Friday Fun: Your Formative Geek Media

I always enjoy reading these origin stories, so thanks for posting, @Reynard.

Aside from not really playing D&D until high school, I'm probably a lot like other folks here:

Born '78, so as a youngin', Star Wars, naturally was one of, if not the, biggest influence; toys, movies on VHS, the Ewok TV specials, and when they came out, the Zahn novels.

An uncle was a Star Trek fan, so TOS, TAS, and TNG were my other primary "Sci Fi" influences, plus I'd add in Buck Rodgers on TV and Last Starfighter. But I CONSUMED Barlowe, Voss, McKee, and the Terran Trade Authority books at my library. Honestly, looking at how much I read/watched sci-f, space opera, etc., I'm kind of surprised I'm not running a Starfinder campaign.

But GI Joe, Transformers, Masters of the Universe were influences on my perspective of adventure and heroism. (Comics, toys, and TV).

But let's talk fantasy, since that's what we're here for. Mythology: starting with Greek, spinning out of my dad's interest in backyard astronomy, then Roman, Norse, and others as I discovered books in my grade school library.

Films: Labyrinth, Willow, Princess Bride, and Neverending Story (and Krull, which I remember watching ad nauseum on reruns) probably have the biggest impact on the core of what I view as "Fantasy."

I was a latecomer to fantasy novels, I was a Hardy Boys, Choose-Your-Own Adventure, and Illustrated Classics reader all through middle school. But most of my reading along that time was probably non-fiction About freshman year (14) I started reading Stephen King and Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. It wasn't until I was 15, 16 that I picked up Dragonlance, then Cleric Quintet, Drizzt, and Ravenloft novels. Didn't read LOTR until I was out of college. Still never read Shanarra or Wheel of Time.

Intro to D&D was Forgotten Realms a few different times, but didn't really play regularly until a campaign set on Krynn around 1993. (that led to the DL novels). From 93 to 96, I dabbeld in lots of geek media: played some Magic: The Gathering, made some Cyberpunk and Shadowrun characters but don't remember playing, played a Malkavian in Vampire (who's thing was he thought he was completely sane and so ended up painfully vanilla). We had a good RIFTS thing going for a while. Played some GURPS in College.

ETA: Discovered Castle Falkenstein around Junior year in high school. Absolutely fell in love with the setting. Never really got into SteamPunk, but the original gameworld remains a favorite.

But Dragonlance and Ravenloft are probably the two biggest influences from the "gaming" side ot things, and Shadowrun has stuck with me for Urban Fantasy.

Played a lot of Castlevania 2. That dovetails with Ravenloft.
 
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Hmmm.... Thinking way back :ROFLMAO:

  • Pseudo science books like "Chariots of the Gods" and "Gods from Outer Space", followed by reading actual mythology.
  • Actual science books like Asimov's "Jupiter: The Largest Planet."
  • Old SF in the vein of EE "Doc" Smith's "Lensmen" series.
  • Star Trek:TOS
  • "The Outer Limits" & "The Twilight Zone."
  • Original "Mission: Impossible"
  • "The Prisoner"
  • "The Six Million Dollar Man"
  • "Kolchak: The Night Stalker"

That sort of stuff through the '60s and '70s.
 


Actual space stuff, NASA and the Soviets in the 70's, one could legitimately geek out on that. Otherwise, Bakshi's Wizards, and Lord of the Rings:

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Besides that there were other things: Speed Racer, Space:1999, Star Wars, Star Trek, Excaliber and so on. How about the Black Hole, excellent OST and at the end the robot goes to hell with the evil guy trapped inside? Very trippy.
 

Greek and Norse mythology. The fist short story I ever read was Howard's "Beyond the Black River". I devoured and reread all of Burroughs novels (I prefer Carson Napier to John Carter). Then I read The Hobbit and LotR. At 11 years old I got the AD&D Monster Manual from my grandparents who thought it was a book of mythology. That led to Red Box, and within a year to copying the Player Handbook by hand from the local library.
 

. How about the Black Hole, excellent OST and at the end the robot goes to hell with the evil guy trapped inside? Very trippy.
Due to how young I was when encountered star wars and Black Hole, for a long time I thought the Black Hole was some sort of adventure with R2D2 and C3PO, I probably only in last decade when wanting to find it again realized completely different stories :)
 

Due to how young I was when encountered star wars and Black Hole, for a long time I thought the Black Hole was some sort of adventure with R2D2 and C3PO, I probably only in last decade when wanting to find it again realized completely different stories :)
The Black Hole's ending seems wild, until one thinks that they were emulating the end of 2001: A Space Odyssey where Bowman returns to Earth as the Star Child. I loved all that stuff, someone mentioned Dr Who, absolutely, 100%. Nobody questioned psionics in game when we had seen Escape from Witch Mountain. Omni and Heavy Metal magazines. Dune was hugely popular.
 

Colliers Junior Classics - Legends of Long Ago and various Saturday morning cartoons.
Dad use to read The Phantom and Mandrake the Magician comics and we watched Hulk, Wonder Woman, Man from Atlantis, Dr Who, Star Trek, Tommorow People. Lucan, Logans Run and Blakes Seven on TV

I read the Black Arrow, Ivanhoe. Robin Hood. Then discovered Edgar Rice Burrows. My first fantasy novels were Narnia and the Prydain books iirc
 

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