How did you start?

What was your gaming "gateway"?

  • (F)LGS

    Votes: 11 3.6%
  • Other retailer (B&N, Amazon, Walgreens, etc.)

    Votes: 12 3.9%
  • Family member (includes gift)

    Votes: 52 16.8%
  • Friend (includes gift)

    Votes: 121 39.2%
  • Through a club/organization

    Votes: 18 5.8%
  • Played related wargame

    Votes: 7 2.3%
  • Played related computer game

    Votes: 13 4.2%
  • Heard about it and sought it out

    Votes: 46 14.9%
  • Something else

    Votes: 29 9.4%

Mark Hope

Adventurer
Long waffly story... :)

Way back in 1976 or 1977, I was reading a hardback compilation of the Trigan Empire comic series. In one scene, the heroes are commanding a large army and have a wargame-style table laid out with little miniatures representing troops and units and stuff. At 7 years old, I was so taken with the concept that I made a big map of the Trigan world and played a proto-wargame using counters stuck to the board with blu-tack. This has nothing to do with D&D at all, but it set the stage for what came later.

A few years after this, when Empire Strikes Back was about to hit the cinema (ie. 1980) I picked up an sf/fantasy magazine with R2-D2 and C-3PO on the cover (Fantasia? Can't recall). On the back cover of the magazine was a full-page advert for the three AD&D core harbacks - that was my first encounter with D&D proper. Of course, I had no idea whatsoever what these books were - completely baffled, although they looked kinda cool. In addition to the Star Wars articles, the magazine also had other stuff of a more salacious nature (amazon hotties flashing their boobies!) that I wasn't sure was targeted at readers of my age. For some reason I presumed that those books with titles like "Dungeon Master's Guide" (for the adult roleplayer, wink wink) fell into that slightly naughty category. From time to time I would look at the advert and try to puzzle out just what the hell kind of game was this?

I also used to get the Star Wars weekly comic. After a while, adverts started appearing in the comic for the Dungeon board game. The idea of adventuring around a labyrinth, fighting monsters and collecting loot seemed incredibly cool and (like with the Trigan wargame from years before) I made a couple of boardgames of my own (set on pirate islands, iirc) in a similar vein.

In 1982 I saw E.T. and read the novelisation of the film. Although the movie only briefly features gaming, the book refers to D&D, characters, stats, DMs and the like in some detail. Suddenly it fell into place - so that's what those books on the back of the Fantasia magazine were about! It had nothing to do with naked bondage amazon chicks at all! Well, whaddya know!!

Just after this, a couple of friends at school asked me "Do you know what Dungeons and Dragons is?" "Yes," I replied smugly. "It's a game played by Americans." They snorted in derision. "Ha! Well, that's where you're wrong. Because we play it, and we're not American". "Oh, cool!" I replied. "Can I play too?" More derision. "No," they replied. "We only play with experienced players and it would take too long to explain it to you". In other words, you're a noob, Hope, so get lost.

Not in the slightest bit discouraged by this display of gamer snobbery, I bugged them relentlessly for weeks thereafter, pumping them for information about the game, how it worked, how it was played, just what a Dungeon Master was and how things like combat and the like were resolved. And then (like with the Trigan wargame and the Dungeon/pirates boardgames) I went home and wrote my own crude RPG called... Castle. It had two stats (Strength and Power!!), a sprawling map that players (ie. my sister, parents and neighbour) moved around taking turns like a boardgame, and any combat was resolved by rolling 5d6 (all the dice I owned!) and subtracting the result from Power. I can't remember what Strength was for...

This kept me happily amused for months on end until our next trip to the UK (I lived in Holland at the time and had no idea where to find gaming supplies). We stopped by Beatties model shop in Newcastle and I spotted the magenta Basic D&D box on the shelf. I bought it on the spot and haven't looked back since. Someday I intend to release Castle as a 672-page deluxe hardback with accompanying vinyl map - but I need to figure out what the Strength stat did first, though...
 

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Ibram

First Post
Started playing my first year in college at at the ODU Sci-fi and Fantasy club. Joined because they played Battletech then moved on to Westend Starwars before being invited to a D&D game by one of the other players in the starwars group.
 

Mycanid

First Post
It was through a friend. My family moved to Syracuse New York and some kids a few houses down the block walked up to me a few days after we moved in and said to me: "Hey, ya wanna try this new game with us?" It was the Blue-grey boxed version of DnD (although they had the earliest version books as well that they lent to me to read ... and though I tried to read them I had no clue what the game was about ... I learned by watching them and then trying it out myself). That was 1979 - the name of the kids were Adam and Joel Pack. I wonder where they are now?
 

GrendelKhan

First Post
Started playing with a group of friends in the 5th grade. We started with the basic and expert rules then graduated to 1st edition AD&D. Played with these guys until we graduated in 1989. Not only did we play D&D together but also Marvel Super Heros, Car Wars, Star Frontiers, Battletech, Warhammer, the list goes on and on. Man, I miss those guys.
 

I had been into comic books for over a decade. Someone opened a shop in my town and after hearing my views and ideas on comic book writing he made me an offer.

The 2nd ed Dungoneering guide. Take it home. Read it. Come to a shared friend's house on Friday and watch the game.

If you don't like it, return the book. If you like it, keep the book. There are other books also.


I decided to roll up a character. 1/2 way through I failed a save vs ghouls. I never even had a turn and I found myself becoming a DM"s plaything and attacking teammates until they killed me. That was December of 88.

So Favorite Local Game store for me.
 

Greylock

First Post
Echoing an earlier reply, there were no FLGSs when I started playing. I was introduced by a friend, and had to seek out books in standard bookstores. After a while, I discovered a wargaming shop miles north of where I live that had started carrying DnD related stuff, and made a point of visiting when I could. [/early '80s]

I guess since there are many "old-timers" here, that there are many similar stories.
 

RFisher

Explorer
(F)LGS/Other retailer: Yes. That's where I bought my Basic Set. It was a game store in the mall--not quite the thing I think of as a FLGS.

Family member (includes gift): Yes. The first I heard of D&D was when my mom gave me an article about it to read.

Friend (includes gift): Yes. The first roleplaying group I joined were friends of mine.

Played related wargame: Yeah. My dad & I played wargames.

Played related computer game: Er...I suppose. I guess playing ADVENTURE helped understand how RPGs worked. The first time I saw a PHB was when my dad borrowed one to use as inspiration for a game he was making on the Apple ][.

Heard about it and sought it out: Yeah. After I'd read that article & seen the PHB, I sought out a Basic Set.

Something else: Probably.

I don't know that any of those events were more important than the others.
 

Nalfeshnee

Explorer
I put down related wargame. Been playing warhammer for around 15 years now and a basically grew up in a gaming store - where other kids when to yoth centres and played 'sports' (whatever that is :)), i'd spend my days with my friends playing warammer/40k (back when they were good... not that that's stopped me).

basically that led to warhammer quest (i know), D&D, AD&D, D&D 3.0 and now 3.5 and gods know how many other systems inbetween
 

Just_Hal

First Post
Friends and Toys R Us for me in the early 80's.
I in 85 worked for a game/rpg/porno chain in Illinois for a while- I was in Nirvana :D
Just went back to Chicago and saw they are still around (no porn)--Gamer's Paradise in the Deerbrook Mall (that one is no longer around)---oh the memories.
 

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