Erekose
Eternal Champion
I originally started playing D&D with the Basic and Expert sets in 1983 (the Moldvay versions) and then relatively soon after switched to AD&D when it becam available in the UK.
My question is that I've subsequently seen later printings of the Master and Immortals books and they are structured very differently.
To be specific the Basic and Expert books that I had were designed so that you could cut the books down the spin and "create" in a folder a larger "book" that would have continuing chapter on character classes, monsters, etc.
When and why did this change? Presumably this happened prior to the publication of the full Basic, Expert, Companion, Masters and Immortals to complete the set?
I appreciate cutting up books may not be popular but there was something appealing about the original assumption that does make me feel quite nostalgic about it!
My question is that I've subsequently seen later printings of the Master and Immortals books and they are structured very differently.
To be specific the Basic and Expert books that I had were designed so that you could cut the books down the spin and "create" in a folder a larger "book" that would have continuing chapter on character classes, monsters, etc.
When and why did this change? Presumably this happened prior to the publication of the full Basic, Expert, Companion, Masters and Immortals to complete the set?
I appreciate cutting up books may not be popular but there was something appealing about the original assumption that does make me feel quite nostalgic about it!
