Once you go C&C, you never go back

After you tried Castles & Crusades, did you switch to it?

  • Yes.

    Votes: 55 24.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 123 55.7%
  • Liked it, but not enough to switch.

    Votes: 43 19.5%

Just read my review of C&C to see what I thought about it. I wish the TLG guys nothing but the best WRT to their game.

It's not for me, though. Like others, I think they took the wrong approach towards the rules - removed stuff that worked (a single XP progression) and overly complicated stuff (SIEGE engine is completely bass-ackwards, IMHO).
 

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gideon_thorne said:
And be assured that he considers this along with any reasonably phrased issue brought to his attention. *coughs*. ;)
Heh, any info you can share about what the art will be like for the CKG, or C&C UA? ;)
 

der_kluge said:
Just read my review of C&C to see what I thought about it. I wish the TLG guys nothing but the best WRT to their game.

It's not for me, though. Like others, I think they took the wrong approach towards the rules - removed stuff that worked (a single XP progression)
As far as I'm concerned, multiple XP tables seemed to work just fine for AD&D. But that aside, a single XP progression to me has a generic feel. Class-based XP tables to me have a certain charm and add character to the classes. Kind of funny how that came out.

and overly complicated stuff (SIEGE engine is completely bass-ackwards, IMHO).
Are you saying that the SIEGE Engine is overly complicated??
 

Dristram said:
Heh, any info you can share about what the art will be like for the CKG, or C&C UA? ;)

Well, content wise, not yet. But style wise a fair bit more black and white ink work. Mainly since it seems to show up so much better. I have a few things in mind, but I am not fully cognizant enough of the interior contents to devise appropriate pieces.
 

Philotomy Jurament said:
(I assume you mean the original Trampier cover.) That's another one of my favorites (even more than the Sutherland DMG cover, which is also a classic). If that's what you mean by "action," then I'm in complete agreement that we should see more of this kind of thing. It's a scene which fires the imagination and tells a story (and drips swords-and-sorcery feel, to me).

I actually tend to like Trampier's work on the DM screen much more than the original 1E cover. The figures are much cleaner and more detailed, and there is a real sense of mood and drama that the AD&D book cover doesn't quite capture. All IMHO of course. :)
 


gideon_thorne said:
I actually tend to like Trampier's work on the DM screen much more than the original 1E cover. The figures are much cleaner and more detailed, and there is a real sense of mood and drama that the AD&D book cover doesn't quite capture.
I had a Trampier screen years ago, but it was stolen (along with some other stuff it pained me to lose), and I had to replace it with the later version of the 1E screen (the hooded guy opening the doors).

Anyone have a decent scan/image of art from the the Trampier 1E screen?
 




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