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"Red Orc" American Indians and "Yellow Orc" Mongolians in D&D
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<blockquote data-quote="Bedrockgames" data-source="post: 8496567" data-attributes="member: 85555"><p>I find it really hard to go back to a particular time and say "This is what D&D was". I mean there were trends, but I didn't really notice much homogeneity until the d20 boom (and even then I think that is fading). during that period I encountered a lot of groups who played D&D in the same way, in the same style. Prior to that, it seemed like every table was different (it also seemed like there was a more mainstream appetite for other systems and games). I started in '86, on the west coast (wasn't born there but spent five years there), and I gamed with three different groups of friends. Every group approached the game differently because you had to read these books and then figure out how they worked in practice. Then I moved back to the east coast, and again every group of friends, even within the same school, was different. Each group definitely had its style: because that style was formed reading the books, experimenting and talking about how the game is played. But even inside those groups, each GM was quite different. Then when we started playing with people in other towns, all kinds of variety.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bedrockgames, post: 8496567, member: 85555"] I find it really hard to go back to a particular time and say "This is what D&D was". I mean there were trends, but I didn't really notice much homogeneity until the d20 boom (and even then I think that is fading). during that period I encountered a lot of groups who played D&D in the same way, in the same style. Prior to that, it seemed like every table was different (it also seemed like there was a more mainstream appetite for other systems and games). I started in '86, on the west coast (wasn't born there but spent five years there), and I gamed with three different groups of friends. Every group approached the game differently because you had to read these books and then figure out how they worked in practice. Then I moved back to the east coast, and again every group of friends, even within the same school, was different. Each group definitely had its style: because that style was formed reading the books, experimenting and talking about how the game is played. But even inside those groups, each GM was quite different. Then when we started playing with people in other towns, all kinds of variety. [/QUOTE]
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"Red Orc" American Indians and "Yellow Orc" Mongolians in D&D
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