TSR The Making and Breaking of Deities & Demigods

Gods, Demigods, & Heroes was a D&D supplement that I suggested to Gary [Gygax] and it was published in 1976. It presented gods and heroes for D&D. In those days there was no google or internet research features and so I had to do a great deal of library research to get the book done. I used the Golden Bough for a great deal of the legendary treatment. I read all the novels of the authors I mentioned in the book. The concept was a first attempt at combining gods into the game and sold well.

Gods, Demigods, & Heroes was a D&D supplement that I suggested to Gary [Gygax] and it was published in 1976. It presented gods and heroes for D&D. In those days there was no google or internet research features and so I had to do a great deal of library research to get the book done. I used the Golden Bough for a great deal of the legendary treatment. I read all the novels of the authors I mentioned in the book. The concept was a first attempt at combining gods into the game and sold well.



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Note from Morrus -- this is the fourth of Jim Ward's series of articles here on EN World! Upcoming articles include TSR's Amazing Accounting Department, and The Origin of Monty Haul!


Naturally, when AD&D came out the idea to update the gods book was given as an assignment to me. Rob Kuntz was supposed to do half of the writing, but was busy with other things and I ended up writing most of it. This time around for the 1980 release of the book there was a lot more known about role-playing and I included those features in the work.

I was a History and English teacher in Prairie Du Chien at the time, with a family of three young boys and a pleasant wife. I wrote all of the material for the book during one summer vacation in 1979.

In those days there wasn't the internet. I had my own reference books from the last time I designed the pantheons and I spent more hours and hours in the library, again taking notes and ordering books from other libraries. I wanted to add more value to the new work, than what was in the first pantheon version.

The hardest section to write was the Cthulhu mythology. I had to read all of the Lovecraft books. There were other writers of that type of genre, like August Derleth, but Gary Gygax and I talked it out and decided to just use the plentiful Lovecraft material. The hard part was that those books are truly scary. I read all of them in three months. For months afterward I had nightmares and constantly looked over my shoulder looking in the shadows for nasty things. Dealing with those dark concepts was a trial for the happy go lucky James M. Ward, but I persevered.

Gary gave me a format to use that was much like a monster manual listing. That was fine with me as it gave me an order and focus for each listing. I was given a thousand pieces of photocopied sheets. I put each one in my nonelectric typewriter and I typed up the deities, monsters, heroes, and other things of the pantheon. In the creation of each pantheon I did the exact same thing. I made a list of the deities. I placed an imagined value on their power and influence. This caused me to list them as greater or lesser deities. For example I had Zeus as a greater god, Artemis was listed as a lesser goddess, Heracles was listed as a demi-god for his half god parent. In the research for all the pantheons I came across creatures and heroes that were added to the pantheon. Then I looked at each character and the legends about them and made up magic statistics on the items that legends reported. I sent each pantheon for Gary to review and generally he liked all of them.

I can remember we had a debate over the hit points of the gods. I wanted the leader of the gods in each pantheon to have 1,000 hit points. Gary wanted them to have 400. His point was that they couldn't be killed on the prime material plane. If any deity were killed in a battle with player characters their spirit of some type would go back to their home plane and reform. There was no arguing with that logic. That discussion caused me to invent the Plane of Concordant Opposition among the planes that Gary put together.

I would like to use this forum to set some small bit of controversy straight from my point of view. When I first started outlining the book, Gary Gygax told me there might be a copyright problem with the Lovecraft and Moorcock sections of the book. Gary gave me the addresses of those two groups and suggested I get permission from them to print those sections of the book. I immediately sent out the two letters and a month later got positive replies back from both groups. They were pleased to get their concepts mention in the book. I foolishly gave those letters to the TSR legal department (I wish I had them to show you now). The book was printed and published in 1980 to wide acclaim. Fans liked the mention of temples and divine magic items. They liked the references to monsters associated with this or that religion.

TSR received a cease and desist order from Chaosium. In 1981 Chaosium printed Cthulhu and Elric set of role-playing games and naturally didn't want a competitor doing the same thing. Please note that I don't blame them a bit. They had contracts with those two groups and were supposed to defend their rights to the trademark. Those two groups should have mentioned to TSR that they were signing contracts with another company. I wouldn't have put those pantheons in the book in that event. There are literally hundreds of other pantheons that could have been included. It is my belief that if TSR had gone to California with those two letters and gone to court, the company would have been allowed to continue publishing. In those days TSR management didn't think they had the money to hire a California lawyer, fly out to California where the case would be judged, and take the case to court. They decided to remove those two sections and continue publishing the book.

I'm happy to report that Michael Moorcock was nice enough to declare in print that he did indeed give TSR and myself permission to write about his works.

Naturally, I wasn't pleased because I had gone through the work of getting permission for those two sections. I immediately offered to write two new sections free of charge to TSR. Management said no. Every year since then, some goofy fan on the message boards claims that TSR stole those two concepts and put them in the book. I don't like being accused of plagiarism. I'm here to say I did my due diligence and didn't get the chance to make the situation better.
 

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Jim Ward

Jim Ward

Drawmij the Wizard

gyor

Legend
Around 120. Greyhawk actually does have pretty much the same Number of deities.

Most demihuman and monstrous deities are multhispheric and the same in both worlds and the Number of unique human deities is almost the same

It's higher then that for FR, because Kara Tur has one religion will millions of Gods (but they are unlisted). It'd be interesting to make a list of Known Gods in FR.

Also does that include Gods worshipped in FRs past, but not known to be worshipped in its present?

Because in the Bakkar Empire the Greek, Norse, Finnish, and Celtic Pantheons were also worshipped, although a full list of wgich deities was not provided as it was fallen Empire. This was according to The Desert of Desolation.

And you have to include the Hindu Pantheon, with twists such as a female Indra, which was worshipped in Maltra.
 

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Azzy

ᚳᚣᚾᛖᚹᚢᛚᚠ
It's higher then that for FR, because Kara Tur has one religion will millions of Gods (but they are unlisted). It'd be interesting to make a list of Known Gods in FR.
You mean the Eight Million Gods (the Shinto rip off)? The "eight million" there is not literal, but a idiom denoting "innumerable", but it doesn't refer to gods as per European/Middle Eastern mythoi—as an animistic religion, it considers auspicious objects (like mountains trees, boulders, rivers, equisite weapons, etc. as "kami" in addition to the heavenly kami (which are closer to the European idea of gods).

So, while FR probably has more pantheons and deities than GH (more being added by the minute, it seems), citing the religion of the Eight Million Gods is not a good argument for that.
 


Clint_L

Hero
Then I thank your phone, because I hadn't read this thread and getting Ward's original remembrance's on the making of Deities and Demigods is fantastic. My original printing is a treasured possession; in fact, it's about a metre from me right now, and I love showing it, with all its NSFW art plus Cthulhu and Elric pages, to any of my players who are interested in D&D history.
 

Then I thank your phone, because I hadn't read this thread and getting Ward's original remembrance's on the making of Deities and Demigods is fantastic. My original printing is a treasured possession; in fact, it's about a metre from me right now, and I love showing it, with all its NSFW art plus Cthulhu and Elric pages, to any of my players who are interested in D&D history.
Ward's recollection of the whole Cthulhu/Elric story doesn't quite match what Sean K Reynolds reported a few years earlier (how I stumbled on this thread.) The full original Deities & Demigods continued to be printed after Chaosium got involved, with language added that credits Chaosium for the use of the material. Only later did the Blumes decide to pull the material.
 

Ward's recollection of the whole Cthulhu/Elric story doesn't quite match what Sean K Reynolds reported a few years earlier (how I stumbled on this thread.) The full original Deities & Demigods continued to be printed after Chaosium got involved, with language added that credits Chaosium for the use of the material. Only later did the Blumes decide to pull the material.
That doesn't exactly contradict what JW said in the OP, it is just a bit more detail really
 


I might save up and get my dad. I could have swore he had it, but it might have been my uncles (when each of them have a set of books with different people owning slightly different ones, my kid mind has blended together who owns what LOL!) It seems like an amazing book to have and a great piece of history to look at lol.
 

That doesn't exactly contradict what JW said in the OP, it is just a bit more detail really
He suggested the material was removed immediately. But it wasn't - many books were printed with the material and a credit to Chaosium for it's use. Then later the material was removed, but they forgot to remove the credit. My copy for.instance does not have Cthulhu or Elric but still credits Chaosium for their use.
 

He suggested the material was removed immediately. But it wasn't - many books were printed with the material and a credit to Chaosium for it's use. Then later the material was removed, but they forgot to remove the credit. My copy for.instance does not have Cthulhu or Elric but still credits Chaosium for their use.
I disagree. I've read the OP 3 times and I don't feel JW suggested it was removed immediately. I don't necessarily think your interpretation is wrong, I just don't think it is any more correct than mine.
 

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