LordEntrails
Hero
@Snarf Zagyg I think you got it pretty good. Of course, the thing is, just like playing OD&D, we all have our own interpretations and memories of what it was. For all 3 of us, it was 4 different things 

Geez, elitism much?Gygax was brilliant. Those "extra paragraphs" were vastly important world building. Kids today learn the DnD world through movies like Lord of the Rings where they visually see the world and "get it', and only need to learn mechanics. Gygax built the same world through his descriptions.
Back in my day when I read 1e I already read the Iliad by Homer, so yeah reading his writing wasn't hard. I don't think most kids read much nowadays, everything is down to one sentence at a time, anything longer needs to be provided as a meme or anime.
I grew up with TSR D&D, and Gygax's writing still makes me go cross-eyed.Gygax was brilliant. Those "extra paragraphs" were vastly important world building. Kids today learn the DnD world through movies like Lord of the Rings where they visually see the world and "get it', and only need to learn mechanics. Gygax built the same world through his descriptions.
Back in my day when I read 1e I already read the Iliad by Homer, so yeah reading his writing wasn't hard. I don't think most kids read much nowadays, everything is down to one sentence at a time, anything longer needs to be provided as a meme or anime.
Gygax is more like a character in a Dickens novel, perhaps one used to satirical effect, like to mock the stylings of insurance underwriters.I grew up with TSR D&D, and Gygax's writing still makes me go cross-eyed.
I don't object to long-winded writers--I mean, here I am in a Snarf thread! But Snarf is writing essays, not rulebooks. More to the point, his prose is pretty clean and straightforward; there's just a lot of it. Gygax's writing was full of false starts, overuse of the passive voice, irrelevant parentheticals, and obscure words used in not quite the right way. (In Snarf's example, Gygax clearly thought you could just drop in "weal" anywhere you'd normally say "good." The two words have very similar meanings, but "weal" typically requires an indication of who or what is benefiting.)
Gygax clearly aspired to Dickensian style, but he did not have the mastery of the craft and the sense of timing that allowed Dickens to pull off his baroque half-page sentences*. Also, there are some people who should on no account be allowed access to a thesaurus.
*I am not a Dickens fan. But I can appreciate his skill even if I don't usually like the results.
This just made me laugh so much reading this.I think Gygax was incapable of writing anything without adding at least an additional paragraph, if not two. Just look at the second paragraph of the Assassin's description-
/snip
ETA- admittedly, my own posts tend more to the High Gygaxian than the styling of Hemmingway.
As someone who grew up playing Yaquinto board games, I feel your pain. Oh, the cardboard chits. I still have nightmares about all those freaking cardboard chits.I tried playing The Sword and the Flame once, a wargame based on British colonial wars. I left thinking "man, and I thought Battletech and Warhammer 40k had funky rules".
This just made me laugh so much reading this.Totally no offense intended at all. Not a shot in the slightest. Just unbelievably funny.
My ears are burning and I don't know why....Introspection and recognition of one’s own faults is the first step toward ignoring those faults and blissfully repeating them in the future!