David Howery
Hero
from what I read about OD&D, the main problem with it was that it was hard to learn unless you're taught by someone who already learned the game. IIRC, the Holmes boxed set was designed to fix that.
from what I read about OD&D, the main problem with it was that it was hard to learn unless you're taught by someone who already learned the game. IIRC, the Holmes boxed set was designed to fix that.
heh. I can remember it being mentioned in the Game Wizards book (I think) about how one of Dave Arneson's 'poke in the eye to TSR' projects after leaving them was an index/guide to all the OD&D books (at the time), which was published, but due to the Holme's set and AD&D, soon became useless, and sales were poor. Probably be a collectors' item nowadays if you have one.Layout was terrible, organization did not exist.
I never saw that. It needed a safari guide.heh. I can remember it being mentioned in the Game Wizards book (I think) about how one of Dave Arneson's 'poke in the eye to TSR' projects after leaving them was an index/guide to all the OD&D books (at the time), which was published, but due to the Holme's set and AD&D, soon became useless, and sales were poor. Probably be a collectors' item nowadays if you have one.
I would argue that Holmes didn't even fix that either. Holmes was still a very difficult to learn game from someone not already familiar with the game. I would argue that it didn't really become more newbie friendly until Moldvay/Cook/Marsh version, and then Frank's version really made it truly newbie accessible.from what I read about OD&D, the main problem with it was that it was hard to learn unless you're taught by someone who already learned the game. IIRC, the Holmes boxed set was designed to fix that.
I started with the Holmes set and we muddled through well enough, though one player had experienced the game before. And having seen the original books, I do think Holmes truly was a major step in making the game understandable. Maybe not as far as the Moldvay then Mentzer editions, but still a huge stride forward.I would argue that Holmes didn't even fix that either. Holmes was still a very difficult to learn game from someone not already familiar with the game. I would argue that it didn't really become more newbie friendly until Moldvay/Cook/Marsh version, and then Frank's version really made it truly newbie accessible.
Holmes was 100x better, don't get me wrong. Just saying that for a brand new player, it was still formatted and presented in a fairly complex way. Not a dig at Holmes--everything was still really new at the time. Just like how AD&D 1e was written with a lot of hard to follow stuff (does anyone really understand how initiative worksI started with the Holmes set and we muddled through well enough, though one player had experienced the game before. And having seen the original books, I do think Holmes truly was a major step in making the game understandable. Maybe not as far as the Moldvay then Mentzer editions, but still a huge stride forward.