Bullgrit
Adventurer
Whether you began D&D in 1979 or 2009, I think the first D&D books you were exposed to, in your first months (2-24) of gaming, have a large importance on how you view the game as a whole, even 30 years later. They may have solidified your interest in the game more than your first play experience.
What D&D books, in what order, formed your introduction to D&D?
The books that introduced me to D&D (first ~24 months) were these (in this order):
1. Basic D&D rule book
2. B1 In Search of the Unknown
3. B2 Keep on the Borderland
4. U1 Sinister Secret of Saltmarsh
5. AD&D1 Fiend Folio
6. AD&D1 Dungeon Master’s Guide
7. A1 Slave Pits of the Undercity (we first played/ran both A1 and U1 with BD&D rules)
8. AD&D1 Player’s Handbook
9. AD&D1 Monster Manual
10. Dragon Magazine #68
There was a lot of homemade adventures during this time, but they were all derivitives/imitations of the official adventures we had read and played.
What was the initial book-path for your D&D career?
Bullgrit
What D&D books, in what order, formed your introduction to D&D?
The books that introduced me to D&D (first ~24 months) were these (in this order):
1. Basic D&D rule book
2. B1 In Search of the Unknown
3. B2 Keep on the Borderland
4. U1 Sinister Secret of Saltmarsh
5. AD&D1 Fiend Folio
6. AD&D1 Dungeon Master’s Guide
7. A1 Slave Pits of the Undercity (we first played/ran both A1 and U1 with BD&D rules)
8. AD&D1 Player’s Handbook
9. AD&D1 Monster Manual
10. Dragon Magazine #68
There was a lot of homemade adventures during this time, but they were all derivitives/imitations of the official adventures we had read and played.
What was the initial book-path for your D&D career?
Bullgrit