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April 21, 2009

From the era of random maulings

From a thread discussing older versus newer editions of D&D at RPGnet, with an eventual focus on whether earlier D&D tried to be 'realistic' -

Travel times is another one of those weird spots where it's become some what vestigial. Once upon a time how long it took you to get from A to B mattered a whole hell of a lot since every 8 hours (or whatever) you stood a chance of getting randomly mauled by a rampaging owlbear or a horde of orcs. Which, by the way, doesn't simulate shit unless you honestly think everyone who travels gets eaten by a grue every 10 miles. But as random encounters fall by the wayside the real reason for wanting to know how long it takes to get from A to B becomes a whole lot less important except for time-critical style adventures. Lo is born the scene based travel challenges and planned possible encounters to keep up the mystery of travel, and so dies the art of the overland map and careful management of how long travel takes.

I like it.

October 24, 2009

Art directing D&D

In doing some research for a couple artist friends, I stumbled across the blog of Jon Schindehette, senior art director for Dungeons & Dragons.

There's a lot of beautiful art and interesting stuff there, including this post about how he came to be an art director at Wizards.

About the author

Alexander Shearer is a biologist, gamer, and writer. He has written for games and educational comics, and writes the ongoing In Development column at ChannelFireball.com when he's not collecting his gaming thoughts here at Gifts Ungiven.

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