We can just use this here digital tent city to gather up
all OSR players and GMs if people want! Initially at least, I'll stick to the idea of running games for people who are new to the OSR or new to the site -- but perhaps this let's some other folks see how much interest there is in these games.
KCC says:
You think youâre getting a Harrigan game, but then you get lumped into a KCC game.
I canât think of much worse!
Oh please. KCC runs a great game, people!
kwll says:
Maybe one thing you failed to mention in your (own) definition if the OSR: all these games are heavily inspired by early versions of D&D, even if some take some good ideas from later iterations. It is not obvious in all circles, so I thought I would point it out.
Well, to be fair there's a *lot* I left out -- kind of depends on the circles you run in, the OSR phase, etc. Indeed, old D&D (typically OD&D, AD&D, B/X) is at the heart of many of these games, but certainly not all of them. There's a whole British OSR movement (see: Troika!, Warlock!, etc.) and a lot of the new OSR / NSR games owe much, much less to the initial TSR products. Also, note above how lightly retroclones are represented in my list. That's purposeful. :)
Conscious that not everyone knows these terms and acronyms, so...
NSR = New School Renaissance or Revival
OD&D = Original Dungeons & Dragons, published in 1974 and added onto via supplements and articles through the 70s.
Basic D&D = The first Basic Set, by Eric Holmes
AD&D = First edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
B/X = The Basic / Expert set put out in 1981. Bedrock in the OSR, this is the Tom Moldvay edition, not the Holmes (1977) or Mentzer (1983) version
BECMI = Basic, Expert, Companion, Masters, Immortal -- basically the 1983 Basic set by Frank Mentzer that got expanded throughout the 80s
Retroclones = Modern clean-ups, adaptations, re-statements and takes on the games above. Classic retroclones include (White Box (OD&D), Swords & Wizardry (OD&D + supplements), Blueholme (1977 Basic Set), OSRIC (AD&D), Labyrinth Lord (B/X), OSE (B/X), Dark Dungeons (BECMI). This is the tip of a vast iceberg, though.