Where do you find all these games?! – Part IV

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Well, the final part of this series has arrived, and I”m here to talk about RPGs. It has been many moons since I have put palm to d20, but even though I don”t really play Role Playing Games anymore, I do still like to keep up with the comings and goings of the genre, and here”s where I go to do it:Wizards of the Coast D&D Site – Several years ago, the company that brought you Magic: the Gathering while simultaneously bringing your parents a second mortgage, Wizards of the Coast, participated in a turn of events of epic proportion when they bought TSR, the company that had defined fantasy role playing for decades with their product, the mother of all nerdfests, D&D. WotC still owns the D&D brand and updates and markets it furiously. Their website is a first stop on news for what, has pretty much become a completely different game from its elder editions (whether or not this is a good thing is hotly debated.)

Grognardia – Firmly in the not a good thing camp is blogger James Maliszewski at Grognardia. More views than news, Grognardia is a great place for musings and discussion on the trend of (especially older players) returning to the roots of the hobby and exploring the games that started the RPG genre in the first place like the original edition of Dungeons and Dragons, Empire of the Petal Throne, and Traveller. James also touches on movies and writes extensively on pulp stories and magazines, themselves a huge influence on fantasy and sci-fi role playing.

OD&D Discussion – This is a forum devoted entirely to the Original version of Dungeons & Dragons, as well as “retro-clones” – essentially rewrites of older editions, edited and spiffed up for the new age. One of the best aspects of this forum are the archive posts from the people who actually played and DMed the FIRST EVER fantasy RPG, Dave Arneson”s Blackmoor. Want to know what it was like before character sheets? Before classes? Before RULES? go explore the forums and you”ll see how the hobby began and what a revelation it was to those first players.

RPG.net – News, reviews and an active and interesting forum? Sign me up! (Not literally, I just read stuff there.) AND it is all in purple to boot. There”s lots of info on small publisher RPGs here as well – turns out there is a lot going on out there outside of D&D.

RPGGeek.com – So, I don”t actually read RPG Geek, but I feel like it should be here for completeness sake, and I do occasionally use the database. This site is run by the same folks as BGG and the two sites even have some crossover for allowing articles and items to be easily cross-linked, etc.

That wraps it up folks. I”ve now passed on all my links o” interest and given you more than enough reading for the rest of you lives. My next plan is to add a “links” page to the top of the blog containing all of the sites listed in all four of these articles for easy access.

ALSO – If anyone has any other good links I”ve missed, let me know and I”ll add those as well. Thanks for reading!