Post by Deleted on Feb 1, 2010 6:02:05 GMT -6
Ladies and gentlemen,
It is my special pleasure to announce the grand opening of "The Comeback Inn", the new home of Dave Arneson's Blackmoor on the internet!
As some of you might already know, Blackmoor was one of the last "Golden Age" D&D settings that was officially supported by WotC,
through license holders Zeitgeist Games and Code Monkey Publishing.
When WotC didn't renew the license last autumn, our little group, tentatively called "The Regency Council",
decided it was time to step up and do something to save our favorite setting from falling into oblivion.
The result is our little message board, which we now humbly present to the public:
blackmoor.mystara.us/forums/index.php
What are we?!
"The Comeback Inn", called so in reference to the first D&D in-game tavern of all time, is already the biggest database
for Blackmoor lore on the internet, and also home to the "Company of the Maiden"
and the latest installment of their long-running PbP campaign "The Promised Land".
We have prepared a small line of fan publications that we will present to the public in the next few months,
starting with a rules-free 30-page companion to the "Company of the Maiden's" take on Blackmoor.
Also, expect all kind of supplementing articles on gaming in Blackmoor for all editions,
investigative articles on the history of the setting, interviews with some of the icons of D&D's earliest days,
reviews on old and current gaming items of interest, and many more things that will help you to run a campaign
in Blackmoor, in a time were it is increasingly harder to get one's hands on out-of-print books.
What is that "Blackmoor" thingy we are talking about?!
Ugh... I know there might be some among you who don't know what I am talking about...
So, let's check Wikipedia's article on Blackmoor:
Yeah, Blackmoor is arguably the mother of all D&D settings, and in great part responsible for the birth of the original (White Box) D&D game!
So, that's all pretty nice, but why should YOU go there and register?!
The idea of the "Regency Council" is to give Blackmoor what it has lacked all the way through its forty-year long history:
A place for the community to grow and to exchange ideas, and a place to discuss the many aspects and elements of the setting,
while staying accessible and open to n00bs.
In short, if you are or ever were interested in Dave Arneson's World of Blackmoor, this is the place to go!
Hoping to see you soon over at the Comeback Inn,
Rafael, speaking for the Regency Council
It is my special pleasure to announce the grand opening of "The Comeback Inn", the new home of Dave Arneson's Blackmoor on the internet!
As some of you might already know, Blackmoor was one of the last "Golden Age" D&D settings that was officially supported by WotC,
through license holders Zeitgeist Games and Code Monkey Publishing.
When WotC didn't renew the license last autumn, our little group, tentatively called "The Regency Council",
decided it was time to step up and do something to save our favorite setting from falling into oblivion.
The result is our little message board, which we now humbly present to the public:
blackmoor.mystara.us/forums/index.php
What are we?!
"The Comeback Inn", called so in reference to the first D&D in-game tavern of all time, is already the biggest database
for Blackmoor lore on the internet, and also home to the "Company of the Maiden"
and the latest installment of their long-running PbP campaign "The Promised Land".
We have prepared a small line of fan publications that we will present to the public in the next few months,
starting with a rules-free 30-page companion to the "Company of the Maiden's" take on Blackmoor.
Also, expect all kind of supplementing articles on gaming in Blackmoor for all editions,
investigative articles on the history of the setting, interviews with some of the icons of D&D's earliest days,
reviews on old and current gaming items of interest, and many more things that will help you to run a campaign
in Blackmoor, in a time were it is increasingly harder to get one's hands on out-of-print books.
What is that "Blackmoor" thingy we are talking about?!
Ugh... I know there might be some among you who don't know what I am talking about...
So, let's check Wikipedia's article on Blackmoor:
Blackmoor is a fantasy role-playing game campaign setting generally associated with the game Dungeons & Dragons. It originally evolved in the early 1970s as the personal setting of Dave Arneson, the co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons, first as a setting for Arneson's miniature wargames, then as an early testing ground for what would become D&D. Blackmoor is the longest continuously played fantasy role-playing campaign in existence.
Yeah, Blackmoor is arguably the mother of all D&D settings, and in great part responsible for the birth of the original (White Box) D&D game!
So, that's all pretty nice, but why should YOU go there and register?!
The idea of the "Regency Council" is to give Blackmoor what it has lacked all the way through its forty-year long history:
A place for the community to grow and to exchange ideas, and a place to discuss the many aspects and elements of the setting,
while staying accessible and open to n00bs.
In short, if you are or ever were interested in Dave Arneson's World of Blackmoor, this is the place to go!
Hoping to see you soon over at the Comeback Inn,
Rafael, speaking for the Regency Council