Having walked the kids through their first D&D adventure I could see the sparkle stay in my youngest's eyes (he's only seven). He so wanted to "play with the toys" I had to let him become the storyteller (DM) and you know what, I think that bright young mind did it far better job than me. I was placed in the precarious situation of being a solo "dungeoneering". "This won't last long" I thought to myself, first monster and he will choose the biggest one in the box (probably the Umber Hulk ... a miniature that has never yet been killed in one of my D&D games)! So there I was walking across the stony floor of a chamber and it was announced that I had encountered a trap. Ooops. One (failed) skill test later and I was left imprisoned by a falling cage (in true comic book fashion). That was it I thought .. monster meat! However with a benevolent sense of imagination, the monster that appeared was a small mushroom man that befriended me. He (it?) said that it would help me escape as it knew where the special key was for the cage! I then played the mushroom man getting the key from a locked chest. Ingenious. He (or was it, it?) set me free and my new BBF and I explored the next room (see below, we are sneaking around in the background trying not to be seen by a Big Blue Monster and two young hatch-ling Dragons [Red and Blue]):
One unremitting axiom of dungeoneering is that where you find treasure chests you find big ugly monsters. In this case a green one that came from a very old Warhammer starter pack. I didn't manage to catch his name as he bludgeoned me into the ground (three rounds of combat which I all lost) as I was distracted open treasure chest withe the allure of gold inside it (see below, I was left unconscious as my new BBF did a very good "hide in the shadows" which is perhaps what I should have done):
Luckily my mushroom BBF was on the ball to once again come to my rescue. It(?) sneaked away and opened a chest where he knew there was a secret healing potion in that resuscitated me (see below, my seven year old was definitely out dungeoneering me hands down):
Once I was back on my feet Mr Mushroom introduced me to Miss Mushroom (pink hat, I get it) his girlfriend(?) who would help me from here "as it was too dangerous for him to go on". Not only narrative but he ingested the sense of peril into the storytelling. I was impressed (see below):
There we had to leave it until another time. My only chance of survival is to "follow the mushroom" to find a way to safety. I think my youngest is a bit of a groovy hippy at heart ;)
My 9-year-old (at the time) did not do quite so well as a first-time GM. Actually, he wasn't all that bad, except that he kept telling my buddy and I what we were doing, rather than wait for us to tell HIM what we were doing. Still, we managed to stagger on until we got to the final room. Says my son: "You see before you an aged wizard. He's a kind man, a wise man, but a man who wound up with 1 of his feet on the moon." I guess it wasn't exactly kind of us, but my buddy and I absolutely cracked up. To halt the merriment, my son quickly amended his description: "He was a kind man, a wise man, but a man who wound up partly on the moon, and partly in the dungeon." This did not stop the laughter. 25 years later it still evokes a chuckle!
ReplyDeleteBest regards,
Chris Johnson
I think your son is a literary genius what profession did he choose?
ReplyDeleteI so long to meet "a wise man, but a man who wound up with one of his feet on the moon" or even "a kind man, a wise man, but a man who wound up partly on the moon, and partly in the dungeon" which sounds like a Terry Gillian hero!
Hey There !
ReplyDeleteMy name is Joshua Stawiarski Co - Editor Of TalkWargaming.com
Sorry if this message is presented in a spammy way,
I wanted to inquire about if you would be interested in selling published content you created that is on your website to us over here at talkwargaming.com.
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Put In The Subject Heading : “ Wargame Creator ”
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Co - Editor Of talkwargaming.com
Has anybody else had contact with this guy. He seems to have left a lot of posts all over the Blogsphere saying the exact same thing to everybody else! I replied (was this foolish) to see what he meant but have heard nothing back to date. Just curious to the motive behind this?
ReplyDeleteHey There Geordie,
ReplyDeleteI first want to apologize for having to post comments all around the blogsphere to get in contact with people such as yourself it seems spammy I know. The problem that I've found, is no one has there direct contact info such as E-mail on their blogs to talk to them thus resorting to talking through comments.
We're trying to expand than just Sci-fi content to create a platform that can be for all wargamers no matter the size of the miniature or game played.
It's been difficult to get people to help us out here on the content end so we needed a new strategy.
To save time on both ends here I'm going to list a few questions and if you're still interested we'll move on from here!
1.) How Much Money Would You Want For 1 Post You Have Done Or A Group Of Pieces Of Content (Like A Campaign) That Are In Relation To Each Other?
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Joshua Stawiarski
Co-Editor Of Talkwargaming
Also it isn't foolish to reply unless you believe it is. Cheers!