Passing through Borders bookshop the other day in search of a classic 20th century novel and that search proving futile, I made a beeline for the graphic novels there to surrender gleefully to the impulse I'd carried over from my last visit to those same shelves, picking up what I know will only be the first of many more: Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 01 (59 progs' worth of strips in 320 pages for £13.99?-: a real bargain!).
Moments when a cultural encounter profoundly define a person are relatively few and far between I reckon and become rarer as the years go by, for simple reasons I would suggest:- There is naturally some kind of limit to people's self-definition through cultural consumption; a limit determined both by the dynamics of human growth and maturation on the one hand, and by the available cultural wealth on the other.
 - I would aver that there is too a limit to people's capacity for reinvention; a limit imposed ultimately by age.
 
Judge Dredd was my first experience of this ilk. I mean to say: I can still remember the first Airfix kit I built and painted all by myself; and my first game of Risk?- well I was reminded of that when the game returned to the table here not long ago. Definitive moments for yours truly these might've been, but their importance was entirely a personal matter.And Judge Dredd? Well, back in February 1977 (10 months before Star Wars too made sure that nothing in geek culture would ever be quite the same again) 2000AD was just another new comic which had caught the imagination of a couple of young teens. And Dreddy was just a character who'd made his first appearance in
And with the boardgame, Judge Dredd continues to entertain even though I no longer read 2000AD. What can I say? Oh yes. Maximum thrillpower! Zarjaz! :0)
Idle rumour and cheap speculation?
It's been more than 3 years since RD/KA! featured the doings of internet cage-rattler and self-appointed cultural crusader- the RPGpundit. He appears now only by virtue of a rumour he's peddling about problems FFG are having with their GW RPG licences, to wit:- Rogue Trader: volume 2 of the 40KRP trilogy.
 - WFRP3: FFG's big new box of... RPG, or is it boardgame?
 
My continuing interest notwithstanding I cannot deny that there are certainly good reasons why people could (perhaps even should?) be dismayed with the nature of FFG's WFRP3 project. There is more to this than the mere matter of money, although 'mere' is hardly a tag applicable to the price of a workable set of WFRP3:
This is compared to $104.85 for D&D's 3 essential volumes: the DMG, PHB, and the MM. OK you need dice but that cost is relatively trivial and 832 pages of hardback book strikes me as offering extra content sufficient to compensate for that minor additional overhead.
At least as important as all that IMO is that the marketing approach which patently drives WFRP3's design and production is one that strikes to the very heart of something taken utterly for granted about RPG's since the earliest days of D&D: the initial buy-in- often but not always a single book or box; this buy-in was a self sufficient game which could be used for the enjoyment of as many as wished to join in. All the cardboard bells and whistles FFG are adding to WFRP3 mean that this isn't really true, however interesting might be the mechanics these parts support.The fly in the ointment now for FFG is the recession. It is a truism that leisure and entertainment do well in hard times, but Rogue Trader and WFRP3 are high-end products, which surely can't be in their favour. I know I'm interested in both; but I can easily see myself going for the minimal buy-in and then mining the games for ideas. I really don't know. But then again, if I'm right about FFG's marketing model, they won't give a tuppeny ha'penny damn, will they?
Finally for now: the RPGpundit's thread is worth checking; as much for the sake of the later sensible comments as for the original rumour itself. ;)
Related@RD/KA!
- Something rotten? But where?
- This, that and the other
Aha! It was you, was it? Borders only has Case Files 2,3,5,6,8,9,10 and 11 at the moment.
ReplyDeleteAh well, I can console myself with the big pile of JD minis I got from Foundry last week. Very nice indeed.
It was indeed I young Andy. Mwah hah, etc! Going to bring those minis round on Sunday so I can join in your gloating? ;)
ReplyDeleteGreat post thank you
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