Though I've now been blogging for almost as long (if not as prolifically) as I had prior to my break, I still can't help but think of the period between 2008 and 2012 or thereabouts as something of a Golden Age for the Old School Renaissance. While the seeds of what would become the OSR were planted on forums like Dragonsfoot and ODD74, its true flowering occurred on blogs. By the time I started Grognardia in March 2008, there were already many blogs devoted to old school RPGs, particularly Dungeons & Dragons. Over the course of the next couple years, their numbers were swelled by many, many more, leading to a remarkable intellectual ecosystem where the history of our hobby was remembered, celebrated, and debated with incredible vibrancy. It truly was an incredible time and I often find myself nostalgic for those days.
An important aspect of those days was how often bloggers would refer their readers to posts on other blogs, whether to comment upon or even criticize them. Despite the claims by some that the OSR was an "echo chamber," anyone who was deeply immersed in the scene at the time can easily refute that. Far from being a hivemind, the early Old School Renaissance was a fractious, cantankerous place, filled with big ideas and big personalities, not all of whom saw eye to eye on every issue. Back then, it seemed as if there were a new "controversy" every week and, while that could be vexing, these squabbles regularly provided an opportunity to hash out questions of wider interest.
I used to read lots of other blogs, because I felt it was important that I keep abreast of what others were writing. Sometimes, that was a lot of work and I won't deny that the first iteration of this blog eventually wore me out to the point of disaster. Consequently, when I returned to blogging in 2020, I vowed I wouldn't exhaust myself in the way I had previously. I'd write less often and only when I felt I had something of interest to say. Grognardia was an avocation, not an occupation and I should treat it as such. For the most part, that's worked out well enough, but there's still a part of me who misses the roiling, chaotic ferment of the old days. They burned me out, yes, but they also produced a lot of great stuff.
That's why I was cheered to discover that a blog I've long enjoyed, Mesmerized by Sirens, has a new post for the first time in three years. Subtitled "the Sanctuary of Old Fantasy Role Playing Games," Mesmerized by Sirens is a great resource for information about not merely old RPGs but obscure ones – games like Bifrost, Melanda, Phantasy Conclave, Castle Perilous, and more. If you're at all interested in the dark corners of the hobby's history, I recommend you take a look. I hope that, if enough people do so, it might encourage its author to keep writing.
Do you have any defunct blogs you'd like to see return to life?
I'd kinda like to see my blog post more than annually, but the guy writing it can't focus.
ReplyDeleteI'd push the golden age up to 2013/2014, but no further. Blogs and G+. Amazing amazing stuff.
I discovered MbS a long time ago as well, and loved it. he is insane, and I love him. very obsessive.
ReplyDeleteI'm struggling to believe that you've been back in the saddle for four years!
ReplyDeleteOther blogs I'd like to see updated again regularly are Wayne Rossi's Initiative One and Echoes of the Geek Cave.
Ahh yes... so many good blogs have been lost in history. I think many have moved on to Substack and also Medium, but I like the old school blogs.
ReplyDeletePat Wetmores(Author of ASE) blog Henchman Abuse
ReplyDeleteThe 'good old days' of the OSR were also my last teens and early twenties, so you may imagine that for me that longing is enormous. Ah, what a time we lived! Full of discoveries and opportunities...
ReplyDeleteThere was a blog long ago called something like Mandragora Marches, which was an attempt to work up a classic D&D world using elements from Andrew Lang's Color Fairy Books (The Blue Fairy Book, the Red Fairy Book, and so on), which were a collection of 12+ volumes containing around 30-40 fairy stories each. It didn't get very far, and after a time the author simply deleted the blog, but it was pretty amazing project. Originally, he was going to include other sources like the Arabian Nights Entertainments and Grimm's collections, but after starting on the Lang books the author realized the immensity of source material there and scaled back to just those to keep it potentially manageable.
ReplyDeleteOh, that sounds amazing! The lang books are excellent.
DeleteI'd love to see Telecanter's Receding Rules resume posting. Had a lot of fun riffing on his more system-agnostic creations in my own blog, but after a small resurgence in 2020 he's been gone since late 2021.
ReplyDeletehttps://recedingrules.blogspot.com/
Two great blogs, not gaming related but of interest to gaming people: Golden Age Comic Book Stories, and Monsterbrains. The former was run by a certain Mr. Doortree — and included a massive catalog of med/hi res images from old comics and pulp novels (scans that I believe were from Mr. Doortree’s personal collection) including artists such as Roy G Krenkle and Arthur Rackham, etc. The blog changed names a couple of times and then finally disappeared about the time Mr. Doortree’s spiteful brother cut down the local, and semi-historic, eponymous door-tree.
ReplyDeleteThe latter blog is a treasure trove of monstrous (and monster) images — a collection put together by Aeron Alfrey, an artist of the macabre himself. He had a corresponding Facebook page. While the blog and Facebook page both still exist, they went dark a couple years ago without explanation.
JOESKY! Middenmurk and the teased bestiary....However: not necessarily OSR, but The Bottomless Sarcophagus was my personal favorite.
ReplyDeleteThe old school renaissance heyday certainly was an amazing time. I am just glad we still have all the posts preserved so they can continue to inspire us.
ReplyDeleteRPG Blog II, a resurrection of the RPG Blog which, judging by the name, may have been the first, um, RPG Blog ever. I remember faithfully following both incarnations for news and insights.
ReplyDeleteI preserved a list of several dozen links to RPG blogs when the RPG Blog Alliance was about to shut down in 2015 over at my old blog. Wonder how many are still around.
ReplyDeletehttps://almostoldschool.wordpress.com/big-page-o-rpg-blog-site-links/
Bending the rules on this one, but there's a great webcomic: https://thekeepontheborderlands.justinpfeil.com/ recreating the Keep on The Borderlands module. The conceit is that the artist recreates the module with a specific set of D&D characters - based on D&D/AD&D rules set (1st ed.). All actions are based on the roll results - combat, saves, etc., which I'll admit has lead to some interesting story turns. Combined with his comments on the actions, the whole things comes off as very OSR gameplay.
ReplyDelete