Consequently, when TSR announced that it'd be giving the Oriental Adventures treatment to the myths, legends, and folklore of the Middle East, I was pretty excited. Though Bulfinch's Mythology didn't include a section on these tales, I was nevertheless quite familiar with the stories of A Thousand and One Nights, not to mention the charming films featuring Sinbad the Sailor I'd seen as a child. And course D&D had long included monsters like the djinn, efreet, ghoul, and roc, in addition to the flying carpet and ring of wishes, all of which have their origin in Middle Eastern mythology.
Entitled Al-Qadim: Arabian Adventures, this 158-page softcover was written by Jeff Grubb with the assistance of Andria Hayday. Grubb was a powerhouse designer at TSR at this time, having previously created Marvel Super Heroes, shepherded the Forgotten Realms Campaign Set to publication, and conceived Spelljammer, among many other influential projects. He brings the same imagination and enthusiasm for Al-Qadim that he did for its predecessors, resulting in a book of which I remain very fond, despite certain shortcomings.
In the book's introduction, Grubb acknowledges that Arabian Adventures takes inspirations from three different versions of Arabia. The first is the Arabia of history, whose people, culture, and history spread from the Atlantic Ocean to India as a result of the Islamic conquests starting in the 7th century. The second is the Arabia of myth and legend. Finally, there is the Arabia of Hollywood, like the aforementioned Sinbad movies. Of the three, the second and third are the most important to Al-Qadim, which is not intended to be historically or culturally accurate but is, echoing the foreword to OD&D, "strictly fantasy."
Like Oriental Adventures before it, Arabian Adventures is not a stand-alone game but rather a supplement to AD&D, then in its second edition. Its purpose is to provide new and alternative rules for use with 2e rather than being complete in itself. Thus, for example, we get a variety of new character kits, as well as new equipment, nonweapon proficiencies, and spells. All of these are intended to differentiate the inhabitants of Zakhara, the Land of Fate, from those coming from more Western European-inspired locales, just as OA had done for the peoples of Kara-Tur. Al-Qadim is decidedly not generic in its presentation, but instead places everything within a very specific cultural and social context derived from the three sources Grubb mentioned in his introduction.
By and large, the end result is excellent, better in some ways than Oriental Adventures in my opinion. The character kits – a concept that didn't exist at the time OA was published – do a very good job of tailoring AD&D's existing character classes for an Arabian-inspired setting. While most of them are interesting and flavorful, the ones I most liked were those that covered roles uncommon or unknown in other settings, like the barber, beggar-thief, and merchant-rogue. Likewise, the new spells and proficiencies went a long way toward making a Zakharan character feel distinct from his counterparts in other realms.
Where Al-Qadim falls down is its being branded with and tied to the Forgotten Realms campaign setting. This is not the fault of Grubb or Hayday, nor does it strongly weaken the quality of their work. In the early 1990s, TSR was very keen on tying all of its AD&D products to one or more of its existing settings. Since the Realms were TSR's "go-to" AD&D setting, the company plugged almost everything into it, including Zakhara (just as had previously been done with Kara-Tur). It's a pity, because I think Zakhara would have been much more interesting had it simply been its own thing, divorced from the rest of TSR's AD&D settings of the time.
One way that this impacts Arabian Adventures in a negative way is that we don't get any unique demihuman or nonhuman playable races. All the standard AD&D races, like dwarves, elves, and halflings, are present in Zakhara and, aside from the usual game mechanics associated with them (ability bonuses, special abilities, etc.), they're really little different from Zakharan humans, sharing the same customs, beliefs, and so on. There's nothing strictly wrong with this approach, but Oriental Adventures gave us several new nonhuman races to play and I think doing so went a long way toward making Kara-Tur feel distinct. I would have liked to have seen the same for Al-Qadim.
The other "flaw" in Al-Qadim is that it's pretty clearly meant to be an alternate Players Handbook. Unlike Oriental Adventures, there's not much in the way of referee material included in this book. There are no new monsters or magic items, for example, and while both those omissions would eventually be dealt with in follow-up products – several, in fact! – their lack in this book was something I felt pretty keenly at the time. I would have preferred something a bit more expansive in its content, but, as I said at the beginning of this post, Arabian Adventures isn't a stand-alone product and, given TSR's approach to publishing AD&D at the time, there was probably little to no chance it would have included such material when it could more profitably be sold in later releases.
All that said, I really like Al-Qadim and regret that, like so many other AD&D products with which TSR flooded the market in the '90s, I never got the chance to make much use of it. One of my friends was a big fan of the line and purchased a lot of the later material, including the Land of Fate boxed set. From what I could tell, all of the setting's support material was of a very high quality – imaginative and fun, with plenty of great ideas to aid the Dungeon Master in refereeing his very own version of A Thousand and One Nights. It's one Second Edition's better supplements and deserves more love than it generally gets.
I never got a chance to check out Al-Qadim as it was published, the publication of 2e coincided with an extended period of personal disenchantment with D&D that caused me to miss out on a lot of things.
ReplyDeleteBut I did go back about a decade later in the the mid/late 00's and pick up pretty much the entire line and it is pretty well done IMO.
It's interesting to note that like Dark Sun, the line had a distinct format for the adventures. The ALQ# series were all released as 'thin' boxed sets. Usually with a couple booklets, some Monstrous Compendium pages, a map or two, and then some heavy cardstock sheets.
Unlike the Dark Sun DS# flimsy folio-like boxes (filed with those spiral flip books), the ALQ-series were real (if slim) boxes. In both cases, the format was very distinct and instantly recognizable on on the shelf at a quick glance. Even if at the time I just passed them both by on my way to other things at my FLGS...
The Al-Qadim supplememt “Cities Of Bone” includes an adventure “Court Of The Necromancers” which is based on Clark Ashton Smith’s story “ The Empire Of The Necromacets”.
ReplyDeleteCAS = Good, of course.
I totally agree. Court of the Necromancers is a top adventure CAS'inspired. The necromancer king Sumulael was a great villain. By the way, more material on necromancers was developed in the Complete Book of Necromancers (blue cover). Another awesome supplement
DeleteI loved this setting, have most of the supplements, and ran a campaign set in it back in the day. The flavour of the setting is really well captured, and it's fun to play.
ReplyDeleteI got some use out of Al Qadim as a peripheral source for an African campaign I tried to put together in college. It ended up being more Arabian than African (I didn't have enough material to work with), but the campaign went splendidly well. Alas, it was senior year so we were only able to do a few sessions before everyone got too busy and we had to drop it.
ReplyDeleteThe Heretic
I know Dragon Magazine had a whole series during the 2e era on African Adventures complete with kits, monsters, etc. Did you have access to those back then?
DeleteI had a really good group of gamers when I was a kid back in the 90s, and Al-Qadim was the highlight of those years. We eventually abandoned it for Planescape and Earthdawn, but I remember the details of almost all of our excursions in The Land of Fate vividly.
"All the standard AD&D races, like dwarves, elves, and halflings, are present in Zakhara and, aside from the usual game mechanics associated with them (ability bonuses, special abilities, etc.), they're really little different from Zakharan humans, sharing the same customs, beliefs, and so on. There's nothing strictly wrong with this approach,"
ReplyDeleteHere I strongly disagree. The inclusion of demi-humans & humanoids derived from European myth & folklore (rather than Middle Eastern tales & myths) sticks out like a sore thumb. I'm guessing that the inclusion of dwarves, elves, etc. was an editorial mandate.
I agree. I had GAZ2 Emirates of Ylarum for the Known World and demi-humans (and humanoids) sit uncomfortably in that setting.
DeleteThe first (and so far only) D&D game experience I've had is, I guess, "al-Qadim-adjacent" -- 4E rules with ICE 'deep south' Middle Earth maps/setting, but IIUC _inspired_ by the existence of the Al-Qadim line a decade or two earlier. I think some adventures/plots/locales were adapted from AQ materials, too.
ReplyDeleteSo I don't have any direct experience of it, and from what I've read of and about it it seems pretty dire to me, but, I guess, I'm grateful for its inspirational qualities?
One of two main D&D buddies became obsessed with Oriental Adventures to the point it was all he wanted to play, and honestly this obsession was one of several overlapping factors that split up our once strong mid-eighties group. The "Arabian Nights expansion" as my friends and I insisted on dubbing it coincided with the (eventual) rise of 2e, which we more or less ceded to our 3-5 years younger brothers' "generation" so that I don't think any of us ever bought it, but years later I'd read Richard Francis Burton's translation of 1001 Arabian Nights and I deeply regretted not buying and playing TSR's expansion. I still do! Thanks as always for this jaunt down memory alley, mate! ---Jim Hodges
ReplyDeleteIn the context of gaming in the 90s, Al-Qadim brought a sense of light-heartedness to an otherwise very serious milieu. You aren't a vampire, you aren't on a desolate planet adventuring for water, you weren't fighting the horrors of the unknown... you were getting into verbal altercations with merchants to see who could "out-humble" the other so as to avoid the Evil Eye while trying to get a 10% discount on rations. You were using the bureaucracy skill to slow down the city guard as you made an escape. You were having coffee with villains and asking them politely for the keys to free their prisoners. I love and miss those times. :-)
ReplyDeleteYou make a very strong case for its excellence :) That's more the kind of games I've always been involved in, and I'm glad that D&D did have some kind of support of its own for that mode of adventuring!
DeleteI enjoyed reading this, good cityscapes. never played :(
ReplyDeleteI believe AQ also had a sort of sub-setting box (of course) that took to the high seas for Sinbad style adventures.
ReplyDeleteMore than one actually: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Al-Qadim_supplements
DeleteI used Golden Voyages for a recent campaign (even if I replaced or heavily modified most of the episodes, and used Mini-Six instead of any D20 flavor).