Tuesday, October 18, 2022

White Dwarf: Issue #54

Memory is a strange thing. Though I owned many of the issues of White Dwarf about which I've been writing in this series, some of them stand out more than others. Issue #54 (June 1984) is one of those I remember very well, in large part because of its striking cover by Peter Andrew Jones. In my opinion, the covers of Dragon were consistently good, while the covers of White Dwarf were more hit or miss. However, very few of the covers of Dragon stick in my head the way that White Dwarf's covers do. I suspect it's because the WD covers were generally wilder and more varied. They were rarely "safe" in the way that Dragon's were. That's not to say all of White Dwarf's covers were brilliant – they were not – only that many more captured my youthful imagination than did their counterparts on the front of Dragon.

Issue #54 is also memorable for its editorial by Ian Livingstone, which touches on the issue of the Satanic Panic. I reproduce his words here in their entirety:

Livingstone pretty well says it all, so I have nothing more to add beyond my usual bafflement that this actually happened. 

"Law of Nature" by Christopher Hunt is a good article on the subject of "logic in fantasy worlds." More precisely, Hunt is concerned with ensuring that fantasy settings make sense and follow intelligible rules, even though those rules may differ from "the constraints of our present world." I'm probably well disposed toward articles of this sort, because Hunt's advice is not far removed from my own general approach. In a similar vein, "Visiting Other Plains" by Ian Marsh offers advice on presenting barbarian cultures in fantasy (with an emphasis on RuneQuest) by reference to real world tribal cultures. Again, it's a good, if short, article of the sort I used to really enjoy reading.

Part 3 of Marcus L. Rowland's "The Name of the Game" focuses on science fiction RPGs, with Traveller taking pride of place, though he also references Star Frontiers, Space Opera, Star Trek, and Laserburn (which I presume had a strong presence in the UK than it did in the USA). Meanwhile, "Microview" by Russell Clark reviews two computer games, Apocalypse (6 out of 10) and Battle 1917 (7 out of 10). "Tabletop Heroes" by Joe Dever and Gary Chalk takes a look at miniature figures from Essex, Citadel, and Ral Partha with an eye toward their utility in Warhammer. 

"Open Box" reviews Murder on Arcturus Station for Traveller, rating it 7 out of 10, which seems a little low to me, especially since the reviewer, like myself, enjoyed it greatly. Kharé – Cityport of Traps, the second volume of Steve Jackson's Sorcery! gets an 8 out of 10. Espionage! and the adventure Border Crossing from Hero Games receive scores of 8 and 9 respectively. Finally, there's Pursuit to Kadath, an adventure for Call of Cthulhu published by Theatre of the Mind Enterprises. The scenario is rated 8 out of 10. All in all, a good selection of products that I think give a true sense of what the hobby was like at the time in terms of its diversity.

While Dave Langford's "Critical Mass" is usually quite forgettable for me, this issue's installment is a rare example of one that I still remember to this day. First, I remember that Langford simply refused to read, let alone review, Frank Herbert's Heretics of Dune. Second, he offers a lengthy excoriation of Battlefield Earth and its author, L. Ron Hubbard. He also reviews several other books that he likes, such as Pavane by Keith Roberts, but it's his takedown of Battlefield Earth that is the main event of his column: "It's dreadful and tedious beyond endurance."

Part 3 of "The Castle of Lost Souls" solo adventure by Dave Morris and Yve Newnham is as fun as its predecessors. I really enjoyed this series of articles when it was first published. "Down Among the Dead Men" by Alex McDonald is an examination of the undead in RuneQuest. More specifically, it expands on the treatment of the undead creatures found in the RQ rulebook. The article also mentions "Games Workshop's forthcoming Questworld pack," which, sadly, never came to pass. There are new episodes of "Thrud the Barbarian," "The Travellers," and "Gobbledigook," which are as delightful as ever.

"Temple of the Doomed Prince" by Phil Holmes is the first adventure I ever encountered for Tékumel. Statted for use with Empire of the Petal Throne, AD&D, and RuneQuest, it details a ruined temple to Ksárul, the titular Doomed Prince of the Blue Room. Though its overall design is nothing special, it's filled with plenty of atmosphere and cultural oddities that piqued my interest. At the time, I'd only ever heard of Tékumel, so this whetted my appetite for more information, though it'd be several more years before I'd actually hold a copy of Empire of the Petal Throne in my hands.

"Now You See Them, Now You Don't" by Fred Lee Cain presents two new monsters for use with Dungeons & Dragons: surrogates and shapelings. Surrogates are invisible golems, while shapelings are a naturally invisible humanoid species. Despite the descriptions of each, I found the monsters themselves rather thin gruel, notable primarily for their invisibility and little else. Finally, "Goals for Role-Playing" by J. Anthony Nanson is a short piece that outlines the kinds of goals characters might pursue – risk, business, romance – and then offers for suggestions for including them in adventures. Since the article is short, I can't really fault it for its vagueness, though I can't help but feel it barely touched upon the possibilities of its premise.

As I said at the beginning of this post, issue #54 is one that I remember very vividly, even though, by objective standards, it's not one of the magazine's best. Still, the mere presence of an adventure for use with Tékumel is certainly notable, since almost no EPT scenarios were ever published in any venue, not even the pages of TSR's own Dragon. Once again, White Dwarf demonstrates its uniqueness.
And then there was this photo from the back of the issue. Yes, it's real.

13 comments:

  1. I've always found this cover image a bit odd because of the way that sword is held. Does it not cut the horse's back? Or the wizard's hand?

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  2. I don't remember any sort of Satanic Panic thing here in the UK, and has always assumed it was more of an American thing as religion seems more important there than here, but perhaps I was just too young at the time to recognise it happening.

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    1. Technically, it wasn't a religion thing as much as a media thing. Remember, religious fundamentalists were telling kids not to drink or have sex before marriage either, which the kids were more than happy to mock and ignore. It was the press building a national hysteria by parading endless experts, doctors, psychologists, pediatricians, educators, activists, and others across the pages and televisions screens - assuring parents their kids will die or go crazy if they play this game, and showing kids that only the worst freaks and losers would ever play the game in the first place - that caused the drop in popularity. Yes, possibly for the last time, religious traditionalists were given a microphone and taken seriously when they went off on the game and joined the hysteria. But the anti-D&D push, as well as the greater 'Satanic Panic', was definitely a media generated hysteria. I wonder if the folks at TSR understood that, or they really believed it was only just the religious folks who were the problem.

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    2. It was certainly a thing here in Australia, although less so than in the United States.

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  3. I'm not sure Laserburn was ever popular as such, but I imagine that its appearance here is because of the strengthening relationship between its author Bryan Ansell and Games Workshop, which culminates (spoiler) in Ansell buying GW a year or so later.

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  4. It's amazing that the media still portrays the hobby this way.

    http://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/002/047/649/671.jpg

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  5. Phil Holmes is another Dave Morris pseudonym, and this scenario was reskinned and republished for Dragon Warriors 2E in the Cold Fury PDF

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  6. Did Langford explain why he refused to read Heretics of Dune, or did he just leave it at that?

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    1. He didn't like Chapterhouse: Dune and assumed Heretics would be more of the same. Moreover, he felt the whole series had taken a turn for the worse with God Emperor of Dune and therefore wasn't worth his time.

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    2. Yikes! Heretics was published and takes place before Chapterhouse, so no wonder he was confused. Anyway, that attitude about God Emperor was a commonplace at the time, but the current fashion is to see it as the pinnacle of the series (which has been my position since my second read of it). Obviously, individual opinions vary, and varied, on this.

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    3. Apologies; I misremembered. His complaint had nothing to do with Chapterhouse and was entirely based on his dislike of God Emperor.

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  7. Bought this. The Tekumel module is unsurprising but fine. It is at least more Tekumel gamecrack to add to the weight and mass of the pile to be judged by the petty god Zod, God of Polyhedral Dice when I expire and all the toys go back in the box.

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  8. I recently discovered that the weird sword on the cover may actually be a homage to Philippe Druillet's Yragael
    Check this out:
    https://kulturbilagan.files.wordpress.com/2019/04/yragael_strip2.jpg

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