Friday, March 16, 2018
D&D in the News (1978): Funny Dice in Iowa, with Zeb Cook
"We're known down here as the strange people with the funny dice," begins Bob Waltman, describing the reputation of the group that met at the University of Iowa's Memorial Union. Before the game of Dungeons & Dragons became famous, it looked strange to pretty much anyone who saw it from the outside--especially reporters. But the game gets a favorable notice in this February 1978 article, "'Funny dice' creates Dungeons and Dragons' by Marlene J. Perrin.
The Iowa City Wargaming Confederation had its roots in the midwestern wargaming tradition. John Chalupsky, the group's treasurer, had been a member of the International Federation of Wargaming before it collapsed in 1973. But Dungeons & Dragons clearly captivated them now. One devotee talks about how the referee "can modify the rules to suit his purposes," another struggles to explain the appeal: "You have to play it to understand it."
Perrin's article mentions that she has competition: "the group puts out its own newspaper... which carries articles about the intricacies of Dungeons & Dragons and other games." Although editorship rotated over the years, this surely refers to their early fanzine, the Dungeon Master, which was first published in 1976.
According to the back of the first Dungeon Master, "The ICWC was founded in late August, 1975 by a group of devoted gamers. Soon after came the introduction of D&D, the game which has spread like a plague across the land. A plague because it soon becomes so addicting that assignments are shunned in favor of a trip into our little fantasy-worlds." The second issue contains a listing of the staff that producing magazine, which includes one "Dave Cook, Second Presidente El Supreme and keeper of the Bone of Contention." That issue printed an article by that individual, on the subject of a recent release called Gods, Demi-gods and Heroes:
This may be the earliest published contribution to D&D by "Zeb" Cook, lead designer of second edition Dungeons & Dragons, innumerable first edition modules, and a driving force behind Star Frontiers as well as many of TSR's other early successes. The ICWC was eager to contribute to D&D, and some of their homebrew encounter tables and classes were reprinted in issue "N" of the Judges Guild Journal. This eagerness eventually caught the attention of TSR, who expressed some reservations about the use of copyrighted material in the Dungeon Master, as we gather from the profuse apology in the third issue.
Both the Iowa City Press-Citizen and the Dungeon Master further mention John Kisner, who typed the first issue of the Dungeon Master personally. By one year into the publication of the Dungeon Master, Kisner served as "current El Presidente Supremo"of the ICWC and his self-published game, Crows & Owls, could be ordered through the Dungeon Master for $6. Incidentally, the ICWC by that sixth issue proudly advertised itself to be "those weird people with the funny dice" that Marlene Perrin would encounter soon thereafter.
Previously on D&D in the News: You're Either a Fighter, Magic-user, Cleric or Thief
Whoa! I was in grad school at Iowa for two years in the 90s, and I spotted an undergrad gaming session in that very building while waiting in line for a movie. I wonder if those guys knew how far back it went?
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