"The Making of OD&D 1970-1977" promotional book image, showing four ribbon bookmarks! |
"Sneak Peak" image shown during the panel presentation |
Then, a few days ago, WOTC provided an updated release schedule that says that the book will come out on June 18th. Interestingly, the title has now been updated to "1970-1977" in this press release and also the mock-up promotional image shown at the top of this page. Does this change mean that it will discuss Holmes Basic, released in 1977, and edited by J. Eric Holmes from the OD&D booklets?
The full description from the press release reads:
"The ultimate book showcasing D&D's inception, including Gary Gygax's never-before-seen first draft of D&D written in 1973, a curated collection of published fanzine and magazine articles contribute to D&D's origin story. Each document is introduced, described, and woven into the story by one of the game's foremost historians, Jon Peterson."
- "Gary Gygax's never-before-seen first draft of D&D written in 1973"
- "a replica of the original Dungeons & Dragons game, page for page"
- "never-before seen correspondence" between Gygax and Arneson
- "a curated collection of published fanzine and magazine articles"
- historical context by Jon Peterson
The book is already available for pre-order at Amazon for $99, but also with a price-drop guarantee:
The Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons: 1970-1977
I've already pre-ordered it myself!
Note that while The Art & Arcana Deluxe, which is the previous WOTC publication most similar in nature to this one, still has a list price of $125 on Amazon, it is currently for sale for $66. Looking at my records, the price when I pre-ordered it was $100, but with the pre-order price guarantee I got it for $63.50.
Update:
Just out today (2/15/24) is a fascinating interview with Jason Tondro, who I quoted above, further detailing the contents of this book. From this it's clear it will include the entirety of 2nd Edition Chainmail, the "Guidon D&D" draft, the first printing of the LBBs (complete with the Tolkien references) and the first three supplements, among much other correspondence and magazine articles. It's a long interview (38+ minutes) but well worth the time spent watching it.
See also:
See also these other posts:
The Making of OD&D Book: What Might the "Precursors" Be?
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