Originally posted by Sigg Oddra:
What if I say use the rules in JTAS 2&3
Sigg,
If they had been available to me I would have used them. They weren't available to me however. I didn't even know they existed until years after their publication. A list of JTAS articles tipped me off.
We're looking at 1978-1987(1) through 2006 glasses again. Sales, marketing, and production have changed out of recognition. Leaving aside buying, even learning about which games and game products were available was very hard.
Thanks to ads in AH's
The General, I knew of one actual FLGS in that period;
The Compleat Strategist. It was and is in New York City. It wasn't exactly handy to get to.
I usually bought wargames in a chain toy store in a mall whose manager just happened to 1) be a wargamer and B) be allowed enough discretion by the home office to stock such items. He carried
AH,
SPI, magazines, some mini rules, and some of the RPGs. Sadly, he didn't stock JTAS. He knew about it, he didn't stock it and he knew no one who did.
I often bought games through the mail.
AH and
SPI had large mail order sales with order forms printed right in their magazines. Without access to JTAS or a GDW catalog, if such a thing existed in 1978-1980, I had no way of knowing what GDW was offering and no way of getting it if I did.
I saw my
first issue of JTAS outside the Great Lakes Naval Training Center in 1981. I had been playing
Traveller for
three years by then. It was #7, the Champa starport issue. After that, I owned several issues, including the on 'Best of..." and saw several more. My collection of
Challenges was far more extensive.
Putting
basic rules, like those concerning robots, in a magazine with very limited circulation instead of on a rules book that stores would be more likely to stock was a mistake. Too many people never saw them. I never saw them until after I had
LBB:8 and
MT was out by then.
In 2006 with PayPal, 800 numbers, eBay, print-on-demand, .pdfs, DRMs, websites, downloads, FedEx, and all the rest, we forget what is was like trying to get hobby materials in the 1970s and 1980s.
Have fun,
Bill
1 - I picked 1987 out of thin air. It was the year I was discharged. I found it much easier to find games and gaming materials then. There were FLGS everywhere it seemed. A great change had occurred.