Difference between revisions of "Rulebook"

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===History of the rules===
 
===History of the rules===
 
The first rule book was a single sheet of paper, the first published and codified rulebook. Originally written, or stolen, the whole cloth from [[Dagorhir]] by James Heran III, or [[Peter LeGrue]]. The first ones cost a dollar a piece from the Science Fiction club of the local El Paso High School. Eventually, the group caught wise to La Grue. But instead of leaving, they kicked him out and built the game themselves.   
 
The first rule book was a single sheet of paper, the first published and codified rulebook. Originally written, or stolen, the whole cloth from [[Dagorhir]] by James Heran III, or [[Peter LeGrue]]. The first ones cost a dollar a piece from the Science Fiction club of the local El Paso High School. Eventually, the group caught wise to La Grue. But instead of leaving, they kicked him out and built the game themselves.   
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'''Correction'''-  The first Amtgard rulebook (1.0), was a complete multipage handbook very much like one you would pick up today. Though much simpler, it identified the basic tenets incorporated into every rulebook to date. It was not a single piece of paper, that item was a promotional handout providing an overview of [[Peter La Grues]] Amtgard first used at the El Paso Comicon in 1983. He did charge for them, $1.00 ea and he sold them exclusively as a source of income. You also paid dues every weekend in order to play. These funds went right into his pocket and became a very sore spot of contention with club members.
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The El Paso High School Science Fiction Club otherwise known as the [[ Far Travelers’]] did not start distributing handbooks until early 1984. We did not kick out La Grue, we separated from his group. For almost a year we had two Amtgard groups playing on different days. [[La Grue]], [[Pan Farstar]], [[Thanos]] Darkside, [[Haunsaure]], and there followers forming one group. [[Tawnee]], [[Nashom]]i, [[Heimdale]], [[Gilo]] and there followers  forming the other This second group  set the foundation for the 2.0 rulebook, the formation of the Kingdom of the [[Burning Lands]], The Board of Directors, and many of the classes played today.[[ Arche]]r, [[Assasian]], [[Anti-Paladin]] ,[[Bard]], [[Monk]], [[Wizard]] (revised) etc.
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La Grues group died , La Grue left El Paso and his followers either quite or rejoined The Burning Lands.
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[[Heimdale]] 2013
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What remains to us from history includes the basic tenets of our game today. Children under the age of 14 aren't allowed on the field, you must have garb, weapons, and a persona. Some awkward bits existed, for instance healers had to have a scroll with their spell written on it. In this version shield bashing, and grappling are legal. A listing of ransoms by class are given.  
 
What remains to us from history includes the basic tenets of our game today. Children under the age of 14 aren't allowed on the field, you must have garb, weapons, and a persona. Some awkward bits existed, for instance healers had to have a scroll with their spell written on it. In this version shield bashing, and grappling are legal. A listing of ransoms by class are given.  

Revision as of 19:07, 10 January 2013

The Rules of Play

The current version in play is 7.7

Yes, they skipped 7.3 & 7.4 because Brennon said so... 7.6, 7.5 Rulebook, 7.2, 7.1, 7.0, 6.5.3, 6.1, 6.0, 5.0. 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 1.0 .

History of the rules

The first rule book was a single sheet of paper, the first published and codified rulebook. Originally written, or stolen, the whole cloth from Dagorhir by James Heran III, or Peter LeGrue. The first ones cost a dollar a piece from the Science Fiction club of the local El Paso High School. Eventually, the group caught wise to La Grue. But instead of leaving, they kicked him out and built the game themselves.

Correction- The first Amtgard rulebook (1.0), was a complete multipage handbook very much like one you would pick up today. Though much simpler, it identified the basic tenets incorporated into every rulebook to date. It was not a single piece of paper, that item was a promotional handout providing an overview of Peter La Grues Amtgard first used at the El Paso Comicon in 1983. He did charge for them, $1.00 ea and he sold them exclusively as a source of income. You also paid dues every weekend in order to play. These funds went right into his pocket and became a very sore spot of contention with club members. The El Paso High School Science Fiction Club otherwise known as the Far Travelers’ did not start distributing handbooks until early 1984. We did not kick out La Grue, we separated from his group. For almost a year we had two Amtgard groups playing on different days. La Grue, Pan Farstar, Thanos Darkside, Haunsaure, and there followers forming one group. Tawnee, Nashomi, Heimdale, Gilo and there followers forming the other This second group set the foundation for the 2.0 rulebook, the formation of the Kingdom of the Burning Lands, The Board of Directors, and many of the classes played today.Archer, Assasian, Anti-Paladin ,Bard, Monk, Wizard (revised) etc. La Grues group died , La Grue left El Paso and his followers either quite or rejoined The Burning Lands.

Heimdale 2013


What remains to us from history includes the basic tenets of our game today. Children under the age of 14 aren't allowed on the field, you must have garb, weapons, and a persona. Some awkward bits existed, for instance healers had to have a scroll with their spell written on it. In this version shield bashing, and grappling are legal. A listing of ransoms by class are given.

Second Edition

In the 2.0 Rules the first weapon making instructions are found. As well as information that we would expect to find in our corpora today. For instance. If you became prime minister of Burning Lands and you were not yet a knight, you became one when you stepped down. A Squire was listed under the classes, 'A Squire is a warrior in training under a Paladin Knight or Warrior with fifteen or more battle games of experience.' Healers were not allowed to heal themselves.

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