NetRodent wrote:Does it have some historic significance?
VermilionFire wrote:I'll vouch for the seller, Greta Conroy, as well. As for why ST1 sells for so much, well it's an ultra rare 1st Ed. AD&D module; actually the rarest with its own series code and traditional wraparound cover. Yes, the adventure itself is crap, but so is PotVQ and Fazzlewood. Whenever the group turns toward ST1 bashing, it just reminds me of the old story about the fox and sour grapes...
VermilionFire wrote:I'll vouch for the seller, Greta Conroy, as well. As for why ST1 sells for so much, well it's an ultra rare 1st Ed. AD&D module; actually the rarest with its own series code and traditional wraparound cover. Yes, the adventure itself is crap, but so is PotVQ and Fazzlewood.
deimos3428 wrote:I still think ST1 would have been better if it featured Acererak terrorizing Hommlet.
VermilionFire wrote:As for why ST1 sells for so much, well it's an ultra rare 1st Ed. AD&D module; actually the rarest with its own series code and traditional wraparound cover. Whenever the group turns toward ST1 bashing, it just reminds me of the old story about the fox and sour grapes...
faro wrote:On the other hand, people might just genuinely not care and/or that given relative rarity it could be said to be ~4-5 times overpriced. To say nothing of timeframe...D&D, not AD&D, of course, which is possibly a reason some people didn't buy it- more feasible than the idea that everyone stood around reading/reviewing it at the garden festival/games day to decide whether it was "good enough" to purchase.It wasn't sold on that basis, it was sold as a collector's item; heralded for two consecutive months in WD.
tfm wrote:As a dungeon adventure, it doesn't seem terribly exciting. It would take the right kind of DM and players who like something different. That said, I think the concept upon which the adventure is based is without a doubt cutting edge sci-fi. It makes me think of the foundations of reality in a fashion similar to Dick's "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" the book that inspired Bladerunner (TDC is the only version to watch, btw). In Up the Garden Path reality is replaced with probability, and it's mind-blowing. The dialogue boxes in the beginning are brilliant. It's an adventure for the brain.
deimos3428 wrote:Nothing can stop the ST1 Juggernaught! Nothing!
deimos3428 wrote:morgansurname wrote:ouch...time to readjust the bids anyone? Looks in Fine...but NM????Nothing can stop the ST1 Juggernaught! Nothing! Though I'm sure some snipes will be frantically cancelled.
morgansurname wrote:ouch...time to readjust the bids anyone? Looks in Fine...but NM????
faro wrote:=Mr. Bus, I'm not even going to comment on your post!
VermilionFire wrote:Woops, thanks for pointing out it was D&D, and not AD&D. Just find it strange that some people go gaga over Fazzlewood (also D&D), which is also a crap adventure and verbatim the same as O1's text, but then say ST1 is wildly overpriced even though its text/art is only available within this one full-treatment TSR issued module. I own both and would choose the ST1 over Fazzlewood any day if forced to make the choice.