Alexander1968 wrote:The D&D Encounters adventures seems to fecth a nice price (nice if you are the seller of course ): I sold some days ago a copy of the first Undermountain adventure, with admittedly a lot of extras, for around £ 50 Am I the only seller to have such experience?
Mars wrote:Do you mean the D20 Expedition to books? Or is there another Undermountain book? I'm not familiar with the "D&D Encounters" line.With minimal searching, the Expedition to books can be found for less than $10 each.
puterdragon wrote:Okay, that's great. I was thinking of concentrating on the G, K, and possibly D series, with F3 thrown in if I can get it.Since I've already got the R1-3 (thanks to enthusiasts here!), I didn't include them. I've got Abysthor as well (I keep forgetting that one for some reason).Right now, it's cheap modules over the pocket book-slaughtering boxed sets <sad>. I'm glad that NG is consistently great for content (I want either the playing or collecting potential).BTW: What do you think?:Golden age: 1979 and earlier (OD&D, Basic, and very early 1st Edition);Silver Age: 1980-2000 approx. (most 1st Edition and all 2nd Edition AD&D);Bronze Age: 2001+ (d20/3rd Edition).I know the dates don't line up in the usual color-coding way (I'm not sure of the exact cut-off for each Edition), but this is the way I think of collecting.In general, I don't think 4th Edition will ever be as collectable as prior Editions. Low print runs on some items will be the exceptions. Gary
FormCritic wrote:Where could I find Expedition to Castle Greyhawk for that price?
FormCritic wrote:It depends on what you consider "golden."
FormCritic wrote:It is the mid-range items you should pay attention to. I bought several of the Wilderlands adventure series modules in the $15 range. I bought Dark Tower for $20 and a second copy for $9.95. I bought two copies of Caverns of Thracia for around $5. I bought Inferno, just as it started to take off, at under $20.
Prices Fit for a Kender!Dragonlance classics at 50% off!Jeff has been at it again! After my own success with the It's Good to Be King Clearance Sale, Jeff had to go out and find his own bargains for the store. So when our distributor, Alliance Games, gave Jeff a heads-up that they were closing out all of the Dragonlance 3rd Edition books, Jeff jumped on every copy that Alliance had in stock—so now we're bringing you the last of the 3rd Edition Dragonlance books at 50% off!We have lots of cool Dragonlance books, from Wizards of the Coast's original Dragonlance Campaign Setting to a whole bunch of the Margaret Weis Productions books, including the classic Bestiary of Krynn—Revised Edition, Dragons of Krynn, and Races of Ansalon. For those of you looking for Dragonlance adventures, you'll want to check out Dragons of Spring, Age of Mortals II—Spectre of Sorrows, and Age of Mortals III—Price of Courag e.Jeff cleared Alliance out of their stock, but many of these books won't last long—especially at 50% off! So get your orders in today before they disappear, like your pocketbook around a kender!
benjoshua wrote:Is this the kind of stuff you are talking about?http://paizo.com/store/games/roleplayin ... ragonlance
Alexander1968 wrote:Not at all. WotC launched an organized play (sort of) this year with an adventure divided in various chapters, each chapter to be played each week. They produced a complete module, Halaster's Lost Apprentice, for D&D 4.0 along a series of playing aids (full colour character sheets, Monster token and so on) to be used during the weekly gaming sessions. I had one copy to spare and after finishing the program (next week a new Dark Sun Module starts to be used) I checked prices on eBay and... WOW This was my own listing. It lasted two days! ** expired/removed eBay auction **PS: I have a copy of the Dark Sun module to spare too, but I will NOT sel it until the program is finished.
benjoshua wrote:I have many of the Dragonlance modules, but I'm not that interested in most of this stuff even though some of it looks interesting.
FormCritic wrote:I would date the Golden Age all the way up to 1980, 1982 or even as high as 1985.It depends on what you consider "golden."One possible dividing line in AD&D would be the shift from monochrome to four color module covers...but there are a few classics that fall into the four color era.For me, the Golden Age ended when 2nd Edition was announced...right around late 1985.You could also date it from the official ouster of Gary Gygax...the day he was locked out of his office.Also, I don't think the Silver Age extended all the way to 2000. There as an intermediate period in the 90's where 2nd Edition D&D was basically treading water and starting to sink. Read the DRAGON magazines from the late 90's, just before the sale of TSR to Wizards of the Coast. You'll see the quality difference...generally listless nature of the publication.Ironically, some of the strongest DRAGON magazine issues were in the 100-120 range, at the end, or just after the end, of the Golden Age.
Zenfinite wrote:I'll go out on a limb here and crown myself one of the resident 4th Edition experts. Actually, Alexander, they released the organized play (called Delve Night) in 2008
Alexander1968 wrote:Well, I'm not a 4th edtion expert, but I beg to differ. D&D Encounters is not Dungeon Delve: they are both OP programs for D&D, but diffrent ones and I was talking about D&D Encounters only (I own and manage a store so I'm pretty well informed, enough to poke the Italian distributors and asking them info before they release news to their custromers ).
Zenfinite wrote:And hey, if you can get any of the older Delve Night stuff, let me know, I'm still looking to complete my run.