Four Reasons Why You
(and Your Kids) Should Play D&D Or Other RPGS
Such as Runequest or Tunnels and Trolls or Star Wars or
Spirt of the Century or Adventure Maximus. Why is pretty well summed up
in this article that ran in The Hollywood Reporter back in 2016. I happened to run across it again while
looking for the recent
interview Steven Colbert conducted with Joe Manganiello, ostensibly over
Manganiello’s new Death Saves clothing line
but which deviated into a discussion of whether rolling 3 d6 or 4 d6 is
preferable when rolling up a character (It’s 4D6 if you are in my game) and
probably the longest discussion about D&D on late night TV, as least as far
as I know.
Anyhow, the Hollywood Reporter article points out three
reasons why people in the entertainment
industry gravitated to D&D and why playing or running it (or any tabletop
RPG for that matter) can help you or your kids:
1.
Worldbuilding and What-if scenarios. D. B. Weiss, showrunner for Game of Thrones,
says playing D&D was perfect preparation for the world building necessary
for creating the sprawling storylines that GOT encompasses. Every session, he as the DM had to develop
worlds in which his players could adventures and run through dozens of What-if scenarios
in his head as he had to prepare for the likelihood that his players would do
something completely different than what he had prepared, opting to venture
into the dark woods instead of the intricately designed castle dungeon looming
before them (something every game master has had happen to them). Meanwhile,
Pendleton Ward, the mind behind Adventure Time, credits his years playing
D&D, with its monsters with their unique instincts and motivations and
habitats, as a huge influence in creating the Land of Ooo.
2.
Storytelling—David
Beinoff, also a showrunner for Game of Thrones, credits D&D with honing his
storytelling skills, learning through practice what hooks an audience and what
sent them nodding off. Even today, if
the story the game master tells is engaging, the players stay riveted on their
words. Lose their attention, and players pull out their smartphones and start
scrolling through their Instagram feeds. A good story can keep players sitting
around the table for hours and thousands more watching on various Twitch feeds,
as Critical Role does.
3.
Acting
and Improvisation—Mike Drucker, a writer on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy
Fallon, says that playing D&D “makes you think on your feet and
commit”. At its best, when the
gamemaster is not simplify reading material from a prepared scenario, a game
transforms into a session of improvisational theater with players responding to
what the gamemaster says and the gamemaster then riffing on the responses from
the players.
Socialization—Deborah Ann Woll, one of the stars of NetFlix’
Daredevil implies this when she said, in response to plans for yet another
D&D movie: “The adventures I’ve had
in Dungeons & Dragons will always be more exciting than anything they could
put on a screen “because it was me and I lived it, and it was spontaneous.
That’s just always going to be more exciting.”
The interaction among players helps draw players out of their shells and
interact with others. Dozens of parents over the years have told me how much
their kids loved playing D&D and other RPGS and how doing so helped them
learn to deal with other people
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