'', art by Trampier In 1977,
TSR, Inc. started to develop a new version of their popular
Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game called
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (
AD&D). Unlike TSR's previous rulebooks, which had been low-quality paperback booklets, the rulebooks for AD&D would be high-quality
lithographed hard covers featuring full color wrap-around cover art and many interior black & white illustrations. The first book to be published was the
Monster Manual in 1977, and Trampier, along with fellow artists
David Sutherland and
Tom Wham, provided artwork for the manual.
Tim Kask, editor of
Dragon magazine, stated in a review that the book's profuse illustrations were "outstanding", and that the illustrations "in themselves would warrant the cover price". It was the next hardcover rulebook, the ''
Player's Handbook'', that would secure Trampier his reputation while he was still in his mid-twenties. Trampier's cover depicted a temple dominated by a huge, devilish statue being looted by a group of adventurers; the back cover included a representation of the book's author,
Gary Gygax. The cover image became synonymous with the game until the cover art was replaced with a new illustration in 1982. Trampier also created several pieces of interior art for the ''Player's Handbook''. He continued to be an important contributor to the TSR brand in the company's early years. Some of his more notable works included: • Cover art and some of the interior illustrations for
Gamma World role-playing game (1978). • Map board for the wargame
Divine Right (1979). • Cover art for the ''
Dungeon Master's Screen'' (1979). [Winner of the Gamer's Choice Award for 1979] • Cover art for the
AD&D adventure
The Village of Hommlet (1979) • Interior art for the third and fourth hardcover rulebooks,
Dungeon Masters Guide (1979) and
Deities & Demigods (1980). • Interior art for many
AD&D adventures.
Wormy The September 1977 issue of
Dragon (Issue #9) featured a new 6-panel comic, Trampier's
Wormy. The first frame featured the title character, a
cigar-chomping,
pool hustling,
wargaming dragon, and subsequent issues revealed the cast of trolls and ogres who were his neighbors and friends. The stories were told from the point of view of the antagonists of the
Dungeons & Dragons game; the
wizards,
warriors and other protagonists that players would be expected to portray were inevitably presented as unwelcome intruders.
Wormy continued to appear in
Dragon for the next 10 years, until Issue #132 (April 1988).
Titan In 1980, Trampier and Jason McAllister co-designed a "monster slugathon" wargame called
Titan, for which Trampier also executed the artwork. The purpose of the game was simply to defeat other players' armies, using the victories to advance in power until there was only one army left. Trampier and McAllister self-published the game through Gorgonstar Company. It was re-published by
Avalon Hill in 1982 and gained a measure of popularity. Articles about
Titan were featured in several issues of Avalon Hill's
General magazine, and it remained in print until Avalon Hill's demise in 1998. In 2008, Valley Games printed a new edition of
Titan without Trampier's artwork. ==Disappearance==