OSRIC OSRIC, short for
Old School Reference and Index Compilation, is a recreation of the first edition of
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons and one of the most successful retro-clones. The first version of
OSRIC was released in 2006. The latest version,
OSRIC v. 2.2, was released in 2013.
Labyrinth Lord Labyrinth Lord (LL) is a retro-clone written and edited by Daniel Proctor and published by Goblinoid Games in 2007. LL takes its inspiration from the
1981 Basic Set edited by
Tom Moldvay and the accompanying
Expert Set by
David "Zeb" Cook. Any adventure written to be played with classic
D&D can be run using
LL with little or no adjustment. However, there are a few differences between the two games. It extends the rules so characters can advance to 20th level (the 1981
Expert Set only included levels up to 14). In addition, in a nod to
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, clerics receive spells at first level.
Basic Fantasy RPG Basic Fantasy is a retro-clone written by Chris Gonnerman that emulates and is largely compatible with the 1981
Basic and
Expert sets. Its differences from B/X D&D include
d20-style ascending
armor class and separation of character
race and
class. It was first released in 2007, and updated in 2008, 2014, and 2023. The game has been positively received.
Swords & Wizardry Swords & Wizardry (S&W), developed by Mythmere Games, emulates the
original 1974 edition of
Dungeons & Dragons.
Swords & Wizardry won the Silver for the 2009
ENnie Award for Best Free Product. There are three different versions of the game available. •
White Box, a streamlined game emulating the rules and options of just the original 1974 boxed set without expansions, creating a play style omitting many elements that were later introduced to
D&D. •
Core, which uses some expanded rules to include most classic game elements. •
Complete, including nearly all of the rules and options added to the original game from supplements and articles.
Dark Dungeons Dark Dungeons has as its primary inspiration the 1991
Dungeons & Dragons Rules Cyclopedia, with secondary inspiration (particularly for the cosmology of the default game setting) coming from the 1989
Spelljammer campaign setting. The name
Dark Dungeons and the names of the sample characters (and their players) found in examples throughout the text are used in parody of the
Chick Tract of the same name. Because
Dark Dungeons emulates the
Dungeons & Dragons Rules Cyclopedia, which itself contains collected and edited rules from the
Basic,
Expert,
Companion, and
Master sets published from 1983–1985, it is compatible with most adventures and supplements designed for those sets. However, while
Dark Dungeons does include rules for immortal level play, those rules are inspired by the 1993
Wrath of the Immortals supplement to the
Rules Cyclopedia and are not compatible with adventures and supplements designed for the 1985
Immortals Set.
Mazes & Perils Mazes & Perils RPG (
M&P) is a retro-clone developed by Wild Games Productions, emulating the
1977 version of the Basic Set edited by
John Eric Holmes.
M&P expands the game from its original level limit of level 3 up to level 12. It won the 2013
ENnie Award for
Best Free Game. An expanded
Deluxe Edition featuring new classes was released in 2015.
For Gold & Glory For Gold & Glory is a retro-clone of the
AD&D 2nd edition rules from 1989. It was first published in 2012, and was written by Justen Brown and edited by Moses Wildermuth. It is available as a free download or as a print-on-demand book.
Blueholme Blueholme is a retro-clone of the
1977 version of the Basic Set edited by
John Eric Holmes. The
Blueholme Prentice Rules, covering 1st to 3rd-level play, were first published in January 2013 by Michael Thomas of Dreamscape Design. They are available as a pay-what-you-want download or as a print-on-demand book. The Prentice Rules won the joint runner-up place in the 2014
Indie RPG Awards. There are two expanded versions in production: the Journeymanne Rules which cover play from 1st through 20th level, and the Compleat Rules which also incorporate additional sub-classes and creatures.
Old-School Essentials Originally called
B/X Essentials, Old-School Essentials is a clone of the 1981
Dungeons & Dragons Basic and Expert sets (aka B/X) edited by
Tom Moldvay and
David “Zeb” Cook respectively. The intended features of this retro-clone are 100% faithfulness and compatibility with the original rules it emulates; brevity; clarity; and meticulous organization and indexing. As of 2020,
Old-School Essentials comes in two versions: “Classic Fantasy” and “Advanced Fantasy,” with “Advanced Fantasy” including B/X compatible material inspired by the first edition of
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons. Old-School Essentials is unique in that both versions come in two different formats: All-in-one (or two) rules tomes or modular multi-book sets. ==References==