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Age of Ink
United States
Приєднався 27 сер 2018
The good old times when people read books or magazines and played games made of paper instead of computer, to learn and to have fun.
Special focus on the eighties, when computers were still competing with printed material, and when the Digital Age was still in the process of replacing the Ink Age...
If you grew up at that time, or want to know how it was back then, this is for you!
Book Passion. Gamebooks. Boardgames. Children's books. Illustrations. Fighting Fantasy. Lone Wolf. Sorcery. Tolkien. Lord of the Rings. Hobbits. Middle Earth. Magnamund. 1980s Nostalgia. Collectibles.
Special focus on the eighties, when computers were still competing with printed material, and when the Digital Age was still in the process of replacing the Ink Age...
If you grew up at that time, or want to know how it was back then, this is for you!
Book Passion. Gamebooks. Boardgames. Children's books. Illustrations. Fighting Fantasy. Lone Wolf. Sorcery. Tolkien. Lord of the Rings. Hobbits. Middle Earth. Magnamund. 1980s Nostalgia. Collectibles.
Lone Wolf Game Books: All Pictures
Page flipping with focus on illustrations from books of the Kai series: Flight from the Dark, Fire on the Water, Caverns of Kalte, Chasm of Doom, Shadow on the Sand.
Written by Joe Dever, the Lone Wolf epic saga benefited from the most amazing illustrations of all gamebooks, by Gary Chalk, whose work influenced the heroic fantasy domain for many years.
Lone Wolf became a mythical series and created a whole universe of its own, with enormous numbers of fans. A group of them launched Project Aon: a great initiative aiming at publishing all of the Lone Wolf book series online, with the authors and illustrators permission.
www.projectaon.org
Written by Joe Dever, the Lone Wolf epic saga benefited from the most amazing illustrations of all gamebooks, by Gary Chalk, whose work influenced the heroic fantasy domain for many years.
Lone Wolf became a mythical series and created a whole universe of its own, with enormous numbers of fans. A group of them launched Project Aon: a great initiative aiming at publishing all of the Lone Wolf book series online, with the authors and illustrators permission.
www.projectaon.org
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Відео
The Story of Eärendil and the Silmaril by Tolkien | Illustrations GPT4
Переглядів 2872 місяці тому
Song of Eärendil By J.R.R. Tolkien Eärendil was a mariner that tarried in Arvernien; he built a boat of timber felled in Nimbrethil to journey in; her sails he wove of silver fair, of silver were her lanterns made, her prow was fashioned like a swan, and light upon her banners laid. In panoply of ancient kings, in chainéd rings he armoured him; his shining shield was scored with runes to ward a...
Choose Your Adventure: Golden Dragon Game Books
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Published almost as early as the Fighting Fantasy series, Golden Dragon was a credible contender. Written by Dave Morris and Oliver Johnson, illustrated by Leo Hartas, Russ Nicholson and Mark Dunn, the Golden Dragon books were released between 1984 and 1985. The 6 volumes in the series are: - Crypt of the Vampire - The Temple of Flame - The Lord of Shadow Keep - The Eye of the Dragon - Curse of...
"Counter" Strike: Vintage Tabletop Strategy Wargames of the 80s
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Large-scale strategy... Historically realistic rules... One of the most gorgeous maps of its time... A complex but rewarding wargame that became a classic.
Age of Ink: What Is This Channel About?
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Introducing myself and this channel. Tour of my library. What's this all about anyway? It's about the good old times when people read books or magazines and played games made of paper, to learn and to have fun. Special focus on the eighties, when computers were still competing with printed material, and when the Digital Age was still in the process of replacing the Ink Age... If you grew up at ...
Sorcery Game Books: Play as a Wizard!
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This is the tale of Sorcery! The first GameBook series to offer a continuous, multi-volume saga... An epic adventure with outstanding rules of play, that left its mark on a whole generation of readers. Created by Steve Jackson in the early 1980s along with the first Fighting Fantasy GameBooks, Sorcery is a four-part solo adventure series that will take you through the dangerous lands of Kakhaba...
The Beautiful Vintage French Book Series "Découvertes Benjamin"
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Au début des années 80, plusieurs collections d'enyclopédies de poche sont lancées par Gallimard Jeunesse. Cette video s'Intéresse à la Collection Découverte Benjamin que je vous invite à découvrir en images depuis ma propre bibliothèque. Je les possède pratiquement tous.
The Most Awesome Wargame: Cry Havoc
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Set in medieval England, Cry Havoc offered simple but efficient rules, and a very attractive design that produced addictive gameplay. Released in 1981 and followed by an extension called Siege, and then several third-party adaptations: Samurai Blades, Vikings, Crusades, Dark Blades...
Amazon's Rings of Power: the poverty of this series is incredible
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The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power Amazon new series is everywhere. Wherever you look, whomever you speak to, you can’t avoid seeing or hearing something about it. I don’t like making negative videos, but this particularly heavy shelling makes me feel like I need to say my piece, especially because Tolkien’s universe is one of the main topics of this channel... So, Rings of Power: Splend...
Here's Why Tolkien's Lord of the Rings is So Exceptional
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After decades of reading it over and over again, I fully grasp the secret of Tolkien's masterpiece and can explain you why I believe it is so amazing... The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien Music: Parsifal by R. Wagner Special thanks to Richard Travale
Talisman: Best Adventure Board Game of the 80s
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A trip into the wonderful world of Talisman: The Magical Quest Game, my favourite board game in the 1980s... Designed by Games Workshop and illustrated by Gary Chalk. A great heroic fantasy classic. 2nd Edition. English and French versions. Special thanks to Richard Travale for the voice over.
Game Books: International Editions Compared
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At the crossroads between books and games, gamebooks were a unique phenomenon in the history of print publishing. Owing to their immense success during the 80s which continued in the decade that followed, gamebooks had an intense editing history with several versions released over the years, by editor and by country. Some have now become rare collectors. Let’s have a closer look at the various ...
Why Books Are More Powerful Than Movies
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Why Books Are More Powerful Than Movies
How J.R.R. Tolkien Published the US Version of The Hobbit
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How J.R.R. Tolkien Published the US Version of The Hobbit
Behind The Scenes: How Tolkien Published The Hobbit
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Behind The Scenes: How Tolkien Published The Hobbit
Tolkien Anniversary Edition (1992): Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Silmarillion and Others
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Tolkien Anniversary Edition (1992): Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Silmarillion and Others
Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 3 | The Caverns of Kalte
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Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 3 | The Caverns of Kalte
Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 2 | Fire on the Water
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Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 2 | Fire on the Water
Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 1 | Flight from the Dark
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Lone Wolf Kai Lord: Journey Through Magnamund | Volume 1 | Flight from the Dark
Tolkien Book Collection: LOTR, The Hobbit, The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales...
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Tolkien Book Collection: LOTR, The Hobbit, The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales...
The Hobbit: First Book in Russian (Illustrated)
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The Hobbit: First Book in Russian (Illustrated)
Fire on the Water | A Very Close Look
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Fire on the Water | A Very Close Look
The Warlock of Firetop Mountain | A Very Close Look
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The Warlock of Firetop Mountain | A Very Close Look
Crypt of the Vampire | A Very Close Look
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Crypt of the Vampire | A Very Close Look
The Lord of the Rings | A Very Close Look
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The Lord of the Rings | A Very Close Look
Flight from the Dark | A Very Close Look
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Flight from the Dark | A Very Close Look
[Book] Le Japon - 1980 Encyclopaedia for children - Pages flipping - Peaceful music
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[Book] Le Japon - 1980 Encyclopaedia for children - Pages flipping - Peaceful music
[Book] Le Livre des Explorateurs - Encyclopaedia for Teenagers - Pages Flipping - Peaceful Music
Переглядів 796 років тому
[Book] Le Livre des Explorateurs - Encyclopaedia for Teenagers - Pages Flipping - Peaceful Music
your videos are very good u should make more of them
I love Gary Chalk's artwork.
Bonjour mon ami. This brings back memories of childhood. I’m glad his son is reprinting these books for both us and a new generation of readers.
Fun video! Artwork makes the game!
Thanks for your interest
I feel like you somehow made this channel exactly for me. Keep doing what you are doing, I love what you're putting out!
Glad to hear it!
Yes. Thank you for this Age of Ink. Much appreciated. I can't stop buying the new definitive editions. And now just bought the Autumn Snow books. I'll be getting them next week if my mail carrier doesn't go on strike. Fingers crossed!
And Thank you for your interest. Glad you enjoyed
For all of your efforts I thank you✌️❤️😱
You are so welcome
Is really sad that Gamebooks Nowaday Appeal only Toward a Niche Audience, Unlike non-Interactive Books
I remembered as a young teen in the 80s playing so many of the Steve's and Ian's FF books, lone wolf and way of the tigers and loved them all. Sorcery! was the only series I couldn't pass book two for the life of me no matter how much I tried because I did not have the spell book and played straight. But I knew it was special compared to the other role playing books by far. It feels real and very tricky. Finally, after purchasing the complete first print in good condition 10 years ago, I hope to complete something I passionately wanted to do since 1985. 40 years in the making.
I hope you do :) Thanks for sharing!
I always loved Lone Wolf, partly because of the name but also because even as a kid I could detect the slightly transgressive right-wing undertone.
I’m 24) and I remember playing through the first 2 Sorcery titles, when they were released in videogame format, artwork and all. I just discovered that they were actually game books. This is so cool.
Thanks for your interest
Such great and quality content you have on your channel. I am so glad I have discovered it. Salutations de Roumanie!
Merci beaucoup Monsieur!
Just found this video, well presented. Have you seen any of the revised series? Histoic'One has released 6 games that are fully compatible with the 1980s games. A new artist, Buxeria, is the designer/artist. He is on a par with Mr. Chalk (in my opinion, better).
Thank you! Yes I've got some stuff from Historic One, it's good but in my opinion the original remains better. Of course it's a good thing that people are still playing those, and trying to build on it.
These videos are outstanding and fun! Please, please, please more! MORE!!! 🙂
Thanks :) Please do tell me which ones you've liked the most.
@@AgeofInk This one. Plus the Sorcery series vid! Though your Tolkien vids are also super fun. You’ve a great voice and command over your scripts. Don’t be afraid of many more, nor how you wish to do them. Don’t second guess yourself. Do as you’ve been doing, as what you’ve done, especially more recently, has been super solid! I wish you well moving forward!
This is a great overview. I can really see your passion for it, and I can see why, it looks really cool!
Thanks a lot, I really appreciate. Glad you found it interesting!
i remember these i would really love to have one of these as a visual novel game like bringing this style of book to life
Sure
As french all readed in the same collection :)
Finally! 🫡
Thanks
Hey look! It's Pirlouit! What a blast from the past!
I’m a Southern Yank, age 50. I NEVER saw FF books as a kid. I knew of CYOA and the early D&D Endless Quest books and I was frustrated by them. I came across the Super Endless Quest books from the late 80s, oddly, in the early 90s. So I could finally kinda create a character and have a combat system. I was older in the mid 90s when I began to find Lone Wolf and FF books in used book stores. Though I liked the world, etc from LW, I still didn’t like that I was basically forced into creating nothing more than an iteration of LW. No. I want my OWN PC 100%. But there were SO FEW American versions of FF. I finally only learned to love it, after decades, a few years ago! Of course…..now I have to pay 50 bucks for one single volume in decent condition because there are now zero used book stores, etc, etc, blah, blah, blah….
In the UK and France it was impossible not to come across a FF book
@@AgeofInkExactly what I’m only now jealous of! Heheh!
I still own six collection books (3 books each) of the German translation. I got my own first Fighting Fantasy book (also in German, as I am German) at the age of around ten - The City of Thieves, which is still one of my favourites. I owned quite a few and I have treasured my collection books for decades now. All of the German edition had die in the outer lower corner to use as random dice roll, which was really useful, of course - they didn't need page numbers, after all.
Thanks for sharing
Love the channel… and great touch with the Parsifal music background
Thanks a lot, I appreciate
Brother! Your vids are absolute gold! Please keep on! It sucks you’ve not made a vid in five months or more and I’ve just discovered you and your channel! More, dude, more! Super Endless Quest and AD$D iterations of such (both with the cool ‘bookmark character sheets’) To say nothing of Lone Wolf…the Magnamund Companion. Tolkien/Middle-Earth Quest…the short-lived rpg from it/them: Lord of the Rings Adventure Game (ICE, 1991).
Many thanks bro, I really appreciate! If you like Tolkien you'll soon enjoy a brand new vid here: the Song of Earendil
I was 11 in 1985. I discovered Talisman in 1987 at age 13 when another friend bought it (we’d been playing D&D for a year or so), and we all fell instantly in love with it. That friend sold it to another friend and he sold it to me (only missing a few chits). I followed by buying the expansion and then the Dungeon. (Sadly, I never bought City or Adventure….wish I had). Over the many decades, I’ve never met anyone who didn’t enjoy playing it! Not kidding at all. Every friend, every girlfriend…and my own daughter…. Everyone loves Talisman 2nd edition! (I have 3rd and a recent copy…..but you cannot top Chalk’s amazing art plus the slight expansions I have. Love the Shrine and Hobgoblin art the most for some reason!) Best fantasy board game ever!!! It’s a real shame the recent Talisman RPG is such a convoluted mess and not the easy, fast, rules-lite game it ought to and deserves to be! (But I have the FF clone Spellzard!, RISUS, WhiteBox:Famtastic Medieval Game, D&D B/X, OD&D itself, Tunnels & Trolls, Pits & Perils, much more for such!) May Talisman 2ed live forever!
Oh yea, without Chalk this would have been another story. But since it is, so it's liked by everyone. Just like the Lone Wolf gamebooks
@@AgeofInk This, and others, may be worth exploring as ya did with some other game books. Heh. Just an idea. Cheers to you and your channel cuz I dig it, brother!
Also, allow me to say that this was a seriously solid video of the subject. Congratulations, sir, and thank you so very much for! More, please! Heheh!
Many thanks, sir, appreciated!
An outstanding undertaking! I’m jealous I never had nor heard of this in the States at the time. Now, it’s extremely super expensive to enjoy this amazing series in the U.S. Thankfully, we can enjoy the new iteration of AFF, but I prefer the slightly expanded clone of the original FF rpg: Spellzard! If ya like rules-lite and FF, I can guarantee you’ll find joy in: Spellzard! (Not involved at all…just wanna spread the word/love). Cheers, everyone! 🙂
It's a shame they weren't as widespread in the US as in some European countries
I got some CYOA books when they first came out. It was interesting reading to an ending, then starting later to "try again." I must have done the "what if" by going back and choosing the alternate decision after a page with an ending I didn't like. I don't think I "mapped" the decision tree as a kid but I must have had some way to account for all the endings so I didn't miss any. Some of the decisions were so random (left or right) with no information as to not really be a decision. And a couple of the early adventures made me feel like, what's the point? What am I doing to solve the mission? In _Who Killed Harlowe Thrombey?_ the murderer is practically ready to confess to anyone, so the best ending is probably when someone gives you $1000 as a reward. In _Your Codename is Jonah_ the information you're supposed to be seeking is in the mail, so shows up regardless of what you do; I guess your secondary mission is to break up a spy ring, but he never tells you that! In _The Third Planet from Altair_ people on Earth decode the message that sent you there while you're exploring the alien planet, so your discoveries don't matter much; you may as well have stayed home! About a dozen years ago I was looking for alternate 2nd-person decision books. I got a couple under the D&D label, but I don't think they were game books. I also found some really terrible ones, by people who obviously didn't know how to make them or what the point was. I mean, when there's only 4 endings and most decisions just branch and link back up to get to the author's intended ending, he/she doesn't really want you to choose! So I found out about the Fighting Fantasy series and picked up a box on Ebay maybe 10 years or so ago (they were originally sold outside the U.S., since they had CAN, UK, AUS, and NZ prices on them, but not dollars). One thing they did differently is had numbered sections or paragraphs rather than devoting a whole page to the result of a decision. I thought it interesting and novel that they used stats and dice and inventory. I did map out the first one, _Warlock of Firetop Mountain._ I discovered you have to beat a strong monster early to get something in order to win, so stats and dice do matter. Another book involved you choosing spells, but when it came down to it, you could pull the curtain to let in the sun and kill the vampire, so what was the point of stats, spells and dice? I think I tried a couple more before giving up. I found at least one where in order to progress you just had to roll high stats at the start followed by good dice throughout, and if you failed a die/dice roll you were done and had to start over. Maybe I should have cheated? Someone said that if they got bad starting stats they quit and started over until they got high ones. If I ever get in the mood again, I'll try another one.
They were far from perfect but overall they offered quite a good experience. Thanks for sharing your own experience and your thoughts about this cultural phenomenon! You should give the Lone Wolf series a try someday
This is the game that got me into role playing... We played at this at school. And AD&D on the weekends. Great 80s memories...
Those Were The Days
Talisman is better when you change endgame / crown of command into other objective that finishes the game. Simply crown of command isn't this great as endgame imo. But if you create some really cool endgame rule for you and your friends , you can have amazing time playing the game.
That's correct! We often did so. For instance the one who has the most companions. Or just kill all other players.
Sorcery! Is so good
Great video!
hey thats the LoneWolf book series! i love those!
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Nicely produced video.
Glad you enjoyed it
I live in France and here Gallimard has never stopped publishing them, the better they are coming back into fashion and there are a lot of new authors who are excellent and continue to keep game books alive. Many fighting fantasy have been reissued in large formats and in hardback collectors series
Thanks for sharing!
Great video and even greater memories. Almost making me want to embark on a quest up into my parents attic to go look for any books that might have gotten boxed up lol. I 100% percent agree the story telling and world creation was incredible and hope to see Lone Wolf come to life one day. With all of the unwanted remakes churning out of Hollywood lately it seems like they might be starved of ideas and could use something fresh.
Thanks for your interest and your feedback! Lone Wolf rules
Magic of old games. But I still prefer hexes in war games than a ruler. It is make the distance so much more clear and make planning easier without making the game more streamlined.
100% agree
This is a classic and I still own my old copy.
Fantastic channel and content! I always prefer to hear the creators voice regardless of accent, it adds a level of uniqueness and character to the content, keep up the great work!
Thanks for your interest and your support!
I got everything but only played it once and didn't like it. The big downside of this game is that it is a skirmish game in which a combat between two equally skilled opponents slightly favors the defender.
That's true
@@AgeofInk I always thought about making the table even by house rule and give it a new shot. What do you think about it?
what a flash back these were cool roll the dice on your life
Oh yea
@6:00 my uncle had a full bookcase of CYOA books in the late 1980s... made me a fan. Looking at those was amazing, but I couldn't open them until I had my own. Being too sensitive, the books could not be handled by a kid in my uncle's will to keep them pristine. He started gifting me Lone Wolf books for birthday and chritmas. Got them to this day. 1-20, 21,22,26. Just bought 29 yesterday. Have 30-32 on the way, and once the reprints of those in the 20s i'm missing are out my libraire will let me know!
"If you are under 35" would be more accurate. Being 41, it literally was my introduction to fantasy RPG, LONE WOLF!!!
In Bulgaria gamebooks were popularized in the 90s (right after the communist regime) by the translator of Tolkien's LOTR. There was a whole pleiad (hehe!) of Bulgarian authors who wrote unique local new gamebooks alongside the translated ones. The Bulgarian gamebooks became so popular that for a time they occupied the top positions for overall bestselling books of any category in the country. They had amazing print run numbers. In total the "first wave" of gamebooks in the 90s were over 200 different volumes. Around the economic crisis towards the end of the decade the market of gamebooks crashed and never fully recovered to its former glory. Since the 00s computer games (especially Diablo and then WoW) overtook the leadership of kid's attention. Nowadays there's a "new wave" of gamebooks and amazing new authors developing even more original mechanics, systems and settings, but it's more of a niche thing for nostalgic older people who grew up with the first wave, and not nearly as popular with the kids anymore - who are now mostly playing video games on phones, tablets, consoles and PC. Alongside the amazing Bulgarian authors of gamebooks, we also had brilliant illustrators and our local gamebooks had absolutely stunning illustrations - both color covers and ink inside page ones. I certainly believe the quality of the Bulgarian gamebooks is so high (both literary and mechanics -wise) that they deserve quality translations in any language for fans of the genre worldwide.
Thanks for sharing! Indeed it would be interesting to know of Bulgarian gamebook translations
Just how TF did I miss this game in the 80s??! I only recently discovered it through its digital version on steam.
Super nice game
I'm only 18 but I've picked a few up recently as a sort of solo ttrpg fix in between d&d games. Must say I'm surprised these aren't more popular today I've been having a great time!
Glad to hear that my friend!
Great work, beautiful collection! I'd be curious to hear your thoughts on Legendary Kingdoms, Rider of the Black Sun and other "modern" gamebooks as well.
Thanks for the positive words! Unfortunately it's unlikely there will be a modern gamebooks topic on this channel any time soon. The focus is clearly on Retro, at least primarily
If you like this video hit a like button If you own sommerswerd subscribe to the channel
I got curious recently when Ian Livingstone was set to visit the biggest game store in town, but flipping through the new editions of Fighting Fantasy made me think the new publisher thought I was too old to give them another read. The new illustrations are a real shame, and I don't think I'm the only one who's had that kind of reaction to them. A recent UA-cam rabbithole reminded me of the charm of the original illustrations, though, so I finally decided to find a set of the first eight Wizard reprints, which I'm really looking forward to try for the first time since the early 2000s. If that goes well, I'd be very curious to try the Sorcery saga, Lone Wolf and the newer Legendary Kingdoms books. Videos like these really help to bring this cool genre to new audiences, cheers to that!
Cheers! Glad it opens old books to new audiences. There are good and bad things to say when it comes to new editions, but none of them are the focus on this channel. Nostalgia comes first :)
Great review and introduction to the game. I've only played the 4th edition, so it's great hearing about your reaction to the game when it came out in the 80s and seeing the early edition game designs! Very well done.
Glad you enjoyed it!
You really need to play 1st or 2nd edition to experience Talisman. Gary Chalk's artwork adds to the atmosphere of the game