“Have you forgotten something?”
The great work is finished. You have crossed the t’s and dotted the i’s,
filled out the copyright notice in the legal appendix, designated your open
game content, delineated your product identity, approved the final layout. You
have paid a few hundred bucks out of your pockets for artwork, including an
eye-catching cover, which has your name plastered on it. Inside, you have
credited your layout guy, your editor, two profferaders, a cartographer, the
cover artist and multiple interior artists, and even added a special thanks
section for the Kickstarter backers after the dedication. You have an ISBN, and
you know you need a separate one for print and PDF. You may have trademarked
something along the way just to make sure.
“Have you forgotten something?”
Daddy faces the music |
If you are in the majority of old-school writers and publishers, you
have forgotten something very important: you have not credited your
playtesters. In fact, I have done a little investigation, and I have here in my hand a list of 90 products
without giving credit that were made by well-known members of the Old School
Renaissance, who nevertheless are still working and shaping discourse on the
Internet. Of course, you can rest comfortably. While no one serious would
forget to credit their cover artist, and only the most heinous would decide to
remove author credit (TSR, our own little Evil Empire, tried to pull that trick
in the 1990s with their fiction writers by using “house pseudonyms”, but even
the low-grade suckers who worked for them rebelled against that), leaving playtesters uncredited has long and noble traditions
in this hobby. Many of the classics never had them listed, and here’s the rub:
they are still good stuff.
However. Returning to play-oriented and play-informed game supplements has been
one of the major promises of old-school gaming, and that casts things in a
different light. By the fans, for the fans, from gaming group to gaming group. Here,
the role of playtesting and giving everyone due credit becomes more than a simple
act of courtesy. I would like to argue that it is, or at least it should be part of our ethos, our mission
statement. In a hobbyist subculture that embraces amateur effort and the DIY spirit,
shared creativity should recognise its contributors. It is only proper to give
credit to those who played a part in realising a game project.
There are important practical concerns, too. Playtesting an adventure is
an essential step of the design process. Yes, this sounds stupid in a hobby
about games. And yet, the trust of gamers has been abused again and again by
designers who do not game regularly, if at all, resulting in adventures which
don’t work as interactive entertainment,
which have terrible structural or balance issues, or which have decent ideas
but are so inaccessibly written that they are cumbersome to use at the table.
Playtesting is a certificate of authenticity which tells us that someone
somewhere has run the module and someone
somewhere has played them, and presumably had fun with it. It tells us the
module is functional. My submission policy for my RPG, Swords & Magic was based on two simple, hard criteria: the
author should be willing to put his or her name on the cover ( “Do I take
responsibility for this thing I have written?”), and it would have to come from
actual play with full tester credits (players and their characters).
No playtesting, no publication.
In theory, there are many experienced GMs who could design an adventure
and go straight to the presses while bypassing the testing process, and still
deliver something functional and fun. Why not? After all, if it is the same
thing we would run for our home group with confidence, is there a difference?
There is no clear answer. Sometimes playtesting doesn’t change an adventure all
that much, it just confirms it works fine and it is ready for publication.
However, the confirmation is still an important part of quality assurance.
Without that step, we only have an educated guess about the adventure’s
viability. Much more often, playtesting is tremendously useful in turning a raw
adventure into a polished final version. Maybe it still doesn’t change things fundamentally. But it can help highlight
encounters which don’t work as expected (or work, but in unexpected ways!),
text which is hard to interpret in play, details which are insufficient or
overdone, and so on. Adventures also have a tendency of growing in depth and
complexity as they are played, as the players discover connections and pursue
courses of action the GM had never thought of. Incorporating some of these emergent elements can make the
difference between safe mediocrity and something truly excellent. And that contribution belongs to our players
– our co-designers. Of course, in an ideal world, an adventure should also
be tested with multiple gaming groups, and should be GMed by someone else than
the original designer. In a well-functioning game industry, this is what I’d
expect the pros to do. Sadly, most of us do not have that luxury (although it
is one of the reasons I like going to conventions) – and one group is usually
okay.
***
Why you should give credit |
What about the List, then? What about the List? I will not publish the full thing – for reasons I will go
into shortly – but I did my research and some of the results are pretty
interesting. My research was based on my current collection of old-school
adventure modules (excluding those I don’t have presently at home in either
print or PDF). I only considered adventures which were released as “full”,
standalone products, whether commercially or for free. Adventures published in
fanzines weren’t counted. I counted hex-crawls (bottom-up setting material) and
mini-settings which could be directly used at the table among the adventures,
but not pure setting material or rules (although if anything, those two should
see even more testing than adventures – it was with a sinking feeling that I
realised a well-regarded old-school designer didn’t credit any playtesters in
his RPGs). I also restricted my investigation to the modern old-school scene,
starting from 2006 with the early OSRIC modules and Rob Kuntz’s Pied Piper
Publishing, and finishing with early 2017 (one product). My sample is obviously
skewed by including only products I actually had an interest in picking up, but
otherwise includes a fair variety of stuff from random internet finds to some
really professionally made adventures with relatively high circulation numbers.
This meant a sample of 131 adventures, of
which 90 (69%) did not credit their playtesters, and only 41 (19% 31%) which did.
Let’s face it: these numbers are not good. It costs nothing, it sure does not
take up much space (if you can squeeze in that extra monster description, you
can squeeze in your list of friends who had gone through your module), but for
all the lack of good excuses, people still don’t do it. In truth, there are
only two genuinely good reasons for leaving those names off: one, if someone
doesn’t want to be associated with the module (oh boy!), or if they would
prefer not to be listed out of concerns for their privacy or professional
reputation. In this case, it is still common courtesy to thank those testers
anonymously, or in a general sense (“thanks to all the people who have played
this module on Convention X”).
Does this mean those OSR people don’t game, or does that mean they just
don’t have a habit of crediting their playtesters? Fortunately, the situation
is slightly better than the numbers would suggest. There is no reason to
suggest we are facing an omission out of malice – I know some publishers who
don’t usually credit playtesters (although tellingly,
there are invariably exceptions to that rule in long product lines), but who
are otherwise ethical and well-respected actors. They may never have thought it
was important, or they may have missed it once and fallen into comfortable
routines. Some people are simply inconsistent, listing testers in one product
and missing them in another. Likewise, I am certain some adventures which don’t
have playtester credits have in fact been tested, sometimes very thoroughly
(there are also some which I have good reasons to suspect have never seen a single
minute of actual play). But I believe without a doubt that those non-gaming
gamers are also out there, silently plotting their nefarious, never-played
adventure scenarios.
In the absence of naming the List’s great offenders (you know who you
are) and the innocent bystanders who have meant no harm, I would rather try
something different: I will mention a selection of people who have consistently
and fairly given people playtesting
- Rob Kuntz, often in anecdotal form, and with detailed play information (too bad he has stiffed publishers and freelance artists alike).
- Zak Smith (although not in Maze if the Blue Medusa)
- Chris Kutalik
- Daniel J. Bishop
The good examples are out there, and they should be easy to follow. It
is a small issue, but there is tremendous room for improvement. Which is to
say: let’s make that small act of courtesy into a natural one.
Sometimes the list of names has the potential to be quite long. For example, my Strange Tale of Crystal Point module for AS&SH will have been run at least 13 times across six different conventions. In these cases, perhaps rather than attempt to list 80-90 names, simply acknowledging the Playtesters at conventions X,Y, Z would be better.
ReplyDeleteThat's understandable. However, if you keep those records and have a page to spare for the testers and their characters, you can start the module with an epic tapestry of carnage right at the beginning - a long, long list of characters marked with tiny crosses.
DeleteTo be clear, I completely agree with your main point. There's really no reason not to show some appreciation to the playtesters through name recognition, especially in cases where the module or product has been playtested by a home group or a small number of times in public.
DeleteA couple of quick comments, Gabor:
ReplyDelete1) I agree completely with including playtester credits in adventures; it's an important recognition that deserves more attention (and is a first step for some folks into the industry; it was in my case!). Black Blade's adventures include such information in them, and we're proud of our playtesters and their contributions!
2) Your math is slightly off: 41/131 is 31.3% not 19% :D
Allan.
Nobody has ever accused me of being a math genius, but... where did that 19% come from? I have absolutely no idea. :D
DeleteMath nothing, I'm wondering if "two profferaders" was intentional : P
DeleteRegarding your point, I must confess I have never given much thought to the importance of listing playtesters in books. I have seldom read through such lists, and I've never felt particularly reassured by their presence. The quality of the product has to be derived from other sources. It is of course a nice courtesty- my only credit in a published RPG is in just such a "special thanks" section for playtesting.
PS- I am glad to have found your new blog. I gave Premier's Fomalhaut journal a read some months ago and realized that I should have been paying more attention to your posts & work for a long time.
I assumed "two profferaders" was intentional :D
DeleteNow, where did I leave that page XX....
Allan.
Ultimately, a product is as good as the creativity and effort its contributors put into it. Playtesters can provide both; sometimes more, sometimes less, occasionally none. Usually, a good GM should get some mileage out of the feedback. Of course, some adventures are beyond help - no doubt about that.
DeleteI do scan playtester lists for interesting details. They are particularly helpful when they also provide information on the player characters the players were running, but almost nobody does that. Otherwise, they are there in the same way a profferader is there - you don't notice them because they have done a good job. .)
Every time you published another Kard és Mágia module, the first thing I read was the list of playtesters (which fortunately included their characters as well). It sometimes told a story, too ("Wow, that guy was still alive? Probably levelled up in the last adventure").
ReplyDeleteDidn't consider that point while writing this post, but right on - there is that "this guy has been everywhere" thing going on. A bit of continuity and shared history, preserved.
DeleteThe funny thing was that I was reading through the post and thinking "ohhhh shit, did I remember to credit my playtesters?"
ReplyDeleteBut seriously one of my design goals with all three of the Slumbering Ursine Dunes adventures was to see if I could pull off presenting things that came straight out of play in the Hill Cantons campaign. Like rather than writing a manuscript and playtesting it afterwards (which I did rigorously too during the revision phases with at least two different complements of players) the majority of the material was vetted by organic table play with a seriously devious group of players that go way out of their way to try and break things. I think designers forget how much of the richness of a play experience is a collective thing that it's just as much about the inventiveness of the players as it is your own and that you need to try to capture a tiny bit of that shared creative storm.