2019-08-08 OSR as a scene is dead

I think Melan is right: the OSR has desintegrated.

the OSR has desintegrated

The old-school community split this year, and its surviving pieces have gone their separate ways. It is gone. There has been surprisingly little talk about it, and most still speak in terms of a general scene, but in my eyes, the divorce has clearly taken place. The fault lines had been present for a few years, and the conflicts were visible for all to see. Google+’s shuttering by its corporate overlords provided a good opportunity for things to come apart, but it has also obscured the OSR’s disintegration. […] There was undoubtedly something there for a few years, and now there isn’t.

We had lots of activity in the forums (and they are still around: Dragonsfoot, OD&D Discussion, Knights & Knaves, and so on), then we had the blogs (and they are still around: Old School RPG Planet), then we had Google+, and now it’s all over the place and nowhere.

Dragonsfoot

OD&D Discussion

Knights & Knaves

Old School RPG Planet

I’m not active on /r/osr, nor MeWe. Is that where the various groups still interact? Lasagna Social is super small. The Old School on Mastodon is tiny.

/r/osr

Lasagna Social

Old School on Mastodon

I just noticed the following on the unofficial Reddit guide: /r/osr has 6k subscribers but /r/rpg has 680k and even something like a subreddit for a YouTube channel has more: /r/mattcolville has 41k subs.

unofficial Reddit guide

/r/osr

/r/rpg

/r/mattcolville

​#RPG ​#Old School

Comments

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The biggest community is on discord, several thousand people with lots of regulars. A lot of the OSR blog authors chat there, bounce ideas off each other, work on community projects, etc. Check Chris McDowall’s Bastionland for an invite.

– diregrizzlybear 2019-08-08 12:53 UTC

diregrizzlybear

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Catholocism didn’t end with the Protestant Reformation, I don’t know why the OSR would end because of the Sworddream Reformation, it’ll just be smaller. Declaring the OSR dead feels like folks have lost confidence in Sworddream and want to ’blow up’ the OSR in frustration.

– ruprecht 2019-08-08 13:00 UTC

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@ruprecht, Wherever Sworddream is happening, I’m not seeing it. Do you have a link? I remember seeing the announcement and then nothing else.

I think that the word “dead” is as appropriate as it is to use for any thing that’s out of fashion. Yes, it’s still around, but it’s diminished. I mean, Old School RPG Planet has plenty of blogs listed, but it no longer feels like a community. I don’t see people commenting on each other’s blogs as much – not as much as they did in 2008-2012, and not as much as people used to comment on Google+.

Old School RPG Planet

@diregrizzlybear, thanks for the info. I tried Discord around 2017, I think. I was on many different servers but the chat format didn’t really work for me, even though I’m on IRC a lot. It feels like a different niche. I don’t really have the need to chat *in real time* about role-playing games.

– Alex Schroeder 2019-08-08 14:41 UTC

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I disagree. For me, it is and always has been about the blogs. G+, Discord, Mewe, etc etc are all basically valueless, as they don’t create the kind of permanent(ish) record the blogs.

The quality has tailed off a bit across the board, but I think that’s inevitable. The low-hanging fruit has been plucked, early giants have retired, etc. But I think there’s still value in the appellation OSR, and in the work the remnants are doing.

The OSR has always been niche, and it still is. That’s ok. It doesn’t mean it’s gone.

– Charles 2019-08-08 14:50 UTC

Charles

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“Yes, it’s still around, but it’s diminished. I mean, Old School RPG Planet has plenty of blogs listed, but it no longer feels like a community. I don’t see people commenting on each other’s blogs as much – not as much as they did in 2008-2012, and not as much as people used to comment on Google+.”

Because it all moved to discord instead of being broken up across dozens of blogs. At this point, blogging is where people put more finished products, after it has been discussed, critiqued, brainstormed, and editted in semi-realtime. It isn’t that the community has disappeared from the OSR but that the blogs serve a different purpose.

It’s also where games are organized, whether on private discords or via hangouts or roll20.

– diregrizzlybear 2019-08-08 15:18 UTC

diregrizzlybear

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@diregrizzlybear, I see. Thanks!

– Alex Schroeder 2019-08-08 16:08 UTC

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To be clear I think Sworddream was stillborn. The concept was basically OSR without yucky people and that’s not really much of an idea. I don’t know if it’s a third wave of the OSR or something new altogether but the Black Hack and GLOG seem to be examples of real movements and communities in a way Sworddream never managed. Then again I don’t discord so I’m probably missing something.

– ruprecht 2019-08-08 18:58 UTC

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Yeah, at one point I made the effort of contacting all the GLOG blogs mentioned in that Who is the GLOGosphere post and was surprised to see how many there were – and how disconnected they were from each other, apparently. Many hadn��t realized that they had been listed and linked until I contacted them.

Who is the GLOGosphere

– Alex Schroeder 2019-08-08 19:10 UTC

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After a few days on Discord again, I’m not too impressed. It’s fine as it is for the people on there. But it hasn’t been drawing me in, so I didn’t feel like I was observing a community in action. I’ll keep an eye on it, for sure, but it hasn’t wowed me.

– Alex Schroeder 2019-08-17 16:55 UTC

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As I was browsing the *Monsters & Manuals* best of list and happened upon Everybody Loves Our Game: On the OSR "Scene" where the term “scene” is used like I wanted to use it:

best of list

Everybody Loves Our Game: On the OSR "Scene"

a scene is something that simply forms by accident around a set of shared interests or behaviours, and as a consequence of the interactions of human beings who have those shared interests or behaviours - nothing more or nothing less

And my impression was that the interactions are dropping off. Or that I am dropping out of it. Not for lack of shared interests but for lack of interaction.

We’ll how this Discord mania goes. For now I don’t mind using it because I get to use my IRC client and not their app. Their terms of service leave much to be desired, however.

I see that a while ago I wrote:

a while ago

I just gave their terms another read through and users must submit to *arbitration* instead of a jury trial and they may not join a *class suit*. I thought these were good things to have?

terms

I also dislike wording like the following although I was happy to see the limitation “in connection with operating and providing the Service.” I hope they take it to mean the same thing that I take it to mean.

By uploading, distributing, transmitting or otherwise using Your Content with the Service, you grant to us a perpetual, nonexclusive, transferable, royalty-free, sublicensable, and worldwide license to use, host, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform, and display Your Content in connection with operating and providing the Service.

@seven alerted my to the fact that the word “perpetual” most likely violates the General Data Protection Regulation.

@seven

General Data Protection Regulation

@technomancy alerted me to the fact that using third party clients are a problem. Just look the rules of /r/discordapp:

@technomancy

the rules of /r/discordapp

Discussion of the following will remain against our subreddit rules:
3rd party clients3rd party ‘plugins’CSS Modifications

Hah!

– Alex Schroeder 2019-08-26 17:31 UTC

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An interesting overview of how it rose and fell: The Many Deaths of the OSR by Lich Van Winkle.

The Many Deaths of the OSR

– Alex Schroeder 2020-08-05 05:20 UTC

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2021-12-17 OSR History

– Alex 2021-12-17 22:38 UTC