The 80's D&D Comic that Became a (terrible) Video Game | Snarf Quest

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William SRD

William SRD

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 802
@WilliamSRD
@WilliamSRD 7 ай бұрын
Level up your tabletop RPGs with Czepeku! MAPS: www.patreon.com/czepeku/ SCI FI: www.patreon.com/czepekuscifi SCENES: www.patreon.com/czepekuscenes
@AzureIV
@AzureIV 7 ай бұрын
So... what was the game? What was the plot? What did you do in the game? Is it just a terrible retelling of the first arc of the comic?
@ZoshBox40k
@ZoshBox40k 7 ай бұрын
To be fair to Snarfquest, it’s very faithful to your average D&D campaign to have bad voice acting and unfunny jokes.
@Nathan_Talisien
@Nathan_Talisien 7 ай бұрын
Also, lots of theft, murder hobo-ism, misunderstandings, and plans going sideways in surprising fashion almost every time a plan is made.
@TheCountOfMommysCrisco
@TheCountOfMommysCrisco 7 ай бұрын
And when all-else fails, just absolute cartoon-logic.
@jakubmakalowski6428
@jakubmakalowski6428 7 ай бұрын
Not to mention how many campaigns don’t get finished.
@Nathan_Talisien
@Nathan_Talisien 7 ай бұрын
@@jakubmakalowski6428 Oh, hell yes... Like 75% of mine over the last 25ish years I've played- anything more than a fairly simple module has a good chance of running out of steam after about a year.
@bloodrunsclear
@bloodrunsclear 6 ай бұрын
I’ve been told that’s what made Honor Among Thieves was the perfect D&D film
@itsashane1552
@itsashane1552 7 ай бұрын
Snarf having a gun is objectively both the funniest and most horrifying thing that could happen
@youngimperialistmkii
@youngimperialistmkii 7 ай бұрын
I am a 1000% evangelist for the glorious, heavy metal, bad ass, sexy, era of fantasy art. The 70's and 80's were a golden era for this kind of thing.
@johndavey2340
@johndavey2340 7 ай бұрын
Sexuality being COMPLETELY removed from D&D I believe is a bad thing. I’m not saying every woman needs double D breasts and a chainmail bikini….but do we all need to be covered neck to ankle??
@ADHadh
@ADHadh 7 ай бұрын
@@johndavey2340 The problem is that "sinful images will lead people down a sinful life" American puritan mentality hasn't died out with the loss of respect Christianity experienced with the early 2000s. It just moved into people who call themselves "progressive". Ironically it's sometimes the people who did offensive sexy images who are now against the horny (like the lead animator woman from Skullgirls).
@AL2VAR
@AL2VAR 6 ай бұрын
@@ADHadh From European perspective - all Americans are extremly puritannical when it comes to sex. I wouldn't say "progressives" are especially against the horny when you have Evangelical Christians and Republicans in Texas doing sting operations and reeducation camps for men looking for (straight) sex outside of marriage.
@ravingbean9766
@ravingbean9766 6 ай бұрын
Let's make D&D Appealingly Great Again
@helbent4
@helbent4 5 ай бұрын
Make fantasy and D&D give us boners again! It seems like convoluted American culture war bs to somehow blame progressives for becoming Puritan. A very large factor is that fantasy grew up and wanted to be taken seriously.
@StubenhockerElite
@StubenhockerElite 7 ай бұрын
To paraphrase Frazetta: "You can do sexy, but there needs to be class, or else it's just porn."
@helbent4
@helbent4 5 ай бұрын
I think much (although not all) of the nostalgia over pulp-style fantasy is old guys like me reminiscing about the first boners they had before they could score one of their dad's Playboys.
@InconspicuousBot
@InconspicuousBot 7 ай бұрын
I was enjoying the art discussion so much that I forgot this video is about a Snarf Quest game.
@DestinyMagus07
@DestinyMagus07 7 ай бұрын
Can't say I expected a short dissertation on the merits of thirsty D&D art when I got up this morning, but I'm here for it.
@lhei_tayuun
@lhei_tayuun 7 ай бұрын
I always appreciate a bit of sense talking about where the pendulum is supposed to come to rest instead of swinging wildly between two cartoonish extremes.
@ffffffffROTHY
@ffffffffROTHY 7 ай бұрын
Snarf is clearly a powerful wizard as he knows the most powerful spell of all: a gun.
@ZacHawkins42
@ZacHawkins42 7 ай бұрын
Alakablam!
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
he stole that from the movie Wizards. " i am gonna show you a trick mother taught me when you where not around"
@Green-Raccoon777
@Green-Raccoon777 7 ай бұрын
​@@markusnavergard2387"I'm glad you changed your last name, you son of a bitch!" *POW!*
@DIEGhostfish
@DIEGhostfish 7 ай бұрын
I'm glad you changed your name you sunovabitch.
@skywise001
@skywise001 6 ай бұрын
Worked in Wizards ;)
@Damienx247
@Damienx247 7 ай бұрын
In Defense of 3rd Edition's art: Wayne Reynold's work was awesome enough to clear a path for him to work on Pathfinder and set the standard.
@DoctorLazers
@DoctorLazers 7 ай бұрын
Wayne Reynolds is a supremely competent artist in a technical sense. He just makes the dumbest choices with his designs.
@DIEGhostfish
@DIEGhostfish 7 ай бұрын
I liked pre-Reynolds 3.5 better honestly.
@j.2512
@j.2512 6 ай бұрын
his stull looks crappy and very adolescent
@Elkantar_Rostorgh231
@Elkantar_Rostorgh231 5 ай бұрын
I was more a fan of Todd Lockwood's art
@kasocool2812
@kasocool2812 7 ай бұрын
I like how the avoided the obvious joke of telling Michelangelo to put pants on the statue of David but still had to put a censor bar over him
@iantaran2843
@iantaran2843 7 ай бұрын
Hey The You Tube gods cannot be argued with 😂
@dieyng
@dieyng 7 ай бұрын
Yeah, thank the Americanization of our cultures for that. To this day, replicas of David in the US get censored.
@yoursonisold8743
@yoursonisold8743 7 ай бұрын
This is the level of obscure I expect and seek from this channel. Keep it up and eventually we will get the backstory of random napkin drawing by famous DnD artists that someone turned into an RPGmaker game!
@skywise001
@skywise001 6 ай бұрын
Huh...you know Id be down for that ;)
@IronChitlinSA
@IronChitlinSA 7 ай бұрын
That 20+ minute lecture on pulp fantasy art was enthralling and I forgot it was supposed to be about a video game. I was surprised when I was suddenly watching a video about Snarf.
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
i´d love a full on video by william like that. his voice is nice to lsiten to.
@RvnKnight
@RvnKnight 7 ай бұрын
14:04 Ah, Record of the Lodoss War, a great anime that was based off of a Japanese D&D replay transcript that ended up spawning its own gaming system called Sword World.
@mementomori771
@mementomori771 7 ай бұрын
Peak!
@Nemo2342
@Nemo2342 7 ай бұрын
There's an english translation of the replays that were published in the magazines on the Internet Archive if you didn't already know. It's fun watch them deal with D&D Basic mechanics.
@Miraihi
@Miraihi 7 ай бұрын
William has made a video on this topic a year ago (Capcom's Forgotten D&D Games)
@Miraihi
@Miraihi 7 ай бұрын
BTW I tried watching Record of the Lodoss War recently, as well as reading the replay book, and it didn't age well. I've been bored most of the time. The animation is also not as impressive as someone has been saying (And it couldn't be amazing even in theory, since Japan was in the middle of the economic bubble bursting at the time and the OVA had to fit much stricted budget than before). The artstyle looks nice and cozy and nostalgic, but that's about it. I understand how iconic is Record of the Lodoss War and how it walked the unthreaded ground, but I think people should temper their expectation before watching it.
@BrightHelix
@BrightHelix 7 ай бұрын
@@Nemo2342 That translation is also really funny because in the preface, the translator goes on about how Japanese people must see alignment differently due to cultural differences because they use Law and Chaos more than Good and Evil... but if you know anything about Basic, the only three alignments the game uses are Law-Neutral-Chaos
@davidb7406
@davidb7406 7 ай бұрын
80's Takhisis looks like she's about five seconds away from belting out "If I Could Turn Back Time" on her "Farewell" tour, lol.
@enkelainen
@enkelainen 7 ай бұрын
You, sir! Yes, sir.
@joshuadurant1250
@joshuadurant1250 7 ай бұрын
Considering Dragon Magazine had Bard on the Run parody songs you aren't far off.
@fandraxx
@fandraxx 7 ай бұрын
What's ironic about the removal of the horniness from the artwork is that such removal firmly *didn't* apply to the games. The barkeep in the first Dark Alliance, Yxunomei in Icewind Dale (and a lot of that game's character artwork) and some of the stuff from the Mystara arcade fighters exude borderline-absurd levels of horniness that the earlier TSR artists could've only hoped to achieve.
@WilliamSRD
@WilliamSRD 7 ай бұрын
Honestly true! The video games got a pass for a lot of stuff the tabletop couldn't! Examples in pretty much every single game!
@TheCountOfMommysCrisco
@TheCountOfMommysCrisco 7 ай бұрын
"D&D mostly left the horny behind around the advent of 3rd edition." And then brought it back with a vengeance in Baulder's Gate 3, the horniest RPG. Edit: Figures two minutes after I post this and go back to the video, he basically says the same thing >.>
@Cynidecia
@Cynidecia 7 ай бұрын
Safe Horny
@Blackadder75
@Blackadder75 7 ай бұрын
The Witcher ......
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
the horny breaks through the wall like the kool aid man
@justenleonas
@justenleonas 6 ай бұрын
Dragon age
@jakejutras5420
@jakejutras5420 4 ай бұрын
​@@Blackadder75 Notice how he said D&D, not RPG, yeah? Lmao, there were tits in Elder Scrolls Daggerfall we all know the horny didn't disappear from RPG entirely!
@s.a.l.1974
@s.a.l.1974 7 ай бұрын
I think the lack of KMFDM t shirts in World of Darkness books has proven that table top gaming art has fallen from grace
@hellbreakfast
@hellbreakfast 7 ай бұрын
It's like they don't even know any vampires.
@AspiringDevil
@AspiringDevil 7 ай бұрын
It's true, & not even a Ghost band tee.
@versebuchanan512
@versebuchanan512 7 ай бұрын
When I was in school I used to tell everybody that KMFDM stood for Kill Mother Fucking Depeche Mode
@l0rf
@l0rf 7 ай бұрын
I have no pity for the majority
@andropovification
@andropovification 7 ай бұрын
Jar Jar Binks bears a not-so-subtle resemblance to Snarf.,
@michaelthomas5433
@michaelthomas5433 7 ай бұрын
"How wude. SNARF!"
@BX-advocate
@BX-advocate 7 ай бұрын
Someone had to say it.
@planescaped
@planescaped 7 ай бұрын
I wouldn't be surprised if George Lucas used Snarf as the inspiration for Jar Jar.
@lhei_tayuun
@lhei_tayuun 7 ай бұрын
@@planescaped He was a comic book nerd and isn't terribly subtle, so that tracks.
@rocketraccoon1976
@rocketraccoon1976 6 ай бұрын
Snarf is street smart and inventive, the exact opposite of Jar Jar.
@hellbreakfast
@hellbreakfast 7 ай бұрын
William, as a career artist, I thank you for your art tangent. You are an upright man with an upright and moral take. Bring back the hip dip, for all. FOR. ALL.
@Shahanshah_Xeno
@Shahanshah_Xeno 7 ай бұрын
The rabbit hole must never end. you must now review Fisher-Price Castle too!
@ididthisonpulpous6526
@ididthisonpulpous6526 7 ай бұрын
I think the "horny" era as a concept is really saying everything before 1998 or so. Because nearly all types of art depicting what we would now call fantasy elements, including early sci-fi really, often if not primarily included alluring scantily clad males and females. That has been the style since circa 500 BC in Greece. Suggesting it was more so than Greek or Roman art is a bit of a stretch. I think we have decided that sex as a part of most rpg marketing is fine in terms of choosing your demographic and the comfort level with sexuality in fantasy the modern audience might be. Let's be clear though outside of largely neutered writings of Tolkien or Lewis most fantasy writing had some layer of overt or undertones of sexuality. Whether it was Lord Dunsany or Clark Ashston Smith they included layers of the erotic. Pulp fiction was far more lurid in it's eroticism and it was a prime mover in terms of influence on the creation of D&D. I think Americans are just scandalized by the thought of sex in any hobby or art. We want to put sex in this box and leave it out of everything else. That's not how art works... One other thing... You described Tolkien's and Tolkien inspired art as "grounded". WHAT?!?!? In terms of the visual art you are mad. Some of the art both on and licensed by Tolkiens works through the 60s, 70s and 80s are utter acid dripping insanity. You are trying to conflate the works of a handful of artists working the last 30 years and papering over the psychedelia infused art work that graced Tolkien's work for the other 30 years of it's existence.
@arcturus1231
@arcturus1231 3 ай бұрын
I got so invested in all the pulp art that I completely forgot about Snarfquest by the time you circled back to it lmao
@Tyyppi2012
@Tyyppi2012 7 ай бұрын
Nice to see some of the more obscure stuff on the channel. Here's to hoping we'll see others like Twilight: 2000 and the Skyrealms of Jorune along with the more well-known games.
@RedHerring86
@RedHerring86 7 ай бұрын
This is really interesting! A well-balanced view on the artwork, and a retrospective on a - to non-americans - very obscure piece of media. And you found the perfect tone to do it! Funny, yet sincere, and very engaging. I don't know what it is, but you have the Morgan Freeman quality of "You could tell me about literally anything and I would listen to you religiously."
@koichijenius
@koichijenius 7 ай бұрын
The Fisher Price castle game might not have evoked any core memories on its own, but I distinctly remember the toy itself and the super gaudy gold knights it had.
@stevenclark1662
@stevenclark1662 7 ай бұрын
Gaudy gold knights unlocked it for me. I 'member!
@thomriley1036
@thomriley1036 7 ай бұрын
While you're taking a deep dive into the world of Larry Elmore, be sure to check out "Brothers Barbarian" on KZbin. Larry was often talked into many questionable side-ventures by his chum (and fellow TSR Alumn) Ken Whitman. They filmed a series of weird live-action D&D videos at a now-defunct inn near his home in Kentucky where Larry had previously hosted oil-painting classes for nerds like myself. At about 6 minute mark in the video, you can see how Ken convinced Larry Elmore to run around wearing nothing but a bush. "Brothers Barbarian" features several other TSR well-knowns like Margaret Weis, if you keep watching. Not sure if Ken Whitman had anything to do with the Snarfquest game, but it sure feels like it. Also, Larry had done work on the Thundercats toy line, which also featured a "Snarf", and he also was very vocal about not approving of the look of Jar Jar Binks in 'The Phantom Menace' ...
@RaichuKFM
@RaichuKFM 6 ай бұрын
This video was surprisingly wonderful. I'm really glad you found a reason to talk about that art, it was great; and the first arc of Snarfquest was surprisingly lovely to hear about. I would definitely be more than happy for a video from you without a videogame angle, especially one on Mage. You do excellent stuff and I'm here for it. Looking forward to whatever comes next!
@Sirwilliamf
@Sirwilliamf 6 ай бұрын
19:00 That cover was NOT for Dark Sun, but a BECMI adventure that predates it by at least a year. Arena of Thyatis DDA1 it was an underrated module IMO.
@RonaldoLuizPedroso
@RonaldoLuizPedroso 7 ай бұрын
*Looks around in fear of a parent entering the room* 🥵
@nilus2k
@nilus2k 7 ай бұрын
True story. Back when I got into D&D I remember looking at a book in my living room when my mom walked in and saw a full page pinup illustrations of barely dressed wizard. I was around 15 at the time. She just said “Oh that why you boys like this game so much”.
@superhetoric
@superhetoric 7 ай бұрын
it boggles the mind how someone can claim to be into tabletop culture (especially d&d) and not also respect the heck out of sword and sorcery, certain sexist depictions of women in the art be darned. I'll always appreciate d&d for being the gateway to me discovering I love the genre and discovering amazing female protagonists like Jirel of Jory, Jenny Waynest or Sun Wolf
@jakejutras5420
@jakejutras5420 4 ай бұрын
Hell yeah man, sword and sandals is always fun.
@rollingtides
@rollingtides 7 ай бұрын
I forgot this was about a video game until 22:50
@tomalexander4327
@tomalexander4327 7 ай бұрын
Too busy staring at the artwork? 😲
@rollingtides
@rollingtides 7 ай бұрын
@@tomalexander4327 that and the fact it brought up some interesting facts i didn't know.
@kaylordehaas8499
@kaylordehaas8499 7 ай бұрын
Please continue to do videos like this. I love it when you do long form videos about d&d lore
@legomech1946
@legomech1946 7 ай бұрын
I got so sucked into your analysis on art that I forgot this was supposed to be a video on the Snarf Quest game until you reminded me halfway through! I haven't watched any of your other videos yet, but so far I appreciate your fair take on the topic of historical D&D art, and I absolutely agree with you. Having grown up playing D&D during the satanic panic of the 80's, my religious aunt freaked out when she learned I liked the game and recruited her father (my grandfather) to investigate. He asked about my hobbies and I ran him through the Red Box intro adventure. As an artist himself, who was also a pilot in WWII and drew a lot of his art in the style of the pin-up girls who would appear on bombers, he instantly fell in love with Larry Elmore's art. He only half paid attention to the adventure itself, instead gushing over the art on every page - although he was definitely sad that he couldn't save the beautiful cleric. After that session he told my aunt to back off and leave my hobby alone. Over the years, we didn't see eye to eye on everything, but that afternoon will always be a positive memory with him, and the art of D&D at the time was 100% responsible for that. So, um, I guess I'm happy that you weren't just doing a strict video game coverage video!
@willowbarrelmaker8269
@willowbarrelmaker8269 7 ай бұрын
Why did nobody tell me the boys in Dark Sun were serving like that? Shit, now I have to check out the setting
@kood995
@kood995 7 ай бұрын
RIGHT?! I like the first image William showed the most.
@nilus2k
@nilus2k 7 ай бұрын
Oh yeah Brom liked to make the girls and boys very pretty. His Dark Sun work also goes hard into the growing 90s leather fetish subculture. Lots of masks, straps and whips. Fun stuff
@DerekLippold
@DerekLippold 7 ай бұрын
Also, it’s too hot to be wearing clothes anyway 😂
@radwolf76
@radwolf76 7 ай бұрын
Every time Brom was mentioned in this my brain was adding "... or as he's known in some circles, 'Goth Anime Legs Uncle'."
@jonothanthrace1530
@jonothanthrace1530 7 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if Brom is bisexual, but he definitely seems to be repping them in his Dark Sun art.
@joshuadurant1250
@joshuadurant1250 7 ай бұрын
While in the art section I completely forgot this video was about a Snarf Quest game. Great job! I have never cared about art history before in my life. You are a natural storyteller and I think just about any topic you cover will be a great video.
@TheFreakDownStreet
@TheFreakDownStreet 7 ай бұрын
There is some kind of webcomic-y about snarf and his party. Or maybe it would be more accurate to say DnD shenanigans make up so much of webcomic dna that they all kinda feel like snarf.
@WilliamSRD
@WilliamSRD 7 ай бұрын
Absolutely! This Absolutely was ground 0 for a lot of styling in later D&D welcoming!
@jarrettperdue3328
@jarrettperdue3328 6 ай бұрын
I remember waiting impatiently each month to read the latest installment of SnarfQuest ... those gaps really impacted the way you interact with the media.
@deusvault5732
@deusvault5732 7 ай бұрын
This video alone has made me realize just how different the art is. I feel taken away to somewhere different with the old art. And the new art makes me feel more like. Informed if that makes sense
@igornascimento5776
@igornascimento5776 7 ай бұрын
10:38 who remembers Frank Frazetta drawing Eowyn? She had her (thick) thighs and butt out. Which would imply all of Rohan rode to battle without pants of any kind, since she was hidden amongst them. Great video btw
@radwolf76
@radwolf76 7 ай бұрын
Frank absolutely is a no pants in general kind of guy. There's some pieces he did featuring the armies of Mordor where the Lidless Eye could see all the way to underhill if he were to gaze upon his own forces marching off to The Black Gate.
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
i have that black ink image saved on my pc. it is grand, but the witchking is menecing. but yes. Eowyn has some THICC THIGhS. kind amakes one wish that there was a black n white frank frazetta LOTR comic out there. imagine his Arwen or Galadriel.
@garrick3727
@garrick3727 6 ай бұрын
Everyone always comments that Eowyn was meant to be disguised as a man, but anyone who's played D&D long enough knows that his artwork is exactly how that tends to play out. The player characters never want to take off their fancy magical armor or give up their weapon never mind how undercover they are going. Eowyn probably just cast off her baggy robe disguise that all adventurer's use if they don't have illusion magic.
@doomguy19931
@doomguy19931 6 ай бұрын
As a huge fan of Frazetta's work, it doesn't take long to find art of some absolutely cheeked-up dudes. So in his eyes, they were definitely wearing that to battle.
@doomguy19931
@doomguy19931 6 ай бұрын
As a huge fan of Frazetta's work, it doesn't take long to find art of some absolutely cheeked-up dudes. So in his eyes, they were definitely wearing that to battle.
@ducklord9933
@ducklord9933 7 ай бұрын
honestly while dnd art might be going downhill with them trying to get ai into the mix, look to other games like pathfinder or other ttrpgs because they are thriving in their art. Wayne Reynolds is one of the best fantasty artists working today.
@corwinberry
@corwinberry 7 ай бұрын
Pathfinder art will have you looking for hours. Even the crpg art books have amazing work. Like micro dose and just flip pages type of vibe
@yoursonisold8743
@yoursonisold8743 7 ай бұрын
I think the art in Tasha's book was pretty fine though and that was relatively recent.
@warellis
@warellis 7 ай бұрын
​@@yoursonisold8743One thing you'll notice is modern WotC art is very very covered up. And the posing is just...bland. Something about modern WotC 5e art feels a lot less interesting or vivid or something compared to earlier art or Paizo's Pathfinder art. Just a lot more dull. I suspect it's bad direction from WotC because Kobold Press's Midgard has definjtely better art
@joshuadurant1250
@joshuadurant1250 7 ай бұрын
No emotions means you lose something you can't put a name to but just isn't there. And eventually AI will make it so technically perfect that the uncanny valley will be triggered as living artists make mistakes even if you don't consciously notice them.
@SeannyOg
@SeannyOg 7 ай бұрын
I'm kind of a middle of the road on the art of D&D. I do think the older artwork was better in an iconic sense, even if it had problems. D&D had not quite solidified as a "product" until the tail end of AD&D and 3rd ED, and so the artists were drawing on general principles of good artwork. You mentioned the older artwork having a "purpose", and while the boobs and thigh comment is spot on, a lot of the older artwork better understood the use of color in general. But it also most be said that a lot of fondness for old D&D art is selection bias, we remember the good stuff and have mostly forgotten the bad. Newer D&D art is hurdled by the brand's legacy and the fact it's now a product. There's still a lot of great new D&D art that uses good coloring and soft or hard edges to direct attention, but a lot of it's very muddled. Most of it isn't bad, it just isn't very striking. If you look at older artwork a lot of the lighting isn't natural, that isn't to say it doesn't look realistic, but the way characters are lit is intentional rather than realistic. Whereas newer art seems to me to strive for realistic lighting, forgetting that good art has never been about realism but implying realism, or an authentic feeling. It's the same with "dialogue" in fiction vs real conversations. Real conversations are boring to anyone not involved, good dialogue is not boring because it uses the trappings of real conversation to deliver characterization or plot without the viewer noticing. Many of the people who are called great dialogue writers write dialogue that sounds nothing like real conversation, but it *feels* real. With that said, while I do love me some sexy art there was a disconnect with some of the older art that as I got older started to stand out to me. Once the horny wears off there's a lot of women characters depicted in older stuff who are meant to be warriors who definitely don't dress in a practical fashion even if they preferred less or no armor. People will immediately go to Conan the Barbarian and say "Well he doesn't wear a lot!" But what people forget is this is characteristic of Conan from the original pulp stories, his tendency to wear nothing but a loincloth or pants was partly an extension of his practical, no-nonsense character, and an expression of his physical prowess. He wore armor when he could, but he often didn't because he's a freakishly powerful fighter. So some bare thigh action on ladies I can overlook if there's some plausibly for it. Less plausible are the bodice breastplates. If the character in question were like a Anne Bonny, who supposedly liked to humiliate opponents by baring a breast and showing they were/had fought a woman, that could be plausible. But let's be frank most of the women depicted in overt sexual fashion in older art had little notion of such characterization in mind, and that's where the sticking point, for me anyway, comes in. Art should try to express the spirit of a character they're depicting, and in this fashion a lot (not all) of the older art does a disservice to the women. Sexuality expression (or lack thereof) is part of anyone's character, but it's rarely on display 24/7, and if you're depicting characters at ease and the women are displaying a sexual side that's at least permissible I think. But a lot of D&D's art is centered around characters of and in action, and when the sexualization is the propose rather than a by-product of such characters for no reason than sexualization that's where I take umbrage with it. To use your example of David by Michelangelo I'd argue the difference is David is standing, his natural form is meant to be marveled, not at an action. To give a plausible case where you could have an adventurer depicted in a way that still showcases their prowess and marvel at their physical form could be a warrior cleaning their armor. It could also be a refreshing in-between of the Chivalry image vs the Barbaric image, where the protective element of the armor clad warrior meets the physicality of a warrior.
@39Chevy
@39Chevy 7 ай бұрын
"Conan from the original pulp stories, his tendency to wear nothing but a loincloth or pants was partly an extension of his practical, no-nonsense character, and an expression of his physical prowess." I've been rereading Conan recently and if my collection is any indication he wears a mail shirt often. IMHO I think William is partially wrong here about boiling it all down to horny. It's also about the idealization of the human form, both male and female, almost as demigods. Like Greek statues, only the form itself reflects the physical ideals of the 70s and 80s.
@hopefulhyena3400
@hopefulhyena3400 7 ай бұрын
I greatly prefer the old art, but mostly for a reason you didn't really touch on. 5e art gives me the same feeling of when I watch a sitcom where the characters win all the time and everything is great and every problem is wrapped up in 40 minutes or less and gosh don't we all love each other and get along. Sure D&D has always had the power fantasy but I think part of that fantasy was and should be real tangible hardship.
@radwolf76
@radwolf76 7 ай бұрын
A previous boss of mine at work was obsessed with SnarfQuest. I ended up getting him both a signed copy of the volume of collected comics and a set of miniatures that Ral Partha had made.
@MikeStavola
@MikeStavola 7 ай бұрын
Corporate folks love taking advice or feedback the wrong way. Parents say, "hey can we tone down the sexy art a bit or make child friendly books, because my kids want to play and it's just a little jarring," and the corporations say, "oh hold my beer. We have no idea what 'sexy art' means, and making kids' versions of books makes too many SKUs so that'll impact profits, but we'll definitely tone things down!"
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
meanwhile, me making my nephew listen to WASP animal while i drive him to his friends
@z2ei
@z2ei 7 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say "mid-90s" as much as I would "late 90s" and more accurately, 2000 and onward. 3rd ed D&D was such a radical change because they didn't want to retain the old D&D fanbase, they wanted the ever elusive "new audience". This didn't just apply to the game, but the art as well..
@TheBayzent
@TheBayzent 7 ай бұрын
3e art still had a ton of skin...the 3e Nymph picture got me acting unwise, let alone the rack they put in half of Simbul's drawings.
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
FRANK FRAZETTA! YES THE PINNACLE OF FANTASY! i mean sword and sorcery but still.
@TheOneHoddToward
@TheOneHoddToward 7 ай бұрын
LOOK AT THE MUSCULARITY!
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
@@TheOneHoddToward I got that refrence.
@locuas5601
@locuas5601 7 ай бұрын
I actually really like the 3.5E art. What I liked is that it sold me on the idea that books like the Player's Handbooks were less like rulebooks and more like Journals someone had filled with their own notes and annotations and yes, their own art. Like some Bard writing done a chronicle of this world. It was more immersive than... say... 5E having these honestly well drawn images, but which feel like illustrations put into a professional made book, not someone's artistic rendition of something they witnessed in their travels.
@MovieMan1710
@MovieMan1710 7 ай бұрын
This whole comic is basically that one joke from Futurama. "Who needs courage when you have a gun!" Also I'd love more videos where you talk about Tabletop history and your own thoughts on it without having to connect it to a video game. Hearing you talk about this weird comic was way more entertaining than if you just recapped the video game and left it at that.
@TheBloodswordsman
@TheBloodswordsman 7 ай бұрын
Me having a shitty day. William SRD - uploads a 50+ minute video. Me in tears: Thank you
@Rimmer7
@Rimmer7 7 ай бұрын
If we're comparing the horny era to the new era where it seems ugliness is worshipped, I know which one I'd pick.
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
the redbox dragon bugs me so much with its single horn. it needs a second one to have symetry. aaaaaaaaah Elmore
@AllfatherBlack
@AllfatherBlack 7 ай бұрын
he was right to do what he did to you
@radwolf76
@radwolf76 7 ай бұрын
Hey now, a single horn never slowed Venger down.
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
@@AllfatherBlack there should be two, one should be broken. it is a personal thing mind you, the art is still stunning
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
@@radwolf76 that is true, but Vengers single horn is not in the middle of his head. it is on the side
@AspectOfVeles
@AspectOfVeles 7 ай бұрын
Snarfquest inspired my love of reading as a kid and my work as an RPG illustrator today.
@injunjoe8967
@injunjoe8967 7 ай бұрын
The badly animated Draconians in the Dragonlance animated movie was an attempt to incorporate at the time a Neverwinter Nights PC mod that featured it- unfortunately it was ill conceived and looked horrible
@markusnavergard2387
@markusnavergard2387 7 ай бұрын
i watched that movie. Bless Keither sutherland for doing research and trying to pronounce the spells correctly.
@jonothanthrace1530
@jonothanthrace1530 7 ай бұрын
I made the mistake of borrowing that from the library many years ago and couldn't get through it. Nearly everything about it was off-putting, some in ways I'm pretty sure were directly attributable to the source material (Why did they have Tasselhoff hitting on a small child?!).
@ColinRowett
@ColinRowett 7 ай бұрын
I came in expecting a video about a weird, bad, comedic D&D game, and I ended up getting an interesting lecture on the history of TTRPG artwork and a (mostly) tasteful discussion on the sexualization of women in said artwork. I love this website.
@stephenstrange6446
@stephenstrange6446 7 ай бұрын
I love your videos, man! I feel like there's not nearly enough content exploring the weird historical aspects of our hobby, and also your work is just super clean and professional. I always drop everything I'm doing to watch a new upload.
@ThePhantomSquee
@ThePhantomSquee 7 ай бұрын
If you had told me this video would make me appreciate old horny fantasy art, I'd have called you a liar, but here we are. Anyway I'm of a few minds about the changing art styles. On the one hand, I do appreciate the dynamic posing of a lot of older art, the use of color, and the traditional medium. On the other, they can be really in your face with the bottom-of-the-barrel fanservice and it's hard to look past that. On *another* hand, I agree that a lot of the more recent art tends to feel technically competent, serviceable, but also dull and nondescript. I was actually surprised to hear you praise Reynolds' art, because for some time now I've found his character art some of the most offputting among the big names. A lot of people have noted how cluttered his character designs tend to be, but more than that, there's something about the people themselves. I find myself looking at characters like Seoni and Amiri and thinking, I *like* this design in theory, I should find it attractive, but something about the way it's put to canvas makes the characters look... I don't know, waxy? Stiff? Like they exist to strike this one pose but will fall apart as soon as they try to move. At any rate, thank you for taking a risk again with the delve into fantasy art history! It reminded me a lot of watching the Eye of the Beholder documentary a few years back. Good times. Looking forward to the next one as always!
@Dantevesalius
@Dantevesalius 7 ай бұрын
I was about to throw hands about how great the Fisher price castle game was before you realised your error
@danacoleman4007
@danacoleman4007 3 ай бұрын
nerd fight 😂😂😂
@dragomanpl1109
@dragomanpl1109 7 ай бұрын
All fun and games until snarf pulls out a gun
@perryborn2777
@perryborn2777 6 ай бұрын
I like 3e's artwork The mix of color art and linework was really cool to me Not all of it is great of course, but books like The Draconomicon truly have some beautiful artwork in them. That book in particular is like a dragon anatomy book/field journal. The black dragon sketches and info are particularly cool The monster manuals are awesome too
@deathnotehell1
@deathnotehell1 7 ай бұрын
About the horny artwork, talking as someone who grew up playing games on the Xbox 360 where the majority of female character was sexualized and who wrote about video games during Gamergate, I don't think that the problem with horny art/video game characters is that there horny as much as that it was the only style for female characters in a lot of cases and with things like Steller Blade out I think that its good to have both. Sometimes its fun to have something more horny based you know. Also as for dnd art, while I agree that the artwork in 3rd edition was dull for people, I love the monster artwork from the monster manuals of that time. The bored lich in the Libris Mortis book from 3.5, which is available as a pdf online by the way, is a favorite of mine.
@TheBayzent
@TheBayzent 7 ай бұрын
I did think it was going to go that way to be honest, where everyone was sexualized. Now everything is forgetteable...
@deathnotehell1
@deathnotehell1 7 ай бұрын
@@TheBayzent I mean when everything was sexualized to hell, it all blended in too. What we need is both not one or the either. Also horny artwork for everybody would be cool too.
@digitaladventurestime
@digitaladventurestime 7 ай бұрын
The hips and thighs as a lost art comment was what got the LIKE! Well done video and analysis.
@Angel_Rin
@Angel_Rin 7 ай бұрын
Love hearing you're take on horniness in dnd art, my friend and I had come to the same conclusion a couple weeks ago, rlly nice hearing that perspective articulated :) My bf and I both love watching your videos, and I would be totally on board to see you do table top rpg videos outside of video games!
@alderic
@alderic 7 ай бұрын
Amazing video, I really liked the coverage about the art in D&D (I would not mind more videos about that, in fact I would love that). There is an often overlooked aspect in the old art: the way which they represent the backgrounds or scenes (and how the light and colors worked on them), because while often, you got your standard background, forest, castles, ect... with often no major twists, they still very evocative and unique despite that, often more that more wild backgrounds/scenes in recent fantasy art.
@mcpw2004
@mcpw2004 7 ай бұрын
Honestly, Your talks about the history of dnd and its various settings (and other systems too) is my favourite part of your videos, so it’s great to see ones which have a lot of it or are entirely focused on that
@EmjayUltra
@EmjayUltra 3 ай бұрын
This might just be your masterpiece. I feel like I watched a really professional mini doc and I got a whole snarf out of it. Thanks for sharing this!
@drtaverner
@drtaverner 7 ай бұрын
Also, traditional canvas painters are often trained in life drawing. Just look at the Renaissance paintings they're emulating with their naked dancers, fauns, dryads, etc... Getting bodies to look good with paint is a big deal and it makes sense that the oil and canvas team showed off their superior anatomy skills when painting fit, strong adventurers.
@bigs5078
@bigs5078 7 ай бұрын
Snarf Quest sounds like the name of a parody RPG inside of another game, like Fable.
@Witchgirl44
@Witchgirl44 7 ай бұрын
I’d absolutely love more videos that are just general weird d&d and TTRPG history, I just love your style of videos
@Greatdictator
@Greatdictator 7 ай бұрын
So i want to say, i did rather enjoy the video and i know you apologized for it, but i did feel like you should have done at least a brief '' playthrough'' of the general thing , maybe mention if any parts of it you rather like (even if minor) since while i UNDERSTAND , i feel like the video loses some value by not going through it. This is a PERSONAL thing since like said, encompassing everything even if its bad will be generally speaking helpfull...plus who doesnt like easy jokes,snarking and a target that writes the jokes itself lol.
@JumCuggler
@JumCuggler 7 ай бұрын
What an excellent video! Thank you for putting names to the evocative classic art that I remember from older D&D.
@thetabletopsupershow3670
@thetabletopsupershow3670 7 ай бұрын
Fun fact, Ral Partha Miniatures produced a line of tabletop miniatures for Snarf Quest ( sculpted by Jim Johnson). Dark Horse ( yes the comic company also produced miniatures) produced a blister pack of unique metal models for Snarf Quest as well.
@TheLishmeister
@TheLishmeister 7 ай бұрын
Great job William! This gave me serious Art History class vibes. This felt well researched and was very engaging. Thank you!
@kiral0606
@kiral0606 7 ай бұрын
Personnaly, I wouldn't mind at all some videos on IP without videogames. The parts where you explain the thetabletop game in details is as interesting or even more than the videogame review part. You have my blessing!
@TheBayzent
@TheBayzent 7 ай бұрын
William, cover what you feel like covering, I'm a grognard but being Spanish means there is a treasure trove of D&D content that never made the jump here and I'm always happy to learn about.
@Stimata
@Stimata 7 ай бұрын
This is the best video William SRD has made, I am so excited about this. More talking about pulp art (and less about Snarf!)
@penttikoivuniemi2146
@penttikoivuniemi2146 7 ай бұрын
I actually always thought the fighter on the cover was supposed to be a woman lol.
@Weckacore
@Weckacore 7 ай бұрын
One of my biggest gripes that I think you sort of mention but not enough to quell me: every single dnd channel on here you can pick a random video and find several unrelated magic card arts in the background. I know that mtg has thousands of unique artworks sometimes very broadly depicting a dragon or something but then why does dungeon daddy always pick niv mizzet? A specific character.
@WolfWalrus
@WolfWalrus 7 ай бұрын
Honestly the first half of the video talking about the evolution of D&D art, different phases and styles and aesthetics, that could have been a whole video by itself. Good stuff, very thorough and well-researched (Also if you want to talk about male Pathfinder characters being sexualised look up the magus Seltyiel, the edgy twink is just 👄)
@eddokter
@eddokter 7 ай бұрын
Posting for increased engagement. Also I really enjoyed this and miss a lot of these old comics.
@ValamirCleaver
@ValamirCleaver 3 ай бұрын
"SnarfQuest isn't particularly well digitized" SnarfQuest appeared in Dragon Magazine from issue #75 (July 1983) to issue #145 (May 1989) with an additional one-shot in issue #200 (December 1993). The Dragon Magazine Archive CD-ROM set was published in 1999 that contains the complete (including comics) first 250 issues of Dragon Magazine in PDF format. While the CD-ROM set is no longer available for purchase the PDFs of the individual Dragon Magazine issues can easily be found through web searches.
@tomalexander4327
@tomalexander4327 7 ай бұрын
The 80s horny artwork is hilariously camp nowadays.
@warellis
@warellis 7 ай бұрын
I don't think it's camp. I honestly think it's more interest and evocative than the modern D&D 5e stuff we see today. The technique is just plain better.
@tomalexander4327
@tomalexander4327 7 ай бұрын
@@warellis if you don't think it's camp then I have some Tom of Finland art to sell you. 😁
@bleaaarghh
@bleaaarghh 7 ай бұрын
It’s not camp, it’s just quality. Digital stuff sucks
@warellis
@warellis 7 ай бұрын
​@@tomalexander4327His stuff is good from what I recall. Like he draws his men really well honestly.
@warellis
@warellis 7 ай бұрын
​@@bleaaarghhWhile that's sort of true, WotC makes it worse I recall. Like you can hsve good digital art. I've seen good art from Midgard & Pathfinder. But when those artist were used by modern 5e WotC, the quality went down. That's what makes me suspect WotC is also partially behind the issues of modern low art quality in 5e.
@timsoyer3840
@timsoyer3840 7 ай бұрын
I love both styles. I love the modern dungeons and dragons art. Bu5 if I had to choose just one it would be Elmores. There’s nothing wrong with a gorgeous woman character art. We’re playing fantasy games for corps sake.
@daniellapain1576
@daniellapain1576 6 ай бұрын
I’m glad I watched this video as an artist. I love the old art style and never knew what it was called. Growing up I only saw certain pictures of the style and always wanted to learn more about it. It’s so much more interesting than most of the art I normally see. Now I can research the style.
@uradgula5258
@uradgula5258 7 ай бұрын
I still got my hardcover "The Worlds of TSR" from '94 art book. It's great!
@Far_Dee
@Far_Dee 7 ай бұрын
I think the draw of the channel is you and your way of covering things, not specifically covering videogames. Anyone can do that if they try (well, almost anyone), doing it with the entertainment value and information level you bring to things is harder to pull off. Branch out, see how your numbers do. I'm sure they'll still be damn good.
@Steellama
@Steellama 7 ай бұрын
I still own the original red box, the fighter on the cover is a dude, he is illustrated a dozen times in the book. You ever notice how the Microcephalic addlepates in charge of revising books never open them?
@kicksywicksy
@kicksywicksy 7 ай бұрын
Thanks WIlliam. Now i'm falling down an ever spiralling internet hole looking at classic pulpy D&D art!
@Nemo2342
@Nemo2342 7 ай бұрын
Oh hello, a video that is directly targeted at me! Just in case you don't want to read the rest of this, I'll say thank you up front for making this; I love SnarfQuest (the comic) and I'm glad to see it get some more attention online. In regards to the art, in reading Elmore's first autobiography/art book he's very upfront about how much he loves women, but even more upfront about how much he loves drawing women. You can really see it in his art, and even though the horny can be a bit much at times you have to appreciate just how skilled he is at turning his models into enduring fantasy art. Neat fact about the halfling thief at 18:03 - this was supposed to be a piece with a halfling male and a human female for Dragon magazine, but the editor told him to drop the male and make the woman the halfling. So he had to change the background from outside to inside in order to place objects to give her the right sense of scale. Moving on, I was given the SnarfQuest collection as an older kid, by some well-meaning relative who didn't think too hard about just how much cheesecake is in Elmore's art (and one of the bonus pages is just pure cheesecake). I knew nothing of D&D (though I did enjoy fantasy) but I was absolutely the target demographic for these stories and just ate them up. Fast-forward to adulthood, and as an adult with disposable income and no sense of restraint, I was able to toss my money behind a number of Elmore projects from his art collections, to reprinting SnarfQuest, the new Snarfquest graphic novel, and yes even to creating the mediocre game that you've had to experience. I'm actually proud to have gotten to help fund the books at least; Snarfquest deserved a reprint, and the Elmore art books are amazing treasures that I wish they'd keep in print and sell again to the general public. Plus it means I got some fantastic mementos from Elmore that I've tucked away in my dragon hoard for future generations. Just for reference, the original Snarfquest collection ends on the page where Snarf is declared king, and then follows with a couple of single-page full-color illustrations/pinups and a full-color short story about Snarf and Telerie fighting a werewolf with the rock star characters from the 2nd arc. As you said it makes a very good read, and I'm sure it worked well in getting more kids into D&D (the back of the book also includes character stats for D&D and AD&D so you can have them in your campaign hint hint). The PDF you're using is from a later edition that includes the continuation from Dragon, and you're right the 2nd arc pretty lackluster for the most part. Kind of like a D&D campaign that continued into higher level content when you're just not ready to let go of your characters, so I guess it's accurate there. This is not a knock on you for using it; it's the only digital version I could find as well when I tried to share the series with my friend who is too far away to borrow my physical copies. "The Mystical Plains of Sashaar" combines the Snarfquest stuff from when when Elmore tried to continue the series as a webcomic with new pages to finish up the story. It's frankly pretty bad; Elmore tags along for a lot of it as a self-insert and frequently pisses off Snarf by being too interested in Telerie. As for the game, I'm actually supposed to have an NPC in there somewhere, but frankly I've never played it enough to know and I strongly suspect they never got around to putting me in there (bullet dodged). I tried the beta, found it very rough, and completely forgot about it until this video.
@Ocarina654
@Ocarina654 6 ай бұрын
REALLY great video. The deep dive on the history of D&D art was excellent and informative. I really enjoy the video game reviews, but something a little less connected to video games and more about the hobby as a whole doesn't feel like it'd be "out of scope" to the channel, so to speak. The videos are quality, as long as you keep up that quality I don't think you'll go amiss!
@TheTalentedMrWulf
@TheTalentedMrWulf 6 ай бұрын
My 4th grade teacher gave me a copy of the graphic novel version of SnarfQuest. It was the full first arc with a bonus full color story at the back from later in the series. I treasure that book and am always happy to see it referenced.
@leonfire99
@leonfire99 7 ай бұрын
You say pathfinder is still horny baiting but really by late 1st edition and definitely into second edition they toned it down too. Just look at the redesigns of the iconics and you'll see, but it extends to the rest of the art too.
@vigorousapathygames
@vigorousapathygames 7 ай бұрын
You have just unlocked a sealed away memory, I read this comic as a kid and completely forgot about it.
@calebshaw3643
@calebshaw3643 6 ай бұрын
@WilliamSRD longtime lurk watcher. Awesome video, mostly wanted to say holy cow! I never imagined I would be reminded of that ancient King Arthur, Fisher Price game. Took me wayyy back to that honestly solid game. Keep up the good work and keep pulling out the obscure stuff hah!
@lipeckih
@lipeckih 6 ай бұрын
Personally, I prefer to consume horny separately from my other hobbies. For the expediency of not having to seclude myself in a cave each time I sit down to read or play something, if nothing else, since I do not live alone. When sitting down to play together, videogames, CCG, pnp, or whatnot, other complications pop up. If you are trying to introduce someone entirely new to the hobby, the first impression of it being pinup model cover art might push them away before they can decide whether they like the actual meat of it or not. If you are picking up a group that already have an idea about what they like, it is important to keep everyone on the same page in terms of the mood desired at the table, including the degree and direction of the horny, and the kind of art that got printed in White Wolf releases half the time, for example, is not conducive to the purpose. Also, in an attempt to push the boundaries of what they could publish, safe-for-work publications warped what their characters were wearing to the point of outright nonsensical. Not to mention entirely non-representative of what is described in the text and function, making the artwork entirely useless for the purposes of aiding imagination in setting any given scene. On the topic of Snarf itself, the original comic art itself is great. Thank you for introducing it here, I could have very well never discovered it otherwise. It is a shame the game adaptation ended up so half-baked.
@MegaCygnusX1
@MegaCygnusX1 7 ай бұрын
Legitimately your best video.
@Zanedor
@Zanedor 7 ай бұрын
For me the various forms of the modern art tends to be more my jam most of the time, both the stuff more like D&D4-5e and Pathfinder. The styles just fit my preferences more as well as the kind of fantasy that speaks to me, it's telling that I'm FAR more of a fan of the Tolkien painterly style then pulp when I think about it. That said there are some old art, and even just some bits and pieces of some older works, that I do really like. The stuff that tends to be more striking, unusual, or "out there," that spark the imagination, those are the bits of the old art that catch my eye. If I want titillation then that's just a quick Google search away for multiple sources, however it's far harder, but more rewarding, to find and digest stuff that gets the wheels in my head working and invokes feelings and wonder.
@benzu79
@benzu79 7 ай бұрын
I came across your videos few weeks ago and binged almost everything. I just got into dnd and it's super interesting to hear about the countless dnd games that are out there.
@MadDoodles
@MadDoodles 6 ай бұрын
I did not expect half of this video to be a crash course in the history of fantasy art and I'm so glad it was. :D
@evandavies16
@evandavies16 7 ай бұрын
If I had to describe modern DND art I would say we are entering a dark age. We can still get out of it right now but it's unlikely. Mostly because Hasbro is really going all in on the AI art. Along with being all in on turning DND into a life style brand.
@patrickpurciful
@patrickpurciful 6 ай бұрын
Hey! 7:49 Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erikson I love that book! I really appreciated the look into dnd art and how it changed over the years. You did a great job with it
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