NASCRAG

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NASCRAG

One of NASCRAG's logos featuring mascot "Little Toby"
One of NASCRAG's logos featuring mascot "Little Toby"

Formation 1980
Type Private organization
Membership 60-80
Squirrel Queen Carole Bland
Website http://www.nascrag.org/

NASCRAG is the National Society of Crazed Gamers [1], a group of game-masters, writers, and artists who have been presenting a series of multi-round Dungeons and Dragons tournaments at the Gen Con game convention since 1980.

The NASCRAG tournament is one of the largest and the oldest[2] independent role-playing competitions[3] at Gen Con[citation needed]. It is a three-round, single-elimination, team advancement tournament in which teams of six (this number has varied over the years) compete with other teams by playing a D&D adventure. Teams are scored on role-playing, and achieving personal and team goals.

Contents

[edit] Organization

Tom Lommel organizing players for "NASCRAG Presents: A Small Problem" at Gen Con Indy 2005. Photograph by Alan De Smet.
Tom Lommel organizing players for "NASCRAG Presents: A Small Problem" at Gen Con Indy 2005. Photograph by Alan De Smet.

NASCRAG is an independent gaming organization that consists of a core of 60 to 80 members[4] (along with a number who have become less active over the years). GenCon provides Nascrag with 20-30 complimentary GM badges every year and some judges simply pay their own way. Being well staffed allows NASCRAG to accept many walk-up participants and to give players two game masters for all the NPC action in Round 3.

NASCRAG is run by "Squirrel Queen"[5] Carole Bland. Carole took over the post from her husband, NASCRAG Chief Lackey Emeritus, Len Bland, in the 1990s.

Since 2004, the job of marshaling the roughly 100 players per timeslot (4 or 5 timeslots per year) into manageable teams of six is handled by NASCRAG's Master of Ceremonies Tom Lommel and his assistant Buster Pishkur. Through many years in the 1980s and 1990s, Buster also assisted NASCRAG's long time Head Marshall "Big" Al Baker.

NASCRAG's elaborate scorekeeping system is currently handled by Jim Carter.

NASCRAG keeps a steady influx of fresh blood through the efforts of "pressgangs," lead by Brian Chase. Pressgangs wander the halls of Gen Con, attempting to persuade new players to join.

[edit] History

In 1979 a group of friends attending Gen Con wanted to play in the D&D Open. But the Open was very popular and had to turn away many players that year. These friends, headed up by Len Bland and James Robert, decided to run their own tournament starting in 1980.

Bill "Indy" Cavalier joined the group in 1982 and has been contributing an increasing number of illustrations to NASCRAG events ever since. Indy's lighthearted style complements NASCRAG's humorous adventures.

After more than two decades of existence, NASCRAG and its players have formed a growing community at Gen Con. Hundreds of players return every year to play and try to win. Some teams have been participating for decades.

NASCRAG sometimes draws on this pool of experienced players to refresh the ranks of their judges. At other times, NASCRAG has found other sources of quality judges. No matter the source - NASCRAG's goal is to maintain high-quality staff.

NASCRAG has been around long enough that several children of the original members now judge for the group.

[edit] Style

Early NASCRAG adventures featured intricate story lines with epic heroic adventure and puzzle solving. This has evolved into an emphasis on role-playing, humor, and puzzles that differs greatly from the combat, strategy, and dice-rolling of traditional D&D tournaments. The NASCRAG focus is on the characters, their interactions, and their relationship to the unfolding story. The characters are individually illustrated and often given distinctive mannerisms or vocal accents to encourage role-playing.

[edit] Adventures

[edit] Primary Tournament

Every year, NASCRAG runs a multi-round adventure as its primary tournament.

The Fez series (1980-1985)
Image:fezcovers.jpg
six adventures based on the troubles of Fez – the Wizard of Time. Licensed and printed by Mayfair Games in the 1980s. It was during this period that the name NASCRAG was coined.
The Zef series (1986-1992)
seven adventures based around Lord Becket, his freedom fighters, the evil Queen Bea the Weredragon, and an alien bird named Zef whose peck would cause personalities to switch bodies.
The Nexus series (1993-1996)
four adventures featuring dimension-hopping via the portal known only as the NEXUS, while battling the Demoness Nox and the trickster spirit Coyote.
Northern (L)attitudes (1997)
a stand-alone adventure ranging from the frozen north to a Jimmy Buffett inspired tropical island in which the heroes were searching for a fabled, lost magic item to combat an ice golem.
Catgut Willy and the Whirling Vortex of Doom (1998)
a stand-alone adventure in which one band of "Jacks" pursue a younger band of "Jacks" into the land of Faerie to save the world from the aforementioned Vortex. It memorably featured Flambeau the flamin' pig.
The NASCRAG University series (1999-2001)
three adventures about the time and dimension traveling agents of the BUSCI organization and their struggles against the evil ASCII Corporation.
The Seconds series (2002-2004)
three time traveling adventures in which humans and elves must work together to aid the eccentric Doc Zown against the depredations of the Spider Queen Lilth and her Dark Race Of Warriors. The fight ranged even into Nashalla, the NASCRAG afterlife.
The Small Problems series (2005-2007)
three adventures in which miniaturized heroes aid Prince Neville O'Bannon – a faerie god-child who doesn't know the limits of his own powers. It features faerie assassins, the mouse-folk of Emerald Bay, and a fantastic voyage inside the Prince's body in a yellow submarine. 2006's event was titled "A Touch of Fever." The final installment of this series, entitled "A Little Revenge"[6], took place in 2007.
The Pretanic Island Saga series (2008-2010) 
2008's event will be titled "Into the Wind"[7]

[edit] Secondary Events

In some years (when they are feeling ambitious) NASCRAG will run a second event.

Penguins of Destiny (1988)
a one round adventure where the heroes must retrieve the stolen Penguins of Destiny: magical statuettes with fabulous powers. The players must learn to work together or die separately. An enhanced version of this event was also played at Winter Fantasy 1998. The author of this tournament was named Treasurer for life of NASCRAG when he sold a small plastic penguin miniature at the Gen Con Auction for $20. (The office of treasurer has no official duties.)
Requiem (sometime between 1987 and 1991)
a Donagael Saga tournament run by NASCRAG.
Dance for a Dead Princess (after Requiem, before 1991)
another Donagael Saga tournament, also run by NASCRAG.
AD&D Missions of Guilt (before 1992)
a true guilty pleasure.
Celluloid Pirates (1992)
a Buck Rogers in the 25th century adventure – The crew of the Dream Runner hijack the space yacht Masquerade in hopes of capturing some rare, ancient celluloid.
The Xemo series (1997, 1998, 2006)
three adventures featuring the illusionist Xemo and his clown servants. These adventures were run in addition to the main NASCRAG events in their given years, and the proceeds donated to the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. 2006 was "Xemo III: The Cleric's Curse."

[edit] References

  1. ^ "cjones3667" (2006-08-15). NASCRAG Banner. Retrieved on 2006-09-15. Banner shows expansion of NASCRAG into NAtional Society of CRAzed Gamers.
  2. ^ (2006) "Event Highlights". Gen Con Indy: 48.  This is the on-site program book. The NASCRAG entry begins, "Providing fun as Gen Con is the whole point of NASCRAG and they've been doing it for, what, 27 years now?"
  3. ^ Baur, Shelly; William Christensen and Mike L. Fiegel. "Crazed Gamers, Unite!", Dragon Magazine, Paizo Publishing, LLC, July 2007 (issue 357), pp. 13. (English)  The article begins, "One of the longest running independent Dungeons & Dragons tournaments celebrates it's 27th Anniversary at GenCon Indy this August: NASCRAG, the NAtional Society of CRAzed Gamers."
  4. ^ NASCRAG's Staff (English) (2007-07-01). Retrieved on 2007-07-02. "Over the years there have been somewhere between 100 and 500 Nascrag Judges... There are currently somewhere between 60 and 80 who keep in constant contact via the Internet."
  5. ^ NASCRAG's Personnel (English) (2006-03-14). Retrieved on 2007-04-05. "Carole Bland, Squirrel Queen"
  6. ^ NASCRAG 2008 | NASCRAG
  7. ^ NASCRAG | Welcome to NASCRAG!

[edit] External links