Deities & Demigods (abbreviated DDG), alternatively known as Legends & Lore (abbreviated L&L or LL), while another book called Deities and Demigods was published in 2002 by Wizards of the Coast, which acquired the D&D brand with their purchase of TSR in 1998.
The original 1980 edition was the first print appearance of various fictional non-human deities, such as Corellon Larethian, Moradin, Gruumsh, and others, many of which have become standard features of the D&D game and its derivatives. These deities were the creation of Jim Ward. Later printings of Deities & Demigods, beginning in 1981, removed some material present in the 1980 printings.
Printings
1st Edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
TSR published the first version of Deities & Demigods in 1980 as a 144-page hardcover for the first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rules. The original edition included 12 pantheons of gods taken from both myth and folklore, as well as gods for various nonhuman races, and four groups taken from fictional works: the Arthurian heroes, the Nehwon mythos from Fritz Leiber, the Melnibonéan mythos from Michael Moorcock, and the Cthulhu Mythos from H. P. Lovecraft.
The original Deities & Demigods includes a nine-page chart for clerics, as well as an entire chapter about the various planes of existence.
The Cthulhu and Melnibonéan sections were removed from the 1981 edition, making it a 128-page hardcover (which resulted in the original edition having a high collector's value). The credit to Chaosium and incorrect page and pantheon counts were still included in some of the subsequent printings.
For the 1985 printing, the book was repackaged and its name was changed to Legends & Lore.
2nd Edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
When the second edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game was released, a new Legends & Lore was written for it. Cover art is by Jeff Easley, with interior illustrations by George Barr, Terry Dykstra, Erol Otus, Erik Olsen, Jean Elizabeth Martin, Jeff Easley, Carol Heyer, Roger Loveless, John and Laura Lakey, and Keith Parkinson. Legends & Lore was expanded, completely revised from the 1st Edition AD&D volume, and rewritten for the 2nd Edition rules.
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For the third edition of Dungeons & Dragons, the name was changed back to Deities & Demigods and the cover artwork was changed again to bring it more in line with other third edition D&D manuals. The interior material bears little resemblance to the previous printings of the book (first through sixth). Additionally, this edition presents only a few historical pantheons and in something of a vacuum, without any reference to or inclusion of their development in previous D&D sources, choosing instead to detail them as one-off campaign options.
The third edition volume was written by Rich Redman, Skip Williams, and James Wyatt. The cover illustration was by Sam Wood, with interior illustrations by Kyle Anderson, Glen Angus, Matt Cavotta, Dennis Cramer, Tony DiTerlizzi, Jeff Easley, Donato Giancola, Lars Grant-West, Rebecca Guay, Matt Mitchell, Eric Peterson, Wayne Reynolds, Darrell Riche, Richard Sardinha, and Brian Snoddy, with Justin Norman, Arnie Swekel, and Sam Wood.
James Wyatt comments on the book's relationship to similar books from earlier editions: "This book owes a lot to the 1st Edition Deities and Demigods/Legends and Lore book, more so than the 2nd Edition version. However, the new material we introduced meant that we had a lot less room to include the variety of pantheons included in the earlier version. So we chose the pantheons that we felt were (a) most popular and (b) most ensconced in the popular culture of fantasy: the Greek, Norse, and Egyptian. It stung a bit to leave out the Celtic deities, but we just didn't have the space."
4th Edition Dungeons & Dragons
Rather than a separate sourcebook, Deities & Demigods is the name of a semi-regular column in Dragon and Dungeon magazines. Deities & Demigods articles in Dragon offers options for players and tips on roleplaying worshippers of a particular god, while articles in Dungeon offer backstory and monsters that DMs can use in a campaign. Starting with Dragon #380, the column was renamed Channel Divinity, though it continues to appear under its original name in Dungeon.
Artwork
The artwork for the first several printings of this "cyclopedia" was created by artists Jeff Dee, Erol Otus, Eymoth, Darlene Pekul, Jennell Jaquays, Jim Roslof, David S. LaForce, David C. Sutherland III, Jeff Lanners, and David A. Trampier, with each artist usually providing all the artwork for an entire pantheon. Erol Otus produced the cover artwork.
The most recent printings of the book contain illustrations from numerous artists and are more in line with the Wizards of the Coast modern treatment of Dungeons & Dragons. These illustrations are in full color, as compared to the black and white art of the original.
Legal history
Deities & Demigods was one of many items named in a 1992 lawsuit between TSR and Game Designers' Workshop regarding the Dangerous Journeys role-playing game and various rulebooks/sourcebooks designed for that game. One section of this lawsuit argued that "The Plane of Shadow in MYTHUS (pages 190 and 402) and MYTHUS MAGICK (pages 21–22, ...) is derived from the Plane of Shadow in the AD&D DEITIES & DEMIGODS book (Appendix 1, page 129); ..."
Reception
1st Edition
Kevin Frey reviewed the supplement in The Space Gamer No. 34. He commented that "If you like a wide variety of deities, this is for you. The gods range from Greek to Chinese to Newhon."
The original Deities & Demigods was reviewed by Andy Slack in issue #23 of the magazine White Dwarf (February/March 1981), who gave the book a rating of 8 out of 10. Slack called the book "an integral part of the rules", and he found the quick reference chart for clerics particularly worthwhile, which describe items such as what a cleric should wear, what his holy colors and animals are, when and where he should worship, and what he should sacrifice.
Lawrence Schick, in his 1991 book Heroic Worlds, was critical of the format used for the original Deities and Demigods: "Unfortunately, the book is usually used merely as a sort of Monster Manual that describes very high-powered monsters. This usage is encouraged by the book's format, which emphasizes the gods' physical abilities over their religious significance." Ozment later commented on the artwork by Erol Otus, calling it "some of the oddest, most bizarre, and original illustrations in his D&D oeuvre. This stuff looks like it burst straight out of the most trippy Cthulhu for underground comics of the '70s."
Scott Taylor for Black Gate in 2014 listed Deities & Demigods by Erol Otus as #5 in The Top 10 TSR Cover Paintings of All Time.
Scott Taylor of Black Gate listed the Legends & Lore as #7 on the list of "Top 10 'Orange Spine' AD&D Hardcovers By Jeff Easley, saying "it is hard to recover an Erol Otus, but this image of Odin is probably one of the best you will ever see. Jeff truly knocked this one out of the park in my opinion."
In his 2023 book Monsters, Aliens, and Holes in the Ground, RPG historian Stu Horvath called it a "beguiling book. Much of its initial promise is delivered in the contours of Erol Otus's epic wraparound cover painting." However, Horvath noted by listing the deities' hit points and other game statistics, the book tacitly encouraged high-level power gamers to take on the deities in combat. Nonetheless, Horvath felt the lasting effect of this book was that it may have "encouraged a generation of players to embrace an abiding interest in mythology."
2nd Edition
Keith Eisenbeis reviewed the manual in the June–July 1991 issue of White Wolf. His overall view was generally negative while he noted details about priests as a positive. He rated it overall at a 2 out of 5 possible points, qualifying it as "a substandard product".
James Voelpel from mania.com commented: "The rulebook's mix of excellent artwork, rules and layout makes Deities and Demigods a real winner. Once again, it is a bit pricey for the average gamer at $29.95, but well worth it for the contents."
The third edition Deities and Demigods won the 2002 Ennie Award for "Best Art (Interior)".
Reviews
- Backstab #39
- Backstab #43 (as "Dieux et demi-dieux")
- Coleção Dragão Brasil
- Coleção Dragão Brasil
Notes
References
Further reading
- "Tuatha de Danaan", Dragon #65.
External links
- Deities & Demigods (first edition) from the Pen & Paper RPG Database
- Legends & Lore (second edition) from the Pen & Paper RPG Database
- Deities & Demigods / Legends & Lore from the Acaeum.com
- The Inside Scoop on Gaming - RPGnet
- Review of Deities & Demigods - RPGnet d20 RPG Game Index
