![]() It is a modern presentation of, and 100% compatible with, those Basic & Expert Rules. OSE is based on the 1980s Basic and Expert sets. The second was the Expert Set published in 1983, which extended it through level 14. The first was the Basic Set published in 1981 which covered character levels 1 through 3. Advanced Dungeons & Dragons was published in 1977 and had 2 major revisions. The original D&D game was published in 1974. Old-School Essentials is a popular game published by Necrotic Gnome. In OSE the Dungeon Master is called the Referee. ![]() You can assume things that I don’t list here are basically like 5E with only minor differences. This information is for evaluation purposes, it should not be considered official rules of the game. I am referring here to the fifth edition of Dungeons and Dragons as 5E and Old-School Essentials as OSE. I haven’t played this yet, but I will be posting my opinion after I get a chance to play test it. ![]() The following review is based only upon my reading of the rulebook. I am doing this with the assumption that my readers are already familiar with D&D 5e. I am specifically comparing them to D&D 5e. This is one of several reviews I am doing this year of various table top roll playing games. Comparing D&D 5e to Old-School Essentials. ![]()
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