
Regardless of which category you fit into, OSRIC is worth downloading. Instruction books for games used to be written more like encyclopedia entries than entertainment, but OSRIC seeks to bring the fun of the original game to a new generation of gamers, and to gamers looking to return to the glory of gaming days past. The gaming industry has also come a long way since the early '80s. However, the original rules aren't in print anymore, so they're not easy to obtain, and they certainly aren't being developed or updated to account for omissions. You can still find copies of the original books on the bookshelves of many gamers (myself included). There's nothing wrong with the original D&D rules, of course.

These are the rules used in the late 1970s to early 1980s, so players can experience role-playing games as they were when they were just getting started. The Old School Reference and Index Compilation (OSRIC) project effectively reimplements the rules for the world's first role-playing game: the original edition of Dungeons & Dragons.
