Theer but no fear

Yesterday, the Age of Theer Kickstarter campaign launched and I, of course, backed it because over the past year, I’ve fallen so in love with roleplay gaming.

Dungeons & Dragons was something I was aware of growing up but never got involved in. It’s hard to when you are directly excluded/judged or you feel unsafe, and that was my experience as a female nerd. Not just in regard to D&D, but fandoms like Star Wars and even my beloved Doctor Who.

Don’t even get me started on comic books.

Shortly after I started writing, a huge fight blew up over gatekeeping in science fiction publishing. Women into sci fi shows were dubbed “fake geek girls”. We were – are – grilled about fandom minutiae and if we don’t “pass” we get ridiculed. As both a fan and a writer of sci fi I’ve come under attack from men who want to keep me out. Out of fandom. Out of publishing. They’ve wanted to take something I loved doing from me, calling me things that I can’t repeat and would prefer to forget.

So when I discovered Todd Stashwick during Star Trek Picard, his nerdery was a weird pull/push because usually guys that into sci fi/fantasy/whatever are the ones giving geek girls the side eye or outright hassling us. Safe to say, I approached with joviality masking a fair amount of caution.

Thankfully, it wasn’t warranted, but I think that worry, that caution, shows how badly my experiences affected me and, in a lot of ways, still do. It took finding WWDND and playing my first D&D game to properly light a fire in me.

But all this is why I’m backing Age of Theer – because the vibe that Todd Stashwick and David Nett wanted to cultivate is one that evokes the excitement of 70s/80s TTRPGs but excludes the gatekeeping that was so rife back then. Todd calls it “putting new wine into old bottles” and I love that idea so much.

I love that Theer has inclusivity built in from the very beginning. That everyone is welcome at the table. It’s somewhere I don’t feel unsafe or judged, and I cannot put into words how important that is to me.

And honestly, it just looks really fun.