Novel about people playing a tabletop RPG getting pulled inside [duplicate]












6
















This question already has an answer here:




  • Classic Fantasy with characters from the real world

    1 answer




A novel about people playing a tabletop RPG get pulled into the world. They have gauntlets on their arms with dice that roll for outcomes. One character was a berserker type and he had a small flying dragon with him.










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marked as duplicate by Jenayah, Buzz, Möoz, Ward, TheLethalCarrot Jan 30 at 6:28


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • 3





    Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

    – Adele C
    Jan 27 at 23:49






  • 1





    The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

    – NKCampbell
    Jan 28 at 0:05








  • 1





    @kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:38













  • Not too broad anymore

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 3:22






  • 1





    Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:43
















6
















This question already has an answer here:




  • Classic Fantasy with characters from the real world

    1 answer




A novel about people playing a tabletop RPG get pulled into the world. They have gauntlets on their arms with dice that roll for outcomes. One character was a berserker type and he had a small flying dragon with him.










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Jenayah, Buzz, Möoz, Ward, TheLethalCarrot Jan 30 at 6:28


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • 3





    Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

    – Adele C
    Jan 27 at 23:49






  • 1





    The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

    – NKCampbell
    Jan 28 at 0:05








  • 1





    @kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:38













  • Not too broad anymore

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 3:22






  • 1





    Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:43














6












6








6









This question already has an answer here:




  • Classic Fantasy with characters from the real world

    1 answer




A novel about people playing a tabletop RPG get pulled into the world. They have gauntlets on their arms with dice that roll for outcomes. One character was a berserker type and he had a small flying dragon with him.










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:




  • Classic Fantasy with characters from the real world

    1 answer




A novel about people playing a tabletop RPG get pulled into the world. They have gauntlets on their arms with dice that roll for outcomes. One character was a berserker type and he had a small flying dragon with him.





This question already has an answer here:




  • Classic Fantasy with characters from the real world

    1 answer








story-identification novel






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 28 at 7:05









TheLethalCarrot

48.8k19261309




48.8k19261309










asked Jan 27 at 23:37









kelloggdkelloggd

17817




17817




marked as duplicate by Jenayah, Buzz, Möoz, Ward, TheLethalCarrot Jan 30 at 6:28


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Jenayah, Buzz, Möoz, Ward, TheLethalCarrot Jan 30 at 6:28


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 3





    Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

    – Adele C
    Jan 27 at 23:49






  • 1





    The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

    – NKCampbell
    Jan 28 at 0:05








  • 1





    @kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:38













  • Not too broad anymore

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 3:22






  • 1





    Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:43














  • 3





    Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

    – Adele C
    Jan 27 at 23:49






  • 1





    The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

    – NKCampbell
    Jan 28 at 0:05








  • 1





    @kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:38













  • Not too broad anymore

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 3:22






  • 1





    Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:43








3




3





Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

– Adele C
Jan 27 at 23:49





Hiya, I just want to back up what FuzzyBoots has said- this question will be easier to answer if you ask it separately, as two questions. Also, to save you a step later, any more details you have might make the difference in someone finding an answer. Were the books in English? When did you read them? Were they appropriate for young people, or just adults? Do you remember cover art or anything similar?

– Adele C
Jan 27 at 23:49




1




1





The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

– NKCampbell
Jan 28 at 0:05







The RPG pulled into another world book gets asked about once a month it seems - almost certainly a dupe. Wonder if we could just pin that and the one about getting sucked into another world via PC game to the home screen.... :D - came here to vtc but will leave open to allow for edit

– NKCampbell
Jan 28 at 0:05






1




1





@kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 1:38







@kelloggd If you want the second question answered, paste your description into another question: "A story about a man looking to lose weight. He taps into something primal, not only losing weight but changing, becoming stronger and faster. But he continues to change, growing more aggressive. There was a scene about him fighting a master with fighting sticks."

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 1:38















Not too broad anymore

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 3:22





Not too broad anymore

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 3:22




1




1





Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 20:43





Apologies and thanks to everyone for the tips. Unfortunately, these are books I read when I was a kid and after 30+ years the details I have are very limited but will include what I can. Thankfully I someone was able to figure out the first one with the limited detail. I am surprised and thankful as there was very little I could remember but it is one of those questions that continued to plague me. Again, sorry for the errors in posting and thanks to everyone for the responded.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 20:43










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















12














The book you describe is one of Andre Norton's worst books (and the very first Dungeons and Dragons novel so far as I know), Quag Keep.




Once, they were role-playing gamers in our world.

They came from different places and different backgrounds.

Now they're summoned together by some magical force...to a land that mirrors the games they used to play.

Quag Keep.
Can they band together to unlock the secret of their summoning--and rescue from the legendary Quag Keep the person who may be able to return them home?







share|improve this answer


























  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

    – Pelinore
    Jan 28 at 0:38








  • 1





    If it's that, this is also a duplicate

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:47











  • That is the one. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:39











  • @kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

    – FuzzyBoots
    Jan 29 at 21:26











  • @FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 21:29


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









12














The book you describe is one of Andre Norton's worst books (and the very first Dungeons and Dragons novel so far as I know), Quag Keep.




Once, they were role-playing gamers in our world.

They came from different places and different backgrounds.

Now they're summoned together by some magical force...to a land that mirrors the games they used to play.

Quag Keep.
Can they band together to unlock the secret of their summoning--and rescue from the legendary Quag Keep the person who may be able to return them home?







share|improve this answer


























  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

    – Pelinore
    Jan 28 at 0:38








  • 1





    If it's that, this is also a duplicate

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:47











  • That is the one. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:39











  • @kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

    – FuzzyBoots
    Jan 29 at 21:26











  • @FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 21:29
















12














The book you describe is one of Andre Norton's worst books (and the very first Dungeons and Dragons novel so far as I know), Quag Keep.




Once, they were role-playing gamers in our world.

They came from different places and different backgrounds.

Now they're summoned together by some magical force...to a land that mirrors the games they used to play.

Quag Keep.
Can they band together to unlock the secret of their summoning--and rescue from the legendary Quag Keep the person who may be able to return them home?







share|improve this answer


























  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

    – Pelinore
    Jan 28 at 0:38








  • 1





    If it's that, this is also a duplicate

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:47











  • That is the one. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:39











  • @kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

    – FuzzyBoots
    Jan 29 at 21:26











  • @FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 21:29














12












12








12







The book you describe is one of Andre Norton's worst books (and the very first Dungeons and Dragons novel so far as I know), Quag Keep.




Once, they were role-playing gamers in our world.

They came from different places and different backgrounds.

Now they're summoned together by some magical force...to a land that mirrors the games they used to play.

Quag Keep.
Can they band together to unlock the secret of their summoning--and rescue from the legendary Quag Keep the person who may be able to return them home?







share|improve this answer















The book you describe is one of Andre Norton's worst books (and the very first Dungeons and Dragons novel so far as I know), Quag Keep.




Once, they were role-playing gamers in our world.

They came from different places and different backgrounds.

Now they're summoned together by some magical force...to a land that mirrors the games they used to play.

Quag Keep.
Can they band together to unlock the secret of their summoning--and rescue from the legendary Quag Keep the person who may be able to return them home?








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 28 at 7:10









TheLethalCarrot

48.8k19261309




48.8k19261309










answered Jan 27 at 23:41









David JohnstonDavid Johnston

2,9831126




2,9831126













  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

    – Pelinore
    Jan 28 at 0:38








  • 1





    If it's that, this is also a duplicate

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:47











  • That is the one. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:39











  • @kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

    – FuzzyBoots
    Jan 29 at 21:26











  • @FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 21:29



















  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

    – Pelinore
    Jan 28 at 0:38








  • 1





    If it's that, this is also a duplicate

    – Stormblessed
    Jan 28 at 1:47











  • That is the one. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 20:39











  • @kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

    – FuzzyBoots
    Jan 29 at 21:26











  • @FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

    – kelloggd
    Jan 29 at 21:29

















en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

– Pelinore
Jan 28 at 0:38







en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Norton "In 1976, Gary Gygax invited Norton to play Dungeons & Dragons in his Greyhawk world. Norton subsequently wrote Quag Keep, which involved a group of characters who travel from the real world to Greyhawk. It was the first novel to be set, at least partially, in the Greyhawk setting and, according to Alternative Worlds, the first to be based on D&D."

– Pelinore
Jan 28 at 0:38






1




1





If it's that, this is also a duplicate

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 1:47





If it's that, this is also a duplicate

– Stormblessed
Jan 28 at 1:47













That is the one. Thank you.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 20:39





That is the one. Thank you.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 20:39













@kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

– FuzzyBoots
Jan 29 at 21:26





@kelloggd: You can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.

– FuzzyBoots
Jan 29 at 21:26













@FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 21:29





@FuzzyBoots Done. Thank you.

– kelloggd
Jan 29 at 21:29



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