25 Years of Denial: The Gold Dragon Incident Gets the Anniversary Treatment
There are gaming groups, and then there are archaeological sites with snacks.
The Crypt Creeps have now been playing together for over twenty-five years, depending on how generously one treats time, memory, and Craig’s relationship with the truth. This is not merely a milestone. It is a containment breach with candles. A quarter-century of weekly games, LAN nights, campaigns, respawns, tactical disasters, loot disputes, suspiciously confident decision-making, and the slow accumulation of in-jokes dense enough to generate their own gravity.
Some groups celebrate anniversaries with a nice dinner.
Some groups commission art.
Some groups write heartfelt retrospectives about friendship, loyalty, and the shared joy of imaginary worlds.
We have chosen to commemorate our long-running association with fake magazine covers, black-and-white dungeon comics, and sticker designs about Craig being a menace to civilised society.
This feels correct.
The Crypt Creeps were never really built on dignity. They were built on showing up, rolling dice, ignoring plans, blaming pathfinding, and gradually transforming every preventable disaster into folklore. And no piece of folklore has endured with the radioactive half-life of The Gold Dragon Incident.
For those unfamiliar with the sacred text, the Gold Dragon Incident allegedly took place around 2003, during one of our Neverwinter Nights adventures on the NODNOL server. We say “allegedly” because dates blur, hard drives die, memories improve themselves in the retelling, and Craig has spent more than two decades maintaining a level of plausible deniability usually reserved for parliamentary inquiries.
The broad strokes, however, remain clear.
There was a town.
There was a gold dragon.
The gold dragon was about two storeys tall.
The party had entered the town to perform normal adventurer business: trade, gather information, sell rabbit pelts, avoid starving, and generally behave like people who had not been raised by wolves in a cursed inventory screen.
Craig, meanwhile, looked at the two-storey lawful-good dragon — a creature that was less “random monster” and more “municipal authority with wings” — and apparently identified it as a viable pickpocketing opportunity.
This was not a shadowy wyrm sleeping on stolen treasure in some forgotten cavern. This was not a morally ambiguous beast guarding a hoard of cursed coins. This was effectively the town sheriff, except the sheriff was covered in gold scales, the size of a terrace house, and presumably capable of resolving petty crime with a single raised eyebrow.
Craig saw this and thought, in essence, “Yes. That.”
And thus began one of the great load-bearing jokes of the group.
The exact tactical theory remains unclear. Craig’s implied version of events has always suggested some daring rogue manoeuvre. A bold gambit. A misunderstood act of genius. Perhaps even a high-risk, high-reward operation that lesser minds simply failed to appreciate.
Everyone else’s version involves a failed roll, immediate consequences, civic exile, and the party being forced to experience the educational side of medieval justice.
There is also the small matter of the server log, which, inconveniently for Craig, appears to have preserved the essence of the affair with the grim efficiency of a court stenographer.
You attempt to pickpocket the dragon.
You fail.
There are some sentences that need no embellishment. This is one of them.
The first comic in this anniversary collection asks a question that probably should have been raised before the dice came out: where exactly does one expect a two-storey dragon to keep loose change?
Horns: no pockets.
Wings: no pockets.
Scales: no pockets.
Tail: no pockets.
Conclusion: no pockets.
This is the sort of preliminary investigation most thieves might conduct before attempting a theft. A brief anatomical survey. A moment of professional caution. Perhaps even a whispered team discussion beginning with, “Hang on, does the dragon have trousers?”
Craig, of course, has always preferred a more direct research methodology. Some people learn by study. Some by observation. Craig learns by pushing the red button, pulling the cursed lever, opening the suspicious chest, digging the hole, climbing the impossible wall, or in this case, attempting targeted wealth redistribution from a civic dragon.
The comic captures this perfectly. Craig, studying the problem with the bright-eyed optimism of a man who has not yet met the consequences department, simply improvises. The dragon, being ancient, wealthy, intelligent, and now personally involved, offers the necessary clarification.
That is not a skill check.
It was, regrettably, a crime check.
This is the kind of rules interpretation that arrives too late to be useful but early enough to be funny forever.
The second comic, Passive Perception, moves from legal theory into stealth mechanics.
Craig approaches the sleeping dragon with the confidence of a shadow. Unfortunately, the environment appears to have been designed by someone who hates rogues. Coins, bones, armour, helmets, a lute, assorted debris, and at least one squeaky object all conspire to produce the traditional soundtrack of bad stealth.
Clank.
Rattle.
Twang.
Squeak.
There is a moment in every tabletop session where the player believes they are being subtle, and the rest of the table can already hear the town guard putting on boots. This was one of those moments, except scaled up to include a dragon large enough to have its own weather system.
The dragon opens one eye.
“I am awake, wealthy, ancient, and taking this personally.”
There are few things in fantasy more dangerous than an ancient dragon. One of them is an ancient dragon with a valid complaint. Another is Craig asking, “So I roll with disadvantage?”
The answer, in hindsight, was probably no.
Not because disadvantage was too harsh.
Because by then the roll had become more of an administrative formality. The universe had already reviewed the application and rejected it on moral, practical, and architectural grounds.
The third comic, Kobayashi Maru, gives the incident the post-disaster philosophical treatment it deserves.
In Craig’s defence — and let us be clear, this is a phrase that should always make nearby adults nervous — he has occasionally suggested that the whole affair was essentially unwinnable. A no-win scenario. A trap. A Kobayashi Maru. The sort of impossible test designed to reveal character, expose the illusion of control, and perhaps explain why everyone was suddenly banned from town.
Myles, naturally, objects to this framing.
“You created the scenario.”
Zaph, with the cold precision of a man who alphabetises ammunition and considers group discussion a failure state, adds the necessary second clause.
“Then failed the scenario.”
Dave, holding the rabbit pelts and possibly still trying to work out whether they can be sold somewhere else, completes the prosecution.
“Then made us live in the scenario.”
Craig’s response, of course, is not shame. It is not apology. It is not even recognition. It is the serene expression of a man who has detected narrative value in his own indictment.
“So you admit it had narrative weight.”
And this is why the joke has lasted twenty-five years.
The Gold Dragon Incident is not merely funny because Craig tried to pickpocket a dragon. That would be enough, obviously. But it endures because it contains the full Craig cycle in miniature.
First, a bold idea.
Second, no meaningful consultation.
Third, immediate consequences.
Fourth, group suffering.
Fifth, long-term denial.
Sixth, eventual conversion into commemorative merchandise.
It is less an incident than a template.
Which brings us neatly to the stickers.
Because after twenty-five years, the Crypt Creeps do not merely have jokes. We have iconography. Dave is no longer just Dave; he is a wandering reagent magnet, a lore-hungry side-plot archaeologist, a man who can turn “we are going directly there” into “I found something interesting over here and may now require rescue.” Zaph is not merely Zaph; he is tactical removal in human form, a precision instrument who has already solved the encounter while the rest of us are still discussing whether the door looks suspicious. Myles is not merely Myles; he is the reluctant adult with the map, the medic bag, and the expression of someone mentally calculating the paperwork.
And Craig is Craig.
The sticker designs lean into these roles because, after this long, they are not character traits so much as emergency labels. They belong on laptops, notebooks, campaign folders, storage crates, hazardous equipment, and anything with moving parts. Especially ladders. Especially ladders that appear to serve no purpose. Especially ladders near Craig.
There is also a Sturnim sticker, naturally, because no retrospective of group chaos would be complete without acknowledging the patron saint of rash entry. Sturnim the Brave: the man, the myth, the warning label. The man who has looked at armour, gravity, and basic caution and declared them optional. His inclusion feels necessary, if only for balance. Craig cannot be expected to carry the full burden of historic irresponsibility alone, though he has made a heroic attempt.
The broader sticker set pulls from our usual rotation of fictional disasters: Icarus, Rogue Trader, Enshrouded, and the general Crypt Creeps Cinematic Universe of Poorly Supervised Decisions. Different worlds, different mechanics, different monsters; same people, same flaws, same strange comfort in logging on again next week to see what new form of avoidable complication we can manufacture.
That, really, is the thing worth celebrating.
Not the gold dragon itself, although it remains a magnificent civic victim.
Not the failed roll, although it has earned its place in the archive.
Not even Craig’s denial, although at this point it should probably be heritage listed.
What we are celebrating is the fact that these stories still exist because the group still exists. Twenty-five years of turning up. Twenty-five years of laughing at each other. Twenty-five years of jokes that have become shorthand, shorthand that has become mythology, and mythology that has now apparently become a fake magazine publishing line.
There is something quietly absurd and genuinely wonderful about that.
Most friendships do not come with server logs.
Most anniversaries do not involve commemorative forensic dragon journalism.
Most gaming groups do not preserve a single failed pickpocket attempt for a quarter-century and then turn it into a magazine cover, multiple comics, and stickers.
But then, most gaming groups are not the Crypt Creeps.
We have survived edition changes, platform changes, game changes, house moves, work schedules, family obligations, technical failures, character deaths, save wipes, patch notes, early access bugs, late-night fatigue, and Craig discovering vertical surfaces.
We have travelled through dungeons, deserts, starships, cursed forests, hostile alien planets, shrouded valleys, grimdark voidships, spider houses, polar wastes, and at least one town that probably still has our faces on a warning poster.
We have developed tactics.
We have ignored tactics.
We have blamed pathfinding.
We have blamed lag.
We have blamed interface design.
We have blamed Craig.
And, to be fair, sometimes the blame has been well-supported by documentary evidence.
The Gold Dragon Incident endures because it represents the perfect Crypt Creeps story. It is stupid, specific, mechanically grounded, morally indefensible, and somehow still arguable over drinks two decades later. It has a protagonist, a victim, a failed roll, a legal framework, secondary consequences, and a villain who continues to insist the situation was more nuanced than everyone else remembers.
It is our Bayeux Tapestry, if the Bayeux Tapestry involved a man in a beanie trying to rob local government.
So here we are. Twenty-five years of the Crypt Creeps. Twenty-five years of denial. Twenty-five years of turning bad decisions into good stories.
And somewhere, in a friendly town that wants absolutely nothing to do with us, a two-storey gold dragon still checks its pockets out of habit.
Not because it has any.
Because Craig once made that everyone’s problem.








