The first time Tony Ford played Dungeons & Dragons, he was a wiry Black kid who had never seen the inside of a prison. His mother, a police officer in Detroit, had quit the force and moved the family to West Texas. To Ford, it seemed like a different world. Strangers talked funny, and El Paso was half desert. But he could skateboard in all that open space, and he eventually befriended a nerdy white kid with a passion for Dungeons & Dragons. Ford fell in love with the role-playing game right away; it was complex and cerebral, a saga you could lose yourself in. And in the 1980s, everyone seemed to be playing it.
The game has since become one of the most popular in the world, celebrated in nostalgic television shows and dramatized in movies. It is played in homes, at large conventions and even in prisons.
When Ford, who is now on death row, first overheard the other men playing D.&D., they were engaged in a fast, high-octane version. The gamers were members of the Mexican Mafia, an insular crew that let Ford into their circle after they realized he could draw. The gang’s leader, Spider, pulled some strings, Ford recalls, and got him moved to a neighboring cell to serve as his personal artist. Ford earned some money drawing intricate Aztec designs in ink. He also began to join their D.&D. sessions, eventually becoming a Dungeon Master and running games all over the row.
This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
The Sunday Read: ‘Women Have Been Misled About Menopause’
How Sports Betting Hit the Mainstream in America
The Most Empty Downtown in America
The Police Unit That Was Supposed to Keep Memphis Safe
The Deadly Earthquake in Turkey and Syria
A Chinese Balloon and a Diplomatic Showdown
The Sunday Read: ‘The Man Who Made Spain the Magic Capital of the World’
The End of the Pandemic Emergency in the U.S.
A Revolution in How Democrats Pick a President
The State of the U.S. Economy in 4 Numbers
7 States, 1 River and an Agonizing Choice
The Death of Tyre Nichols
The Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
Arrests, Executions and the Iranian Protesters Who Refuse to Give Up
An Aggressive New Approach to Childhood Obesity
How Nonprofit Hospitals Put Profits Over Patients
What Biden Miscalculated About His Classified Documents
The Debt Ceiling Showdown, Explained
The Sunday Read: ‘Could I Survive the “Quietest Place on Earth”?’
A Mother, a Daughter, a Deadly Journey
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Up First from NPR
Today, Explained
Hard Fork
The Journal.
Post Reports