1980s Dungeons & Dragons panic revisited

"Satanic Panic over Dungeons & Dragons" is one of my favorite genres of journalism, and Eric Grundhauser's article about it is a goodun, with all the right YouTube clips.

By 1984, fantasy roleplaying had evolved from thretening the innocent minds of America's youth to threatening their eternal salvation. Religious mini-comic author Jack Chick published one of his "Chick Tracts"—those extreme religious comic book pamphlets you find on the bus—about the issue, tying fantasy roleplaying directly to the occult. Called Dark Dungeons, the thin pamphlet tells the story of Debbie, a young woman who gets seduced by a witchy dungeon master who teaches her to embrace evil through the game. Through the course of the story, Debbie uses a "mind bondage" spell on her father to get spending money and finds the body of a friend who committed suicide after losing her game character.

They're still going on about it, too.