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Knights of the Dinner Table (KoDT) is a comic book/strip created by Jolly R. Blackburn and is published by Kenzer and Company . It primarily focuses on a group of Role Playing Gamers and their actions at the gaming table, which often result in unfortunate, but humorous consequences in the game. The name is a pun on King Arthur's Knights of the Round Table.

The main group of characters are the members of a gaming group known as "The Knights of the Dinner Table" among local gamers in their home city of Muncie, Indiana. They are (in their seating order from left to right):

Many of the stories presented in KoDT are based on actual in-game experiences of the developers or readers, who are encouraged to submit story ideas. Part of the comic's popularity stems from the reader's ability to relate to the characters and their experiences to their own.

As Blackburn has no formal art training, the characters are drawn in simple caricatures which are scanned by a PC and are continuously reused. This has not hurt the series and has added to its appeal among fans.

KoDT first started in the second issue of SHADIS magazine in March of 1990 when then editor Jolly R. Blackburn, still awaiting comics to place on the last page, decided to draw a simple strip of his own to put on the last page, which he called Knights of the Dinner Table and first featured B.A. and Bob. As the third issue came to print, he still did not have comics and continued to make his own, adding in Dave and Brian. By the sixth issue, Blackburn had finally had other comics and replaced KoDT with them, however readers demanded the return of the strip and it did in the eighth issue and continued to until the 21st issue when the strip moved to Dragon Magazine in 1996 with issue #226. In 1996, the comic also began to be published in monthly comic books, which are still in publication.

The popularity of the comic has manifested itself in a number of ways. At conventions that Kenzer Co. attends, live readings of various strips are a popular activity where attendees and even the strip developers take the roles of the various characters and read off the dialog of the strips before an audience. Also, Kenzer has published an actual version of the fictional Hackmaster role playing game featured in the comic, which is based on the original version of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, and uses the same system under license. Hackmaster has become popular on its own, and has even won the Origins Game of the Year Award in 2002.

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