From a usage standpoint, it might have more utility cut up into cards. Easily randomized, easy to track who's got what, easy to pick and choose without the whole bundle, or to add to later.
reminds me of a starting equipment/shop page from this criminally neglected Italian RPG: http://leganerd.com/2013/01/01/gdr-ufficialmente-morti-kata-kumbas/ (at bottom)
Thoughts about Terminal City Con
-
There were a hundred and three games at Terminal City. Three of those were
Lamentations of the Flame Princess.
Why? LotFP is fun. The rules are free. Th...
Dungeon Apps
-
"I’ve just been wondering what apps adventurers would use if smartphones
worked in dungeons"
- Jeff Rients
Here's some ideas we had:
"Lock app for th...
New edition of Starmada! Huzzah!
-
So Daniel Kast's *Starmada* has a new, 30th anniversary edition out. You
can get the pdf from WargameVault (the wargame store of the DriveThru
people) or...
Cities of Darkness
-
Unlike D&D, I've got a soft spot for the classic World of Darkness lore. I
am too young to have been around while it was relevant but it's always had
the...
I'm Zak, I live in Los Angeles. Most of the people I know here are women I know from being a porn "actor"--so they're porn stars and strippers. So that's who I play Dungeons & Dragons with.
6 comments:
Wow. There's a whole lot of NOPE there for a paranoid adventurer. The Key, the Lantern, and the Morningstar would be my first grabs.
From a usage standpoint, it might have more utility cut up into cards. Easily randomized, easy to track who's got what, easy to pick and choose without the whole bundle, or to add to later.
reminds me of a starting equipment/shop page from this criminally neglected Italian RPG: http://leganerd.com/2013/01/01/gdr-ufficialmente-morti-kata-kumbas/ (at bottom)
Thanks for the link! I have been looking for such lists for ages.
I sort of borrowed the original idea from the Lone Wolf gamebooks.
Post a Comment