We are back, fully rested. But I can’t promise the same for tomorrow’s post. It’s another late, early shift pattern.
“Why has your favourite game stayed with you?”
I’ve already said in a previous post I don’t really have a favourite RPG. However if we went with my most played game instead (which by implication would be a game I enjoy playing). Then we will for this answer go with D&D.
I love fantasy. Whether it’s the rich depth of Tolkien’s Middle Earth, Dragonlance, The Witcher, and so on.
So there is that hook into why D&D has stayed with me.
There is also a nostalgia reason.
D&D as I have said previously, was my first ever RPG that I purchased. So there is that whole emotional link there.
I also like how well the game is supported not only by WotC and third parties. There is such amazing third party products out there, from adventures, to DM tools such as the Lazy DM books.
On the whole the D&D community is great, and supportive. Which also makes a big difference when you need advice or help.
“Past, Present, or Future? When is your favourite game set?”
I really don’t have a favourite game, as I’ve not played everything I own to make that decision.
I play D&D mainly. There has been a session of Paranoia. But I’ve not got Twilight 2000, The One Ring, or any of the others to the table. Games I really want to play.
Now we know I am a fan of the cyberpunk genre. I have Cyberpunk Red and The Shadow of the Beanstalk sourcebook for Genesys, just waiting to get to the table one day.
But if there is one setting I’m a bigger fan of then that is Middle Earth. I’m a Tolkien fan. I love Lord of the Rings.
I think you would answer for this question it is more a mythical past than the past.
A mythical past that has heavy Middle Ages influences granted.
Yesterday I had a chance to get Portal the Uncooperative Cake Acquisition Game to the table. But you will have to wait to hear about that.
In the meantime it’s time to look at todays navel gazing question, “Who would you like to Gamemaster for you?”
An interesting but difficult question. A variation of the who would you have at a dinner party if you could chose anyone?
A lot would I’m sure say one of the two Matt’s (Mercer and Colville), or maybe Jim Murphy or Sly Flourish.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see a large number going the big Hollywood celeb route with Joe Manganiello, Vin Diesel, or Jack Black.
If there weren’t some out there going the Wil Wheaton route with their answer I’d be shocked.
I suppose I could go with Deborah Ann Woll or Becca Scott as a tip to the RPG celeb route.
Although I’m pretty sure I’d have a fun time at their tables this isn’t my answer to the question.
I’d like my friend Cameron who first GM’d for me back in my days at Brighton Polytechnic.
We lost contact decades ago.
I hope he kept his interest in RPGs over the years, and life has been kind and generous to him.
But it’d be super cool to reconnect and start crafting stories together again. Especially if it was using The One Ring second edition so once more we were in Middle Earth, and Dram the hobbit would once more be wandering the hills and meadows of the Shire.
After yesterdays near slip up and just about posting within the days deadline (by the UK time zone that is). I’m writing todays hash tag entry before I’ve even had my first coffee of the day!
So let’s get on with this so I can have my coffee.
“Suggestion Sunday: Roll 1d8+1, and tag that many friends and suggest a new RPG to try.”
I’m not going to follow this to the letter today. Instead I’m going to suggest to who ever reads this blog a couple of new RPGs to try and why.
These won’t be RPGs I’ve played. But they will be ones I own. The reasons I give to try them are basically what attracted me to the RPGs and why I want to eventually get them to the table.
My first recommendation is the FFG series of RPGs, The End of the World.
There are four books in this series, Zombie Apocalypse, Wrath of the Gods, Alien Invasion, and Rise of the Machines.
I own two of them, Zombie Apocalypse and Alien Invasion.
So why should you play them?
Firstly the players play as themselves usually in whatever town/city you live in. Their starting equipment is whatever they have in their pockets and in the room the game is played in. You also if you are the GM get to kill yourself off in some gruesome way right at the start of the game. There has to be a reason you aren’t taking part in the adventure after all.
I find this first reason so, so cool. It also makes the whole game so personal. All of a sudden it’s not some npc villager dying and coming back to life as a zombie, it’s John Satt who you went to school with. Wait that’s my best friends house those aliens just blew up.
The second reason is the d6 system used by the game. It’s very narrative based. Very similar mechanics wise to the FFG custom narrative dice used in the Genesys system. So no special dice needed. Very quick and light to use.
The third and final reason is the variety of choice of apocalypse you want to experience. Each book has at least three variants based around that books theme. These books theme and variants inside can be said to be inspired by one or two movies. Which I love.
Ok on to the next recommendation.
I think you should try either the Labyrinth RPG or the Dark Crystal RPG.
Most definitely if you are a fan of either or both the movies. But I think you might enjoy these even if you are not.
Each book is the complete adventure, you only need add pen and paper, plus d6 dice in the case of the Dark Crystal.
These are rules light systems. Very accessible.
They look fun.
I love both movies. So I was sold on the theme.
Let me know if you’ve played these and what you thought about them.
“How would you change the way you started RPGing?”
I don’t think I would change anything about it really.
Sure it would have been fun to have started playing with my friends that I grew up with, and went to school with.
I’m not sure if that had happened I would have actively searched for an RPG society at Brighton Polytechnic. But instead been happy to play D&D with my friends whenever I returned home (which I did often).
I made some good friends playing MERP. Unbeknownst to them they were helping me through a very difficult part of my life. They played games with me, treated me normally. Something I needed at the time.
We are fastly approaching the mid point of this thing. The time is flying by. I think this years focus definitely so far seems so much more personal. I must catch up on some of the other content creators and see what they are doing.
Let’s see what todays soul searching question is.
“Why did you start RPGing?”
I think it’s been established my teenage years were the 80’s and the UK home computer boom. Living in a fenland market town.
Over in the states they had the whole satanic panic stuff going on. Which never really was a thing over here. So we weren’t really aware of it.
What I was aware of was the “moral majority” in the US and their campaign against heavy metal. After all I was into KISS and other metal groups, reading the then monthly Kerrang! and driving my parents and neighbours crazy with loud rock. So this sort of thing got reported in Kerrang!
In the UK we didn’t escape the moral crusade of others. Here we had Mary Whitehouse and her campaign to censor tv and video. We had the whole video nasty thing. Plus a wanna be Mary Whitehouse called Victoria Gillick who was trying to impose her catholic beliefs on the country and control girls bodies. Fun fact about Victoria Gillick she lives in Wisbech. So we often saw her round town. I went to college with one of her daughters. Plus a few years ago her husband was a UKIP town councillor.
The nearest I got to hearing about the religious fundamentalist campaign against D&D was seeing the Tom Hanks movie Monsters and Mazes (rented and watched on video).
There is a certain picture being painted over these types of posts. I certainly think comparisons could be made between Wisbech and say a mid west American town. It was (and still is) Hicksville.
It certainly feels looking back that it was in its own little bubble. Although it still has the whole “are you local?” thing going on.
I’ve already said previously the home computer boom expanded my world.
Despite owning a copy of the Basic D&D Starter set. I hadn’t actually played it. None of my friends were interested.
I think I could be best described at the time as D&D or RPG curious!
Playing an RPG seemed the natural progression from adventure and RPGs on the home computer.
They were something I wanted to try. I thought I would enjoy them. Although to be truthful, I wasn’t entirely sure what they were, and how you played them.
I think I’d owned the Starter set for a couple of years before going off to Brighton Polytechnic.
I joined the role playing society at Brighton Poly so I could try an RPG for the reasons mentioned above.
Maybe in a future post we will get to explore the Brighton years in more depth. Until then catch you in the next post!
“If you could live in a game setting, where would it be?”
I’d like to say the Forgotten Realms, but let’s face it it’s basically a fancy Middle Ages setting. No flushing toilets, no running water, diseases, working the land, feudal system. Need I go on to why I wouldn’t want to live there?
Middle Earth?
Ixalan?
No for me it’d have to be one of the cyberpunk dystopian futures such as that depicted in FFGs Android setting.
The moment I first played Android Netrunner I fell in love with the theme.
The runners taking on the mega corporations.
Yes it’s still a world of haves and have nots. A world of corruption, run by mega corporations. Mega corporations that are not openly at war with each other, but fight against each other in the shadows.
Image Copyright to FFG
To be fair apart from the level of technology, no space travel, or space elevator, are we really that far off what is being depicted in these type of settings?
Mega companies like Amazon, Google, Facebook and Apple more or less tell Governments how much tax they will pay. They are almost a law unto themselves. Our politicians no matter their political leaning act in the best interests of the big companies and the rich.
But still in this bladerunneresq future I’d see myself more as one of the runners than say a Street samurai. It’d just love the tech. As I do now, and have done ever since the home computer boom of the 80’s.
It’s a blistering hot day, I’ve managed to get some gaming in on my day off. Apart from the heat it’s been a pretty good day off. But I’ll cover all this in another post.
You’re here to read todays entry in the 2022 RPGaDAY thingy.
So what is our thunk for the day?
It’s “When did/will you start Gamemastering?”
I started gamemastering way back (and this makes it sound like a long time) in 2019. I want to say April/May time. I’d go back on here and check but in this heat that’s too much effort.
In reality we are talking less than twenty sessions. It’d be more if there hadn’t been a global pandemic.
So I’m a fairly inexperienced DM/GM.
But I do enjoy it. Especially after discovering the way of the lazy DM. Which has made preparing for sessions a delight.