kale — praxis
designing tRPGs — 180 Proof
listening to music
- mostly re-reading
discussing philosophy (on & offline) — 180 Proof
Listening to music, writing
Reading, of course. — Pantagruel
Discussing philosophy online and in real life
Listening to music — Jack Cummins
I assumed reading, writing, music and philosophy to be a given around here :smirk: — darthbarracuda
:up:Going to coffee shops ... Meandering around, — Jack Cummins
Well no, my own ttRPG designs (I haven't really played since the mid-80s), which are like – inspired by – published games such as e.g. Barbarians of Lemuria, On Mighty Thews & Torchbearer (sword & sorcery), Neon City Overdrive & Technoir (cyberpunk), Kult, Urban Shadows & Houses of the Blooded (dark fantasy), Earthdawn & Summerland (post-apocalypse), Scum & Villany and Mothership (space opera+) and Zenobia, 43 AD & Honor and Blood (alt-history). My designs tend to be rules-lite, very low crunch, GM plus 2/3 players (4 max), structured for one-to-four shot episodic gameplay (so no "zero-to-hobo" & almost no prep) and player-facing (e.g. GM doesn't roll dice). My nephews "playtest" them for me with their groups between 5e / Mythras / Star Wars campaigns.DnD, Shadowrun...? — darthbarracuda
What games, if any, did you play before 5e? Are you playing now? Even before the pandemic, Roll20 & Discord seemed fairly popular; they'd turned me off, however, when I'd played some "virtual tabletop" sessions with my nephews and their father/my brother last year (I live in the US southeast, they in the southwest & pacific northwest 3 time-zones away), maybe because playing via screens allowed for too many distractions and much less social immediacy.I got into 5e back in college; during the pandemic I played some virtually on roll20 but it sort of fizzled out.
Looks good, I love roasted kale with olive oil and salt. — darthbarracuda
:100: :smirk:TheGreatWhatever once told me that he thought computer games were "chore simulators", I thought that pretty apt. — darthbarracuda
Sometimes I kick myself when I think of what others have done with their ttRPG experiences from the '70s & '80s – converting their game worlds / favorite PCs into epic fiction: George RR Martin, R Scott Bakker, James SA Corey, Scott Lynch, Steven Brust, Raymond E Feist, Ian C Esslemont, Steven Erikson, ... Joss Whedon. This had never occurred to me and I've no idea why it didn't; I've always loved fantasy, scifi & horror, yet when I began writing fiction in the late 80s my literary interests were mainly absurdist, experimental (though not p0m0), and historical in novella & short story forms rather than novels or epic series.That's cool, had no idea you had that deep of a background in RPGs. — darthbarracuda
That's cool, had no idea you had that deep of a background in RPGs. — darthbarracuda
Thanks for this. :up:I agree with Abdulelah:
"I am disgusted that this is something that will be producing profit when people like me suffered the consequences of this war and will have to watch people play it for fun," Abdulelah, 28, told CNN. "I just can't get past the inhumanity."
While I take issue with the word "inhumanity" I get her point and think there is no "history" being taught here. It's simply a money-maker at best, and a confederate-statue of history at worst. — James Riley
Thanks for this. :up: — 180 Proof
I admired your paintings. Also the kale.Oil painting — praxis
:grin:In my circles, RPG is rocket propelled grenade. — James Riley
Update: downsized further mostly due health issues (slowly on the mend) ..."Hobbies" downsized to this short list by the pandemic:
- listening to music
- mostly re-reading
- urban hiking
- designing tRPGs
- discussing philosophy (on & offline) — 180 Proof
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