Friday, August 5, 2011
Warmachine RPG in 2012
This is older news I'm surprised it wasn't more widely distributed around the intertubez ...
Lock & Load Announcement: Iron Kingdoms RPG
Posted on June 19, 2011 by PPS_Aeryn
One of the reasons we at Privateer Press are so jazzed to have our own convention is that it’s a great place to make those huge, earthshaking announcements about upcoming products. So, without further ado, here’s a big one, info gleaned from the Iron Kingdoms RPG announcement.
* Release Date: Gen Con 2012
* System: Proprietary. This system shares some common mechanical elements with a couple games you already know and love: WARMACHINE and HORDES.
* Classes: You will have the ability to play warcasters or warlocks in the RPG. With a flexible system for how you start off your campaign, you can also play such a character from session one, not just after months of adventuring.
The Integratron?? Awesome RPG one shot setting
Really odd. Clearly mostly bunk (all the alien shit) but the acoustical properties of the building and the location are interesting. George Lynch is cool and hilarious as well.
Check out the website.
Check out the website.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
The Captains ...
Ok first I don't really consider myself a trekkie but I have to say since they've put all the Trek stuff up on Netflix streaming I've been revisiting the Trek stuff which I really haven't seen for years. I've watched all of Enterprise (which I'd never seen before at all), a good portion of the original show and I'm about half way through the Next Generation stuff. Campy, corny, and to be honestly mostly delightfully entertaining in a warm and geeky way. I've been drawn back to Trek this summer a bit (thanks to Netflix and the JJ Abrams film). Anyway in the continuation of this recent bender ... I watched William Shatner's Documentary this evening The Captains.
"You recognize that William Shatner may be a fool, but he's our fool." UGO review of the film.
I can't agree more with that quote. Come on we all know ole Bill Shatner over the top and all the way ... but god damnit ... it just works doesn't it? Sure the film is largely about Shatner but what else would we expect? The film really delves into what many of the actors went through to play the part and what its meant for them professionally and personally. Beyond that if your curious check it out ... its free at the Epix website (www.epixhd.com). You just have to sign up for a free trial account. Epix itself seems lackluster but its one of the only places you can see The Captains on the internet for free (in a non-shady way anyway).
Anyway if you have any positive views on any of the Trek series ... watch it ... you'll enjoy it. If you hate Trek with a passion and hate William Shatner (how could anyone?) skip it. I very much enjoyed the film for what it was ... thanks again Bill :)
New addition to geek dictionary -- Roll Player
Roll Player -- A participant in a role playing game who is a self proclaimed master role player (not to be confused with roll player) when in fact they are actually a power gamer. These players frequently use their "character backstory" to justify anything no matter how stupid or game breaking it might be. Though they frequently hide behind the guise of backstory they are almost always unwilling to work at making the game fun for everyone. Sadly they are just min-maxing power gamers trying to hide their devious ways.
(It was here first ... hehe).
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Fantasy Flight Picks Up Star Wars
FFG snags the Star Wars license ...
gasp .. surprise .. no?
Ya ya tons of people predicted this one it seems like FFG is the go to shop anymore for stuff like this. I can't say I'm at all disappointed as they in my opinion generally make fine games.
Is more always better? Well that is in the eye of the beholder I guess. I know in addition to being anxious for a new Star Wars RPG I'm excited about more Star Wars board games, non-collectible card games, MINI games (they mention it) etc. etc.
gasp .. surprise .. no?
Ya ya tons of people predicted this one it seems like FFG is the go to shop anymore for stuff like this. I can't say I'm at all disappointed as they in my opinion generally make fine games.
Is more always better? Well that is in the eye of the beholder I guess. I know in addition to being anxious for a new Star Wars RPG I'm excited about more Star Wars board games, non-collectible card games, MINI games (they mention it) etc. etc.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Desperate attempt to not let mini gaming die in my gaming group ...
Mini gaming in general has been on a terrible slide in my gaming group for nearly two years now and I fear its about to die. To be honest there are six or so people beside myself in my gaming group (out of about 20 people in the extended group) who are mini game fans. The local mini gaming community is pretty bad, consisting entirely of store trolls and kids ... neither which demographic I have the patience to deal with anymore. So in a last ditch effort to save mini gaming ... ANY mini gaming ... in our group. I'm going to toss a hail marry.
The systems that have the most appeal are Warma-hordes and Dystopian Wars. Two systems does concern me because we are splitting the interest but that is what the group wants overall so I'm going with it. Don't get me wrong there is a GW bent in our group ... but getting 40k/WHFB off the ground has actually been whats nearly killed mini gaming for us.
The scale, investment and scope of those systems is just too big for most of the people in the group with an interest. Getting things assembled and on the table has just proven insurmountable for most of the other people in the group. To top it off 40k scales horribly ... 500 point games suck ... and ya there are some skirmish fan systems out there but they aren't supported, aren't balanced, etc. etc. and there is always an Achilles heal that kills off any effort with the GW stuff with our group. We've tried three times over the past year and each time for one reason or another efforts to as a group do GW stuff fails. The nice thing about both dystopian and Warma-hordes is the buy in is low. 40-50 bucks and someone is in with a starter force. The games play ok at the starter set level and there is no need to immediately jump it up. With GW there is. With Dystopian the painting/modeling commitment is low as well. Warma-hordes is identical to GW stuff in terms of painting modeling really ... but again at the boxed set level.
So I'm making one last attempt. I'm going to try to just put up or shut up about mini gaming. I'm going to focus on the following three projects:
1) Getting a sea board built with a few nice sets of islands done up.
2) Getting two 4x4 tables done and full terrained for Warma-hordes (with like 2 terrain sets for each board).
Once that is done:
3) getting two forces done for Dystopian (Brits and Prussians) and 2 starter forces for Warma-hordes completed. So I can offer a game to anyone even if they don't have minis and don't ever have any desire to buy and paint stuff ... no worries they could use one of my loner armies and have fun on a mini gaming night.
Right now I have no way to really tell when mini gaming is going to be taking place because I won't have my fall schedule until at least next week or perhaps the week after. Its sounding like Monday night might be my mini game night. For those Monday night football fans ... I have no aversion to having the game going on in the background if you want to come over play some mini games and watch the game. But we'll get into that once I know for sure that is going to be the case. Wednesday might also end up being a better day. I'm pretty sure I'll have class on Tuesday and Thursday eve though so likely those nights will be auto-out.
One day I'd love to get back into 40K or perhaps Warpath (mantics ruleset which you can 100% use GW minis with) and warhammer fantasy (or Kings of War.. again mantic system) but that is likely 2012. Its just too big a endeavor all around. Hopefully we find some more people up a Weber this year and bolster our numbers a bit ... that would help.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
BADASSDOM! (and why is LARP so lame)
First check out that trailer. Looks awesome!! Peter Dinklage ... Summer Glau ... Danny Pudi ... in the same movie about geek shit. Come on this is going to be hilariously good!
Ok second and this was sparked from a discussion the local game group forums.
I'm a jerk for saying this but I feel compelled none the less.
Ok long ago in the days of yor in the garage of old ... we had a summit of begutted self proclaimed wise men to discuss LARP and why it was so epically gay ... sorry that is offensive to the gay community to link them with LARP in any way ... lets instead go with LAME ... as it were (and is).
The panel decided that for the following reasons LARP is actually classified as the epitome of lame, the saddest of activities that the vast majority of geeks are unwilling to accept. Why though?
First and foremost its an activity that the very obese (peeps who make me look svelte) seem to gravitate towards. However perhaps the largest group of LARPers is the terribly socially awkward set. People who just don't know how to interact with other humans at all on a common wavelength. Toss in a good mix of folks who don't understand personal hygiene and you have your typical LARP group. Ultimately these groups unite to make LARP look like one of the singularly most lame things one could possibly do to all of us outsiders.
This is sad because really LARP could be cool ... it really really could be a fun cool activity. There is really nothing more lame about the concept of LARP vs the concept of pen and paper RPGs. Yet in practice ... yes there are some super lame D&D groups out there ... but by and large most RPG groups are kinda tame and don't really differ much from your average group playing a board game. Why could LARP be cool and fun? LARP could combine community theater, improvisational acting and perhaps even historical reenacting with gaming. In concept that could really be cool if well executed.
Well that trailer sure makes it look badass eh. I mean if hot chicks and cool dwarfs LARP'd in large enough quantities ... who the hell wouldn't want to LARP. See that is the key there ... cute girls and more normal people (lets face it truly mainstream people would NEVER LARP) don't NOT LARP in high enough numbers to make the activity cool. Boffer LARP I think might be in some areas an exception due to an odd association with martial arts, but boffer LARP is pretty lame too for the same reasons in general.
Hell ren-fair/SCA stuff struggles with that and its alot more acceptable because they are for the most part a historical reenacting group that practices crafting, etc.
I said years ago and I'll say again ... I can make LARP cool ... instantly. How??
Simple ... give me ten average to hot girls ... (need at least 2 or 3 very hot girls). Five somewhat normal dudes. Most of the people in the group need to be intelligent. You mix that up and that could be the foundation of a decent LARP group. You can mix in 10 more people ... a couple socially awkward people ... a couple ultra-fatties ... and it would still probably be ok. As long as the ratio of somewhat cute girls to the overall group size is about 30% ... and the overall semi-normal intelligent person ratio didn't drop below 60% ... it would be fun and cool.
As we all know actual LARP never approaches those ratios and therefore is doomed to be eternally lame.
For proof of this I hold up Cos-Play ... how the fuck is Cos-Play now nearly mainstream (in the geek world anyway). Simple ... the ratios listed above.
(half serious ... half satirical ... half sarcastic !!! INDEED!!)
Thursday, July 7, 2011
LARRYCON II this weekend!!
HOLY MACKEREL BATMAN!! Is the second annual LARRYCON already!! TIME HAS FLOWN ROBIN ... TIME HAS FLOWN!!
What is LARRYCON one asks ... well its an excuse for good friends who now live in different areas to get together in the land of milk, honey and mormons otherwise known as Utah for a wild weekend of gosh darn honest to goodness gaming .. golly gee willikers!! Sigh ... sorry I've been in this wondrous land of friendliness for too long now I think.
Last years LARRYCON was a blast!! Over the course of the weekend thanks to not only my friends Scott and Rob who trekked up from Las Vegas last Friday evening ... but to all the local gamers who I've met over the past year ... we pulled off a 25 person Micro/Home-Con. Several people crashed in my basement ... it was awesome and hilarious fun for an entire three day weekend! This year a few more people are trekking up from Vegas and we'll have some local new faces as well so it looks to be bigger and better than the last one ... at least 100% larger and now with a kung foo grip!
Last year we played (and several others I'm probably forgetting):
Hopefully this year we revisit some of those and add more to the list!
Monday, July 4, 2011
Two free online games (microtransaction) ... World of Tanks and League of Legends
World of Tanks and League of Legends.
OK so far I've enjoyed World of Tanks. Its a Call of Duty-esq (tanks only though) style game. You play on large maps against other tanks. You can play as German, American or Russian tankers. But the battles are mixed so you are playing on teams with all three factions on the same side. There is some sort of balancing algorithm at play in the game in terms of tank types (a mix of light, medium, heavy, tank destroyers and mechanized artillery) and I think it includes peoples crew training, upgrades, etc. in the balancing equations. So the games are mostly balanced and generally fun.
So far my only complaint is the leveling is really slow ... clearly they want you to pay for the bonus experience. But I've heard in the game and on the forums that even with the premium experience its an ultra grind. Really though as far as microtransaction goes you are only mainly looking at buying quicker leveling not really additional content as far as I can tell.
World of Tanks Trailer:
Ok the second game is League of Legends its apparently based on the Warcraft III engine (ya I know blast from the past eh!) but I've heard its fun. Your basically rumbling around with a single hero in a big battlground (again just think Warcraft III) where you fight either 2 vs. 2 battles or 5 vs 5 (or you can just fight the computer for a reduced exp reward). Apparently they rotate the hero types each week and if you want to keep playing the same hero type you have to buy it. I don't know what other microtransactions they have going on ... I haven't played it yet I've just been hearing about it. I'm actually downloading it now and I'll update this post when I get some playtime in. Update: Been playing the game for a few hours, its pretty cool so far. Worth a look anyway.
League of Legend trailer 1:
OK so far I've enjoyed World of Tanks. Its a Call of Duty-esq (tanks only though) style game. You play on large maps against other tanks. You can play as German, American or Russian tankers. But the battles are mixed so you are playing on teams with all three factions on the same side. There is some sort of balancing algorithm at play in the game in terms of tank types (a mix of light, medium, heavy, tank destroyers and mechanized artillery) and I think it includes peoples crew training, upgrades, etc. in the balancing equations. So the games are mostly balanced and generally fun.
So far my only complaint is the leveling is really slow ... clearly they want you to pay for the bonus experience. But I've heard in the game and on the forums that even with the premium experience its an ultra grind. Really though as far as microtransaction goes you are only mainly looking at buying quicker leveling not really additional content as far as I can tell.
World of Tanks Trailer:
Ok the second game is League of Legends its apparently based on the Warcraft III engine (ya I know blast from the past eh!) but I've heard its fun. Your basically rumbling around with a single hero in a big battlground (again just think Warcraft III) where you fight either 2 vs. 2 battles or 5 vs 5 (or you can just fight the computer for a reduced exp reward). Apparently they rotate the hero types each week and if you want to keep playing the same hero type you have to buy it. I don't know what other microtransactions they have going on ... I haven't played it yet I've just been hearing about it. I'm actually downloading it now and I'll update this post when I get some playtime in. Update: Been playing the game for a few hours, its pretty cool so far. Worth a look anyway.
League of Legend trailer 1:
Saturday, July 2, 2011
What is over the line in a game?
When is too far ... too far?
Recently on the local game group forums we've had a discussion going on what is too far with RPGs and video games. I'm pretty opinionated on this in terms of I think any depiction of violence or abuse towards children is 100% taboo. Apparently people don't feel that way.
even worse someone thinks its so funny they will sing Adam Sandler opera man style songs about it
Yet as offensive as it is I don't think it should be banned or burnt. Its protected speech and people are fully entitled to consume it and view it. Such is freedom ... good with the bad ...
It just saddens me that there seem to be no standards anymore in terms of this sort of thing. But this is a broader discussion. What do people out there think? Especially with your own home gaming. What are your lines ... or do you have any ... in RPGs?
Its just a game is the take on the internetz ... and therefore doing anything in it is ok and your an idiot if you read anything into it. So there are no lines at all ever, under any circumstances when it comes to games now apparently according to most people on the internet. Because its fictional and just pixels its all ok. This is why video games are less and less appealing each year. I suppose at some point it will all just be torture porn hentai with an anything goes attitude. Sad really, but just sad to me I guess after reading more about this online I realize I'm in the minority to such an extent I might be the only person in the world who feels this way (well maybe there is one other but that's about it). I know this is kind of old news for the internet ... but we have been talking about it in the local community and we started bringing it back to the world of tabletop games and I wondered if anyone else out there had thoughts.
Recently on the local game group forums we've had a discussion going on what is too far with RPGs and video games. I'm pretty opinionated on this in terms of I think any depiction of violence or abuse towards children is 100% taboo. Apparently people don't feel that way.
even worse someone thinks its so funny they will sing Adam Sandler opera man style songs about it
Yet as offensive as it is I don't think it should be banned or burnt. Its protected speech and people are fully entitled to consume it and view it. Such is freedom ... good with the bad ...
It just saddens me that there seem to be no standards anymore in terms of this sort of thing. But this is a broader discussion. What do people out there think? Especially with your own home gaming. What are your lines ... or do you have any ... in RPGs?
Its just a game is the take on the internetz ... and therefore doing anything in it is ok and your an idiot if you read anything into it. So there are no lines at all ever, under any circumstances when it comes to games now apparently according to most people on the internet. Because its fictional and just pixels its all ok. This is why video games are less and less appealing each year. I suppose at some point it will all just be torture porn hentai with an anything goes attitude. Sad really, but just sad to me I guess after reading more about this online I realize I'm in the minority to such an extent I might be the only person in the world who feels this way (well maybe there is one other but that's about it). I know this is kind of old news for the internet ... but we have been talking about it in the local community and we started bringing it back to the world of tabletop games and I wondered if anyone else out there had thoughts.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Oz roleplaying game ... odd or interesting?
I don't know what to make of this ... something interesting or just a bit too out there to want to attempt. See this is the kind of game I could see playing with my own kids as a family RPG. Might be interesting. But from how the developer teaser is worded it sounds like its geared towards adults and RPG nerds at that. So I don't know how much mileage I'd get out of it for a game for the kids, I'd be better off hacking another system and just doing a sandbox game for them. As for me I don't know if this would be something I could reasonably get a group of gamers together to try ... even for a one shot ... lol. Here is a blurb from the Studio 2 page.
"All of the familiar characters from the Land Oz are in Oz: Dark & Terrible, with one exception. The Scarecrow is an Anidum; a creature containing a person's soul that has been transplanted into a mannequin, while the witch responsible walks around in the Husk with all its memories. The Tin Woodsman is a retired member of the Wizard's "secret service", the Tin Men, who ensure the citizens of the Emerald City remain loyal to their ruler and are willing to use whatever means necessary to achieve their goals. The Cowardly Lion is a disgraced exile from his rightful kingdom after his father betrayed the other Animals in a catastrophic battle against Blinkie, the former Wicked Witch of the South, who refuses to be like other Carnivores who eat the hearts of Humans to gain lycanthropic powers."
For sure an interesting concept though, I'm tempted to pick it up just to see the mechanics and the game itself, I'm sure it would be interesting if nothing else.
Thursday, June 30, 2011
The history of modern mini games and/or Games Workshop
"Games Workshop is like the McDonalds of wargaming, because it’s a reproducible, franchiseable concept" Henry Hyde, Interview with Rick Priestley.
I happened upon a good interview from 2009 with Rick Priestley and John Stallard (old time UK GW people who really have helped shape the entire gaming world via their projects at GW over the years). I found this thanks to a great blog The Fighting Fantasist. Its really cool because they are basically talking about the old school gaming revolution ... without really doing so. It also makes me wonder when mini games is going to really and truly get its own OSR. Ya ya I know historicals has basically never left the 1970s but I'm talking fantasy and sci-fi based games. I see lots of mom and pop companies out there but nowhere near the level of community that the OSR RPG community has. I think perhaps 15 MM sci-fi has potential to maybe be the first big OSR breakout with mini gaming. Who knows though. Thoughts?
Beyond that though this article had alot about gaming in general and game design in terms of rules appeal based on ones generation. I never really thought about how age really can give one a preference for specific rules complexity. These complex rulesets appealed to teenage boys alot (in the 1960s-early 90s anyway) because it gave them certainty in the games they were playing and allowed them not to have to worry about making judgments. Today its probably not true as everyone's attention span has been reduced by 80% thanks to the internet and all our wonderful (and destructive) internet gadgets. We all have popcorn brain now ... hehe. I'm beginning to see it applies to all facets of mini gaming beyond just RPGs. I'm waiting to see it happen with board games (though one could argue it kinda already has). Its really nostalgic in the beginning with alot of talk about the infancy of the miniature gaming industry (which incidentally spawned the RPG industry ... don't forget that Gygax and Arneson were historical gamers before they created D&D and D&D itself comes from Chainmail which was more a fantasy minis game than a RPG). Its long and if you don't know who these guys are you might not find much interest in it but I really enjoyed it!!
Really this hits at the heart of game design and how we gamers of different generations have different levels of appreciation for different types of games. My patience level for rules complexity is not what it once was. In my early 20s I was a fount of rules minutia and I memorized tables and charts and could ramble them back to you at will ... now that just pisses me off. I care about concepts, about what it is people are trying to do ... not some specific rule about "oh you get a D4 there not a D6." But in my teens and early 20s that is all I could focus on ... because then I didn't have the capacity for judgments and generalities that I do now as an old guy. I really like how Rick goes over how this plays into game design, etc.
I love the quote from Mr. Hyde regarding D&D its a classic (one that most gamers can relate to).
"I remember my first D&D game seemed a really bizarre to me because it was without
miniatures, just the Dungeon Master sitting in the corner, making it clear that you had to imagine
what was going on, it was all inside your head, and I came away feeling like I’d smoked something
particularly strong –it was just mind expanding. And it was actually quite a long time before I saw a
game using miniatures." Henry Hyde
When asked about Warhammer being a "six move" game he replied ..
"Yes, the premise there was that you have to be able to play a wargame that starts when you get
home from work, which can be played in its entirety, and then allow you to get to the pub in time
for last orders with time for you to discuss it! Now, because we’ve changed the licensing laws in
this country, this has undermined an entire generation of wargames developers! It’s a serious
problem! But that was indeed the basis on which we developed our games, because that’s how we
did it." Rick Priestley
All in all a very good but really detailed interview... (so if you have ADD skip it. I loved it though.).
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Extremely poigniant discussion of the portrayal of armor on females in fantasy settings
Extremely poigniant discussion of the portrayal of armor on females in fantasy settings ... INDEED!
Alchemy itself as RPG inspiration
I'm sure there is alot of pseudo-science (De facto) and pseudo-history (gross over simplifications for sure) in this film. YET ... really inspirational in terms of RPG seed potential.
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Going off the grid ... BLASPHEMY!!
My friends all know my standing rant of "this isn't Dungeons and Dragons ... that died when 3.0 was introduced and the grid became a requirement for the game." Usually a one way ticket to hell in the minds of most D&D fans and or an automatic mental ignore. Such is the life of a garrulously loquacious wanderer.
Again don't get me wrong ... sure I have extensively played 3.0, 3.5, pathfinder and 4e. I've spent hundreds (probably thousands) on books, supplements, modules, minis ... to play in a grid world. Hell I'm a mini gamer, I play Warhammer, 40k, Warmachine, etc. I actually enjoy modeling and painting minis. But to me the core of a role playing game is players delving into what makes their character tick and finding a living breathing character there. The DM can use that to make the game better and better. The grid pulls everyone out of that immersive experience and brings them into something not very different from 40K or Warmachine, etc. but in a cooperative board game style of mini game. Its cool and fun ... but its a very watered down version of role playing in my opinion. I usually get shouted down as a grumpy old grognard when I say this in public though these days.
Again don't get me wrong ... sure I have extensively played 3.0, 3.5, pathfinder and 4e. I've spent hundreds (probably thousands) on books, supplements, modules, minis ... to play in a grid world. Hell I'm a mini gamer, I play Warhammer, 40k, Warmachine, etc. I actually enjoy modeling and painting minis. But to me the core of a role playing game is players delving into what makes their character tick and finding a living breathing character there. The DM can use that to make the game better and better. The grid pulls everyone out of that immersive experience and brings them into something not very different from 40K or Warmachine, etc. but in a cooperative board game style of mini game. Its cool and fun ... but its a very watered down version of role playing in my opinion. I usually get shouted down as a grumpy old grognard when I say this in public though these days.
I recall the old days though back when Hexes were traditionally used for large maps (entire regions) where the grid was reserved for smaller scales stuff (anything from buildings to dungeons to towns). In that regard the grid and hex seemed to be better suited for their respective uses. I still use hex for large maps and grid for anything smaller when I'm doing my own campaigns, regardless of the system. As was mentioned with 3.0 onwards for D&D you needed to use the grid for game play due to so many rules that you needed to track in terms of player proximity to things, etc. Abstract combats became a thing of the past and the rise of grid gaming was complete (for D&D anyway) "Oh combat ... 10 minute pause as the grid is brought out and everyone drops out of RP mode into tactical board game mode." Again as I said I've been engaging in 3.0 grid based gaming as most of us have for a long time now ... but I remember the days before the must use grid to be able to play ... RPGs. Also I've heard the "oh you can play 3/3.5/pathfinder/4e without a grid. In response to that I've always said don't give me any lame shit about how the grid games don't need a grid ... you can't bullshit us ... most of us have tried it without the grid and it sucks. Half of the rules in the games are combat advantage, flanking, attacks of opportunity, AoE stuff with specific square effects, etc. etc. it would be so labor intensive for the DM to run a non-handwave fudge all the rolls game of 3.0-4e it wouldn't be worth the effort and there would be so many interuptions it would still disrupt the game with delays. That or it would just turn into the DM faking everything and essentially railroading most of the game.
Having recently returned to non-grid based RPGs I am beginning to remember what made them magical and I'm enjoying it. As a DM I'm seeing the story remain in play for the entire session. With the grid based games as soon as the grid rolls out its tactical board game time and all meta conversation about tactics. That doesn't mean that in non-grid games players don't attempt to do so but in my experience you get less of it. Also as a DM I am finding its easier to shut down the meta talk and excessive BS tangents and non-game talk. I'm seeing my players have their characters do alot more RP type actions in combat situations. I'm seeing players seem to get into their characters more etc. This might not be the case for others and other gaming groups but so far in mine my grumpy old grognard theories are proving true. So its been refreshing. On the flip side of the coin though its not a balanced fight against me as the DM the way things were in 4e, etc. I am more the stage manager again ... instead of an mini game opponent to my players ... I like this role more I think.
SO here is to twisted Blasphemy and heretical teachings!! Down with the grid! Up with pentagrams!
Monday, June 27, 2011
The Windmills of Wargaming in Northern Utah
I'm fighting the blahs ... the blue bitchings ... the wailing Wally's ... in terms of gaming. Lately I've felt pretty owned by all the stuff going on with two of my favorite games. Warhammer 40,000 and Dungeons and Dragons. But really the more that I have talked to others and thought about whats going on I'm seeing this as a great opportunity to get into some other games I might not otherwise try. To take a break and take a chill pill and just smell the roses and enjoy my time here with my family and friends.
See about two years ago I moved away from Las Vegas up to northern Utah. I moved from an area where I knew dozens and dozens of fellow gamers (who I'd gamed with for years). Was a member of a big 40K oriented war gaming club. Beyond that I had a well established pattern of traveling down to So. Cal and Arizona for gaming cons, tourneys (Gencon So. Cal and Gamesdays back in the old days), etc. But that all came to a screeching halt for the most part (I still make trips to Vegas now and again and down to So. Cal ... but its just a couple times a year). So I have spent the last two years trying to find fellow gamers up here and it hasn't been easy. Utah (at least where I'm at) is a much more insular place where gamers band togther in little garage groups and don't get out into the broader "community" much. Game stores thus dominate the "public" gaming options and there are literally zero game clubs to speak of. I have for two years attempted, along with the dozen people in my home gaming group, to build a game club. But its just not gone anywhere. I helped build a club in Las Vegas that in its heyday had over fifty active members and over a hundred on the dues paying membership roster. Sadly that club due to most of the founding members moving and the ravages of the recession has died ... but that was after I left Las Vegas so that didn't directly impact me. Anyway though we've been trying and trying to build an independent gaming community in our area and its been rough.
That said though I have a great home gaming group that I really enjoy gaming with. So my approach with what games I look to possibly add to the mix, etc. has changed. The GW stuff will always, always have a special place in my heart. GW brought me into gaming again as an adult around 1998 or so and mini war gaming was my first gaming love (again as an adult, as a kid I was brought in with Red Box D&D). But that just hasn't taken off in my home game group. About six of the twelve to fifteen people who are in our gaming group are GW fans and have a desire to maybe play. Some of them have armies that they can never bring themselves to paint (not blaming them, its tough finding the time and energy to paint in some cases nearly 200 mins) and the costs for just something that is going to be very casual is a deterrent for several of them. I've tried team painting nights and paint challenges, suggested house leagues, campaigns etc. We tried Necromunda and Mordheim and they just didn't click ... in the case of Necromunda its so alien to the 40K of today people were turned off. Mordheim was tough because of the warbands some people wanted to play were imbalanced and not "official." We tried some various skirmish rules for 40K and they just didn't click with the group. So essentially due to lack of numbers of committed players they have fizzled. Another big deal with my group is the lack of actual willingness to play longer duration games. The big reason that is is that our group has a strong tendency towards BS tangents (for RPGs the GMs work hard to keep people on track .. but with a GM-less system there is no such restraint). So a game of 40K can easily take 4 hours (for a 1500 point game ... sad but that is just an ongoing problem with this gorup). So with the big storms raging in the GW community these days, the lack of quality public play options in my area and just the realities of my own overall GW gaming prospects here in northern Utah I've put GW on the back, back burner ... maybe I'll make an attempt to return when 6th ed hits for 40K. I'd love to do 8th ed WHFB but that just seems like an even more daunting prospect than 40k.
For D&D see the last post I made. We all had some fun with 4e but for a variety of reasons the group has soured on WoTC and 4e for now. So we have moved off into other directions with RPGs. RPGs are not a worry for me I know our group will continue to have an ongoing game or two of something ... they are easy to put together and fun and there is no end of good systems out there to suit our fancy of the day.
But what I have been looking for now is simply a different approach for myself in terms of mini gaming especially. I am buying all four starter sets for Dystopian Wars (land and sea), I'm buying all the starter boxes for Warmachine and Hordes, I'm looking at some 15 MM sci-fi options, etc. I'm going to buy the stuff, paint it up and run the games like a board games. I have all the terrain completely finished for all of those possibilities so my group can use my stuff and we'll cycle through. If people want to go out and buy their own stuff and paint it up ... awesome ... but if not ... we will have fun mini gaming. I know my group would be A-OK with this. Its sad that I have to resort to this, but really with all the distractions of the internet, video games, and just fast paced modern living ... people just seem to have less and less time for mini gaming. By the way this all might sound INSANE to some of you but bear in mind I have five kids who are young (the oldest is 7) and they are all budding little gamers. So having a big selection of mini games, etc. all painted with core rules that I can eventually play with them is something I've been thinking about for a long time as well. So this does effectively kill to birds with one stone for me and therefore makes more sense than it might if I was just a single guy with no kids trying to get gaming going.
I'm a little worried that I'm attempting to bite off more than I can chew here ... but I feel like this is the surest path to keeping mini gaming alive for myself. In the past I've partaken in many, many crazy mini game related projects and had some huge successes and huge failures. But just a few of the things I have been able to pull off in terms of similar commitments have been: painted a dozen 40K armies to a decent standard. I've worked on huge game club projects from a full 40 player tourney setup (tabletops, terrain, etc.) to big club game table projects for Gamesday (back when we still had them down in LA), etc. So I'm confident I can pull this off if I can just master my own laziness and keep myself motivated. I just need to get a fire burning and keep it going. So my hope is that within two weeks I have my Dystopian Wars minis in hand and then once that project is in I'll start in on Warmachine.
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Warhammer Fantasy RP 2nd edition game
Ok so last night we finished our 5th session of a Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay 2nd edition game. The game is going well so far. My home gaming group is an eclectic mix of folks based largely on my geography (Ogden area of Utah) and also being somewhat new to the area (been here about two years now). The group is all folks in their 20s (save the old man GM … me … mid 30s). College students and all pretty hardcore gamers. But not grognards, more video game fans that dabble into tabletop gaming a bit.
The group started out playing 4e together and right after the first of the year that fell by the wayside for several reasons that I won't go into right now (not a bash of 4e or D&D at all, just our group has lost our interest in it for a variety of reasons and I hate 3.5 and pathfinder … again not a bash just my personal feelings). I'm a big indie RPG fan but this group is mostly not of that persuasion. I have a nostalgia and affinity for old school RPGs as well but this group mostly has the take that “if we are going to play D&D lets do 4e or 3.5 … period.” So pulling off a T&T, Labyrinth Lords, Castles and Crusades, LoTFP or whatever is a non-starter with this crew.
So a few months back I tossed out the idea of running a 2nd edition Warhammer Fantasy Role play game. I don't dislike 3rd ed. … but I have 4/5ths of the books from 2nd and the entire group has played Dark Heresy so there is at least some intuitive familiarity with the mechanics of it. Plus everyone is a HUGE fan of the Warhammer universe. My final twist which got the entire group 100% on board was … we are going to do a Chaos centered game (evil) and they were in. So the group rolled up characters and we have a Chaos Dwarf engineer and human Warrior, Marauder, and Sorcerer. I'm running the game sandbox style with some key milestones/plot points. We have a central storyline that involves a journey to a lost dwarven hold far to the north in the chaos wastes (loosely based on Karak Dum for any of you Felix and Gotrek fans). However the party has stopped off to aid a large tribe of beastmen (actually nearly enslave) and become embroiled in a battle against undead who where plaguing the tribe.
The party has pretty considerable resources and they are sort of mid-level (2nd nearly 3rd advance) … basically the equivalent of 7th or 8th level D&D characters. The combats have been decent but the issue I have with the WHRP system is the crazy critical charts, the cumbersome (but optional) armor system and pretty complex combat mechanics. I've boiled down the combat system and magic system to its core mechanic (following the suggestions in the main rulebook to do so) and things seem to be going pretty smoothly. Fortunately the group is really interested in the story more than just randomly killing things. I also engage in a lot of email/out of game conversation with each player about things. We've had dream sequences, visions, extended research sessions, etc. etc. I'm having a blast with the game and the group seems to be as well.
The big thing that I'm looking at adding to the game though is the plundering of a rules mechanic from the new Deathwatch Space Marine RP game by Fantasy Flight. Particularly the “Hordes” mechanic. Essentially to simulate the awesomeness of the battle brothers the game employs a combat methods for GMs to use in terms of combat against large numbers of mooks/minions/etc. In Deathwatch those encounters are treated like fighting one big beast basically. To quickly describe the essence of it, the hits are just multiplied and so instead of a swing of the sword or axe hitting one baddie ... it hits 5 or 10. Similarly with ranged. So I'm going to basically just hack it to fit fantasy ... I'll have to toy with the mechanic a bit and figure out how powerful I want it to be. But even there the player power curve isn't as big of a concern as it normally would be for me. I'm not worried about them being over-balanced and having it ruin our fun. They are basically heading off to hell ... where the laws of the universe no longer apply ... they'll likely be facing hordes of demons and all sorts of chaos/warp tainted monstrosities.
So as I am not running the standard Warhammer game where players die every other session and crazy random criticals are potentially one shoting bosses or the PCs, etc. its not a standard game. The players are very heroic (anti-heroic rather) and while I want them to feel danger and consequences for their choices … I don't want them re-rolling characters every third session (characters that they have invested hours and hours into now, developed deep backstories, etc.). Also I want them doing really epic, fun, stuff. I want meaningful, memorable combats. None of us are interested in grid based, tactical miniature game 3.5/4e style combats in this game either. So I feel that adding this mechanic will also help us have really big fights that feel epic.
So as I am not running the standard Warhammer game where players die every other session and crazy random criticals are potentially one shoting bosses or the PCs, etc. its not a standard game. The players are very heroic (anti-heroic rather) and while I want them to feel danger and consequences for their choices … I don't want them re-rolling characters every third session (characters that they have invested hours and hours into now, developed deep backstories, etc.). Also I want them doing really epic, fun, stuff. I want meaningful, memorable combats. None of us are interested in grid based, tactical miniature game 3.5/4e style combats in this game either. So I feel that adding this mechanic will also help us have really big fights that feel epic.
I'm excited about using this mechanic and I think its something that will add to the game. So far we've been able to really have a solid campaign with a lot of player involvement and a really fun narrative story that the players are really helping weave and so the game really feels live and full of action and adventure. We've had a lot less cheesy “we get in a barfight” “my character gets drunk … hehe” this time around which was a hallmark of our D&D games and a lot more focus on individual character goals and the central storyline. I've also had a lot of in game player vs player conflict (all in a good way) that is adding to the suspense and tension (again in a good way). I just hope we can keep it up for another 6 to 8 sessions. At least until the end of the summer.
I know I haven't posted much (any) original content on my blog for ages. So of the 58 people “following” the blog maybe 1 random person actually reads something here every few months .. lol. Such is life and really this blog is just mostly a mental placeholder for me. Honestly a place where I post and a few old friends occasionally check it. If I pique any actual “public” interest … cool!! but that isn't why I do this. I make no pretension of being a “pro” blogger. I don't have the time, nor probably the talent, to be such. That disclaimer aside I'll try to do some more posts (more coherently as well) on the game. Our group is taking up Warmachine/Hordes and Dystopian Wars as well so I hope to have some pics and updates on that too.
Cheers!
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Longing for the simpler days of baddassery ...
Longing for the simpler days of baddassery? Well back when America was single handedly saving the world from those evil Soviets who just wanted to nuke us all! Well heroes and villains are usually a product of their time as they say. So we had heroes like Chuck to take our minds off of that reality and remind us of how friggin bad ass we could be if we just practiced our forms!
I've been looking more at 80s pop cultural relics for ideas for some games I'm planning on running for my kids who are just starting to hit the age where RPGs are a possibility. I'm considering Thundar the Barbarian, of course a Dungeons and Dragons cartoon style game (eventually I want to do the classic 1st ed mods and some OSR stuff with em, but I'm thinking when they are a bit older ... 10-13 age group). Anyway that clip just seemed pretty funny ... but very adaptable to the mind of a 7 year old.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Is 6th ed really coming?
Is 6th ed really coming? I posted to another blog with a reply and basically this sums up my take on it. For me I once lived, breathed and bled GW. It was the only gaming related hobby I engaged in really, it was all consuming. From about 1998-2004 those were the golden years for me for GW. Then bit by bit at the tail end of 4th edition I started to lose interest. Mostly as GW's own support out in the Western US started to wain and the hardcore tourney set took over more and more. Don't get me wrong, I was a competitive player back in the day, a tourney organizer myself for years. Our local game club traveled en mass to the GTs and large RTTs. But the mix was a good blend of amazing painters/hobbyists with the more hardcore tourney win at all costs guys. Slowly that mix has evolved to today where in my experience at a big tournament your looking at about 85% win at all costs/just bought their army from blue table and about 10% hobbyist with 5% just walked in off the street and doesn't know whats what yet (but if they stick around they'll likely become a win at all costs guy ... drooling over BoLS lists o' the minute).
6th edition will be coming ... we all know it it is just a matter of when. Who knows if this is really the hearkening of the real release or not ... all I know is it is within the window of reality in terms of the ever 5 years or so new rules version. As for the rumors who knows. It is apparent that there has been massive complaining about 5th ed for years and GW isn't about making tourney players happy GW is about selling models. They've farmed out every other aspect of their company to others (Fantasy Flight, usually THQ for video games, etc.). They want to make money from their mini lines obviously ... so the new edition will be designed to maximize that.
Who knows if the rumors that there will be a 6th ed are true, I'm not even going to pay attention to the specifics just yet. 40K was on the back burner for me anyway ... I've sold 3 armies in the past six months (out of over a dozen that have been mostly gathering dust) and 6 more in the year before that (I have a massive amount of GW stuff what can I say). WHFB has been a pipe dream in the area I live in ... its just not viable. I'll probably dump more 40k stuff and wait to buy anything new until we get more info on all this. If its a hoax oh well I'm clearing out armies I'll never play again ... regardless. The hobby has changed so much for me though each passing year it has less and less to draw my interest. Fewer people in the local area care about painting, about the backstory of the 40K universe, about the things that brought me into the hobby fifteen years ago. In the local area the percentage of MTG/Store Trolls playing the game has increased dramatically (to the point that is the majority of the players now). GW's own support has dried up (on the West coast anyway). So the annual trip to Gamesday to get me psyched has just become a faded memory. I will forever love the GW 40k and WHFB universe and probably always buy their black library releases and play any decent video games they release (what rare titles those are).
For the future I find myself looking more and more to other companies in hopes they'll begin to fill the place in my gaming life that GW used to. Mantic's line is looking better and better ... Spartan Games stuff is looking cool. There is always the rise of Privateer Press (a new sci fi system next year! Level 7?? Huh??). So I'm in a holding pattern with GW ... I pray they bring back the fun that drew me into the hobby ... that they clean up the shat codices that Chaos has to choose from. I hope they figure out a way to bring back some balanced support to the hobby and curtail the net list o' the minute crew a bit. If not I'll always have fond memories I guess.
Who knows if the rumors that there will be a 6th ed are true, I'm not even going to pay attention to the specifics just yet. 40K was on the back burner for me anyway ... I've sold 3 armies in the past six months (out of over a dozen that have been mostly gathering dust) and 6 more in the year before that (I have a massive amount of GW stuff what can I say). WHFB has been a pipe dream in the area I live in ... its just not viable. I'll probably dump more 40k stuff and wait to buy anything new until we get more info on all this. If its a hoax oh well I'm clearing out armies I'll never play again ... regardless. The hobby has changed so much for me though each passing year it has less and less to draw my interest. Fewer people in the local area care about painting, about the backstory of the 40K universe, about the things that brought me into the hobby fifteen years ago. In the local area the percentage of MTG/Store Trolls playing the game has increased dramatically (to the point that is the majority of the players now). GW's own support has dried up (on the West coast anyway). So the annual trip to Gamesday to get me psyched has just become a faded memory. I will forever love the GW 40k and WHFB universe and probably always buy their black library releases and play any decent video games they release (what rare titles those are).
For the future I find myself looking more and more to other companies in hopes they'll begin to fill the place in my gaming life that GW used to. Mantic's line is looking better and better ... Spartan Games stuff is looking cool. There is always the rise of Privateer Press (a new sci fi system next year! Level 7?? Huh??). So I'm in a holding pattern with GW ... I pray they bring back the fun that drew me into the hobby ... that they clean up the shat codices that Chaos has to choose from. I hope they figure out a way to bring back some balanced support to the hobby and curtail the net list o' the minute crew a bit. If not I'll always have fond memories I guess.
The past will never come back. Things have changed with GW forever. My only hope is they find a new way forward. A way to help new players capture the magic of the overall hobby of miniature wargaming. A way for fans to get even more cool models at hopefully at some point ... stabilized prices?!?! Time will tell I guess.
More on GW pricing, etc.
I also agree with this post ... though I think some of the statements about the flexibility that local retailers have in terms of their pricing on GW products. Its a long video but the guy gives a pretty detailed explanation of where GW has been and where he feels they are going. Its general, but its accurate. The first 20 minutes gives a good summary of the situation.
I only really disagree with a little of what he says about how local retailers can reduce their margins easily on GW stuff. I know for a fact that at least here in the US in some markets, GW has gone after local retailers for discounting GW product. Yes those retailers depending on where they are getting it can simply tell GW to stuff it ... many times they just cave and stick to MSRP and maybe do selective 10% discounts. Other than that, though this guy is spot on ... this is the same thing I've been ranting about for years. GW wants you to ultimately only be able to buy their product from THEM. Is that evil? Is that bad? I don't know ... but I think at least in my part of the world ... its bad for the hobby. Maybe its just my selective attention on this topic, but it seems to me that there is more discussion on the internetz on this particular price increase and the switch to resin than there has been about GW for a long time. Most of its in a negative light. But maybe the "no publicity is bad publicity" adage holds true ... time will tell I guess.
I only really disagree with a little of what he says about how local retailers can reduce their margins easily on GW stuff. I know for a fact that at least here in the US in some markets, GW has gone after local retailers for discounting GW product. Yes those retailers depending on where they are getting it can simply tell GW to stuff it ... many times they just cave and stick to MSRP and maybe do selective 10% discounts. Other than that, though this guy is spot on ... this is the same thing I've been ranting about for years. GW wants you to ultimately only be able to buy their product from THEM. Is that evil? Is that bad? I don't know ... but I think at least in my part of the world ... its bad for the hobby. Maybe its just my selective attention on this topic, but it seems to me that there is more discussion on the internetz on this particular price increase and the switch to resin than there has been about GW for a long time. Most of its in a negative light. But maybe the "no publicity is bad publicity" adage holds true ... time will tell I guess.
Games Workshop ... please listen ...
I agree with what this guy is saying. Clearly they have a financial/business stake in the industry and I do not. Yet as a mere fanboy (and a proud one for nearly 15 years now) I agree with this message ... please pass it on!
Sunday, June 19, 2011
HAPPY FATHERS DAY!!
To all you gamer dads out there!! HAPPY FATHERS DAY!!
A fun filled morning of thumb wrestling and bacon consumption ensued in my crazy ... five kids under 7 ... household (sadly I had no nubile young bacon concubines to serve my bacon ... but one can dream can't they!)! Nothing like playing Warhammer Fantasy RP until 3am and then being awoken promptly at 7 AM with a plate of steaming bacon. Needless to say I got up and consumed away!
Privateer Press going Sci-Fi? What is the world coming to!
WHOA!! First Mantic Games announces they are going Sci-Fi with the Warpath system ... now ... Privateer Press follows suit! Watch out GW here comes more competition! Yeeeeeehaaaaaaw!!! Who knows if what these two will put out will really be head to head 40K competition but I am looking forward to more "main stream" (if you can ever call anything mini gaming related that) options in the market place.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Monday, June 13, 2011
The Hobbit ...
Somewhat old but I hadn't seen this yet ... don't know what the deal is but lately I've been on a LoTR kick again ... anyway .. enjoy :) Hopefully they finish this damn thing at some point!!!
Friday, May 13, 2011
TROLL HUNTER ... the movie?!?!
Ok ... its foreign ...
clearly ... its low budget ...
But holy crap the more I've seen about this movie the more I want to see it!!
STUPER POWERS DELUXE and TACO BELL!!! ¡AY, CARAMBA!
I would like to give anyone out there who doesn't know about it a quick heads up on one of my favorite little systems ... its great for one shot supers games (if you want zany/campy hilarity) its called STUPER POWERS DELUXE. I haven't played for years but it "is a role-playing game in which you play a superhero endowed with silly, useless, and downright gross superpowers, sent into battle against the only slightly less ridiculous forces of evil." You end up with characters who can project smells into the minds of their foes ... catch is they themselves have to experience the smell (have fun with that one), they shoot ice cream (instead of fire or ice or energy beams), heroes summon vehicles made of fruit, etc. crazy retro camp at its finest. This system really isn't the game a group would probably pick for long term play but for some funny one and two shot games this is just a priceless system. Every game I've experienced of it has been a blast.
The hilarious Taco Bell advertisement just screams for conversion into a stupor powers game ... of course the group would have to make a run for the boarder at some point during the session :)
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Is technology ultimately a distraction in tabletop gaming? Or is it a amazing tool?
First this might seem trite and contrived but to me this is a fundamental question that I have yet to really address on my own terms. Clearly the answer is something in the middle as it always is with an open ended question like this.
For me though this discussion has long been raging in various gaming groups I've been a part of. Lately its been along the lines of Iphone apps, dicerollers, board game aid-applications, the demise of character builder/monster builder as we knew them with 4e, etc. Yet I can not put my finger on the answer from my own perspective. I tend to be averse to too much technology I find it is distracting and a huge time waster. Do we really need to twitter everything we do? Be honest how much time on facebook is even enjoyable for most people. Blogs ... hell this blog I've had a ton of mediocre posts ... a handful of people have read them it is not why I do this so it doesn't bother me, but wouldn't my time be spent better painting figures or terrain or reading a new ruleset or something ... probably is the answer I have to give. I think if we try to stay aware of whether or not the technology we are using is really as useful as its being billed to be is a good starting place. I think the problem is tech is hip ... and here in America most people whether they admit it or not are pop culture whores and hipsters and being seen with the latest model of apple product, using applications for everything you do .. is hip .. its trendy ... its in and its cool. The price we pay though for that is it really worth it? For me so far I am leaning towards no ... in terms of tabletop gaming. Then again I'm not in a group that is completely pushing it so I don't know what the global gaming community really feels on this.
Clearly off in the future sometimes all tabletop gaming is likely to be borg-ized by technology for good or bad ... its inevitable. We all know it. Board game companies will likely blend with other media companies and we'll be downloading the new Twilight Imperium or Arkham Horror expansions rather than buying the tabletop version. With minis its harder to say but we've seen the first attempt already. But the big question is does tabletop gaming die a little more, does it lose some of its magic, when technology runs amok? Or is it a long over due liberation? For me I have mixed feelings. Just since around 2000 I feel there has been a massive hit to the average tabletop gamers attention span and willingness to delve into complex rulesets, maybe that is a good thing? Don't really know. But also numbers seem to be down a bit. More people seem to be content to stay home and game via WoW or the newest video game release. That might just be my own biased personal experience based on trying to find new gamers. But things do seem to be changing and at least at this moment and from my own individual perspective ... not all for the better. To me technology seems somewhat distracting and invasive at this point.
For me though this discussion has long been raging in various gaming groups I've been a part of. Lately its been along the lines of Iphone apps, dicerollers, board game aid-applications, the demise of character builder/monster builder as we knew them with 4e, etc. Yet I can not put my finger on the answer from my own perspective. I tend to be averse to too much technology I find it is distracting and a huge time waster. Do we really need to twitter everything we do? Be honest how much time on facebook is even enjoyable for most people. Blogs ... hell this blog I've had a ton of mediocre posts ... a handful of people have read them it is not why I do this so it doesn't bother me, but wouldn't my time be spent better painting figures or terrain or reading a new ruleset or something ... probably is the answer I have to give. I think if we try to stay aware of whether or not the technology we are using is really as useful as its being billed to be is a good starting place. I think the problem is tech is hip ... and here in America most people whether they admit it or not are pop culture whores and hipsters and being seen with the latest model of apple product, using applications for everything you do .. is hip .. its trendy ... its in and its cool. The price we pay though for that is it really worth it? For me so far I am leaning towards no ... in terms of tabletop gaming. Then again I'm not in a group that is completely pushing it so I don't know what the global gaming community really feels on this.
Clearly off in the future sometimes all tabletop gaming is likely to be borg-ized by technology for good or bad ... its inevitable. We all know it. Board game companies will likely blend with other media companies and we'll be downloading the new Twilight Imperium or Arkham Horror expansions rather than buying the tabletop version. With minis its harder to say but we've seen the first attempt already. But the big question is does tabletop gaming die a little more, does it lose some of its magic, when technology runs amok? Or is it a long over due liberation? For me I have mixed feelings. Just since around 2000 I feel there has been a massive hit to the average tabletop gamers attention span and willingness to delve into complex rulesets, maybe that is a good thing? Don't really know. But also numbers seem to be down a bit. More people seem to be content to stay home and game via WoW or the newest video game release. That might just be my own biased personal experience based on trying to find new gamers. But things do seem to be changing and at least at this moment and from my own individual perspective ... not all for the better. To me technology seems somewhat distracting and invasive at this point.
I agree that there is a big convenience factor with using tech aids in gaming. I think that is the ultimate seduction of technology its easier, faster and able to accommodate more complexity in a manageable way, etc. I mean if it isn't why would we use it at all? So yes tech is a tool that can make things "easier" but the question is always is the price (literally sometimes) worth it?
I for one though hate using PDFs for games ... exclusively. They can be a great reference, very handy, but using only PDFs has at least in my experience been somewhat problematic. Perhaps its just my antiquated sensibilities but I have talked to many other people who feel the same way. But the value of PDFs is high and clearly PDFs have changed the gaming industry big time. The indie scene especially. I think that is the ultimate seduction of technology ... its easier ... I mean if it isn't why would we use it at all? So yes tech is a tool that can make things "easier" but the question is always is the price (literally sometimes) worth it?
I think we are sort of at that place with technology and tabletop gaming where technology and much of the rest of society was say five or ten years ago. Its odd to me that even tabletop gaming is an area of interest that attracts a high percentage of geeks, techies, nerds and generally folks more apt to use tech and explore new uses as soon as whatever piece of technology is available. Yet here we are ... just now in the past 3 or so years really getting more and more of it. Seems like the tabletop gaming industry/hobby is lagging behind the rest of post-industrial society a bit. For example this past year we saw the first (at least widely available in the US market) game that fused tabletop miniatures with tech Ex Illis. That game was really interesting it is a grid based tabletop game. You paint and assemble your minis just like the warhammer range, but when your done you play on a grid and record your moves in a computer. Much more complex math can be done so ultra customizable options are available which otherwise wouldn't be or would be so complex that the vast majority of players wouldn't want to play. Yet playing the game felt odd ... the question "why don't we just play a video game" kept coming up over and over. Yet undeniably a blending of tech is inevitable. As future generations grow up with tech everywhere around them, I think games that don't have some tech element are going to be a hard sell.
For me tech aided gaming has been cool. In years past when I was a more avid 40K player I can't imagine life without the armybuilder program. The 4e run wouldn't have been half as fun without the old character builder program, and though I know I didn't use it ... every DM who I have talked to that ran 4e seemed to have dearly loved the old monster builder.
A few other interesting tangents sparked from this is the distraction caused by technology ... when one plays a game if their actions distract others that is a distraction. Especially with role playing games where generally immersion is desired. This said GMs have long been using tools like audio tracks, visuals ... heck back in the 1980s I played in a summer game where we had access to a high school (one of the players dads was the school principal and would let us game in a classroom while he worked down in an office) ... our DM used photocopied transparencies and just hand drawn maps (dry erase) to aid the game. It enhanced the game alot. Clearly when a full "gametable" type setup is available ... just imagine the possibilities ... all board games in a digital format, all RPGs in a digital format. Interactive tools via PDA devices (or just our phones) etc. etc. its mind boggling how far this could go and how cool it might be.
Yet the large question looming in my mind is along the lines of how much technology distracts from life itself and for me tabletop gaming has been a refuge to some extent from technology. Anyway a really good article along these lines I read last summer sort of got me thinking about all this NY TIMES ARTICLE. When the day finally comes that tabletop is heavily dominated by tech ... I wonder how I'll feel ... will that be what finally pushes me out of gaming entirely? Or will it be a magical time again ... a new time of wonder at all the possibilities akin to the day when I stood in awe as the classic red box was opened?
For me tech aided gaming has been cool. In years past when I was a more avid 40K player I can't imagine life without the armybuilder program. The 4e run wouldn't have been half as fun without the old character builder program, and though I know I didn't use it ... every DM who I have talked to that ran 4e seemed to have dearly loved the old monster builder.
A few other interesting tangents sparked from this is the distraction caused by technology ... when one plays a game if their actions distract others that is a distraction. Especially with role playing games where generally immersion is desired. This said GMs have long been using tools like audio tracks, visuals ... heck back in the 1980s I played in a summer game where we had access to a high school (one of the players dads was the school principal and would let us game in a classroom while he worked down in an office) ... our DM used photocopied transparencies and just hand drawn maps (dry erase) to aid the game. It enhanced the game alot. Clearly when a full "gametable" type setup is available ... just imagine the possibilities ... all board games in a digital format, all RPGs in a digital format. Interactive tools via PDA devices (or just our phones) etc. etc. its mind boggling how far this could go and how cool it might be.
Yet the large question looming in my mind is along the lines of how much technology distracts from life itself and for me tabletop gaming has been a refuge to some extent from technology. Anyway a really good article along these lines I read last summer sort of got me thinking about all this NY TIMES ARTICLE. When the day finally comes that tabletop is heavily dominated by tech ... I wonder how I'll feel ... will that be what finally pushes me out of gaming entirely? Or will it be a magical time again ... a new time of wonder at all the possibilities akin to the day when I stood in awe as the classic red box was opened?
What do people out there think?
I look at this clip and its friggin awesome (yes yes I know the game table itself is old news I'm just talking about the concept which I think very, very few gamers have yet to experience on a regular basis) ... it just gets my mind reeling about the possibilities. Imagine if all of the good board games, all the good RPGs, even many tabletop miniature games had integrated features usable by a game table like that one (or maybe even a BIGGER one ... man a 4 foot by 6 foot table like that would be AMAZING!). But then I watch the demo and I see how much time people spend dinking around with things .. granted its a demo ... its new tech. As such systems come on line they'll inevitably be refined and people will get better and better at using them. Its soooo enticing on one hand and so uncertain and disturbing on the other. This stuff will be coming down the pipeline someday in the future ... clearly its inevitable.
Monday, February 7, 2011
COMMUNITY Dungeons and Dragons Episode!
OK ... first if you haven't seen the show ... why not? Its great! (If you'd like to check out the episode just go to Hulu and hit the Community section ... its the most current episode (episode 14, season 2).
To explain why I'm posting this here ... its a mainstream example of gaming and I think its one of the best media depictions of the positive aspects of what RPGs are all about! The fact that it occurred in a show that I already liked was just icing on the cake!
Really on the face of it one could go ... man the writers got it all wrong ... this isn't D&D ... (I'd slap such a statement in the face with a terse TROLL! YOU MISS THE POINT!).
Yes Abed rolled for the party (I think that was a way to speed up the game as they only had 21 minutes for the episode! Community needs to be an hour ... *sniffle*) ... but this is hardly the first depiction of a game like that in film. The suspense and effect of the random nature of dice was conveyed to the viewer so I don't think someone unfamiliar with D&D would misunderstand what the game is about based on that.
Pierce being a spoiler ... actually playing the antagonist ... well Abed rolled with it and wow ... turned out great! (well not for pierce ... but hey ... nothing ever goes well for pierce ... he is a dick after all).
Chang ... while his sad early demise was a disappointment (to me as I wanted more Drow ... damn why can't this show be an hour!) ... his dramatic death immediately escalated the stakes of the game and focused the players. No wamby pamby goblins anymore ... they were playing for keeps!
Neal ... his legacy added legitimacy to the game ... the loss of a treasured hard earned essentially "heirloom" item was traumatic for him as a player but also for the rest of the group. Drama builds!
I like the statement that was made with normally cool, together, generally bad ass ... Jeff Winger made through the episode. He basically was too cool for the game. He didn't let himself have fun ... he didn't let himself truly be a part of the game. He missed opportunity to really shine and play to what would normally be his strengths. Abed was throwing him an opportunity and he wusses out ... sad ... really sad Winger
Winger was actually playing the Troll (for proof watch the credits at the beginning ... hehe).
Brita ... well she started out bad but as the game went on she really lent to the game by helping build emotion! Wow look at her reaction at the death of an NPC whom she had befriended. That is what Wickian DMing will do ... pull emotion out of players and heighten the experience for everyone ... bravo Brita!
The rest of the group:
Annie the love scene was fucking hilarious ... and what ... the often maligned, taboo, mocked ... gender bending. Oh sure it was in there for laughs but its a good point ... its a role playing game ... don't be afraid to stretch yourself (no bad pun intended ... given the well endowed moniker of her character). The dwarf character was funny ... Troy's character didn't do much but both he and Shirley good example of how meta conversation can add to the game actually and not detract from it. Their meta discussion actually added to the fun and hilarity and built on the drama ... bravo to them!
What excites me the most about this is its a very positive portrayal of D&D ... oh sure there are geek references, etc. But really the point is the positive side of RPGs and what they can do. Hell these people are trying to SAVE A DUDES LIFE with D&D??!?!?! This ain't the Tom Hanks 80s bible thumper burn all e-vile D&D!! Or the standard ... D&D is for losers ... again ya they portray "Fat Neal" as a nerd with no life ... but ... they sort of hold him up as someone worthy of compassion and a good guy. The show focuses on the positive side of what a role playing game is ... and what it can mean. Bravo ... bravo!
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Farewell to an old friend ...
Farewell to an old friend ...
I heard today that an old friend passed away ... he was only in his mid 30s (Born in 72') ... had a terminal illness for years. He was very private about it and I didn't know (I don't think many people outside of his immediate family did) that it had returned. I post this here because Rick was a gamer ... through and through ... dyed in the wool ... gamer. He was mainly a mini game fan ... but he was an old time D&D player and an avid video game player as well. I met him through the Las Vegas Gamers Club ... he and I were basically part of the founding group. We had a wonderful five year run as a club ... then people moved away and things sort of fell by the wayside. I'd only spoken to Rick a few times since I left Las Vegas in 2009.
He LOVED ... I mean dearly LOVED Games Workshop games ... particularly 40K. I think they guy owned and fully painted to high tabletop standard ... damn near every army GW makes for both 40K and WHFB. He was crazy for the stuff ... he'd buy an army ... paint it ... sell it off ... buy another ... lol. Always so fun to shoot the shit about gaming with. He really didn't care if he won or lost when you played against him ... he never lost his cool and got ticked about losing .. or gloated about winning ... he was really just in it for the fun and good times. He could find the humor in a bad loss ... find humor in rolling 8 ones out of 9 dice (I witnessed him make that roll once btw) for a game losing round of close combat in a tournament. When he won he was gracious. He was quick to compliment people, quick to open a door, quick to pat someone on the back when they needed it. When we had our first child he got a card and a heartfelt gift ... I mean none of my other gaming friends did anything like that and I didn't expect them too ... but Rick did ... he was that kind of guy.
He LOVED ... I mean dearly LOVED Games Workshop games ... particularly 40K. I think they guy owned and fully painted to high tabletop standard ... damn near every army GW makes for both 40K and WHFB. He was crazy for the stuff ... he'd buy an army ... paint it ... sell it off ... buy another ... lol. Always so fun to shoot the shit about gaming with. He really didn't care if he won or lost when you played against him ... he never lost his cool and got ticked about losing .. or gloated about winning ... he was really just in it for the fun and good times. He could find the humor in a bad loss ... find humor in rolling 8 ones out of 9 dice (I witnessed him make that roll once btw) for a game losing round of close combat in a tournament. When he won he was gracious. He was quick to compliment people, quick to open a door, quick to pat someone on the back when they needed it. When we had our first child he got a card and a heartfelt gift ... I mean none of my other gaming friends did anything like that and I didn't expect them too ... but Rick did ... he was that kind of guy.
He was one hell of a nice guy ... one of the nicest people I've ever known and I say that with all sincerity. Always there to lend a hand, always willing to pitch in on gaming club activities, etc. He was one of those guys who not to be cliche "would give you the shirt off his back" but really he was ... he could be down to his last five bucks and if you needed it ... he'd give it to you. He was just a salt of the earth person just an amazing person. He had a very young daughter and a loving wife. It tears me up to know that his child won't know him and that he won't have a chance to see her grow up, go through school, go off to college, get married, have a career, kids, etc.
Rick rest in peace man ... you will be missed ...
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
To follow the blog heard ... who will pick up the Star Wars RPG license?

So who will pick up the Star Wars RPG license?
Here is my based on nothing but opinion opinion ...
To start as we all know The Old Republic looms on the horizon ... its going to generate interest in the Star Wars franchise that it hasn't seen in years. Clearly all the bean counters, marketers, executives and legal folks are well aware of this and as we know Lucas is all about the Ben Franklins ... they could give two shits about anything else. Again obvious givens right. So keep this in mind then when one speculates on who is going to pick up the license. For Lucas Arts ... they have so much merchandising going on ... in so many genres ... the RPG license is a small nat on a nats arse sitting on another nat who happens to be on a mouses ass. In short its pointlessly small. I'd think they'd be far more concerned about the collectible card games/mini games/board games, etc. So why would a company like Mongoose with really poor history in the US (I have no clue what their history is in the UK maybe its better) in terms of big successful titles, and their licensed stuff is bottom barrel stuff.
Mongoose is a terrible, terrible company that has put out consistently bad games. I'd die laughing at the house that does Babylon 5 ... picked up a Lucas Arts license ... it would be a huge joke. Mongoose isn't remotely the caliber of company they'd be interested in IMO. They have had a few ok RPG supplements but in general everything they've done from their minis lines to a fair portion of their RPG stuff hasn't been of a level that Lucas Arts would be looking for. If I had to take a shot in the dark guess on who would be in the running I'd say: Green Ronin (they've done high quality licensed product), Fantasy Flight Games (they are just a top notch all in one shop, Lucas Arts could sign them up across the board for tabletop and they'd be set). Unless its some crazy lotto win for some third string company like Mongoose ... I'd wager it would be one of those two.
Cubicle 7 would kick ass (Legends of Anglerre rocks) ... but do they have the chops to compete for a Lucas license?? The only companies I know of that make sense are FFG and Green Ronin ... Green Ronin has Dragon Age, Warhammer Fantasy 2nd ed, and A Game of Thrones under its belt. Again all idle speculation at this point ... Upper Deck will likely end up with the license and farm out the RPG stuff to someone we've never heard of ... lol. Who knows ... likely Lucas will drag its feet for a few years and award it to some shitbox company that does a bad job ... and we'll end up with a game designed by Jar Jar Binks ... woot!
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