Looks cool! Oh… it’s already on my wishlist!
Looks cool! Oh… it’s already on my wishlist!
It’s impressive that he managed to avoid touching any grass for 11 years!
I have a player like this. He always specs out all the options on spreadsheets and tries to find the optimum builds for any RPG we play. Which is fine, but I got really tired of him telling everyone else how to play their characters in D&D that we’ve only been playing other RPGs for the past few years where build optimization is less of a thing.
3900 games here.
I guess it’s time to switch to Linux finally.
This is why I liked the how Torture skill in Burning Wheel does just this: you decide what the victim says. It’s not true, it’s just what they admit to.
Even if I don’t directly use each book, I might find ideas and inspiration in them that I can bring back to the games I do run. This has happened plenty of times. Besides, they can be fun to read. This goes for old books too. Numerous times I’ve adapted old material for new games.
Fair point! I’m not saying it’s a bad thing, it’s just interesting to me cause I’m not used to it. I usually run D&D as medieval (like ~1300 AD) European fantasy with magic and a little bit of anachronistic renaissance stuff.
As someone who’s been DMing for 30+ years, it’s really interesting to me when people have anachronistic stuff like coffee shops in D&D.
The “Iv’e” bothers me more than it should.
Doesn’t look like it, unfortunately. But it’s planned. Kotlin can also compile to JavaScript with DOM manipulation. I’ve not tried either scenario, myself.
It’s in alpha, but there is a Kotlin to wasm compiler in the works.
It’s TTRPG designer Greg Stolze!
If only I could be so grossly incandescent.
Yeah, exactly my thinking! THIS is the real D&D party!
Is this a reference to Crime Pays But Botany Doesn’t?
This is just a picture of Ron Perlman.