Games Blog

Reviews, thoughts and options from the word of paper-and-pencil roleplaying games.

James Desborough has got the licence for an RPG John Norman’s Gor, and has started Indiegogo campaign to fund it. No further comment is really necessary…

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Dungeons and Dragons 5th Edition Player’s Handbook

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMugBack in the early days I played a lot of D&D. Most memorable was a lengthy campaign that started off using first edition AD&D, eventually progressing to second edition. After than I drifted away to more “realistic” systems such as Runequest and GURPS, and later still to various rules-lite systems tuned for one-shot convention play, the only gaming I do much of nowadays. I did buy the third edition at Gencon UK in way back in 2000, but passed on 3.5 and the controversial fourth edition entirely.

The fifth edition of Dungeons and Dragons comes at a time when the D&D community had become fragmented. The fourth edition was a radically different game, emphasising tactical combat and set-piece battles at the expense of roleplaying, and has been described as being closer in spirit to Magic:The Gathering than to earlier editions of D&D. That alienated a significant part of their market, many of whom deserted the game in favour of rival systems based on the open-sourced rulesets of earlier editions. The highest profile of these was Pathfinder, derived from 3.5, and various OSR (Old School Renaissance) small press games based on much earlier editions. Continue reading

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D&D Consultantgate refuses to die down

This post contains more RPG drama relating to the D&D consultant issue. If you don’t want to read another word about this ongoing shitstorm, then move along, there’s nothing to see. Continue reading

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So a bunch of gamers are celebrating the release of the 5th Edition of Dungeons & Dragons by burning their 4th Edition books. It seems the D&D Edition Warriors now make Yes lineup purists look like rank amateurs. Accusing me of being the president of their record company for writing a three-star review of their new album just can’t compete.

Posted on by Tim Hall | 3 Comments

D&D5 and Internet Outrage

So the first release of Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition has caused an internet shitstorm. And this time it has absolutely nothing to do with any content of the actual game, but the names of two of the list of people credited as consultants. People are talking of boycotting the game, or making donations to an appropriate charity instead of buying D&D products.

Admittedly those two names have a reputation as rather abrasive characters who do not suffer fools gladly, and referring to opponents as “Psuedoactivist Swine” is not the best way to make friends and influence people. But nothing excuses smears and blatant lies such as wholly false claims of racism and homophobia. The whole thing seems to be driven by long-running personal feuds and opposing cliques, some of which goes back to the elitism coming out of The Forge a decade ago.

I’m reminded of the “Satanic Panic” back in the 1980s, when a bunch of fundamentalists declared than D&D was a gateway to devil worship and a significant cause of teenage suicide. These small-minded and censorious authoritarians managed to do a great deal of harm to the RPG hobby, for example getting the game banned in schools. They succeeded in this because D&D was little known and little understood, and too few people outside the RPG hobby understood how much their claims were paranoid nonsense.

A decade later they tried the same thing against the far more mainstream Harry Potter fandom, and they just got steamrollered. Enough of a critical mass of people had read the actual books, so that nobody outside the fundamentalist bubble could take the devil-worship arguments seriously.

The same has happened with the so-called “Outrage brigade”. When they went after relatively little-known small-press writers people who ought to have known better bought their lies and smears. Once they went after the biggest game in the RPG hobby it was the equivalent of the moral minority versus Harry Potter. They were revealed as a small clique, deserving irrelevance beyond their little echo chambers.

It does need to be said that there has been some thoroughly toxic behaviour on both sides, bad things said in anger that keep on fuelling the fires. School playgound level name-calling and “Die in a fire” ad-hominems are never acceptable behaviour regardless of the provocation. As my mother always said “Two wrongs don’t make a right”. Some people really need to grow up and let go of old grudges.

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Dark Dungeons!

Yes, they really are making a live-action film version of that infamous 1980s Jack Chick tract warning of that dangers of Dungeons and Dragons.

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Songo Mnara as an RPG setting?

ku-xlargeA lost city reveals the grandeur of medieval African civilization, and provides a bit of food for thought for anyone creating a psuedo-medieval RPG setting

Some of the world’s greatest cities during the Middle Ages were on the eastern coast of Africa. Their ornate stone domes and soaring walls, made with ocean corals and painted a brilliant white, were wonders to the traders that visited them from Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. They were the superpowers of the Swahili Coast, and they’ve long been misunderstood by archaeologists. It’s only recently that researchers outside Africa are beginning to appreciate their importance.

It’s easy to overlook the fact that in medieval times northern Europe was a backwater, and the real civilisations of the world were going on elsewhere. So any would-be game designer creating yet another Generic Fantasy setting based solely on medieval Europe is missing out.

The whole thing is worth reading, especially the way Songo Mnara had been wrongly assumed to have been a Arab outpost rather than an indiginous African civilisation. It’s true that it was Islamic, but it practiced an African version of Islam with far greater equality between the sexes.

At a time when game designers are being encouraged to be more inclusive, we should remember that medieval Africa wasn’t all primitive tribes, but contained sophisticated civilisations equal to those of Europe.

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ConTessa this coming weekend.

ConTessaA brief signal boost for ConTessa, an online gaming convention taking place this coming weekend, from the 7th to the 9th of February.

As it states on the ConTessa website:

ConTessa is an annual 3-day online gaming convention showcasing the many women who play, create, and love tabletop games.

ConTessa is contests, demos, panels and most of all games.

ConTessa is an apolitical space where everyone is invited to share in positive gaming experiences. Run by women – fun for everybody.

Sadly I can’t participate due to long-standing prior commitments, but the whole thing is a strongly positive idea that deserves support.

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RIP Nicki Jett

It was very sad news to learn today that a long-standing and much loved member of the Dreamlyrics online roleplaying community, Tim Flynn, known to the community by the forum identity Nicki Jett, has passed away after a lengthy illness.

Online identities can be complex things, and it’s not for me to say whether the Nicki Jett persona was Tim Flynn’s greatest roleplaying achievement or whether she was something a bit more than that. But I’m going to use the name Nicki and female pronouns for the rest of this piece, because that was the person I knew.

I’ve known Nicki online since the days of the RPGAMES forum on CompuServe in the mid 1990s. She was a tremendous writer who always inspired and brought the best out of the others in every game she played. She was always very pro-active as a player. That could occasionally throw a spanner in the works when she dragged the story in a way the rest of the group didn’t really want it to go, but most of the time grabbing the game by the scruff of the neck and making things happen was just what was needed. And she certainly made things happen in-game.

Her characters were always larger-than-life, strongly self-confident but never over-sexualised women, the sort of characters you really didn’t want to mess with. I remember her character in a near-future cyberpunk game who took on a tank in single combat, and subsequently slaughtered an entire troop of Israeli commandos who were supposed to have been our allies. It was things like that which earned her the occasional nickname of “collateral damage woman”. She could occasionally be a bit of a munchkin; who remembers original GURPS 3rd edition Psionics rules? Nicky could be a challenge to GM sometimes, but her contributions to the site always made it worthwhile.

Certainly her psychokinetic revolutionary Hollis was one of the central characters of my own long-running game KLR, and it’s not really a coincidence that the game finally folded when her ill-health made her unable to post.

Whether you were known as Nicky or as Tim, Rest in Peace.

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Iridium Tractor

Is this an early incarnation of the Agricultural Thresh Metal of Iridium Tractor, as seen in the game of Umläut: The Game of Metal at this year’s Summer Stabcon. But where is Flossy the sheep?

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