Tabletop Roleplaying Games (D&D, Pathfinder, CoC, ETC.)

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So the woman who runs one of the D&D meetups on the East Coast continues to want to run everyone's game and now how to host a meetup at your place to introduce yourself to new players. "to host let us know - we will teach you this skill.We would like to add more event" I'd post more, but that would give away the location. This woman is doing more harm than good in the game. Don't get me started on how her second email to people claimed she was almost raped at a game and used that as an excuse to tell you to run your games her way to "protect you".

I'm pretty sure anyone who wants to set up games would know how to interact with people and know where to meetup. It's not exactly a hard skill to "learn". This woman just wants you to have meetups at certain locations so she can control what you do in your games.
 
I finished my collection for the Wraith: The Oblivion line and got all the game books (that aren't Mind's Eye). Now I just got to wait for the 20th anniversary edition (which is coming a few months).

I've recently begun re-reading my copy of Dark Ages: Vampire, and I forgot how cool the medieval settings for World of Darkness were.
Which edition do you have?
 
I finished my collection for the Wraith: The Oblivion line and got all the game books (that aren't Mind's Eye). Now I just got to wait for the 20th anniversary edition (which is coming a few months).


Which edition do you have?

I own Dark Ages: Vampire (2002) on hard copy, and I also own Vampire: The Dark Ages (1996) on PDF. I have been reading both, and enjoying both of them.
 
Are planning to check out the V20 version?

Probably. I'll admit it'd be hard to top the mechanics of the 2002 version or the atmosphere of the 1996 version, but I think it's worth checking out.

The original V20 corebook was pretty good though. Especially how it took a metaplot-neutral stance.
 
I posted this on the social justice warriors section, but I thought I'd share it here. Now that I think about it, I wonder what this guy would say about World of Darkness. (I like to imagine Theo Bell kicking this guy's ass.)
26672500287_012d049ba8_b.jpg
 
I posted this on the social justice warriors section, but I thought I'd share it here. Now that I think about it, I wonder what this guy would say about World of Darkness. (I like to imagine Theo Bell kicking this guy's ass.)
26672500287_012d049ba8_b.jpg

I feel like this "professor" never bothered to look into the game and just read SJW articles about it.

Edit:
Breitbart article I see, I wonder how much of the professors findings they skipped
http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2018/...-perpetuates-systems-of-white-male-privilege/
The professor in question
https://ed.stanford.edu/faculty/anterog
Yup looks exactly how I thought.
 
Part of me wants to run a campaign set during the American Civil War and GM it in the style of the narrator in a Ken Burns documentary.

And I'd play this song before the beginning of every session.

 
Having recently read Dark Ages V20, I must say that it is surprisingly good.

Troves are being taken down if there's anything you need you may wish to get them now. (Some moron is giving them fake DMCA complaints and sites don't bother to allow people to challenge them) Soon as a new book appears though I scoop it up for my collection though.
 
I've been wanting to play either Dungeon Crawl Classics or Original Dungeons & Dragons for quite some time, or better yet, DM a game of it.

I love Original Dungeons & Dragons, and I have begun working on ideas for an OSR homebrew campaign setting of mine that freely mixes elements from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, and Medieval Europe. Especially the Early Medieval period also known as the Dark Ages or the Low Middle Ages.

However, I may also include a lot of the Sword & Sorcery and sci-fi pulp gonzo weirdness that is found in OD&D (and repeated in Dungeon Crawl Classics).

The setting could work for either OD&D or Basic D&D, and while it is a fantasy world, I am invoking elements from real-life history and mythology. The alignment system is the old three-point alignment system (Law, Neutrality, Chaos) rather than the more famous nine-point alignment chart that has been the mainstay from AD&D onward.

There would initially be three core character classes: Fighter, Magic-User, and Cleric. I am unsure as to whether or not to include the Thief as a core class, and Humans would be the only core playable race.

Elves, Dwarves, Halflings, and other demi-humans would exist, but are reserved for NPC's and would be rare.

Again, this setting is in the earliest phases of development and I'll keep you guys posted if you're interested.
 
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