Crossguard is a setting-agnostic TTRPG system inspired by the simulationism of GURPS, the tactics of Mythras and the build-and-play ease of Lancer. Check out the free rules over on the Patreon! https://t.co/vwBq1ObSYB
Lo and behold, the PDF version of the Crossguard rules now work. Much easier to navigate now, and it works on mobiles. All the rules download links have been updated: https://t.co/vwBq1ObSYB #ttrpg
Crossguard Beta 0.102 is out! This update makes characters more versatile and well-rounded, and a ton of other stuff got updated too. Download links here: https://t.co/vwBq1ObSYB #indie#rpg#ttrpg
@Bogdan28820966@TeamYouTube It starts with the fact that literally in order to get any kind of support from YouTube you have to go on Twitter and tag a guy. It sucks. And I've had similar issues though not on this scale, thank f. C'mon @TeamYouTube
Another TTRPG dev post, this time about the difference between freeform and level-gated systems, some modern solutions, and what I went with in Crossguard. Checkit: https://t.co/dhqjRvlAUJ
@ViktorGorchev Is it worth it, in your opinion? Being indie you have to be so much more public-facing. It can be exhausting. But y'know. Independence. Eventually, after a long road.
The conclusion to my design discussion on Crossguard's core check system. And my own little thesis on how to turn little plastic numbered trinkets into fun and drama. https://t.co/8MFOPHpHO8 #ttrpg#dnd#crossguardrpg
Randomly generate a piece of sigh-inducing new terminology for what the GM is called in your new indie TTRPG.
First word (1d6)
1: Whisper
2: Dirge
3: Grift
4: Sporgle
5: Darkness
6: Illumination
Second word (1d6)
1: Lord
2: Master
3: Speaker
4: Splatter
5: Keeper
6: Smasher
So what's trending on TTRPG twitter today? Did someone post about a gay kobold on reddit and that's why 5e is bad?
*rolls oracle dice*
Old school fantasy D&D art and cheesecake? ... Alright, please continue
As an accompaniment to a video I'll be putting out soon talking about the HOW (how to play Crossguard, the basics) here's an article talking about WHY the core systems are designed the way they are. (Link below, twitter is weird)