3 Ennie Noms, 1 Win (Silver) for best RPG blog!, Writer of RPG games & articles, MIDI composer, lover of F1, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, and all-around nice (single) guy!
#New#RPG#DnD#Universal Blog Post: Can you imagine an adventure that works with almost ANY campaign, ANY genre? Today, I offer one. 1165 words.
When it's NOT time to Railroad
https://t.co/GqzWXy1LLf
@bright39264 My experience is almost the opposite. The problem isn't the separate files, it's correlating the information in those files. Keeping everything in 1 doc hides the forest for the trees, it's no solution. The files in question need to be treated as flat-file databases.
@bright39264 In my experience, the biggest problem in capturing a characters POV is seeing only what THEY know of the world / the story. The ability to outline events and tag them with participants / observers, then add 'hidden' events where the news reaches others, could be very useful.
@symeew13 Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, and Motley Crue were the three most disappointing concerts I ever attended. Aerosmith didn't care, Alice was quieter than the support act, and the Crue were so loud that you couldn't hear a single word or note, hearing just shut down.
#New#RPG#DnD#Universal Blog Post: Practical measures to improve the delivery of languages (real or alien) and accents at the game table. 8210 words.
A Twist Of The Tongue: Accents and Foreign Languages
https://t.co/RNjmLm0OZH
#new#RPG#DnD#Universal Blog post: Parallels exist between Perspectives in art and the way events are viewed in a RPG, leading to a lot of useful advice. 5706 words.
Perspectives Of Plot
https://t.co/HkCT8MJ2JV