Where my current players are there is a chance of running into "colorful" NPC's. One such category ending up on the "Random Encounter" tables I scratched together is Traveling Sorcerer!
I copied some of the random tables from this LotFP product and pasted them into the Last Gasp online generator tool. Just like that I now have, if encountered, a means of creating helpful and caring random strangers for my players to interact with!
Zak posted this questionnaire and here are the answers I came up with;
1.
One article or blog entry that exemplifies the best of the Old School
Renaissance for me: Chris Kubasik's Traveller-out-of-the-box series
of blog posts on his blog Tales to Astound are epic. I
particularly like “The
Expectations of a Traveller Referee at the Start of the Hobby”.
Made me go from “I wonder what Traveller is actually like?” to “I
need to play this game now!” before I finished reading the post. 2.
My favorite piece of OSR wisdom/advice/snark: What James Raggi wrote
in the Referee Guide of his Grindhouse Edition of LotFP. 3.
Best OSR module/supplement: By far, and much said on this blog, I get
more use out of Vornheim:
the Complete City Kit. Regardless
of system or genre I've been able to use this game book whenever I'm
adjudicating action in an urban location. 4.
My favorite house rule (by someone else): Carousing Table for
experience points. Jeff Reints came up with this? Showed me how to
shoehorn carousing rules into USR Sword & Sorcery. 5.
How I found out about the OSR: Grognardia. 6.
My favorite OSR online resource/toy: No contest; Last
Gasp's Generator. 7.
Best place to talk to other OSR gamers: It has been G+. 8.
Other places I might be found hanging out talking games: MeWe, this
blog, YouTube channel and my Anchor podcast. Links to connect are all
over this blog. 9.
My awesome, pithy OSR take nobody appreciates enough: The rules are
for the players. 10.
My favorite non-OSR RPG: Scott Malthouse's (U)nbelievably
(S)imple (R)oleplaying free system. 11.
Why I like OSR stuff: Original, adult gaming
content I can't get anywhere else. 12.
Two other cool OSR things you should know about that I haven’t
named yet: 13.
If I could read but one other RPG blog but my own it would be:
Playing D&D with PornStars. 14.
A game thing I made that I like quite a lot is: USR Sword &Sorcery. 15.
I'm currently running/playing: Clockwork & Cthulhu, my online
Renaissance campaign and I play online in some West Marches styled
B/X games when I can. 16.
I don't care whether you use ascending or descending AC because:
Because I can subtract from 20. 17.
The OSRest picture I could post on short notice:
The first live stream of my long running Clockwork & Cthulhu online game got off the ground with a real live gatecrasher dropping into the Google Hangout right at the end of the session. It was like some viral bot which persistently entered the Hangout with a prerecorded message. I'm guessing there are automated malicious malware which searches YouTube live for streams? I do not have a clue. Anyone who has experience with live streaming their Hangout go ahead and jump to the end to see what I am talking about. I would like to clean this kind of intrusion up.
Fortunately it did not diminish play and fun being had with this current live session. Using the YouTube(beta) studio I was able to set up a channel (Vanishing Tower Press) and figure out how to generate a Google Hangout which was also streamed live as well as be recorded to my YouTube channel. I'm sure many of you have already familiarized yourself with this online tech, but this was my first look at running it myself. Long story short, it was dead simple to open the Hangout through YouTube. I posted the link to my MeWe game group and let the players fall into just like always.
The game did take a roll-call hit this outing with the session three players down. This didn't have anything to do with the great G+ migration disrupting communication channels. Just stuff coming up so players couldn't show. Yes this is a pain in the ass as a game master, but we who show negotiate a handwave solution for the present situation and press on. We have come to know the game as deeply serial. Everyone wants to force a resolution so the session grinds on.
And it went like most sessions have for nigh on three years. There was the early settling in, the shop-talk as we all transition into gamer world. Then came play. With fewer active table players I usually see the "journey" through the game world pick up speed so we saw the environment drastically change over the course of the session for the PC's. More questions, fewer answers and less PC's to absorb the certain damage to come, and then the unusual bot hack which brought the whole session to a quick ending until next time.
Being able to replay the session back was waaay cool. Super obvious how it can sharpen my recollection of what just happened. Running a session I can miss some of the witty play coming from my players. So yeah I get to appreciate the social aspects of the game in playback I do miss to a degree as a game referee. Probably the most immediate and useful GM'img teaching tool going too. I was never good enough in sports to make tape and watch game film like the varsity players so I don't have much experience with learning from watching yourself play but the value is unmistakable. I'm not sure what the overall impact to play will be, but review did give me a chance to confirm suspicions and validate some actual play methods I try and stay conscious of. Getting to see the actual walk of the lot of talking we all do around here, it's good to see it work.
Adding a video library to the campaign along with the written is pretty exciting. Never has there been the ability to manufacture the actual play experience for spectators on such an accessible scale. Now all those papers, notes and scribbled maps are adorned with the sound of voices and images of people playing.
The
demise of G+. Couldn't come at a better time. I was starting to
wonder why I was continuing to go there. I felt like there was too
many posts and circles and groups to effectively curate. If I didn't
use G+ as my online game platform I probably would have just stuck
with my blog's blog roll to stay up on cool content.
With
the migration to MeWe of many G+'ers I kinda get to rebuild my online
gaming architecture. Not by much, but with any type of move I get a
chance to look through my stuff and ask “What do I really need?”
First off I need a group for my current online game. Here MeWe falls
short because there is no integrated video conference app built into
the site. G+ broke up the seamless way I could go from announcing a
game, getting players and then forming a group complete with event
listings and then simple click for all participants to jump in on
game day. But I could still type in group contacts and send out
invites to the online Hangouts session. With MeWe I can have the
group organization but I will be needing to lead everyone over to the
Hangout. The good which has come about with the forced reorganization
is I've made a hard look at YouTube. To look at the recording and
live streaming capabilities. The public consumption of viewing others
playing table top roleplaying, well I have a long running game and me
and my players don't mind people lurking.
Seeing
what is possible. This is what I got the most from G+. What I can do
with free access to online tools and the audience online to interact
with. My game was nonexistent and once I was hooked up on G+ I was
reading blogs with elevated gaming information, writing my own game
blog and playing actual games. Then was the exposure to incredible
adult material I would never get from game companies.
Original, visceral and presented in useful and beautiful formats.
Plenty for free and the really good stuff was worth the price. Made
me want to make my own stuff. The G+ gamers showed the way here too.
POD, One Book Shelf, layout software, making PDF's. I get to make
game books I want to have on my shelf. And if anyone else is
interested they can spend coffee money and have them too!
I
was way wrong in thinking G+ would be around for a long time. But
hell with it. The good look and lesson I got sure showed it is all
about the people in the game community. We have met, more come
everyday, and the blogs backstop all the valuable material so
exposure and innovation will continue.
I
will be detaching from G+. No reason not to just post on my blog and
group scrum live with the gang on MeWe for now. As long as I have a
viable means of creating a video table for players to sit around I
don't think my online experience will be diminished at all. Maybe
this will cut down on distractions so I can finish the latest three
or four gaming books I agonize over.
All
in all this shows the durability of the blogs. This is a good thing.
Now I got a game I gotta get ready for. See you all real soon.