Another Gary Con is in the books. Sticking to tradition, I roomed with the same guys as last year (Judge Jeff of Spellburn and Appendix N, weird illustrator David Hoskins), and this time we were joined by David's friend Harry, who was attending Gary Con for the first time. This year I decided to run games as well and signed up for three games. A bit naively I chose to run three different systems, so I lugging way too many books into the Con.
Showing posts with label DCC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DCC. Show all posts
Friday, March 15, 2019
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
DCC: Doom of the Savage Kings
Here we go. The band continues with an adventure that is second only to the ultimate funnel and quintessential DCC adventure Sailors on the Starless Sea. DCC #66.5 - Doom of the Savage Kings is the perfect follow-up to whatever funnel produced your adventurers. In an desolate land, a mythical beast torments the people and the local jarl has taken to human sacrifices to placate its awesome appetite. The adventure is a heavy metal infused sandbox mystery with a supernatural threat looming over every nightfall. Spoilers after the break!
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
DCC: The Queen of Elfland's Son
The band continued their adventures with DCC #97 - The Queen of Elfland's Son. After surviving the horrors of Brandolyn Red, the peasant adventurers leveled up to proper DCC classes and sought further opportunities for glory. My usual spoilery review/play impressions follow the break.
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
DCC: They Served Brandolyn Red
Kicked off a new DCC campaign on Roll20 this week with the Goodman Games' 2015 Halloween module - They Served Brandolyn Red. This is the second time I've ran this module, the first being at a game store in Kansas City. I've had a great time with it both times, so my spoilery review and some play notes after the break.
Monday, March 12, 2018
Gary Con X
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| The Seat of Honor |
Day One
I arrived at Gary Con X around 3pm on Wednesday. This is only my second con to attend after going to NTRPG last June. It's a significantly larger con but still nowhere near the size of the big cons. Whereas at NTRPG I carefully booked all my time, I only scheduled a single game each day, hoping that I'd be able to find enough extra stuff to do to fill my time.Monday, October 9, 2017
The Weird Lore Found in Books
I've never felt compelled to build a setting from the ground up. I like drawing maps occasionally, but actually thinking about the borders of countries, the rulers of realms, the pantheon, the lay of the cosmos, it's all kind of boring to me until I need it. This is why I like gazetteer style setting books like Matt Finch's Borderland Provinces. It gives me all that background detail with nice bits like the emblems of each province and the religious heresies operating in the region, while leaving plenty of space for me to develop.
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