RPG
Fear of Girls
9I don’t know if you guys can laugh about gamer stereotypes. I know I can. Everytime I watch the awesome movie “The Gamers” I am literally rolling on the floor laughing. Another pretty funny short movie about fantasy roleplayers is “Fear of Girls”.
Episode 1:
Episode 2:
And by the way, do American gamers really use “boo-yah” when rolling a natural 20?
CthulhuTech
13
CthulhuTech is a strange marriage of H.P. Lovecraft‘s Cthulhu mythos and japanese big robot anime series. CthulhuTech is also the first RPG by WildFire, a labor of love of just three people who created the game in their spare time. Knowing this makes the end result even more spectacular.
The rulebook is a beautiful 290 pages full-color hardcover book. When I first opened the book I was blown away by the artwork. The second thing I noticed that everything screams “Neon Genesis Evangelion”. And that’s a good thing. But let’s talk about the story of CthulhuTech first.
The game is set into the near future. It’s 2085 and humanity wages war against an ancient alien race, the Migou, who attack from space and against various cults who attack from within. The stars are right and dead gods have awakened and their gaze falls on Earth. The New Earth Goverment (short: NEG) utilizes cybernetic-organic mecha to fight against the alien invaders and the mecha of unspeakabe cults.
If you are a fan of japanese mecha anime and the Mythos, you will at once fall in love with CthulhuTech. The idea behind the setting is very cool, strangely familiar but also something refreshingly new. But I also fear that a lot of the psychological horror that’s part of Lovecraft’s stories will have to be thrown out of the door when you run a CthulhuTech campaign. The player are supposed to play soldiers in the so-called Aeon War and when you’ve dealed several times with strange alien mecha and other forces of the Mythos, you will probably get used to it. So in the end a Migou is just something like an orc in D&D.
But I haven’t had the chance to playtest the game, so perhaps it’s possible to establish a sense of dread common in Mythos stories even when the players’ character stomp around on battlefields across the solar system with huge humanoid warmachines.
The game uses a rules system dubbed Framewerk, that uses ten-sided dice and reminds me of White Wolf’s Storyteller system. There’s some kind of “poker game” built into the task resolution system that favor roll results that are multiples or straights. Like many modern roleplaying game, CthulhuTech doesn’t use classes or levels. There are several character templates that can be used when you don’t want to create characters totally from scratch, but their are meant as mere guidelines. The available templates are: Arcanotechnician (part scientist, part occult magician), Engel Pilot, Intelligence Agent, Mecha Pilot, Occult Scholar, Soldier and Tager (someone who has bonded with a supernatural symbiont).
Players can also choose between two races: humans and nazzadi. The Nazzadi were created by the migou from human DNA to fight humanity but they rebelled against their creators and now fight alongside humans. Did somebody say Zentraedi *cough*?
When you skim through the book you’ll notice that it’s full of background information, flavor text, everything you’ll consider “fluff”. Although you’ll find many things “borrowed” or “inspired” by anime series like Robotech or Neon Genesis Evangelion, the creators of CthulhuTech have created a highly detailed word in its own right. And since the book also contains a lot of NPC stats, vehicle stats, adventure hooks, etc. you can easily run a whole campaign without ever buying an additional sourcebook.
If you like mecha, SF, the Cthulhu Mythos, japanese anime and eldritch horror, you really should check out CthulhuTech. And if you need even more information on the world of the Aeon War, there’s already a CthulhuTech Companion available in stores and another title called Dark Passions is coming out soon.
Scribd gem: D&D from 1974
0While browsing through Scribd, fellow blogger Dominik Dießlin from the german blog Rollenspiel Almanach has found some true gems: the complete Dungeons & Dragons White Box!
- D&D 1974 – Rulebook 1 Men & Magic
- D&D 1974 – Rulebook 2 Monsters Treasure
- D&D 1974 – Rulebook 3 The Underworld Wilderness Adventures
- D&D 1974 – Supplement I Greyhawk
- D&D 1974 – Supplement II Blackmoor
- D&D 1974 - Supplement III Eldritch Wizardry
- D&D 1974 – Supplement IV Gods Demigods and Heroes
The Lost Continent Illyria
6
Some time ago our fellow RPGBlogger Philippine Gamer has posted about a D&D 4th Edition campaign setting a member of his gaming group, R. Velasco, created: “The Lost Continent Illyria – A Renaissance Magiteck Setting”.
Although (or perhaps because) I am currently working on my own project “World of Asecia”, I had to check out his work.
And I was totally blown away. The setting is only 14 pages long but it’s very well written and uses some great artwork. The PDF document almost looks like a professional roleplaying sourcebook on par with WotC’s work.
Here’s an excerpt for your convenience:
Illyria is a setting where magic, fantasy and technology exist side by side.
Magitech, Portals and Magical skyships, espers and engineers, summoners, and gunknights. Illyria is an unforgiving monarchy where the blood of dragons promote a person’s identity and social status. But still heroes arise in the name of the Queen, or in the name of the Country. Never both.
If you are looking for some setting for your D&D game or some inspiration for your campaign check it out! You won’t regret it!
Roleplaying music: Elyrion Soundtrack
1
Elyrion is an upcoming german steampunk fantasy roleplaying game. It will be released in the coming days, probably on SPIEL ’08 in Essen. There will also be an official soundtrack composed by Erdenstern. Erdenstern is known for their five “Into the…” albums that contain hours of instrumental music perfectly suited for your roleplaying sessions (Check out my post about them). The music was in fact composed with fantasy roleplaying designed. I will review the soundtrack as soon as it’s out. Until then you can listen to a medley released at the official Erdenstern site.
Heroes’ Guild
6
The video game “Fable” featured a “Heroes’ Guild” that was a center of learning an training for Heroes for hire. In the game the player’s character entered the guild after his family was killed and is trained in swordmanship, archery and magic. During the game there were many quests and often the player was able to choose if he wanted to take the good or evil route. The guild’s members were not forced to be “good”.
Could such an institution work in a D&D setting for example? I say: “why not?”. In most campaigns the players’ characters are some kind of mercenaries, hired swords, treasure hunters or soldiers of fortune. But every party is usually on its own. So why not introduce some kind of “Heroes’ Guild” or “Adventurers’ Union” to the game that helps adventurers to organize, enforces some regulations and represents the adventuring part of the population at the royal court?
I think the name “Adventurers’ Union” is much better than the slightly cheesy “Heroes’ Guild”. So, let’s go with that. Ok, we have settled on a name let’s make up some more details of our new faction. It makes sense that the union has offices in all the major towns, so that interested hero-wannabes may sign up and join the union. As a member of the union you are allowed to wear the official union badge and take on union-sponsored quests. You also have to pay some percentage of your income to the union. The union will make sure that you get paid when you’ve done your job and will provide places where you can rest, train and socialize with other adventurers.
Some 4E myths
32There’s a war going on the internet. In blogs, forums, chats etc. players all over the world are entrenched in their positions and untiringly attacking their enemies. The fight is about what edition of D&D is the best. Especially the 3E advocates are using several arguments to attack the 4th Edition of D&D that obviously come from the lands of myths and fairy tales. And no, I don’t want to tell you that 4E is better than any other version of D&D but I try to bring some rationality into the discussion.
- D&D 4th Edition makes it harder to roleplay your character
That’s a common argument against the new edition and it’s the most silly one. No game can actively hinder you from player your character. Heck, back in the days, we even roleplayed games like Diplomacy. You don’t need a special set of rules for doing roleplaying. - The 4th Edition is just not D&D anymore
That’s a harder nut to crack. If D&D it’s all about the rules for you, then this is probably true, but I always thought D&D was about dungeons, dragons, brave heroes, swords, sorcery, epic adventures and things like that. And you still can run adventures in the 4th Edition that are about all that and even more. The latest edition also brings back the epic destinies, something that harkens back to the earliest editions. - You can’t play 4E without miniatures
If you were able to play D&D 3.0 or 3.5 without the use of minatures you should be able to pull this off in 4th edition too. Some classes (like the Warlord) for example benefit from using some kind of combat map, but you are not forced to use miniatures. I played in several D&D sessions and we never used aminiatures. - [Enter class name here] is missing from the PHB, it’s not D&D anymore
Remember the first D&D? No? Then let me tell you that the first D&D had only three classes: Cleric, fighting man and magic-user. When the above is true, the original D&D is no “real D&D” either since classes like the thief, druid, barbarian, paladin etc. are missing. And there’s another point: the “missing” classes will come back in the coming Players Handbook 2. And the barbarian was already released for playtesting. - D&D plays just like WoW now
So you probably never played 4th Edition or World of Warcraft before, when you think this is true. At first it’s obviously the other way around: WoW and other fantasy MMORPGs were inspired by pen&paper and single-player computer RPGs. And even if there were some similarities in the game mechanics, the gameplay is (or at least should be) vastly different. And if it’s not you have a very unimaginative DM.








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