| (Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4) | |
Beat Writer Posts: 177 Joined: 6 Apr 2008 | |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
McWoD (as everyone should call it for the cheap pun alone) is World of Darkness done with the D20 system, which means if you ever care to change over to 3.0e or 3.5e DnD (or any other D20 product really) you'll notice the similarities immediately. The D20 system is well-known for doing anything pretty well but often not brilliantly - for that it's often better to get a system made for the setting (assuming that system is brilliant itself). It's WoD with the setting reinvented by Monte Cook, one of the three primary writers of 3rd ed DnD. Other than that, I really couldn't say; I've only read some snippets of the setting and system, and what I've seen didn't pull me in for a closer look. |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 |
Sounds like you need a better GM, some of the games I've played in have been made MORE awesome by failed rolls. We follow a simple law... The Dice Can Never Kill You, basically a bad roll will never result in a character death, but should always have consequences. Death is the result of a bad decision, not bad luck. Also you CAN build characters who are "immune" to bad dice rolls, I have several friends who always roll poorly but manage to get by through shear character build. There are also Diceless Systems or Low Dice Roll systems (BESM is a good one if you roll poorly) that you could try. |
Beat Writer Posts: 151 Joined: 27 Oct 2008 |
No, my GMs were all pretty good at what they did, since they've all GM'd for those games before, they always knew what to do. It was me and the dice that were the problem. And dice rolls never KILLED me, but as you said, several consequences occurred that LED to death. I've tried making roll-proof characters, but I never was able to get far enough so that the stats were actually immune to bad rolls. And none of my friends who played these games were really into diceless or low-roll systems as they always played by normal rules, because thats what they were used to. Those said friends continue to play D&D at their respective colleges, whereas I stay content with my video game consoles. |
Red Guard Posts: 3611 Joined: 27 Mar 2008 |
Here's what I would do in this situation: That's probably because my time GMing and my experience with less-traditional games has made me very pushy when it comes to fun. -- Alex |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
Here I am, about to debate "fun", but anywho. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2770 Joined: 13 Feb 2008 | PnP RPGs will always trump anything a video game can throw at them, mainly because of the sheer freedom of play. I mean, playing a PnP RPG for the first time was astounding. I was so used to being shoved along by the plot that having no limits on my playing was mind-boggling. The best part is, the GM can just make things up to compensate for a party set on doing something completely irrelevant to the plot. Heck, my group didn't figure out we were on a tangent until a few sessions after we talked to an injured-looking fellow the GM had just thrown in there for detail's sake. We spoke to him, got off on a mission, and didn't even realize we weren't doing the main campaign until weeks later. His "side-quest" was just that compelling. That's the power of a good GM. |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 |
Roll vs. Horrible Death in the Night! |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
Hell yes! But then the players ruin it with their pesky Fate points. I try not to complain but I'm sure when they look into my wounded, glistening eyes in those horrible few seconds in which I improvise a calmer fate...well, they see the pain and the fury. And they shudder and weep. |
Red Guard Posts: 3611 Joined: 27 Mar 2008 |
Oh, no, no, "interesting" should most often mean "you get fucked"! That's what heroic stories are made of, after all: sorrow and setbacks! Simply put, I think the right way to do pretty much any kind of die roll is "Come up with an interesting mostly-good thing that happens if it is a 'success', come up with an interesting mostly-bad thing that happens if it is a 'failure', and then go from there." Say a player-character is scaling the walls of a pirate fortress and fails a climb check. Falling to your death during what's more or less exposition just sucks. Note how WFRP has Fate points to keep this kind of crap from sucken-ing up the game. (How stupid is it when RPGs try to solve this problem by invalidating the awesomeness of death itself? Resurrection spells: very seldom anything but lame!) My preferred solution is to make something bad but fun happen when you fail that climb check. You fall ignominiously to your death? Yawn. You slip and a loosened peddle and alerts some guards? Awesome! It's really easy for a GM(*) to get momentarily confused and turn a die roll into "Save vs. The Game Sucks For the Next Hour." Between GMing a bunch and reading/playing games where this process is slightly more explicit, I'm quite used to looking out for that, even when I'm not the GM. I'd rather call it than let the game suck for the next hour, and I generally try to encourage other players to do it to me as well. (That's not to say that dying like a punk is never appropriate, either. There are some styles and genres where dying like a punk totally fits.) -- Alex |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 704 Joined: 27 Nov 2008 |
i was running a game of paranoia and everyone had died at the end of several weeks of sessions. so after this i decided to ask everyone what they thought their quest was and who they got it from. nobody had the same answer and they were all wrong. so good. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1013 Joined: 4 Dec 2007 | P&P games are the only RPGs I'm willing to play. Computer games still haven't matched their quality of storytelling or gameplay, and probably won't for a very long time. I'm a GM exclusively, though, because firstly, most people around here usually end up planning out an entire adventure before starting it (mucho badness) or having mindless magic item fetch quests (thanks whoever said that) or making the games all anime-ish (I can't stand anime). And when I GM I have control (mostly) over what happens in the world, and with my GMing style, the game can be just as surprising for me as it can for the players. Seriously, in my current campaign, I really only planned for the whole thing to (probably) culminate in elves building a ship (that's a big thing in my setting; ships are objects of legend, and have never been successfully built yet, attempted, but never succeeded) and sailing into the "Endless Water" in some random direction. Now the elves are at war with the dwarves because some demon decided that the elves didn't need to build a ship because if the humans can sail places (using elven technology) they can spread their inferior race and the world will be a shithole, so she duped the dwarves into hating the elves and tried to dupe the elves into hating the dwarves (they had just recently started being peaceful again, so tensions were easily raised) by sending assassins to both sides in disguise as an agent for the other side, but one of the assassins found out what was going on and started trying to stop it from happening (that's one of the players) and got caught up in the scholar caravan (returning from a trip to the gnomish city to try and get gnomish scholars on board with the elves and their boat-building) and now the players are acting as diplomats between the dwarves (who have already captured the elven city with their military superiority) and the elves, and have agreed upon a one-week ceasefire for the person who tricked the assassins into doing their jobs to prove that she exists and that the elves aren't trying to pull a super-conspiracy on the dwarves. Yeah, totally different from what I expected. Also, this post is required to become a plug at the GMF. Here. Very few members, no admin, but we're working on that, and we're trying to get as many people as we can to join in to help keep things going and... well, have more people to talk to... |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
Chief among them WFRP. :D |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3664 Joined: 21 Jan 2008 | I've played GURPS for about 2 years now... and it's a blast, since the friends I play it with are bat-shit insane, so things are always interesting. Playing with munchkins and point-whores (I'm one myself), and with maybe one decent player, we end up wasting our time raving (I shit you not, we raved for a session), rather than finishing our quest. P&P games are great, and I don't see them as something to compare to video games. P&P for me is a more social activity, while video games are more of 'alone-time'. Both are fun, but cater to different areas of enjoyment. Coming up, a few of my friends have invited me for a zombie-apocalypse campaign. It'll be a bitch, since I'm used to hero-characters (125-200 points) and the GM is only allowing us 75 point characters... it'll be interesting though, seeing whether our party will survive. Probably not, knowing the GM. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
Hear, hear. In my first campaigns I thought it was bad that I really didn't know where I was going with certain plot hooks. Then I learned that this left the players the chance to push into the setting however they saw fit - and made it much cooler when everything coalesced into something bigger. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 704 Joined: 27 Nov 2008 | yay a PnP forum. i'm overloaded with joy. incidently i have the coolest d20 ever. In my opinion planning out a full adventure is a bad thing but you always need a presence that will drive it towards an awesome boss battle (also these are a must and must be solved through logic alone) sadly i can't use that awesome boat idea because i just bought the Runequest books with all the history and i want to make the most of it. |
Press Junketeer Posts: 414 Joined: 18 Feb 2008 | I currently run a DnD 4.0 game with inspiration from Lovecraft(Screw it, it's got more balanced classes. It hasn't been hit by splatbooks like 3.5 has been. And when it does, ha ha, balance. I'll just dump the stupid Dragonborn lore and the retconned Tiefling crap), a Hunters: The Vigil game with inspiration from X-Com, and a Dark Heresy game with inspiration again from Lovecraft and Silent Hill (Replace fog with dust). They're incredibly enjoyable and I'm trying to infuse in each of them a greater meaning. Well, at least for my DnD campaign I'm trying to infuse a sense of the need to stand up against the arrayed forces of evil even if that means sacrifice. While I love vidja games, Pen and Paper games have always felt better. They're just a lot harder to set up and run. But, to draw from an example from my own players, in video games if you were told by the assistant to a major source of information to 'go away, he's busy', you'd pretty much have to leave. In Pen and Paper? You ram a damn ambulance through the wall and demand to speak to him now and get an improvised mission involving the Nosferatu clan that wasn't anywhere in the planning. That and be offered, and accepted the offer, to backstab your team mates from the big bad in exchange for a good position in the coming empire and, while in the end be kicked into the machine feeding the big bad Specter and have the loli wraith/specter you work for get killed, still manage to screw over your friends by letting the big bad shade get free to destroy the city and screw over the heirarchy. Lot of good memories of Old World of Darkness. As a side note, I think the best Pen and Paper games are the ones that are not so rigidly defined. Games like WoD, Dork Hearsay, WHFRP, and Hero System give themselves better to improv and making things up as you go along than DnD and its ilk. And while DnD is fun, improv is the soul of pen and paper. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 704 Joined: 27 Nov 2008 | is dark heresy any fun? because as i've said i've been trying to get into it. is there any space in dark heresy to play as the other races or does it pretty much limit you to human? |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1185 Joined: 17 Jun 2008 | As long as no game gives me the oppurtunity to play an impoverished illusionist turned beggar, or a dancer from Ukraine dreaming off a future in broadway, viewing the current zombie apocalypse as a minor obstacle just inches away from loosing his mind entirely, or allows me to avoid combat with a few clever words, then I'm going to keep playing pen and paper games. Hell, I probably would anyway, it's a lovely social activity, and I love coming up with interesting characters, and settings. Lately I've had a tendencity to work the same world simultaneously as a setting for roleplaying and games I'm working on. Gives some nice perspective. Really neat. |
Paperboy Posts: 42 Joined: 27 Aug 2008 |
It's a great game, I enjoy running it, but you really have to have players who either already 'get' the setting or alternatively explain the world very well beforehand before you jump in. It really isn't tolkeinesque fantasy rpg #951 in terms of accessibility. The system itself is relatively simple, if you like d100 type games. |
Beat Writer Posts: 137 Joined: 12 Mar 2008 | Reading this thread has got me thinking, i really want to try one of these things but i doubt anyone i know would be willing to or anything like that.. is there anything online that may amount to this or am i screwed? |
Press Junketeer Posts: 414 Joined: 18 Feb 2008 |
HERETICAL XENOS LOVING SCUM, THE ONLY RACE OF ANY INTEREST IS HUMANITY It's fun, but fair warning. It's very, very brutal when it comes to combat. Everyone has really low HP/Wounds, so you're mostly just relying on your toughness and armor to reduce damage. Also, it has a corruption and insanity meter. When you get enough insanity points (30, 60, and 90) you pick up fun little derangement. When you get enough corruption points (Every 10 points) you get little malignancies that alter how you behave and every 30 points you get mutations (With 90 points being a major mutation). Major mutations are nasty. My Psyker got a major mutation that cause his body to be studded with eyes, and the next session he got a full body exam. He didn't survive. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2664 Joined: 4 Nov 2007 |
I can't say how fun it is as I've had little chance to play it but I can regurgitate some things I've heard and know. Firstly, it's the WFRP system...in SPAAAACE! (Shocking, I know.) The biggest difference, though, is the scrapping of the career system as it stands in WFRP (a bummer, but somewhat understandable, I guess, sorta, kinda) for a system that is still about "careers" but if it were called a "class" system ala DnD no one would complain. No multiclassing support - only some very limited and weird progression tables from which which you pick skill upgrades. These are meant to represent a difference between a social assassin and a sniper, for instance, though they both begin under the Assassin career. Question for anyone with the info: what are the core books I need for Mongoose Traveller, and what are the best books from previous editions for fluff/ideas/rules/extras? I'd always been interested and now I hear they're putting the Babylon 5 setting into the Trav system and I'm very psyched. Help a gamer out. |
Red Guard Posts: 3611 Joined: 27 Mar 2008 |
Some people play games online through various text-chat or voice interfaces. Several different approaches to the activity: For actually playing a pen-and-paper game online, the biggest difference is whether you want to use virtual miniatures (many pen-and-paper games have combat rules based around moving little tokens or figurines around on some kind of map or grid). If you do, there are specialized applications that provide chat, die-rolling, a map, and usually scriptable character sheets as well. OpenRPG is one of the most well-known. Wizards of the Coast recently wrote software like that especially for playing D&D 4th Edition online; I think you have to pay some kind of small subscription fee for it. If you don't want virtual minis on a map, all you really need to play is IRC and maybe Skype. The main purpose of minis and a map is to add tactical complexity to combat scenes. They tend to slow down the resolution of combat scenes significantly as well. I generally don't play pen-and-paper for tactical combat anyway, so these days I prefer to avoid games with minis. Some people do "play-by-post" gaming instead. That's kinda just like leaving each other messages on a forum. Play tends to be very slow but you pretty much just post whenever instead of having organized sessions -- although some groups impose serious time commitments. Look at the forum games and RP forum for a whiff of what that's like. Hope that's at least vaguely helpful. -- Alex |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 | Speaking of Pen and Paper, my last session went over like crap. Now I've got my players holed up in a building while an apache circles around it. This is a bad thing because I planned for a car chase but they just stayed in the building the whole time. |
Press Junketeer Posts: 414 Joined: 18 Feb 2008 |
Well, the obvious answer is have the apache leave. Play it up as a trap to draw them out or have it be conflicting orders or what ever. Then bring in the rocking car chase.
The two Dork Hearsay games have nothing to do with the Calixis system, and in fact the first one actually had us up against a Tau Shas O' and that freaking battle suit. Admittedly, you have to go homebrew, but that's not too hard. Especially with Tau. Drop strength, toughness, and weapon skill. Max ballistics and agility. Also, some one went out and made a homebrew orks race for play with multiple clans as 'homeworlds'. I think it even had careers other than break things. As for playing outside Calixis, as long as you know the lore of Warhammer 40k it's not too hard. Most of the career packages aren't reliant on being from Calixis, and even those that are can still be used due to the fun of traveling through the warp. EDIT: As an addendum, the group I usually play with also had a medieval primal world game that I heard was decent, and they're currently running a pre-heresy primarily spess mahreen game. |
Beat Writer Posts: 153 Joined: 28 Nov 2008 | In high school, I played pen-and-paper RPGs with my friends. Then, by the 10th grade, as we all discovered girls, booze and weed, our interest waned. It re-emerged in our early 20s, but by then I discovered video games. We never really went back to it, as two of the three of our core group are now professionals, married and engaged, and only have time for an hour or two of video games. There is no video game that will ever compare to an imaginative, well-told pen and paper story, plain and simple. Your imagination is the best graphics card, and your mind's eye is the biggest plasma screen you'll ever see. |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 |
Really? I was thinking that blowing up the building might be a better plan, then they'd HAVE to run. |
Press Junketeer Posts: 414 Joined: 18 Feb 2008 |
Well, do you want a car chase or running? Blowing up the building would be funny though. |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 | Well they would probably be running to their vehicles, unfortunately they're about 100 feet below where the players are at the moment. Though I frequently forget the mindset of PC's, they rarely run away. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 869 Joined: 7 Nov 2007 | All my friends want to play as a pen & paper now is the game I created. |
On the Record Posts: 5975 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 |
Everytime I try to GM in the world I created (but frequently play in with another GM at the reigns) I fail horribly. See Above Posts. |
Beat Writer Posts: 195 Joined: 25 Nov 2008 |
Amazing, funny game. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1146 Joined: 27 Aug 2008 |
You're talking about the d20 system, which is distinct from D&D. D&D is NOT modular, it's a fantasy RPG through and through. You can occasionally sneak in aspects of other genres, but they have a tendency to break a system that does not work so well to begin with. It's been my general experience that there isn't any such thing as a perfect system, instead you just pick one you like that works well with your playing style. Rule One is always have fun. Everything else is negotiable. |
Red Guard Posts: 3611 Joined: 27 Mar 2008 |
Even d20 isn't that modular. Look at d20 D&D, d20 Star Wars, d20 Modern, d20 Games of Thrones, d20 Iron Heroes, d20 Conan -- they all basically deliver the same action-oriented style. There are some "d20 System" games that don't but they use all of, like, three rules from the system.
Which brings us to Rule Two: "Negotiate!" -- Alex |
| (Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4) | |
|
|
Not registered? Sign up for a free account! |
Me and a couple of friends actually set out a few days ago and and bought the World of Darkness (Monte Cook's World of Darkness even. I have no idea what that means) Rulebook. So we've been reading up on it, and seeing as how we've never (ever) even touched on the topic of DnD and table-top RP:ing in general before, this will prove to be... interesting.
It fell on me to be the GM for our first night, so I was wondering if anyone have any tips on how to make the most of these crazy shenanigans. I've already got a general story planned out, but knowing my friends, it'll get pretty weird before the end.