- OSR = Old School Revival
- PbtA = Powered by the Apocalypse
- FitD = Forged in the Dark
I only know the middle one! I'll check the rest out!
I only know the middle one! I'll check the rest out!
I knew all of them, I have gotten too nerdy.
You are on lemmy, we are all nerds here
I refuse! You can't prove I'm a nerd!
Forged in the dark are games that use blades in the dark which is a powered by the apocalypse game, so you'll pick them up quickly. Blades is an amazing game so I'd absolutely recommend this.
OSR games are definitely for a specific taste, they try to capture the early TTRPG era dungeon crawl tone over the very narrative forward modern TTRPG, which personally is the opposite direction from where my tastes have trended from 5e.
My home game is an old school dungeon crawler, but without tactical combat. Best of both worlds. Thanks Dungeon World
Fit deez nuts!
Old-School Runescape as a TTRPG sounds interesting
As long as we are capturing the world and not the grind. Could you imagine partying up and your DM narrates chopping yews for 4 hours? Lmao "you failed your one tick check"
Many years ago, our party found itself on a boat going down a river. With nothing better to do, we started fishing, hoping for the plot to continue after a couple of inconsequential dice rolls.
It didn't. We literally spent hours irl rolling dice to fish because our DM was very clearly not interested in running an actual game that day.
We soon started playing without him, bit I think that is the closest I ever got to OSR the ttrpg.
That's a shame from your DM but equally making the plot for yourselves and putting the DM in a boat where they need to do the setting and NPCs that you choose to seek out can have fun outcomes.
As the forever DM of my group, I am always willing to be a PC in a players game no matter the system (so far)… because I just want to play haha. I do only really run D&D myself though haha. We have talked about swapping to PE though because of Hasbro..
If you do make that change I'd really recommend playing a couple of oneshots between the switch with totally different systems. I'm finally exploring different TTRPGs now and it's made me realise I was doing the equivalent of only watching one franchise film series with all of cinema available.
I've had a killer time with FATE, City of Mist and Blades in the Dark.
I've absolutely loved narrative heavy oneshot games like Alice is Missing, For the Queen and Ten Candles.
I've enjoyed collaborative worldbuilding games like The Quiet year and Microscope (or anything else made by Ben Robbins), although I do think these are best to build a setting to play in because they leave some specific itch unscratched.
You know what your players like, I know mine are split between wanting to feel like they're devising a story that would make a good show and the other half are looking to be emotionally ransacked, so story heavy games that put the worldbuilding and decisions in the hands of the players is perfect for me.
only watching one franchise film series with all of cinema available.
Getting some Boss Baby vibes from your comment
I'd play a boss baby TTRPG in a heartbeat.
Well it's not the same, but I recommend you check out Dadlands
I stopped at 2.5e and did recently start learning a bit about pathfinder.
FitD is my favorite non-crunchy system. I don't want to call it "rules light" because it isn't that light. But it is great.
I’ve only played Blades, but it really clicks for me and my group. It’s a solid framework for crazy adventures. And who doesn’t like a good heist!
Oh, I'm even harder to pull. I know I've had a couple friends try to jump me into other settings this way, but if I can't convert my legacy Pathfinder characters into the setting you're trying to get into without having to sand parts off and sacrifice parts of the vision, it's a lot harder to get me to consider it more than that one time-- which is ironically, a lot of the reason I don't gel with 5e. Not enough splats for me to run my aged concepts as envisioned without having to make ill-fitting changes, or figure out how to convert a non-core Pathfinder class to 5e.
Maybe try a game in a different genre than fantasy. That way you won't constantly be comparing the system or your PC to Path Finder.
One of those must be some new way of spelling "Mörk Borg"...
EYES WIDE OPEN
7:7 All praise Yetsabu-Nech, the underworld’s nightmare, the black disk which stands before the sun! All praise Verhu, beaming with delight! All praise the fire which burns all! And the darkness shall swallow the darkness.
Ironsworn and Starforged, too 🤌🏼🌟
Flipped a whole group to Starforged this week without even meaning to. The forever GM thanked me for giving him a break
Straight up. THE single best/easiest/most fun way to both give the forever DMs a break and inspire others to take the plunge and run their own storylines. 🤗🔥
Me: starting a Wheel of Time game from an out of print book based on 3.5e (mostly
My players: "can I roll perception?"
Me "you'd like that, wouldn't you?"
I'm begging you..
That's kinda how I formed my current group, actually...
Ooh. I've picked up a bunch of Apocalypse books and one Forged book, I should check out Revival.
Humor, jokes, memes about TTRPGs