• 9 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 7th, 2023

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  • These minis look great, and I love the writeup of exactly how you got them this way!

    I’m a huge fan of the skin of the Spined Devils, that’s pretty perfect. What kind of purple did you use as a base there?

    Also really love the peg leg devil, such a clever way to deal with a failed print! And at least in the picture you really can’t tell it wasn’t supposed to look that way at first.

    And about the fireball: my advice would be to get bright/light yellow in the recesses. LIke a wash, but then to lighten it instead of darken. It can be a bit tricky depending on what’s underneath it, getting the light colors opaque enough. But for me, that works wonder in giving glow effects.

    Really cool work, thanks for sharing!


  • I like it a lot! I don’t have experience using such mechanics in TTRPGs, though I feel the same way about the disappointment of rolling low. However there’s a few boardgames that come to mind that use similar mechanics, which are great. In Oathsworn: Into the Deepwood you have lots of tokens that you can use to buff your rolls/draws, but if you fail you get back everything you spent and you get to pick a new one on top of that. It actually has an extra sort of luck mitigation on top of that; random results are determined by custom dice, but all dice have a deck of cards equivalent that has all dice sides 3 times. You don’t shuffle them in between draws, so as you go the results get more and more predictable. Would really enjoy having more games with such (bad) luck mitigating mechanics!





  • I’m not opposed to crowdfunding tabletop games in principle. Even bigger companies might need some guaranteed cash up front before ordering a huge print run of their product. In that respect, it’s basically a preorder.

    However, there’s a lot of habits surrounding kickstarters that I could really do without. Arbitrary funding goals and contrived stretch goals (“we can make a game if we get funded at 40k, but now that we have 2m we can give you the game as intended all these extra bits!”), preying on FOMO, overpromising and underdelivering, launching half baked and undeveloped ideas as a kickstarter, etc. All of that just screams to me that their main goal is taking my money, instead of creating an awesome game and being solvent while doing so.

    I don’t really do crowdfunding games anymore. Instead I wait until it hits retail, pick up a second hand copy if it doesn’t, or just don’t buy it. There are exceptions to this of companies I trust to deliver, but they’re few and far between.

    That said, I kind of like what Cephalofair is doing with their current Gloomhaven campaign on Backerkit. It’s basically a preorder for a bunch of new products that’ll go in production soon, clear information, no extra FOMO bullshit, lots of content creation and events around the new products, and a really good deal compared to MRSP (and historically, their crowdfunding campaigns have been by far the cheapest way to get their products).







  • I’ve had a bit of a low gaming week, only played

    D&D 5e (1x 4p): We’re taking a bit of a break from our main campaign that’s been running for 5 or 6 years, and one of the players is DMing a few sessions of something from the Wild Beyond the Witchlight book. We’re enjoying the very strange Witchlight Carnaval! I play a Fairy druid, and as I discovered as we started playing, my character has ADHD. I’m really enjoying the silliness of the setting, and the DM is fantastic at doing silly voices which fits so well!

    Bonus question of the week: one game I recommend to almost anyone is The Crew. Cooperative games are enjoyed by almost anyone, the rules are so simple to explain and fit pretty much everyone’s attention span, games are short but you can play it for hours too, and depending on experience and skill you can dramatically adjust the difficulty. And it’s cheap and small and easy to bring places. Great game all round!







  • I’m not sure, to be honest. I feel like only very few crowdfunding projects constitute “news” (and how do you decide what to include and what not?), and there’s plenty of people who don’t care for crowdfunding at all.

    Perhaps better, the person who did an excellent weekly crowdfunding roundup on r/boardgames is also on lemmy. Perhaps we could include their posts here?



  • I’ve been trying to cultivate my home as a place my friends feel comfortable showing up to. There’s a bunch of people (too many) in my life who are going through tough stuff, and lately more and more they just show up for a chat, reading a book in peace and quiet, or sleep over and have a night away from home if they need it.

    It’s not so much them being welcome that feels like an accomplishment (because that’s just a given), but rather that they seem to have internalized that it’s OK to ask for help/support and feel comfortable enough with me/us to come here.

    As I’m typing this out I’m not sure if this fits in the “betterment” category, but it’s a positive change in my life I’ve noticed and worked on lately, so submitting it anyway. 😊


  • Foon@beehaw.orgOPMtoTabletop Gaming@beehaw.orgNew moderator saying hi!
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    1 year ago

    Just try to let go of the “well I’ve always done it this way” which I know is easier said than done.

    Definitely easier said than done… I’m sure I’d really struggle with that.

    I think the Familiar example is a great explanation. It really does sound much cooler. In 5e, you don’t really get a whole lot of meaningful choices after level 3 or so.

    It’s an indie solo journaling RPG called Apothecaria

    Based on this description, you seem to have picked up my “vibes” pretty well :D It sounds super cute. I’m not sure about the solo aspect, though. I generally don’t enjoy solo gaming as much, and especially TTRPGs are something I do with friends.

    But generally, I like whimsical and cute settings. I’m much more of a fantasy person than scifi. Also not looking for dystopian worlds, right now that’s not something my group would handle well. Also a big fan of strange creatures (for example the Feywild is my favourite realm in D&D) and animals. Generally looking for more wholesomeness. More “Help the Forest Queen and her pack of magical forest creatures get rid of the creeping blight in the forest” rather than “A cabal of evil people has released a monster that’s set to devour all the poor people”.

    Edit: Also, a strong bonus would be tight rules. With little ambiguity. So players can have clear expectations of the consequences of their actions, rather than just “GMs discretion”.

    Does that help at all? I’m excited to learn about new systems.


  • Yeah some of my favourites are from JE too, I particularly like Finder and Downpour. And Lure of the Deep Wilderness, although it’s very much dependent on which adversary we’re playing against. Although I have a lot of love for the base game spirits too, especially when we’re introducing new people to it I tend to play one of my staples Rampant Green or Thunderspeaker. And of course Ocean is awesome, though someone else tends to snap that up quickly!