Suit: Clubs have enemies of fewer HD than PCs, then Hearts (enemies of same HD as PCs), then Diamonds (enemies are 1 or higher HD than PCs), and Spades is highest (enemies are up to double the HD of PCs)
Value: is the number of things in room, roll 1d12 and this is how many monsters there are (up to the value of the card), the rest are objects or treasure, face cards should have more treasure than monsters; Ace cards should just be treasure! Ace of Spades is just a room with a very valuable treasure, Queen of Spades potentially has 12 monsters with double the HD of the PCs
Passages: the card value also determines how many more rooms split off, divisible by 3 have three rooms splitting off (3,6,9,Queen), divisible by 4 have two rooms splitting off (4,8,Queen), this means the Queen rooms always have a secret passage leading out, the rest of the cards have one more room
Wednesday, February 27, 2019
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
re-introducing the Damned
The apocalypse came and went, now its leftover terrors lie across the land like a plague of fear. The weak cower in their hovels, content to eke out a meager life, praying that demons in the guise of men will pass them over. For those demons have no fears, they refuse to kneel, they want your crowns. And how will you threaten them from atop your thrones? How can you reason with a fiend when all it knows is hunger?
Johnstone Metzger once granted me permission to convert his Heralds of Hell playbooks into a legal-size format, and he granted me permission again to revise those same playbooks to the second edition rules for Apocalypse World.
After a delay of my own devising, I can finally reveal this, the fourth of five, the Damned, with all new artwork provided by Marie Ann Mallah!
LINKS
letter size
legal size
full book size
Johnstone Metzger once granted me permission to convert his Heralds of Hell playbooks into a legal-size format, and he granted me permission again to revise those same playbooks to the second edition rules for Apocalypse World.
After a delay of my own devising, I can finally reveal this, the fourth of five, the Damned, with all new artwork provided by Marie Ann Mallah!
LINKS
letter size
legal size
full book size
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Dark Souls is easy
I decided to pick up Dark Souls again. "I own it," I thought, "I should probably try playing it again." But I kept putting it off, some other game was always ready to be played. Recently, somebody told me that Dark Souls was easy, and when I asked him to explain he said "The secret to winning Dark Souls is knowing where to dodge, not when."
I remember struggling to beat the first boss, the Asylum Demon, and getting killed repeatedly, losing souls, frustratedly running through the same monsters trying to get to a boss fight I felt was barely winnable. Then I popped the disc into my Playstation, made a new character, coasted through every corridor with barely a scratch and defeated the Asylum Demon on my second attempt. Suddenly, armed with this newfound wisdom, I was charging through Dark Souls like a superhero dropped into a room full of mooks.
I still make mistakes, I still get killed a lot, and I still don't really understand what all the numbers and words mean on my "character sheet"
clicken to embiggen but I'm no longer finding the game tedious or boring. It's a genuine joy to play!
I still haven't gotten very far, I think. The Chosen Undead is tasked with ringing the two Bells of Awakening during the first act, and I've only rung one. But yesterday, I defeated the Gaping Dragon on my second encounter with it, and I wasn't even using the best weapon I had against him.
not my video!
this guy has better equipment than me
I remember struggling to beat the first boss, the Asylum Demon, and getting killed repeatedly, losing souls, frustratedly running through the same monsters trying to get to a boss fight I felt was barely winnable. Then I popped the disc into my Playstation, made a new character, coasted through every corridor with barely a scratch and defeated the Asylum Demon on my second attempt. Suddenly, armed with this newfound wisdom, I was charging through Dark Souls like a superhero dropped into a room full of mooks.
I still make mistakes, I still get killed a lot, and I still don't really understand what all the numbers and words mean on my "character sheet"
I still haven't gotten very far, I think. The Chosen Undead is tasked with ringing the two Bells of Awakening during the first act, and I've only rung one. But yesterday, I defeated the Gaping Dragon on my second encounter with it, and I wasn't even using the best weapon I had against him.
this guy has better equipment than me
Sunday, February 3, 2019
OSRenstein: how I'm rewriting the spells of D&D
I'm not sure what day I started writing on, but I've got about 15 pages of rules written with 9 more pages drafted out with little details and bullet points of what I want to write. I've been sending my gaming friends copies of the pdf as I update it and I promised them that I would have the 1st-level wizard spells done with the next version.
This is how I'm writing the spells, I'll use the Shield spell as an example.
The first thing I do is write down the important details of each version of the spell as it has appeared throughout the various versions of the official D&D rules (except 4th edition because fuck that edition):
I want to strip the spell of its complexity, much like 5th edition has, but I want to retain a long duration, similar to the Basic version. Notice also how the Basic version of the spell gives a much bigger AC bonus than all the other versions of the spell. I like that most versions of the spell completely negate Magic Missile attacks.
I've included the ability to cast a spell as a reaction in my rules, and I think Shield fits perfectly as a spell that a wizard may want to cast in the heat of the moment. The only real decision I have to make is whether I want this to be a spell that the wizard casts and then it just exists for the duration of the spell, or if I want to change it into a spell that must be concentrated on to maintain.
I'm going to choose the latter, but I also want wizards to have the option to cast it as a spell they don't need to concentrate on, something with a long duration. My Magic Point system already gives me the perfect way to make this a potentially powerful spell at higher levels simply by adding a scalable duration.
Adding all of this means the final version of the spell looks like this:
The list of 1st-level spells I'm working on is
Alarm (abjuration)
Cantrip (all)
Charm Person (enchantment)
Chill Touch (necromancy)
Find Familiar (ritual)
Floating Disc (invocation)
Grease (summoning)
Hold Portal (transmutation)
Light (transmutation)
Magic Missile (invocation)
Phantasm (illusion)
Read Languages (divination)
Read Magic (divination)
Shield (abjuration)
Sleep (enchantment)
Spook (necromancy)
Steed (summoning)
Ventriloquism (illusion)
This is how I'm writing the spells, I'll use the Shield spell as an example.
The first thing I do is write down the important details of each version of the spell as it has appeared throughout the various versions of the official D&D rules (except 4th edition because fuck that edition):
basic - affects caster, lasts 20 minutesThis tells us a lot about the Shield spell, and it also shows us how D&D has changed over the years. Imagine that!
magical barrier between the caster and his or her enemies.
It moves with the spell caster.
gives AC 2 vs missiles and AC 4 vs other attacks
1e - lasts 5 rds/level
invisible barrier before the front of the caster
negates magic missile attacks
gives AC 2 vs hand hurled missiles (axes, darts, javelins, spears, etc.)
gives AC 3 vs small device-propelled missiles (arrows, bolts, bullets, manticore spikes, slingstones, etc.)
gives AC 4 against all other forms of attack
also adds +1 to the magic-user’s saving throw vs. attacks which are frontal
all benefits of the spell accrue only to attacks originating from the front
2e - lasts 5 rds/level
invisible barrier in front of the wizard
negates magic missile attacks
gives AC 2 against hand-hurled missiles (darts, javelins, spears, etc.),
gives AC 3 against smalldevice-propelled missiles (arrows, bolts,bullets, manticore spikes, slingstones, etc.)
gives AC 4 against all other form of attack
also adds a +1bonus to wizards saving throws against attacks that are frontal
benefits apply only if the attacks originate from in front of the wizard
3e - lasts 1 minute/level
creates an invisible, tower shield mobile disk of force that hovers in front of caster
negates magic missile attacks
gives +4 shield bonus to AC. applies against incorporeal touch attacks, since it is a force effect.
shield has no armor check penalty or arcane spell failure chance
unlike a normal tower shield, you can’t use the shield spell for cover
5e - lasts 1 round
invisible barrier of magical force appears and protects you
Until the start of your next turn, you have a +5 to AC, including against the triggering attack
you take no damage from magic missiles
I want to strip the spell of its complexity, much like 5th edition has, but I want to retain a long duration, similar to the Basic version. Notice also how the Basic version of the spell gives a much bigger AC bonus than all the other versions of the spell. I like that most versions of the spell completely negate Magic Missile attacks.
Shield (abjuration)Looking at every version, that's the Shield spell as I want it to be played in my rules. This is what I've written before I've considered any of the specific modifications my custom rules might apply to it yet. I'm already using Magic Points instead of a Vancian system, and that's baked into the Casting descriptor.
Creates a magical barrier in front of the wizard that negates all missile attacks and provides +4 Armor against anything attacking the wizard from in front.
Casting: 1st level, 1 MP.
I've included the ability to cast a spell as a reaction in my rules, and I think Shield fits perfectly as a spell that a wizard may want to cast in the heat of the moment. The only real decision I have to make is whether I want this to be a spell that the wizard casts and then it just exists for the duration of the spell, or if I want to change it into a spell that must be concentrated on to maintain.
I'm going to choose the latter, but I also want wizards to have the option to cast it as a spell they don't need to concentrate on, something with a long duration. My Magic Point system already gives me the perfect way to make this a potentially powerful spell at higher levels simply by adding a scalable duration.
Adding all of this means the final version of the spell looks like this:
Shield (abjuration)I might need to fix the wording of "Each level added to the MP cost" but for now it works, and this is only the fourth spell I've worked on so far.
Creates a magical barrier in front of the wizard that negates all missile attacks and provides +4 Armor against anything attacking the wizard from in front. Can be cast as a free action, but the wizard must concentrate to keep the spell active.
Casting: 1st level, 1 MP. Each level added to the MP cost allows Shield to last for 10 minutes without being concentrated upon.
The list of 1st-level spells I'm working on is
Alarm (abjuration)
Charm Person (enchantment)
Chill Touch (necromancy)
Find Familiar (ritual)
Floating Disc (invocation)
Grease (summoning)
Hold Portal (transmutation)
Light (transmutation)
Phantasm (illusion)
Read Languages (divination)
Read Magic (divination)
Sleep (enchantment)
Spook (necromancy)
Steed (summoning)
Ventriloquism (illusion)