RPGaDAY2015 Day 17: Favourite Fantasy RPG

#RPGaDAY2015 is the brainchild of game designer Dave Chapman. Basically, each day in August there is a question about RPGs. This is day 17.

Favourite Fantasy RPG: This should be an easy answer, but it’s kind of not. One of the reasons I design games is because I am unsatisfied with the games available. Further, what kind of fantasy? Swords & Sorcery? High fantasy? Science fantasy?

I’m going to go with Old School Hack. It’s got that D&D vibe, but it’s a super simple system that has always delivered really fun games in my experience. It’s generally delivers over-the-top games with crazy action, and is abstract enough that it can pretty much do everything from low fantasy to science fantasy.

D&D 5E gets the nostalgia vote – the majority of my gaming time has been spent with D&D, and I like 5E the best of any of its versions. D&D 5E is also a fun game. I enjoy it. The problem is the amount of prep time it takes. Still, for the D&D experience, 5E is my favourite taste.

Honourable mention goes to Jaws of the Six Serpents. This is as close to an off-the-shelf sword & sorcery game as any I’ve played. It was the inspiration for Sword Noir.

And back in the day, I really enjoyed True20 for fantasy. It’s the best complex (or semi-complex) RPG out there, and I had a lot of fun running my historical/fantasy Viking campaign with it.

A Tale of Two Failures: Kid’s Stuff

Last post, I talked about my failure with adult gamers. Now let’s look at kids.

I have two (awesome) daughters, aged six and eight. They have progressed through Lego Heroica, to the Castle Ravenloft board game, to actual D&D. When D&D 5E came out, I got the Starter Set specifically to test drive it with my girls. They loved it, and so we embarked on our own campaign.

Side note: D&D is still known as “Starter Set” by my girls. “Daddy, are we going to play Starter Set today?” I don’t even bother trying to correct them.

Okay, so things were going great, that is until last session. It kind of crashed and burned. We ended up on the couch watching Clone Wars together instead . . . which I generally don’t consider a bad outcome, but not an auspicious ending to a D&D session.

So what happened? I can think of a few things.

My immediate sense was it was due to my lack of enthusiasm. This was absolutely a contributing factor. I can get my girls to engage in anything as long as I am there participating. Practice piano? No problem if I say “I want to listen to you play piano.” Math? “Can you show me what you learned with these questions?” Really anything. So part of getting them into D&D, I am sure, was daddy’s enthusiasm. It wasn’t there on Sunday and they noticed. They started getting distracted and talking about other things – which they generally don’t do.

I lacked enthusiasm because I was tired; possibly still hung over from an epically stupid night of drinking on Friday. Yes, I am old enough that the effects of a night of drinking can span two days. In any case, I was tired and couldn’t work up the enthusiasm to properly run the game. I’m usually very engaged when we play, figuring out funny ways for them to fail or silly things for the monsters or bad guys to do. I didn’t do that. I am proud to say my eight-year old tried to take my place narrating the failures, but she had a small collection of funny outcomes that wore out from use. To keep them engaged, I need to be on the ball – that’s true with just about anything, honestly.

But I think the biggest part is that I forgot what I loved about D&D when I first got into it. I was older than they are – I was about eleven or twelve when I started, I can’t remember exactly – but it wasn’t great overland adventures and epics quests that got me into D&D. Those came later. What got me into D&D were dungeons. My friends and I went through all the early standards. My intro was the Keep on the Borderlands, about which I still have a huge amount of nostalgic love. There were lots of others for which I have fond memories – Tomb of the Lizard King was a favourite; and Against the Giants and then Vault of the Drow, which kind of led into our inclusion of more story elements, like politics and influential NPCs. It was the dungeons that I loved. I’m putting them into the kind of game I would run later in high school or in university. Kind of like the other failure due to complexity, I’m trying to do too much when all I really need to do is take them through some dungeons.

And then introduce them to some dragons, of course.

We’ll see if my suspicions are correct. I’ve downloaded a couple of Dyson Logos’ maps and next episode they’ll be able to free their kobold friends from the dwarves by seeking out the kidnapped dwarven family – taken by the nefarious goblins hiding out in their cave complex!

Wish me luck.

You can find out more about Lego Heroica here.

You can find out more about the Castle Ravenloft board game here.

You can find out more about the Starter Set here.

You can find out more about D&D here.

You can find Dyson Logos’ maps here.

Mountain Dwarf Tree-Huggers Anonymous

From “Races – – Dwarf” at the WotC D&D site.

With the writing for Nefertiti Overdrive done and off to the editor, I have time to take a breath and relax a bit. During that breather, I got back to playing D&D with my children (two daughters, aged 6 and 8, whom we’ll call Smiley and the Princess).

The Princess, the eldest of the two, has been focused on Dwarf clerics since she played the Castle Ravenloft board game. She liked being able to heal. Both girls are really afraid of damage – then again, aren’t we all – and having someone on hand who can heal is essential for them. Because the eldest chose a Dwarf, so did the youngest, though the youngest is a Mountain Dwarf and the eldest is a Hill Dwarf.

Which is funny, because the youngest’s Mountain Dwarf if a Druid. She loved the idea of nature magic and helping animals. I am not about to put constraints on her, and if she likes the idea of a Dwarf that grew up in a great cave complex who now protects the forests and wilds, it’s all good.

So we have a Dwarf cleric and a Dwarf druid. They’re first encounter was with poachers looking to kill a mother white tiger. This is somewhere mountainous and cold, though I haven’t put on details on it yet. The two Dwarfs took on three bandits and did pretty well. Now I have to flesh out the campaign. Maybe the world is gripped with eternal winter and these two are tasked with finding the cause.

No doubt they would go looking for Elsa.

Whatever the case, getting deeper into D&D 5E led to me to more closely read the PHB. Some thoughts on that later.