Eijolend

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Industrial Revolution 3 - it provides a very different experience and more depth while not blowing the complexity completely out of proportion. Industrial Revolution 2 is also still fun, and may be preferable if the addition of more complexity in the oil processing that 3 did is not your thing.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I have GMd it multiple times although mostly just one- or two-shots. I really adore the Mouse Guard setting, but I found the rigorous structure quite limiting as it almost discourages following up on organically occuring story moments.

Luckily, the basic system is really quite general and will survive a lot of fiddling around with it. So what I do is simply not using the systems that I don't like, and emphasize the parts I do like. I try to preserve the general feel rather than the exact mechanics:

Yes, you're strictly on a mission, but that doesn't mean you are forbidden from searching alternative solutions, even if it deviates from the initial plan.

I like the element of having some downtime inbetween the action, where "everybody gets to do something" but without the strict check economy. (Also having to spend checks to try and recover from conditions while your friends are having fun in town is just not great in the first place.)

I don't use the checks at all because I simply don't get the appeal of such meta negotiation systems. The players can simply use their traits in favor, and the GM is allowed to use them against them when appropriate - the Fate and Persona points offer more then enough options to let the players emphasize when a roll is important to them.

I don't like that the "twist" resolution method encourages the GM to set high obstacles so that something interesting can actually happen. Sometimes it is fun to come up with a twist on the spot, but often times just sticking with a more traditional pass/fail style tests is the better choice. Though I think the system lends itself bery well to thinking about how different degrees of success and failure could look like.

However, there are some elements of the system that in my opinion need special attention when deviating from the "intended" style: One is that repeated rolls on the same skill have implications for how fast the progression is when compared to skills that come up less often. I usually try to avoid too many repeated rolls on the same skill, but if that is not possible in the situation, consider using a similar system as in conflicts where only one success or failure can be earned per skill per "scene".

Another thing to consider is that giving out multiple conditions on multiple players has a really strong impact on the conflict mechanic - it really makes the group much weaker. With a more flexible number of rolls, it is quite easy to accidentally weakening the party too much.

Side note on the conflict mechanic: it doesn't feel great in larger patrols, even if you split it up into multiple conflicts, and I would understand not liking the rock paper scissory feel of it in the first place. Luckily, the system lends itself rather well to alternative resolution methods like one player or the whole group need to gather X successes in Y rounds (I like to style these after the "dramatic tasks" of Savage Worlds).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I have a Mini-PC sitting under my TV that is a frankenstein'd together media PC and home server running on Ubuntu.

I am running Nextcloud for easily accessing stuff from all devices, Bookstack for organizing and sharing notes, borgbackup for, well, backups. Currently experimenting with gitea just in case github loses its shit^^

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Oh yeah it is certainly a bit on the dry optimization side of things. I haven't played it enough to be certain, but it definitely feels like there is some degree of snowballing going on depending on how your first few turns went.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Thanks for pointing that out to me. I didn't know they made another game using a similar mechanic. I will certainly check it out!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Obsidian hab ich mir auch mal angesehen und es sah eigentlich vielversprechend aus. Bin dann aber letztlich bei bookstack gelandet, weil ich eine online Lösung wollte, wo ich meine Notizen zu den Sessions auch direkt für die anderen Spieler zugänglich machen kann - ich persönlich wär zwar glaub ich mit git als sync-Lösung okay, aber ich glaub das trifft nicht auf alle meine Mitspieler zu 😅.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Derzeit am aktivsten tatsächlich DnD5e mit The Wild Beyond the Witchlight und Journeys through the Radiant Citadel.

Ansonsten bin ich ein großer Freund von Savage Worlds basierten Systemen, wie Crystal Heart und Deadlands - die bring ich aber meistens nur für oneshots auf den Tisch.

Aus der Liste von RPGs, von denen ich das Setting toll finde, aber gewisse Probleme mit dem Regelsystem habe, sind Numenera, Mouse Guard und Shadowrun ganz vorne mit dabei.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

I quite like Nova Luna as a game that everyone can play, but that has a fierce optimization aspect, if you are into that.

I was pleasantly surprised by Lost Ruins of Arnak - I don't think there is any other game that has this combination of worker placement and deck building. I was a bit worried how the very low number of turns would interact with the deck building elements (generally cycling through the deck very often is expected in that genre), but it works surprsingly well!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Oh, I tried this for a few games on boardgamearena. I quite liked it, but the cards you draw seemed very influential in whether they fit the fauna cards/personal objectives or not. Do you find it holds up when playing it repeatedly?