How often have you used a game setting with a different game's ruleset?
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

Greyhawk is far and away my preferred setting for D&D-like games, I’ve run a bunch of rules in it but mostly 13th Age and Shadowdark.
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

Blades in the Dark loadout mechanic I’ve used in almost every one shot regardless of system. Too useful
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Greyhawk is far and away my preferred setting for D&D-like games, I’ve run a bunch of rules in it but mostly 13th Age and Shadowdark.
Did you find it easy to make the switch to those game systems?
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Blades in the Dark loadout mechanic I’ve used in almost every one shot regardless of system. Too useful
I’m not familiar with that. Is that like letting players choose a set of equipment at the beginning of play, or…?
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

My first “Shadowrun” game was just taking the setting and using D20 Modern for the rules since I didn’t have the actual Shadowrun books (and couldn’t find them for sale either).
Sometimes, after playing actual Shadowrun, I feel like the D20 Modern rules worked better.

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My first “Shadowrun” game was just taking the setting and using D20 Modern for the rules since I didn’t have the actual Shadowrun books (and couldn’t find them for sale either).
Sometimes, after playing actual Shadowrun, I feel like the D20 Modern rules worked better.

And there is a Shadowrun inspired d20 setting, iirc!
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Did you find it easy to make the switch to those game systems?
Yeah they both are built around the classic D&D gameplay loop of exploring and dungeon crawling. I run my own adventures rather than using purchased modules so I don’t have to worry about converting monster stats and stuff. But Shadowdark converts very easily to old D&D versions, it would be straight forward to run any old pre-3rd edition D&D modules in it.
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Yeah they both are built around the classic D&D gameplay loop of exploring and dungeon crawling. I run my own adventures rather than using purchased modules so I don’t have to worry about converting monster stats and stuff. But Shadowdark converts very easily to old D&D versions, it would be straight forward to run any old pre-3rd edition D&D modules in it.
That sounds really cool. I’ll have to check that out. Thanks!
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

Not what you are talking about but one reason I learned to love the champions system from the early 90’s was a guy there ran a fantasy setting using it. He had a program to he made himself to do the heavy lifting but the variable power pool rules gave him a great ability to have characters have any spell they wanted by talking to him. Just had to fit within the pool which as a magic user would level as points were put in.
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

I used nWoD for fantasy games. The core dice pool system works pretty well, and few things are tightly coupled to any setting in particular.
I mostly don’t like d20, so when someone tells me they’re doing a game about secret vampire societies in it, I’m a lot more disappointed than if they ported a system I like or am neutral on. Also 5th edition in particular makes a lot of assumptions about how things work.
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@mr_noxx I’m slowly rewritting Babylon 5 as a Daggerheart hack…
I would be very interested in this if you ever post it

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I’m not familiar with that. Is that like letting players choose a set of equipment at the beginning of play, or…?
One of the key ideas in Blades in the Dark is avoiding lengthy planning discussions. You go on missions called Scores and you only plan very minimally how you want to achieve your mission.
Then through play you can flashback to when your characters were preparing the score and say “of course, I bribed this guard yesterday so that he’d let us in the back doors”, that kind of thing.
So for equipment you just choose whether you have a lot, some or a little, not what you actually have. There is a stealth penalty for having a lot.
Then during play, when you need something you just mark off a slot on your sheet - obviously it needs to be something you reasonably have access to.
So I’ll often say “you have 3 things with you but you can tell me what they are when you need them”.
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I used nWoD for fantasy games. The core dice pool system works pretty well, and few things are tightly coupled to any setting in particular.
I mostly don’t like d20, so when someone tells me they’re doing a game about secret vampire societies in it, I’m a lot more disappointed than if they ported a system I like or am neutral on. Also 5th edition in particular makes a lot of assumptions about how things work.
This. NWod/ChoD system just works so well. Of course I’d avoid it if the setting does not fit, but non-thematic d20 should be replaced by dice pool whenever one can do it. I haven’t tried this yet but I really want to run a medieval fantasy game with Mage magic system. Pretty sure there are some games already implementing something like that from the start, but if magic was ever a thing then mage seems like the way it would be approached, messy and dangerous.
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

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This. NWod/ChoD system just works so well. Of course I’d avoid it if the setting does not fit, but non-thematic d20 should be replaced by dice pool whenever one can do it. I haven’t tried this yet but I really want to run a medieval fantasy game with Mage magic system. Pretty sure there are some games already implementing something like that from the start, but if magic was ever a thing then mage seems like the way it would be approached, messy and dangerous.
I love mage, but its magic is so involved and powerful I wouldn’t want to use it in a game unless everyone was a mage. You don’t really want one players options to be “I hit him with my club” and the others to be boundless.
Awakening 2nd edition was really good, imo, but I never actually got to play Ascension
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

This is the secret to being a dm and “having so many cool unique ideas”
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My first “Shadowrun” game was just taking the setting and using D20 Modern for the rules since I didn’t have the actual Shadowrun books (and couldn’t find them for sale either).
Sometimes, after playing actual Shadowrun, I feel like the D20 Modern rules worked better.

Depends on the edition of Shadowrun :lol
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I seem to do this a lot - I’ll find a game whose setting I really like, but dislike the ruleset it uses, so I end up converting it over to the ruleset I prefer (usually Cypher System). I’ve learned that to some people, this is blasphemy of the highest order, which is surprising. I still do it, though.

100% done this. Some systems just gel with me better (like nWoD or CofD). I’ve always wanted to try this with Curse of Strahd.
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I used nWoD for fantasy games. The core dice pool system works pretty well, and few things are tightly coupled to any setting in particular.
I mostly don’t like d20, so when someone tells me they’re doing a game about secret vampire societies in it, I’m a lot more disappointed than if they ported a system I like or am neutral on. Also 5th edition in particular makes a lot of assumptions about how things work.
I’ve played a Call of Cthulhu games in nWoD or CofD before. Never tried fantasy, that seems neat.
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