I read a post today about someone wanting to play an OSR game and then cooling on it quite rapidly because the GM presented them with a river to cross and they couldn't work out how to do it.
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@Printdevil @Taskerland I actually met it running open signup games online. (And that was _after_ it had been filtered by people who were prepared to use a straight videoconference system rather than actual roll20 or one of its clones.)
Did you brand everyone with a scarlet letter?
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@Taskerland "We tried to cross but our beards became waterlogged and we sank"

@Printdevil But imagine how those failed stand-up comedians would emote as they marched into the water? A true golden age for the hobby.
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@Taskerland I'm not only not at home to this, I'm camped out against it with a sign.
@Printdevil @Taskerland I hate this shit about VTTs with passion. Digital interface prompts not only ignorance of mechanics (which is not necessarily a bad thing) AND relegates fiction into binary world of computer.
It is the thing that let's me play and it pollutes the culture xd
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@RogerBW @Printdevil I'm reminded of when I started drifting back towards the hobby, I decided to run Mines of Phandelver and I was *horrified* by how bad an introductory adventure it was.
The first encounter has a load of Goblins attacking you, forcing you into mass-combat as your first encounter with the rules.
If I were to write an introductory adventure for a broad audience, I would start with the fundamentals of engaging with a fictional world.
@Taskerland @RogerBW @Printdevil Given a few bad dice rolls, it’s very possible that that first encounter will end in a TPK. When I’m running something for people who haven’t played before I give them a chance to make a skill roll for something like shooting a bottle off a wall or arm-wrestling their friend, where they can fail and learn about pushing a roll or facing a non lethal consequence.
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@Printdevil But imagine how those failed stand-up comedians would emote as they marched into the water? A true golden age for the hobby.
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@Taskerland @RogerBW @Printdevil Given a few bad dice rolls, it’s very possible that that first encounter will end in a TPK. When I’m running something for people who haven’t played before I give them a chance to make a skill roll for something like shooting a bottle off a wall or arm-wrestling their friend, where they can fail and learn about pushing a roll or facing a non lethal consequence.
@satsuma This wasn't about understanding the mechanics though... this was about understanding that it's a fictional world and it's okay to go 'Is there anything that we might be able to use to fashion a raft?' Understanding how to push dice is a skill that should come after the basic processes of engaging with a fictional world. @RogerBW @Printdevil
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@Taskerland @RogerBW @Printdevil Given a few bad dice rolls, it’s very possible that that first encounter will end in a TPK. When I’m running something for people who haven’t played before I give them a chance to make a skill roll for something like shooting a bottle off a wall or arm-wrestling their friend, where they can fail and learn about pushing a roll or facing a non lethal consequence.
@satsuma @Taskerland @Printdevil I dimly recall the sample adventure in the Games Workshop RQ2 did this. There's something up on that cliff, make a climbing roll, There's lunch on the hoof, make a Bow roll. That kind of thing.
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@Printdevil @Taskerland I hate this shit about VTTs with passion. Digital interface prompts not only ignorance of mechanics (which is not necessarily a bad thing) AND relegates fiction into binary world of computer.
It is the thing that let's me play and it pollutes the culture xd
@vdonnut Right... because a virtual environment is anchored. There are things that are objectively and unambiguously true and false about it. RPG fictions are often more fluid, ambiguous, and subject to collective interpretation. @Printdevil
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@satsuma @Taskerland @Printdevil I dimly recall the sample adventure in the Games Workshop RQ2 did this. There's something up on that cliff, make a climbing roll, There's lunch on the hoof, make a Bow roll. That kind of thing.
Those are the breadcrumbs you need for a solo game, or a beginning GM, but you need off that very quickly or scenarios look like you're cutting the meat too small.
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Those are the breadcrumbs you need for a solo game, or a beginning GM, but you need off that very quickly or scenarios look like you're cutting the meat too small.
@Printdevil I think for absolute beginners, the hard part to understand is never 'roll the big dice and look at the numbers to see if you succeed at doing a thing'
But then I did once run a game for someone who wasn't familiar with fantasy and thought that he was wandering around a town with a bag full of rabits killing homeless people.
Origins: A Carrier Bag Full of Rabbits
Origins is a series of posts in which I reflect upon my relationship with RPGs as well as the events that have shaped my tastes and understanding of games. The rest of the series can be found here. A boardgame-player asking for recommendations as to their first RPG got me thinking about how accessible roleplaying…
Taskerland (tasker.land)
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@Printdevil I think for absolute beginners, the hard part to understand is never 'roll the big dice and look at the numbers to see if you succeed at doing a thing'
But then I did once run a game for someone who wasn't familiar with fantasy and thought that he was wandering around a town with a bag full of rabits killing homeless people.
Origins: A Carrier Bag Full of Rabbits
Origins is a series of posts in which I reflect upon my relationship with RPGs as well as the events that have shaped my tastes and understanding of games. The rest of the series can be found here. A boardgame-player asking for recommendations as to their first RPG got me thinking about how accessible roleplaying…
Taskerland (tasker.land)
To be honest that sounds like my players after 40 years of gaming.
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@Printdevil I think for absolute beginners, the hard part to understand is never 'roll the big dice and look at the numbers to see if you succeed at doing a thing'
But then I did once run a game for someone who wasn't familiar with fantasy and thought that he was wandering around a town with a bag full of rabits killing homeless people.
Origins: A Carrier Bag Full of Rabbits
Origins is a series of posts in which I reflect upon my relationship with RPGs as well as the events that have shaped my tastes and understanding of games. The rest of the series can be found here. A boardgame-player asking for recommendations as to their first RPG got me thinking about how accessible roleplaying…
Taskerland (tasker.land)
@Taskerland @Printdevil @satsuma I think fantasy RPG in particular assumes "you've read a lot of fantasy books, wouldn't it be great if we mashed them all together, so the Gray Mouser running from latest mark rounds the corner and bumps into Conan?" (IIRC this was pretty much the original pitch for the _Thieves' World_ anthologies.) The early games won't give you the feel because they assume you already know it. The recent fantasy games are just their own thing and I'm not sure how you're supposed to get to know it.
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@Printdevil I think for absolute beginners, the hard part to understand is never 'roll the big dice and look at the numbers to see if you succeed at doing a thing'
But then I did once run a game for someone who wasn't familiar with fantasy and thought that he was wandering around a town with a bag full of rabits killing homeless people.
Origins: A Carrier Bag Full of Rabbits
Origins is a series of posts in which I reflect upon my relationship with RPGs as well as the events that have shaped my tastes and understanding of games. The rest of the series can be found here. A boardgame-player asking for recommendations as to their first RPG got me thinking about how accessible roleplaying…
Taskerland (tasker.land)
@Taskerland @Printdevil @RogerBW @satsuma "…he had spent three hours wallowing in a horrific fever dream where Warwick Davis wandered around a council estate with a garden gnome and a carrier bag full of rabbits who were all eagerly encouraging him to murder a bunch of homeless people with a fire axe…"
A perfectly normal concept for an indie game these days.
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@Taskerland @Printdevil @RogerBW @satsuma "…he had spent three hours wallowing in a horrific fever dream where Warwick Davis wandered around a council estate with a garden gnome and a carrier bag full of rabbits who were all eagerly encouraging him to murder a bunch of homeless people with a fire axe…"
A perfectly normal concept for an indie game these days.
That's just my games. Ask @devilsjunkshop
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That's just my games. Ask @devilsjunkshop
"An erotic version of Last of the Summer Wine punctuated with exasperated violence and non plussed villains wondering why their plans don't get more traction"
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@satsuma This wasn't about understanding the mechanics though... this was about understanding that it's a fictional world and it's okay to go 'Is there anything that we might be able to use to fashion a raft?' Understanding how to push dice is a skill that should come after the basic processes of engaging with a fictional world. @RogerBW @Printdevil
@Taskerland @RogerBW @Printdevil It was more of a “It’s a bright, sunny morning on the ranch - what chores need doing? Do you need to round up the cattle, or maybe you’re idling and throwing horseshoes at a pole?” This should set the expectation that they can choose what they want to do and maybe it will lead to a skill roll where success isn’t certain.
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@Taskerland @RogerBW @Printdevil It was more of a “It’s a bright, sunny morning on the ranch - what chores need doing? Do you need to round up the cattle, or maybe you’re idling and throwing horseshoes at a pole?” This should set the expectation that they can choose what they want to do and maybe it will lead to a skill roll where success isn’t certain.
I think Crpgs often handle this well. "What were your characters doing when you were 13"
Fallout 3 etc. A session Zero of just going over the rules would be a good opener for lots of reasons.
Of course a lot of players bring big concept to the tablet for the characters and it's hard to do that. I suppose you could have them all play normal villagers the first week who proceed to die horribly.
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I think Crpgs often handle this well. "What were your characters doing when you were 13"
Fallout 3 etc. A session Zero of just going over the rules would be a good opener for lots of reasons.
Of course a lot of players bring big concept to the tablet for the characters and it's hard to do that. I suppose you could have them all play normal villagers the first week who proceed to die horribly.
@Printdevil @satsuma @Taskerland First example of this I saw was a CoC cRPG in about 1990. During character generation, for men, it would ask "what did you do in the War", and you could choose from among four options. More front line service would give you more fighting skills but less sanity. Point is, it also conveyed ideas about the setting.
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That's just my games. Ask @devilsjunkshop
@Printdevil Some of them are a lot like that, yeah
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I think Crpgs often handle this well. "What were your characters doing when you were 13"
Fallout 3 etc. A session Zero of just going over the rules would be a good opener for lots of reasons.
Of course a lot of players bring big concept to the tablet for the characters and it's hard to do that. I suppose you could have them all play normal villagers the first week who proceed to die horribly.
@Printdevil @Taskerland @RogerBW when I ran Tales of the Old West at Furnace I asked everyone what was the one thing they really wanted to do as a cowboy, and someone said that they wanted to lasso a bad guy, so of course the opportunity arose at the showdown!
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