Gen Con 2000 Report 97
zuluwarrior writes "That Beatdown Reporter braved the sea of smelly geeks and visited this year's Gen Con in Milwaukee WI. for the latest computer game news, RPG and board game info and to see if he rolls a natural 20. Top stuff."
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:2)
A GM's Report of GenCOn (Score:4)
Things I liked
I have a lot of negative things to say about the way Wizards of the Coast (WotC) ran parts of the con this year, so I wanted to start on a positive note. And I did, in fact, have a good time. Here are some things I liked, in no particular order.
All the Gamers
According to the news report I saw, there were twenty thousand of us in town for the con. Let me repeat that - twenty thousand! There's just something great about having that many like-minded folk around. Very cool.
The new Badges
Badges this year were of the hang-around-your-neck instead of the pin-to-your-shirt variety. They were sturdier, unlikely to lose the paper insert, and easy to put on and remove. They must have been especially nice for people in costume, who wouldn't have to worry about sticking a pin through their art (or, for the very scantily costumed, finding a place to pin it in the first place).
The Anime Room
As with last year, the Anime Room was in the Hilton, across the street and caddy-corner to the convention center. While directions could have been a bit clearer, that is more a flaw with the onsite booklet than with the Anime Room Itself. I only made it there once, and rather late, but they were playing something I wanted to see and the staff (even for the late hour) was enthusiastic. I can't speak for crowding, as I was there late, but the room seemed spacious enough, and the video/sound quality was good, even from the back of the room.
Game Locations Listed in the Onsite Book
Last year, the onsite book did not have locations listed, causing all manner of confusion. Kudos to WotC for listening to attendees' complaints and acting on them.
The Safe House
I love this place. Everybody loves this place. It's the one think I really will miss about Milwaukee when the convention moves to Indianapolis in 2003. And the password is... [DELETED].
Now... the problems...
Running as a Tabletop GM
Last year, I left the con with the distinct impression that they were *trying* to make pencil-and-paper GMing so unpleasant that the tabletop players would just go away.
This year removed all doubt.
I arrived bright and early Thursday morning and was able to pick up my pre-reg packet smoothly. At least, I thought so until I opened it. There were my player tickets, the onsite booklet, my Pez(tm), my 4-Day player badge... Hey! I quickly checked the rest of my materials. Nothing anywhere indicated that they had any idea that I had registered as a GM, nor was there anything about the games I was running. I was a bit worried - I knew I hadn't made the pre-reg book deadline, but I had specifically telephoned two weeks earlier to make sure they got my events (they never sent me a confirmation).
I found the Information booth and asked what was going on. I was told to go to "GM HQ" on the third floor. Now, having been through this runaround last year, I knew that there was no such thing as GM HQ. I went to the third floor and found the booth marked "Tournament Registration" (which was not then, nor at any time during the con, labeled "GM HQ").
I stood in line behind three or four other disgruntled folk and was handed a sealed manila envelope from a pile of similar envelopes. This, apparently, was my GMs packet. I asked about my events. The man behind the counter told me that if I told him my event numbers, he could look up whether I had sold any tickets. How, I asked, was I supposed to know what my events number were? They're listed in the on-site book.
I obtained a GMs badge at the point by sounding like I was about to lose my last shreds of patience and make a scene.
I wandered off and looked through my packet. It was so generic, the introductory letter inside welcomed me to Origins (another convention entirely). Notably lacking were GMs instructions or any other useful information. There were event proposal forms for Origins 2001 and Gencon 2001, and a time sheet.
It was at this point that I remembered why I did not bother to get a reimbursement last year.
The time sheet, I should add, needed to be initialed by a "manager". Out of the four games I ran over a cumulative sixteen hours, I was checked in on by a manager exactly once (five minutes before game time, and so could not initial my sheet) and was able track one down once (and it took some doing). Fortunately, the second one was kind enough to initial all of my events for me, without checking.
By Friday midnight, I had run all of my games, so on Saturday, I checked in on Tournament Registration. The person there couldn't help me, but we eventually found someone who initialed my form and told me to come back Sunday. All reimbursements would be done Sunday, regardless of when the events were finished.
Sunday I showed up to a very slow line and watched two GMs in front of me give up in disgust. I made it to the front of the line and got my reimbursement. I felt like I'd GMed for free and earned the money for putting up with WotC.
I'm going back next year, and I'll even GM again, but if you're wondering why the number of games run keeps dropping, even as the people who want to play keeps increasing, here's your answer.
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:1)
I object to TSR's names. (Score:3)
Re:One word: (Score:1)
--
CoC and DW's WnW (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
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Re:Crossbows and Catapults (Score:1)
I got everything in the set, even the dragon and the battering ram, for B-day when I was like 9. Sadly I only played it once, at my birthday party, b/c I didn't have any friends when I was a kid.
Anyway, it sat in it's box for 5-6 more years and my mom sold it at tag sale with my ENTIRE set of Bantha Tracks newsletters!!! I was pissed for several years at that one.
---
Unto the land of the dead shalt thou be sent at last.
Surely thou shalt repent of thy cunning.
Re:A GM's Report of GenCOn (Score:2)
I volunteered (and in fact did not sign up until I got to the convention), and although I had some issues with how they handled assignments (for example, not telling me I could leave my post at the Ball), I had no problems getting my time checked off or reimbursed. I got my work at the art show, the castle, and prereg signed off at the same time with no issues, showed up sunday morning, and got my money.
It might be a bit different for GMs, but I had no major problems.
Re:Failed his journalism roll. - 500 XP (Score:1)
The fantasy artist Clyde Caldwell is always at the Con ... and always seems to have an entourage of interesting women helping him out at his booth...
And then there was that "assistant" in the Art Gallery...
I need a digital camera...
BTW, yes, there are some gamers that take your breath away... And I don't mean that as a pleasing experience at all!!!
--
Re:Gah!!! (Score:2)
At least you didn't put a write-in vote for the half-orc! (Shudder)
Re:...ahhh....GenCon... (Score:1)
Re:One word: (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
This thread has me wondering, what kind of numbers has the new PHB sold already?
Re:I object to TSR's names. (Score:1)
Besides, the DMG will have more of the rules anyhow.
Re:Crossbows and Catapults (Score:1)
Re:...ahhh....GenCon... (Score:1)
On a totally unrelated note, I like Greyhawk, but I like my own campaign better. And unfortunately, the feeling I got from the 3rd Edition PHB was that they're doing a bit too much to integrate Greyhawk into the campaign world (I mean, a full pantheon that players are told is the right one. My older PCs aren't going to use it, but anyone who buys the PHB and comes into my campaign as a newbie is going to be quite shocked). It might just be me being overprotective, but some of my friends felt similarly.
Re:...ahhh....GenCon... (Score:1)
I don't really care if Hasbro puts out a bunch of merchandise (with the movie, it's probably inevitable anyhow), I'm more worried about them playing editor like they've been doing a bit of with Microprose...
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
What she didn't know was that the patrons weren't really staring; after seeing one glimpse of her, they were blinded.
=================================
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:1)
When I was a kid? Damn I'm old.
...ahhh....GenCon... (Score:3)
And, then, on the ride home any female seems to be a hottie. The "GenCon Goggles" (if I may coin a term) are certainly a phenomenon.
Ah...If only it were the old days before Wizards of the Coast...
Re:Damn! I wanted to go, but spaced it. (Score:2)
*OOhh, FOILIES!! GOTTA get the FOILIES!!*
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
I immediatly wonder where one gets a chainmail bikini sized for a 300 pound woman and whether the artisan was properly compensated for the incurred RSI.
FJ!!
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:1)
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Re:New /. Survey: [Re:wtf -- rejected?] (Score:1)
That's my favourite.
It's true.. isn't it?
Isn't it?
Re:natural 20? (Score:1)
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:3)
No
The overwhelmingly female Samartian horse archer corps are a striking example of this; another is the Viking shieldmaidens. Stabbing spears poking out from shieldwalls aren't particularly valiant or odeworthy
(It's a troll, I know, but enough people are ignorant enough to agree that I thought it was worth correcting anyway...)
Gwar & Slashdot ... a combo made in hell (Score:1)
The guy with a horn in his crotch is Scroda, one of the villians of Gwar. Scroda is basically a crack-smoking phallus. He does not have to win
My life is now complete because Gwar has appeared on Slashdot.
If you are not easily offended, not stupid, but not smart either, see http://www.gwar.net
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:1)
Ever since I bought T$R's AD&D's PHB (man, 3 TLAs in a row?), female PCs had a lower maximum STR than male PCs. The reason? "Males in real life are stronger than females". Or something like that.
#def RANT
Yeah, right. "Real life". As if battling dragons and demi-gods happened in real life. My guess is, they didn't want male PCs to be equalled by female PCs. Call it machismo, call it sexist, but that's the most logical reason I can think of.
#undef RANT
And I wondered why me and my friends couldn't meet any female players...
Re:Maybe it's just me... (Score:1)
If Origins was any indicator, collectable card games are a lot less prevalent at the big game conventions these days.
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:1)
Er. Pardon my ignorance, but what is a koshigatana? Or don't I want to know?
-J
yeah, and besides (Score:1)
-jpowers
Re:Underappreciative people... (Score:1)
Nobody knows what's going on, necesary equipment goes AWOL for hours, the computers, network and the printers are always going down, none of the temps have been briefed on anything outside of how to operate the database front end (and half the time they need supervision to even do that), Microsoft products are always being used, etc. etc.
This year's GenCon was different though -- not only did they hide a RANDOM ASSORTMENT of the tickets for the people who pre-registered at an understaffed table in a darkened hallway far away from the long row of lighted "PRE-REGISTERED" signs above the tables staffed with temps but they managed to keep it a SECRET from almost the ENTIRE STAFF including the WotC employees and volunteers assisting said temps! This fiasco is even more impressive than the missing cash register (and lack of network connectivity for said register once it was finally located) that caused a two hour wait at the GenCon gift shop last year.
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Damn right (Score:1)
-jpowers
Re:I object to TSR's names. (Score:1)
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:1)
As for my (perhaps sexist) opinion, I think female warriors could be effective in combat, but their weapon of choice probably wouldn't be any of the heavier hand-to-hand weapons.
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Re:Maybe it's just me... (Score:1)
Re:GenCon (Score:1)
My experience at GenCon this year... (Score:1)
...Was not as good as the previous two I had been to, the last of which was the year before WOTC bought TSR.
Firstly, I must admit I was not there to play games, I was there for info on starting a game company. Mission relatively accomplished.
There were kids playing card games everywhere. They're like roaches that you just get used to and ignore, but if one gets in your way, you dispose of it.
Third Edition D&D. Better rules, still isn't r-o-l-e playing.
WOTC needs to get over themselves. Seriously. Does anyone else remember the press release circa 1995 that said, "We don't want to be the biggest game company in the world."
It also seemed to me that even though the new convention hall is bigger now, the Con itself was smaller than three years ago.
Comment Quickies:
GenCon was still fun, but not as fun as it had been
Dracos
"Integer: a number that represents any valid floating-point value"
re: Want my opinion? (Score:2)
Maybe I'm just a crotchety old man (at 20), but I remember when the gaming world wasn't summed up by the dark empire of the west. Magic:the Gathering, and Wizards of the Coast buying TSR ruined the gaming world. It used to be the case where TSR(D&D), FASA(Shadowrun/Battletech), White Wolf(Vampire/Werewolf/Mage/Wraith/Changling), Palladium(Rifts/Heroes Unlimited), Steve Jackson(GURPS/In Nomine), and West End(Star Wars) slowly revolved around each other in stately pace, releasing games that most people bought. Smaller companies hung around too, like Atlas and CheapAss. They released quality games that could compete on equal terms released by the big boys. Then Wizards of the Coast(WotC) came along with Magic. Gaming became the domain of creepy little kids whose parents could afford really expensive cards. Then, so they could keep the kids addicted to their products, WotC "saved" TSR by buying them out. D&D was now part of the WotC domain. Geek kids could now be hooked from about 6 or 7 until they died, to WotC products. Then Pokemon came out, adding even more people to their consumer base. Awful management on the part of West End Games resulted in them dying a slow, painful death. Lucas recently releaved the spasming corpse that was West End of the lucrative Star Wars license, and rewarded it to (guess who?) WotC. Now WotC owns two of the five major lines that used to drive the gaming world. The same company that now produces wrestling and baseball Collectable Card Games is making design decisions on one of the oldest gaming lines and on the RPG set in a place a long time ago and far far away. (sigh) And that's not all! An even greater evil has recently befallen the gaming world. WotC was bought out by Hasbro, Inc. As Wizards has done with TSR (those of you who bought 3rd Ed., check your books for a TSR logo or mention. You won't find one.), so Hasbro is planning to do with WotC, or so I'm told. Yes, that's right. D&D will soon by produced by Hasbro. Yuck.
For the sake of honesty, I must confess that I'm part of a small gaming company [sanchogames.com], so I take these things kind of personal. But Jeez! This years Con was HALF the size of the 98' con. The Wizards Castle was HUGE! You know why? To cover up the fact that there were *very* few small companies there. Those who came rocked, natch, but still. Part of that might have had something to do with the now outrageous prices charged by Andon Unlimited (Guess who owns them?), the company that organizes Gen Con and Origins. Atlas Games [atlas-games.com] and Steve Jackson Games [sjgames.com] now share a booth because of the outrageous prices. These companies are middle sized fish in this particular pond! If they have to share a booth, what are small businesses supposed to do? So yeah, that's my opinion.
Been a long time. (Score:1)
I haven't been to a convention even REMOTELY like this since I was a teenager and went to a local gaming/comic convention. It was great to be in a huge place full of people who were into stuff that I was but at the same time I couldn't help wondering just how dangerous this was considering how wierd they all must (also) be! :)
--8<--
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:1)
In Akron,OH it's on Tu-We-Th at 6am...
Finally (Score:3)
Martin
Nothing on the Movie? (Score:2)
Interesting (Score:2)
The REAL URL (Score:3)
You want to be http://www.sharkyextr eme.com/games/columns/beatdown_gencon2k/ [sharkyextreme.com] - there.
Gah!!! (Score:2)
Well that's in my Top 10 Things I Hope I Never See.
One can only imagine.
*shudder*
Slashdotted? (Score:2)
They must be running IIS! {grin}
Re:Damn! I wanted to go, but spaced it. (Score:2)
Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:2)
Did anyone else here glue themselves to the old D&D cartoon when they where kids? I would -love- to get that movie collection on DVD.
I wonder if any TV networks still cary it... oh well.
Memories......
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Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Failed his journalism roll. - 500 XP (Score:5)
I only saw 2 women in chainmail bikinis and both of them were real good looking.
Gencon also smelled better than the average Anime
Re:/. sucks worse every day. [NOT A TROLL] (Score:3)
Re:Speaking of D&D, remember the cartoon? (Score:2)
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:1)
Or maybe that's just bad science.
+1 Informative (eom) (Score:1)
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Crossbows and Catapults (Score:1)
Ahh, the good old days.
Participant (Score:2)
My wife and I have a booth in the art show every year. this year, there seemed to be a proliferation of kids (>20 yrs)wearing camoflauge with parts of motherboards and modems taped all over them. Don't know if it was shadowrun or what... looked stupid. the smell was better this year. New games looked pretty cool... Scooby Doo meets Magic:the gathering. sold a lot of stuff.
End Rambling
Underappreciative people... (Score:1)
Why?
Re:Nothing on the Movie? (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
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Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Infolinx (Score:2)
If you're into White Wolf's [white-wolf.com] products (Mage, Vampire, Werewolf), their own site's pretty good, and Ex Libris Nocturnis [nocturnis.net] isn't bad, either.
RPGnet [rpg.net] is sort of the USA Today of the industry. You know, slick and dumb. They do have a rather nice habit of posting more than one review per book, though, so you get to see multiple perspectives, even if their writers are high schoolers.
-jpowers
Re:Underappreciative people... (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
New TREK Games and more... (Score:1)
I was assisting a charitable Jail and Bail program for Strive Media Institute [strivemediainstitute.com], helped by the Klingon Assault Group [kag.org], and the convention atmosphere was remarkably upbeat, cooperative, and rich with humor. And while I didn't spot the obese woman clad in chain mail, there was an oriental woman in a slit dress whose image is pleasantly burned onto the retinas of many attendants.
STAR TREK GAMES
When FASA stopped producing the Star Trek Role Play Game, many felt abandoned. Many new Star Trek games, both RPGs and starship combat simulations, are now being produced by Last Unicorn Games [lastunicorngames.com]... which it turns out was just bought up by the big ol' Wizards of the Coast [wizards.com]. Live demonstrations of their RED ALERT ship combat gave a nice taste of a rather fast-paced tactical game.
When a reporter focuses on 'smelly teens' and he wigs out over costumed attendants, it seems he lacks a sense of adult fantasy and imagination. The T-Rex sized dragon skeleton and Wizards castle are just the beginning for a lengthy list of amazing production values.
Re:A GM's Report of GenCOn (Score:3)
It is, in fact, different for GMs. That is, for tabletop GM's. Last year, we also had issues with card players being invited to cut in front of tabletop players in the registration line, as well. They also scheduled RPGs at the same table at the same time (this year) and moved Chaosium's area without notice. It's a lot of little things that add up.
The issue with the time cards is that it works well enough for shift-based work, in areas where there are managers (like the tournaments rooms, the dealer's room, etc), but not so well for the gaming rooms, where you only ever see the redshirts running by.
A week?? (Score:1)
You failed to mention Starship Troopers also by Avalon Hill. Maybe you were too distracted by Squad Leader. It seemed to move much better than SL but still seemed kinda lame.
And what ever happened to the BattleTech simulators?? Where was Yip^6?? Why was there only one game of Chill in the entire catalog?
And to whoever made the comment that the smell was better this year only has to wait for 2003 when Hasbro moves the Con to Indianapolis.
Viv
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Anybody up for a.... (Score:1)
I love that line.
Re:Gah!!! (Score:2)
And I quote, from the sidebar on the top-right corner of page 105 of the D&D 3rd edition Player's Handbook:
"The information on Table 7-5: Armor is for Medium-size creatures... Armor for Large characters costs double and weighs twice as much, and for Huge creatures it costs quadruple and weighs five times as much. Armor for even larger creatures must be specially made and has no standard price or weight."
Re:My experience at GenCon this year... (Score:1)
3rd Edition DnD - I disbelieve your illusion and cast magic missile at your head. Seriously, tho, some of the best role-playing I ever experienced was when I was a serious Rolemaster fan and had to be 'degraded' into playing D&D because nobody wanted to play anything else. I played a thief who, on a lark, spent all his options in ventriloquism and played a split personality with my shortsword. Oddly, everyone else in the game picked unusual skills and characters as well, which made for a very interesting party. Some of the other characters in the game included a half ogre who was so dumb he had to make rolls to see if he could remember if you were a friend or foe (among other things - often very funny), a dwarf who lived for battle and often needed to be talked out of charging into no-win situations (one which nearly got my character killed when our arguement got a little too heated and drew the attention of the enemy. It was a difficult arguement, too, because my sword was on his side...), a mage who specialized in cantrips and others I don't remember so well. I guess my point is anything can be role-played, so don't judge the people by the system.
Wow - rainbow-headed goths! I was really starting to get depressed about the state of the whole goth thing.
I rode in the Mystery Machine. About 12 years ago (really!). Maybe not the same one, tho.
Blondes in chainmail bikinis...yawn... what else is new? I worked Ren fest in a booth with two of 'em a few years back (1 who usually only wore chain mail... and not much at that!). The ones I remember from GenCon were much more modest. Then again, a lot could have changed in the 10 years since I went last :)
Star Wars RPG is back?!? That can only mean Space Opera and Spawn of Fashan can't be far behind! And even Star Frontiers, Gamma World, and 007! nah.
Re:Maybe it's just me... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
Bzzzt! Try again. Logged in users get dynamically generated story lists (which are up-to-the-minute), while non-logged in users get a cached page that updates every so often.
Re:Underappreciative people... (Score:1)
When it was purely a TSR show they had their own problems, but at least the problems, and the staff, were the same every year.
The biggest change staff wise is that TSR's headquarters are no longer a 30 minute drive away. TSR basically shut down during Gen COn and 90% of their employees worked the con. WOTC now relies on mostly vonluteers and temp services. Most of these folks haven't worked the con year after year and thus are not up to speed on how things are and should be.
Re:Black Angel from Last year (Score:1)
I didn't go this year - questions (Score:1)
I just got really bored with it last year, and I blame it all on WOTC. I can only hate them so much though, because Mike Selinker is a god to me.
The National Security Decision Making game is the best thing in the world, for anyone who hasn't discovered it.
If you're seriously starting another gaming company, you're welcome to email me. I profited on an invisible booth at GenCon in 1999, I've run two conventions myself, and my GM has run 2 more. I've helped debug Kenzer and Companies games and worked for them: I'm credited in Fairy Meat (along with everyone else in my group, we all helped write it)
And 2 years ago I got Shane Hensley (PEG) quite drunk just a few hours before their company planning meeting. But I've learned he was probably drunk already
And if anyone ever got really mad because Chthutlutulululu hit them in the head in the Hyatt Atrium, blame me.
Was there still a Succubus club?
I'm definitely going to go the last year it is in Milwaukee, and I'm going to make it seem just that much more of a letdown when they move it to nowhere.
Slashdotted (Score:1)
-Earthling
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
natural 20? (Score:3)
Maybe it's just me... (Score:1)
GenCon (Score:2)
So what's the answer? (Score:1)
All that buildup, and the question never even
gets answered! What a ripoff!
Congratulations slashdot! (Score:1)
I am glad to see this article posted here, because a nerds life is more then CPU cycles and linux.
Re:Nothing on the Movie? (Score:1)
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
if it ain't broke, then fix it 'till it is!
Re:Gah!!! (Score:1)
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:2)
Koshigatana are Japanese twin swords. Generally a little shorter and rather wider than a wakizashi, they are used for trapping parries, redirections, and blocks as well as the typical kenjutsu slashing attacks.
There's no way a koshigatana wielder can trade blows straight up with someone with a full size weapon, or go for a single crippling stroke -- the key to their use is extreme speed and dexterity to deflect blows while giving the opponent the death of a thousand cuts. In other words, upper body strength is not that relevant, which is why this a weapon a geisha girl ("kunoichi", as "kunoichijutsu" is the technical term for female ninjutsu) can take out armored samurai with.
At this point, I'm sure, all the EverQuest fanboys are getting ready to claim I don't know what I'm talking about and that a koshigatana is a one-handed piercing weapon because their databases say so. Well, yes, anything small and pointy can be used as that, but that is historically inaccurate and stupid besides. It is a two-handed weapon, one in each hand, and to model combat with it properly in an RPG you should give the wielder a full parry defensive bonus plus a gladius/cutlass caliber slashing attack each round, or no defensive bonus and two separate attacks, with none of whatever penalties usually apply for using a weapon in each hand. However, since speed and dexterity are so important, if the wielder has any armor heavier than a leather vest, none of this applies -- then they just have a rather light shortsword in each hand
In European terms I suppose koshigatana style would be closest to the swordbreaker/rapier combo used by Renaissance-era thiefcatchers, but with the intent to leave the target looking like they were worked over with straight razors, not just disarmed, and swordbreakers are dependent on the wielder having comparable arm strength to their attacker to work well. As koshigatanas are meant to parry and deflect rather than trap or block, raw strength is much less important. A chick weapon, in other words. Which brings us back to where we started
Re:Why I don't like RPGs (Score:2)
You should go through the Norse sagas to find some striking counterexamples. However, Teutonic women are a special case, as any of you who have visited Nordic countries probably know already
Valkryies aside, effective women warriors have historically been archers, as any reasonably strong woman can pull a bow of the rather pathetic draws that historical bows were capable of handling. Also, being a good archer requires a lot more training and discipline than a footsoldier while being less individually glorious, which traits are more often to be found acceptable by women than macho male warriors, oddly enough
Re:yeah, and besides (Score:1)
Re:One word: (Score:2)
"The axiom 'An honest man has nothing to fear from the police'
Help Desk (Score:1)
I pre-registered for GenCon, and spent all four days there. I also spent about two thirds of my total time at the Con volunteering at the front Help Desk.
I can understand and appreciate all the complaints and problems people had with this years GenCon. Events were double booked into rooms, moved, and rescheduled... often without telling the person who was running the event! Game Masters and other exhibitors were given no extra help at all, in large part because there was no extra help to give. Changes and reschedulings were done ad-hoc, with no central reporting at all. The only vaguely reliable method for determining what was going on where was the Event Team walkie talkies.
Another immense problem was housing. There was NO documentation on the availability of transportation to the various hotels. To compound matters, the housing situation was fubar, with people getting shuffled left and right, people who were promised housing that was not provided... the list is endless.
Events were another problem. On the second day, the event database started hosing itself... it got corrupted, and I don't know what they did to fix it, but I wouldn't be surprised if they had to restore from an earlier backup. I talked for a while with a couple who had had all their events simply 'lost'... listed nowhere, and with no method available to announce unlisted events.
Overall, this years GenCon was a disorganized mess. The GenCon webpage was a discrace, with poor information, and complete lack of updates. I'm hoping they do better next year... I still had fun, but the people who do all the work... the exhibitors, the game masters, etc... are being royally screwed over. Hell... volunteers were treated better than the people who make the Con happen... I was able to get my ticket refund Saturday afternoon.
I had fun. I enjoyed it, and so did most of the people who went there. But WotC is very quickly alienating the people who create the content that brings people back every year. Not smart.
Raven
And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor
One word: (Score:4)
Hooray! (Score:1)
The "game" in question involves a series of wooden blocks stacked to look like battlements. Small soldiers are optional and can be arranged any way on these blocks you see fit. Star Wars figures can be used to give it a "futuristic" theme. Walk back 10 paces and man a small, wooden, ingeniously crafted catapult...
Well, tanj. I read that while downloading the latest AllegroHack [pinn.net] binary. I came this close (scrunches up fingers real small) to just turning off the computer right there and going to get my blocks out of the attic and my legomen from the closet. I mean, really, who needs HP and MP snd Str and Int and Exp Pts and all that when you can just destroy stuff with reckless abandon (while maintaining that fantasy setting)?
I think I need to go lie down...
-J