A History Of Pen & Paper RPGs 44
Thanks to Skotos.net for their column discussing a brief history of tabletop role-playing games, as the author, aided by resources such as the Pen & Paper RPG database, charts the evolution of the RPG from 'character modelling' in the earliest titles ("...the purpose was to create statistics, abilities, and rules which could be used to depict a character"), through 'character development' in the original 1974 Dungeons & Dragons ("Instead of having static characters, players were offered ways for their characters to evolve and change"), right up to the 'story telling' emphasis in the '80s and beyond ("player investment in individual characters was dramatically reduced in exchange for telling better stories.")
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:3, Funny)
Just thought I'd point that out in case you weren't aware.
Good thing video games and movies never have Satanic themes!
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:2)
The friends I played with are also all married and doing just fine thanks. I don't know of one person that I knew that played that has commited suicide.
I would say that your statment is flawed.
For myself and my friends it was all good clean fun.
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:1, Insightful)
It's the same as with TV, video games, and the internet.
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:2)
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:2)
Or Ross paying too much child support so he has to move in with Joey?
This could be fun.
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:1)
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:1)
Of course, it was reading the Bible and other Classical mythology (into which I include Norse and Egyptian mythology) that caused me to become curious about the occult, and reading the Illuminatus! Trilogy that prevented me from taking it too seriously.
Re:RPGs are Satanic (Score:2)
Rifts (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Rifts (Score:3, Interesting)
If ya love the magic vs Technology theme.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:If ya love the magic vs Technology theme.... (Score:2)
Oh, yeah, that's why (Score:1)
Re:Oh, yeah, that's why (Score:5, Insightful)
Dude, $35 for a tabletop set is a pretty good deal considering most PC or console games start at around $60, and those games only last 20 hours on average. Invest in a couple of books and dice and you've got basically infinite playing time.
Re:Oh, yeah, that's why (Score:2)
Actually, new video games normally start at $50, and there are hundreds of them available for $20 or less. The average of 20 hours strikes me as extremely low, but it's the kind of stat that's pretty much impossible to know.
Invest in a couple of books and dice and you've got basically infinite playing time.
Quality of entertainment is much, much mor
Re:Oh, yeah, that's why (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree wholeheartedly.
That's why I'd rather own any one version of D&D than every "Baldur's Gate" computer game ever made. No computer game can compare to the infinite variety of pencil-and-paper gaming.
Oh yea, and you can get more length of entertainment, as well as more quality of entertainment, out of any RPG than you can out of any existing computer game. Unless you are one of those people that think re-playing
Make your own paper and pen RPG (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't forget Flying Buffalo (Score:3, Interesting)
When the net came along I thought well there goes Flying Bufflo, but no - they're still around - and on the net.
Re:Don't forget Flying Buffalo (Score:3, Interesting)
Flying Buffalo. I'll definitely will be checking them. Anyone has more PBM or non-realtime games recommendations? Heck, I'll probably take a look at that fantasy football again.
Those interested
Laser Squad Nemesis. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't forget Flying Buffalo (Score:1)
Hackmaster!! (Score:1)
Re:Hackmaster!! (Score:1)
The handbooks are a good deal these days. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The handbooks are a good deal these days. (Score:2)
Re:The handbooks are a good deal these days. (Score:1)
(OT) Pen and Paper DB - Does anyone use it? (Score:2)
Since this posting is the first reference I ever came across for the PPRPGDB, I'm wondering if perhaps I should take a couple of minutes and update the entry. Does anyone out there actually use
Re:(OT) Pen and Paper DB - Does anyone use it? (Score:2)
Best,
Adam
Re:(OT) Pen and Paper DB - Does anyone use it? (Score:1)
The DB is wierd. Its got *lots* of my friends from my gaming days in it...
Some interesting omissions (Score:5, Informative)
I worked in the adventure gaming field from 1984 until 1997, and then sporadically thereafter. I started at Steve Jackson Games, editing Space Gamer magazine under Warren Spector, and later freelanced for many paper game companies. This article does a decent job, for its length, of conveying the broad development of "core game design" mechanics. But I notice some odd oversights:
But even if you disagree, the field has always enjoyed a tremendous ongoing current of small-press one-shot RPGs, what you might call the "short stories" of the form. Nowadays you find many such designers active on the Forge [indie-rpgs.com], the Burgess Shale of modern small-press RPG design. See, for example, the much-praised Little Fears [key20.com], Universalis [actionroll.com], The Riddle of Steel [theriddleofsteel.net], and Sorcerer [sorcerer-rpg.com], as well as curiosities like Bedlam [realms.org.uk], Courts & Corsets [harlekin-maus.com], octaNe [memento-mori.com], and Nicotine Girls [123.net]. And for a twisted mix of horror, humor, and emotion both high and low, check out Paul Czege's My Life With Maste
Re:Some interesting omissions (Score:1)
(The one thing I consistenty hated was melee and strike rounds, they are too mechaninc and take too much time.)
For a longer history of Role Playing Games with a different approach, see RPG History by Astinus">. I was very much surprised by the quality (and length!) of these articles! [ptgptb.org]
Re:Some interesting omissions (Score:2)
Re:Some interesting omissions (Score:2)
Oh yes, Paranoia was - in a way - more a "player killing game" than a "story telling game"... No other game had me spend more time on character creation.
Paranoia! (Score:1)
You can look for games/players that use JParanoia on paranoia-live.net [paranoia-live.net] or paranoia-rpg.com [paranoia-rpg.com]
(Paranoia-Live.net being the better of the two sites.)
Re:Some interesting omissions (Score:1)
Steve Jackson Beat us to it! (Score:2)