Just posted this up out of curiosity to see who here on the forums plays any kind of Pen-And-Paper/Tabletop RPGs in the vein of D&D, Call of Cthulhu, Exalted etc. I'm a player of Pathfinder (think D&D version 3.75) and have dabbled in Call of Cthluhu and the Warhammer 40,000 RPGs, and I'm just interested in seeing what people on the forum have done in regard in regard to these games, seeing as these boards are devoted to an RPG series; you a hardened veterans of the dungeon crawl? An exhausted, baffled and exasperated DM? A fresh-faced level 1 fighter with little experience of the game and no idea why the DM keeps bursting into tears whenever you suggest Bull Rushing somebody? Or are you just RPG-curious*?
Anyway, this is the Colonel Mustard totally not a survey to see if he's truly alone in this harsh, dark world thread. Do have fun, and I am curious to see how many vidja gamers play on the tabletop as well.
*Like Bi-curious but with a much smaller chance of actually having sex.
I do not play P&P RPGs anymore. I sort of drifted away from all the people I gamed with. However I did play and GM for about 20 years or so. Like probably everyone, I started out with D&D. Back then it was Advanced Dungeons and Dragons, which really dates me. I still have my first edition Deities and Demigods with the Cthulhu Mythos and Fafnir and Grey Mouser gods in it.
I gamed with several different groups over the years. After those early D&D days we mostly did games like Call of Cthulhu (which is still one of my all time favorite RPGs), Earthdawn, Shadowrun, the old West End Star Wars, Marvel Superheros, and Champions/Fuzion. We also dabbled in a lot of other games for a session or two, just to see if we would like them or not. I remember DC Heroes, Chill, The Price of Freedom, MORG (I am not sure if I got that name right), Vampire the Masquerade and Werewolf, Wheel of Time, Paranoia, Recon, and lots of others I cannot remember any more.
I GM'ed a Star Wars game, which was tons of fun as it started out with the players all being Imperials. I used West End's Minos Cluster expansion to set it in. The cool thing was that as the game went on, all of the PCs wound up defecting to the rebellion. I wove in a lot of characters and events from the Tie Fighter video games, like Admiral Harkov, Zaarin, and the Tie Advanced. The PCs were at ground zero for the final showdown between Vader and Harkov, and meeting Vader face to face is what pushed many of them right into the Rebel cause. It was all without me prompting them to do it either. They just saw the true face of the Empire, and did not like it. After that they became Rebel Commandos working for General Madine, and I kept the game going for a few more years that way. I really liked that, because the players were what determined the course of the game, not me.
I ran a Marvel Superheros game after that, which was a ton of fun. After about 5 years of that it got stale though, so I moved on to running Earthdawn, and then finally Shadowrun. Those two games were lots of fun, since they took place in the same world, just in different times. Because of that I was able to bring characters and ideas from my Earthdawn game into the Shadowrun one.
One thing I really loved about Earthdawn was the emphasis on legends, and the very real power they had in the world. In that game, items spontaneously enchanted themselves if they were associated with legendary deeds. The Horrors also made wonderful villains, since they could Mark someone and work through them without that person even knowing it.
Shadowrun also holds a very special place in my heart. It was a wonderful blending of magic and cyberpunk (granted they stole most of the cyberpunk from William Gibson, but he never minded). It was a very fun game, with a wonderfully dystopian future.
I was always more a roleplayer than anything else. Getting into another person's head - and away from the real world - for a while was always the appeal for me. Although we certainly had powergamers in the group too, and what I guess I would call puzzle-solvers. They got the most fun out of being faced with some conundrum and trying to figure out a way out of it. Call of Cthulhu was always good for that sort of thing, since going in guns blazing against a Shoggoth is never a good idea!
I haven't actually played a P&P RPG, though I am very interested. I joined a group that was going to play one called Gamma World, but unfortunately it fell apart before it even got going.
A friend introduced me and my brother to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fantasy_Trip (TFT) back in high school, in the mid 1980s! Yeah...long time ago!
At the time, I was a sophmore, and running with a druggy crowd, which (of course) irked my folks to no end. I wanted to get away from all that, and turn-based RPGs were the answer.
TFT is similar to DnD, but it has a different system of attributes, making it impossible for a high-level character to wind up with a zillion hit points. I think the most hit points a PC could have (a Conan type of PC) was 30, which took a long time (years) to build up. Most PCs started with somewhere between 8 and 16 hit points.
I think TFT went out of business at some point, because their installments (their dungeon crawl books) stopped showing up in the stores after a few years. At that point we really started getting dorky, and began to hybridize TFT with DnD, because DnD had a much larger system of rules, monsters, installments, etc. Basically, if you could think of any subject (taxes, for instance) DnD most likely had some rules to play by.
I played tabletop games probably into my 2nd year of college (early 90s), but by then all my friends and brother were off to their own colleges, and it's not much fun trying to play by yourself! I really wanted to find a videogame that simulated roleplaying games in real-time (starting with the original Nintendo/Legend of Zelda), and it took many years of course to find Oblivion. Soon as I read a review about Oblivion here on the 'net, it literally took me less than an hour to rush to GameSTop, buy Oblivion AND a PS3!
To answer your question, Mustard, I don't game tabletops anymore. I jsut don't have the time. My friend who originally introduced me to RPGs in the 80s still does, though, and he's been trying to get me to come visit and do some tabletop gaming with him (he lives about 3 hours away) but ...it'll probably never happen.
BAck in high school, we had all summer to get a game going. Nowadays we all have full-time jobs, kids, and (gah) responsibilities!
I still play Dungeons & Dragons, but my last campaign died out and my new one is just waiting to be started. I wouldn't be surprised if most of the writers here who had played it, still play it. I love the creativity of them that videogames simply can not capture.
My fiance got me DnD (basic starter game) for my birthday last year, and the one time I played I enjoyed it so much, but ever since then he says he wants to have an experienced DM. He was the DM and has played a few times and doesn't like being one.
I miss that game. I had so much fun.
I always wated to play DnD ever since I found the 3rd edition monster book, I was into, well monsters back then, when I dug more into the whole pen and paper thin I had really wanted to try it, but all the response I would get would be, "That's for losers."
I still been trying to hunt down a group for few years already.
In my school, the weirdos were cool. To me, at least XD
But nah, we all stuck together, we formed our metal bands on and off, played Magic tournaments(some of them still do) had Halo tournaments and now we all just sort of hang out once in a while and nerd out. But we haven't played DnD in over a year because no one really wants to take the time to remake their characters, since a lot of us are either way more OP'ed or, like me, since I haven't gotten to play as much as I like, so inexperienced that the rules have to keep being explained to us.
I'd be interested, but it better start after this semester ends for me. The work I have piling up is insane...
I have 0 prior experience playing RPGs as well.
Count me out. I have tried that before, and it did not do much for me. I like being in the same room at a group of people.
My intro to D&D was via Baldur's GateI, then many years in BGII. By studying the mechanics, I ended up learning much of the AD&D rules of how things work. It was a system that. . . worked, but I enjoy some other systems much more.
I never played the actual tabletop or group sitting around mode and probably don't have much interest in it.
There does seem to be some interest here in interactivity however. At the risk of straying off topic a bit, I've always watched our own Roleplaying forum here at chorrol. Now that I'm not currently writing, I wouldn't mind considering the right RP thread.
I played AD&D with my brother and his friends way back in the day. We were too young for jobs and our parents thought it was all about devil worship, so we managed with one kid’s allowance and my babysitting money. We had the Player’s Handbook and the Monster Manual, plus I think one or maybe two modules. So I got some graph paper and made things up. It was tremendous fun. I still have my blue canvas binder with pen drawings on it, and somewhere in the attic lurks a bag full of dice.
I would love to see more activity on the roleplaying threads here. I’m one of the silent readers.
Never done that but I think those who do are to be respected. Remembering tons of info and statistics takes time and brain capacity.
I have one of those
Joined a DnD group a while back. https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/538670_4354412633035_469452540_n.jpg about to be ambushed by goblins.
GANDALF! NNNYYOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!
The chicken used a garrote on two of them.
I wish I could play a PnP RPG but no one I know would play one and they can be really expensive also there is almost no where to get them in Ireland.
Powered by Invision Power Board (http://www.invisionboard.com)
© Invision Power Services (http://www.invisionpower.com)