Curiously, I was recently reading an editorial from Gygax in Dragon #67 (published in 1982) and he was mentioning moving the monk to a future "Sino-Japanese" version of AD&D, primarily aimed at the "Far East" market, but with the idea of also publishing an English translation. Probably it was...
From the description, it seems to me that it would just be the possibility of accessing the campaign page directly from maps. But I hope that campaign management itself will see some improvement down the line.
That's my impression as well.
Hmmm... commuting daily to my school in Rome sounds somewhat inconvenient and I already find the heat here excessive. Too bad, I like the name of the place and I would have loved a pool.
May be they are not really having that argument. Maybe they are participating in a massive PBP game in which they play the roles of people having that argument.
I had never heard of Everything before this thread. I've downloaded and tried it. I see that it has a lot of interesting features, like support for regular expressions, but the "basic" usage is extremely simple and it works great for me for finding stuff (I have a ton of files scattered all over...
I'm glad I bought a PDF copy for in in 2020. And I'm especially glad that it was a PDF, that is safely backed up and that I can still access and use...
I find it a bit strange that they list Cthulhu by Torchlight under the classes header. All the other sources contain full classes, while this product has just sub-classes.
I personally liked them both, especially Dunkirk. I only watched The Presige once, when it originally came out and I was lukewarm at best. But considering that it is universally praised and I generally like Nolan, I really should see it again.
My eyesight is also no longer good, but I can still read WotC's books. However, and maybe we are starting to go in a circle, I was specifically referring to the digital formats of those books...
Nah... I would never be so careless as to pronounce the full name of Thar.... [Nikosandros is carried away screaming by unseen forces moving along the dimension of nonconceivability]