Man-thing said:People buying rpg products as fiction should look at "Behind the Spells:Magic Missile" or "DM's Directory of Demiplanes".
Excellent examples of PDFs with a strong fiction element to them.
Man-thing said:People buying rpg products as fiction should look at "Behind the Spells:Magic Missile" or "DM's Directory of Demiplanes".
philreed said:(Note: The use of You isn't targeted at anyone specific. I've just noticed that anyone not actually playing gets upset when the try to treat a Campaign Planner like a work of fiction.)
Mercule said:IIRC, the product "copy" pretty clearly states that it's a bunch of forms. While I can sympathize with you (Phil) having to deal with complaints of "Hey, this isn't fun to read!", I fear that having any pity for someone who thought it might be a good time-kill to be an insurmountably difficult task. :\
philreed said:Do you think people would understand that they're nothing but forms?
Acid_crash said:I thought that the price was a little high, until I looked through the product. I think its worth it. A 4 out of 5 stars in my estimation.
Acid_crash said:I got the Campaign Planner Deluxe from dtrpg for $15, 93 pages of forms and tables to help consolidate information. This product is definately intended to help a DM focus his mind. It has forms for a listing of deities and portfolios under the deity, a form for which books the DM allows (so if its not on the list, then the answer is no), forms for basic npc stats, forms for basic town information, forms for rumors, forms for artifacts in the game, forms for a whole slew of things that a DM might, or even might not thought of.
I thought that the price was a little high, until I looked through the product. I think its worth it. A 4 out of 5 stars in my estimation.
Man-thing said:Holy crap, you mean the campaign planners are just forms!!!!!!!