Jonny Nexus
First Post
We are pleased to announce that Game Night is now being distributed by Esdevium Games, one of the leading distributors of hobby and mass-market products in Europe.
The practical upshot of this is that if you're in the UK, Ireland, or possibly mainland Europe, your local games shop should be able to order it for you. So if you want it, and you haven't yet got it, you can now get it through them.
Its Esdevium stock code is MOP001. (And if they want the ISBN as well, that's 978-1-906402-01-3).
Chapter One of Game Night is available as a free PDF. Try it - because if you're a gamer, you'll like it!

About Game Night
The Gods don't play dice with the universe... unless it's game night.
A ten-thousand-year quest is about to be completed. Prophecies will be fulfilled, ancient riddles answered, legendary evils bested, and the nature of the universe revealed. All that's needed is a band of mighty heroes to do the completing.
Unfortunately for the locals, some of the gods have taken a personal interest in the chronicle of these heroes' adventures. Now they are each guiding one of the characters towards the conclusion of their epic journey. That is, when they're not squabbling, backstabbing each other, blowing things up by accident, refusing to play by the rules, and turning the AllFather's creation into a mess of petty arguments, fantasy cliché, gratuitous combat and unnecessary dice-rolls.
If you thought your games group couldn't be any worse, Game Night shows just how bad things can get when a bunch of unruly deities decide they want to play. And may the heavens help us all.
About Jonny Nexus
Jonny Nexus is thought by many to be the leading humour writer on the subject of roleplaying games.
He's served as a regular columnist for the magazines Valkyrie and Signs & Portents, wrote the Slayers Guide to Games Masters for leading gaming company Mongoose Publishing, and is the editor and chief writer of the cult webzine, Critical Miss.
Outside of writing, he lives in West London with his wife and a menagerie of house plants and works as a programmer in the City of London. “Jonny Nexus” is, of course, a pseudonym.
For more information visit www.jonnynexus.com.
The practical upshot of this is that if you're in the UK, Ireland, or possibly mainland Europe, your local games shop should be able to order it for you. So if you want it, and you haven't yet got it, you can now get it through them.
Its Esdevium stock code is MOP001. (And if they want the ISBN as well, that's 978-1-906402-01-3).
Chapter One of Game Night is available as a free PDF. Try it - because if you're a gamer, you'll like it!

About Game Night
The Gods don't play dice with the universe... unless it's game night.
A ten-thousand-year quest is about to be completed. Prophecies will be fulfilled, ancient riddles answered, legendary evils bested, and the nature of the universe revealed. All that's needed is a band of mighty heroes to do the completing.
Unfortunately for the locals, some of the gods have taken a personal interest in the chronicle of these heroes' adventures. Now they are each guiding one of the characters towards the conclusion of their epic journey. That is, when they're not squabbling, backstabbing each other, blowing things up by accident, refusing to play by the rules, and turning the AllFather's creation into a mess of petty arguments, fantasy cliché, gratuitous combat and unnecessary dice-rolls.
If you thought your games group couldn't be any worse, Game Night shows just how bad things can get when a bunch of unruly deities decide they want to play. And may the heavens help us all.
About Jonny Nexus
Jonny Nexus is thought by many to be the leading humour writer on the subject of roleplaying games.
He's served as a regular columnist for the magazines Valkyrie and Signs & Portents, wrote the Slayers Guide to Games Masters for leading gaming company Mongoose Publishing, and is the editor and chief writer of the cult webzine, Critical Miss.
Outside of writing, he lives in West London with his wife and a menagerie of house plants and works as a programmer in the City of London. “Jonny Nexus” is, of course, a pseudonym.
For more information visit www.jonnynexus.com.