Roncer,
Thanks. Maybe I will.
By the way, I guess I missed a simple word to describe the sort of "Beer and Pretzels" game that Dungeon hasn't done for a while:
The One Shot.
God, I love one-shots. Instead of trying to do full new RPG's every three months, break them up with fun, dumb one-shots. Just silly games that can't hold the interest for terribly long but will be fun as hell to play at least once.
Although the game's obviously been done, the Massive Ordinance game -- was that the name? I mean the game where you play a third grader in a school that's been taken over by demons, and you just happen to have access to a top secret army base's special weaponry-- that's the sort of game/module hybrid I mean. It's just a few new rules, an outlandish premise, a map, and some monster counters. And you run it one night out of the box, and you have a blast. It's basically just the standard D&D rules, but in a novel, maybe comical setting.
Thanks. Maybe I will.
By the way, I guess I missed a simple word to describe the sort of "Beer and Pretzels" game that Dungeon hasn't done for a while:
The One Shot.
God, I love one-shots. Instead of trying to do full new RPG's every three months, break them up with fun, dumb one-shots. Just silly games that can't hold the interest for terribly long but will be fun as hell to play at least once.
Although the game's obviously been done, the Massive Ordinance game -- was that the name? I mean the game where you play a third grader in a school that's been taken over by demons, and you just happen to have access to a top secret army base's special weaponry-- that's the sort of game/module hybrid I mean. It's just a few new rules, an outlandish premise, a map, and some monster counters. And you run it one night out of the box, and you have a blast. It's basically just the standard D&D rules, but in a novel, maybe comical setting.