Dextolen
Community Supporter
Just curious to see if we participated in any of the same events...
I was involved in three D&D/d20 events:
1. The Sorceror's Citadel - Thursday night. This was the best D&D session all weekend. The group was great, the DM knew d20 and kept it moving. He also knew the adventure and the NPCs very well.
2. In Pursuit of Magic - Friday late morning - A nice DM, he didn't use miniatures or graphical representation, so any abilities or feats involving placement were out the door. It was like playing 1st ed. all over again. He was a decent storyteller so it made up for it.
3. Mysterious Lights, Missing Time and Mutilated Cattle - Saturday Afternoon - I thought this was going to be a d20 X files/CoC type game. WRONG! It turned out to be comedic fantasy with a scifi twist. The DM did not know the d20 system, in fact the world rules set were originally meant for another system. The story was funny (we were Mages in Blue, MIB - who keep extraplanar creatures from causing too much of a stir on our world). I enjoyed myself dispite the d20 nerd in me. The DM reminded me of the type of DM I had when I first started playing back in 6th grade. He never cracked a rulebook and made decisions on the fly, never read boxed text, etc. It's like he knew the world back and forth and could roleplay it on memory alone. I respect that.
I was involved in three D&D/d20 events:
1. The Sorceror's Citadel - Thursday night. This was the best D&D session all weekend. The group was great, the DM knew d20 and kept it moving. He also knew the adventure and the NPCs very well.
2. In Pursuit of Magic - Friday late morning - A nice DM, he didn't use miniatures or graphical representation, so any abilities or feats involving placement were out the door. It was like playing 1st ed. all over again. He was a decent storyteller so it made up for it.
3. Mysterious Lights, Missing Time and Mutilated Cattle - Saturday Afternoon - I thought this was going to be a d20 X files/CoC type game. WRONG! It turned out to be comedic fantasy with a scifi twist. The DM did not know the d20 system, in fact the world rules set were originally meant for another system. The story was funny (we were Mages in Blue, MIB - who keep extraplanar creatures from causing too much of a stir on our world). I enjoyed myself dispite the d20 nerd in me. The DM reminded me of the type of DM I had when I first started playing back in 6th grade. He never cracked a rulebook and made decisions on the fly, never read boxed text, etc. It's like he knew the world back and forth and could roleplay it on memory alone. I respect that.