That's more a function of anime norms. Kirby (the video game character) also used a yoyo.It seems as if wearing a short skirt is a requirement for wielding a yo-yo as a weapon...funny how Cadderly managed to get around that.
Johnathan
That's more a function of anime norms. Kirby (the video game character) also used a yoyo.It seems as if wearing a short skirt is a requirement for wielding a yo-yo as a weapon...funny how Cadderly managed to get around that.
Johnathan
I finished The Cleric Quintent, a five novel series by R.A. Salvatore this week. I had heard positive things about this series over the years, particularly about the unique characters, but have mixed feelings about the collection.
On one hand, R.A. Salvatore is a gifted writer when it comes to creating light page turners that don't require a lot of thought, but on the other hand, I thought his combat descriptions were unnecessarily lengthy, detailed, and at many times, highly unbelievable. I know, I know, it's fantasy, but still. Also the main character having essentially a Yo-Yo as a primary weapon was a major suspension of disbelief for me.
At any rate, there were fun moments in the books, but also large spans where I wanted the author to narrate through combat rather than providing play-by-play announcer and color commentator for every. single. battle.
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Hah - just finishing up book 3 of Broken Earth myself. What did you think?Why the R.A. Salvatore power fantasy kick lately? After finishing up N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy, I desperately needed something light and figured I would check out some 'classics' of the pulp fantasy genre.
Honestly, it was a frustrating read. Parts of the Broken Earth series were really engaging, but there were large swaths of what I call meta magical babble I really struggled to get through.Hah - just finishing up book 3 of Broken Earth myself. What did you think?
Although I may have to put it on pause for a few days - I have to read War with the Newts before a SF book club meeting on Monday...
Tasha's you kind of have to read, just to keep up on everything - especially if the players are asking to include it. I do like the optional feats; I'll be allowing them.Read Sandman Slim, by Richard Kadrey. Good solid read, 4/5. I bought it and a sequel at the book sale this fall, but I can't remember where I put the second one so probably reading something else.
Also finished up the X of Swords crossover (I've read the X-comics for...33 years now), and been reading misc gaming stuff. Got Tome of Beasts II and Tasha's Everlasting Cauldron last week; the DCC Lankhmar boxed set; the Basic Fantasy rulebook and the Basic Fantasy Field Guide; also last week, and Hunters in Death, a hexcrawl setting/mini-campaign fanzine by Gothridge Manor yesterday. So lots to browse through.
(X of Swords is definitely the tightest plotted crossover I've probably ever seen; amazingly good throughout. Tome of Beasts II was excellent; Tasha's is fine but not blowing me away; DCC Lankhmar absolutely blew me away with the insane production values; not so much with the vast number of pages taken up by situation specific charts (this is my first encounter with the DCC rule system and...wow. What a waste of space in this BEAUTIFUL product!!!); Basic Fantasy was fine (knew what I was getting); the Field Guide was actually very good; Hunters in Death was also very good/recommended.)