Mercurius
Legend
No, I'm not talking about the post-apocalyptic genre, but rather a variation of "desert island discs" - but more appropriate to the times. The scenario: Some kind of apocalypse occurs, but one in which you survive and, somehow, you can still play RPGs. I know, craziness, but go with it. For whatever reason, you can keep only five RPG products - whether to read or play (and not counting dice). Which are they?
A couple further points: they have no selling or bartering value - the value is solely the product itself and its contents for your enjoyment (reading or playing). You have everything else necessary - pencil and paper, dice, maps, etc.
Finally, it has to be a distinct product: no slipcases of three books (unless it is something like SJ, but not the D&D core rule set), no Kickstarter mega-packages. But it can be a box set. Meaning, any singular product (e.g. with a unique ISBN) is fine.
Oh yeah, transportation is not a problem - so you don't have to worry about weight (Ptolus, yay!). But you can't pick PDFs - these are hard copies. Paper, cardboard.
Alright, go for it. And as a bonus, explain your post-apocalyptic RPG plans. I'm going to think on it and post later.
A couple further points: they have no selling or bartering value - the value is solely the product itself and its contents for your enjoyment (reading or playing). You have everything else necessary - pencil and paper, dice, maps, etc.
Finally, it has to be a distinct product: no slipcases of three books (unless it is something like SJ, but not the D&D core rule set), no Kickstarter mega-packages. But it can be a box set. Meaning, any singular product (e.g. with a unique ISBN) is fine.
Oh yeah, transportation is not a problem - so you don't have to worry about weight (Ptolus, yay!). But you can't pick PDFs - these are hard copies. Paper, cardboard.
Alright, go for it. And as a bonus, explain your post-apocalyptic RPG plans. I'm going to think on it and post later.