

There’s a YouTuber called The Rules Lawyer, and I thought at first this post was about him. It sounds like something he would do: “Every +1 Matters!”
There’s a YouTuber called The Rules Lawyer, and I thought at first this post was about him. It sounds like something he would do: “Every +1 Matters!”
If an OSS project wants to thrive, it would behoove them to implement things that people want. I don’t think there’s a one-size-fits-all solution there, but they shouldn’t be surprised if nobody wants to use their software because it doesn’t do what they want.
I love my WFRP campaign. I’m playing a noble’s servant who got sent on a dangerous quest by his lord to “man him up a little,” and he wound up getting mixed up with a party is complete nutcase. The rules have an odd kind of crunch to them - there’s tons of details for combat, but my GM says there’s basically no encounter design guidelines, for example. Still, it’s a great time and I can’t recommend it enough.
Nah, OSRS stands for Old School RuneScape. OSR is just Old School Rune.
I’m playing a Star Wars Saga Edition game right now where my character is a former privateer fighting in the Jedi Civil War for the Sith. He was fairly honest with his party members about his former criminal affiliations, that’s how he met them in the first place. The fact he was on the wrong side of the war only came out when a conversation about the war came up and he was directly asked about it. The Jedi in the party took it surprisingly well, but that’s probably more due to the conversation being completely unserious other than his admission.
Lesson learned: you can probably trust your party with your dark past.
How about for 4 minutes?