It’s like writing a book with each person playing a main character and the ST/GM leaving hints about the over all plot. So it gets messy and derailed all the time, and people fight with each other as much as they fight the bad guys some times, but it’s a lot of fun. The degree with which people accomplish actions depends partially on fate (the dice) but you can better your odds by “training” your character (literally stacking the numbers in your character’s favor).
tagged:
currently-reading, mister-read-2012, reading-alone, and we-own
Books Read in 2012
January
1. Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar
2. Dead Beat by Jim Butcher
3. Blood Fruit, edited by James EM Rasmussen
4. Night World v 1 by L.J. Smith
5. Night World v 2 by L.J. Smith
6. Zombie Writing! Edited by Armand Rosamilia
7. An Occupation of Angels by Lavie Tidhar
8. Goosebumps: Stay Out of the Basement by R.L. Stine
9. Katana by Cole Gibsen
Awesome! I have no clue how to play any of that, but so many of my friends are dedicated!
It’s like writing a book with each person playing a main character and the ST/GM leaving hints about the over all plot. So it gets messy and derailed all the time, and people fight with each other as much as they fight the bad guys some times, but it’s a lot of fun. The degree with which people accomplish actions depends partially on fate (the dice) but you can better your odds by “training” your character (literally stacking the numbers in your character’s favor).
no clue how it’s play but I assume it doesn’t involve math, not dorky at all