As much as I hate the cold, I love living in a place with 4 distinct seasons. Give me a blanket of snow that lasts for 10 weeks, not grey, dead wetlands.
December 13, 2025 at 7:03 PM
As much as I hate the cold, I love living in a place with 4 distinct seasons. Give me a blanket of snow that lasts for 10 weeks, not grey, dead wetlands.
Just as it's foolish to stop wasting $ only when you are running out, it's idiotic to wait until you see your death around the next bend to stop wasting time.
December 3, 2025 at 8:08 PM
Just as it's foolish to stop wasting $ only when you are running out, it's idiotic to wait until you see your death around the next bend to stop wasting time.
Railroading in RPGs has more subtle layers than at first blush. The oldest (& likely the largest) culprit was the majority of TSR modules from the late 70s/early 80s, which set the stage for what followed.
Railroading in RPGs has more subtle layers than at first blush. The oldest (& likely the largest) culprit was the majority of TSR modules from the late 70s/early 80s, which set the stage for what followed.
This week on RPR, listener Alex asked a question about how to make player-driven play work in shorter games. Thanks for the question, Alex! This episode is my answer —> #5 Player-Directed Goals: shows.acast.com/roleplayresc...
This week on RPR, listener Alex asked a question about how to make player-driven play work in shorter games. Thanks for the question, Alex! This episode is my answer —> #5 Player-Directed Goals: shows.acast.com/roleplayresc...
We learn by doing. The right way to learn new RPG mechanics (or anything complex) is not to read it all at once, but to absorb just enough info to start practicing 1 small section at a time. Learning is also tactile, so actually rolling/writing, etc. With each new section, repeatedly practice it.
November 21, 2025 at 4:51 PM
We learn by doing. The right way to learn new RPG mechanics (or anything complex) is not to read it all at once, but to absorb just enough info to start practicing 1 small section at a time. Learning is also tactile, so actually rolling/writing, etc. With each new section, repeatedly practice it.