#RPGaDAY2015, Day 23: The Perfect Game

So, Day 23 is Perfect Game for Me on #RPGaDAY2015.

I’ve been paying attention as I’ve been writing, and common themes come up:

  • Player investment and ownership in what happens at the table, outside of just reacting to the setting and story.
  • A fast-playing system for what goes on under the hood. Something interesting to interact with but not so elaborate that it detracts from the story formed at the game table.
  • A game system that informs the game’s players ((Remember that the GM — or whatever term you use for that facilitator role — is also playing the game.)) what the game is designed for.
  • A low prep time for the game’s facilitator.

Three games instantly spring to mind: Inspectres, Lady Blackbird, and Primetime Adventures.

InSpectres really shines with the Confessional bit ((Although the “once per game” or whatever limitation the Confessional Scenes has in the game is fun-limiting. Just go to Confessional whenever the players want.)) where characters reveal that the game is a reality tv show and they can introduce elements into the “now” that weren’t shown on screen earlier. It’s also a fast system with very little prep from the Ghost Master (or whatever the GM is called in that game). Get it now for $10! ((InSpectres is available in PDF only through that link. I am not sure where you can get a physical copy.))

Lady Blackbird does a similar thing that InSpectre’s Confessional Scenes do with the refreshement scenes — especially the scenes that are done as flashbacks. Both games’ scenes increase the player’s investment into the game and let the players dictate how some of the story is going. And a bonus: neither game needs any prep. Get it now for free!

Primetime Adventures doesn’t need any prep, either. Just show up and run. Plus, the game is set up to have the players create a great deal of the story, force the GM to focus on all characters equally over the course of a series, gets the players to reward each other for entertaining everyone at the table ((Which will probably come up again in Day 24’s “Favorite House Rule” post)) , and there’s also the Audience Participation rules that lets everyone play the game. Get it now for $10! ((It is a $25+ for a physical copy of PTA, depending on where your mail box lives.))

Did I mention there’s no prep for these games? I really don’t have much time to prepare for a game; these three games are literal time-savers. InSpectres is great for (Ghostbusters-flavored) comedy, Lady Blackbird is great for action, Primetime Adventures is great for drama.

 

Edit: You know, I’m going to add Apocalypse World to that list. It hits everything, except for generating the fronts after character generation. But once that’s done, it’s smooth sailing from then on. AW also has my favorite game system, but you can read more about that on an earlier day’s entry.

#RPGaDAY2015, Day 22: Perfect Gaming Environment

Fell a bit behind on the #RPGaDAY2015 thing, but we just had our wedding anniversary over the weekend ((Eighteen. We could send our marriage off to college.)) and I’m going to use that as an excuse when, in fact, I was just lazy. ((Busy too, and not just playing Shadowrun Hong Kong. Actual work stuff.)) So. What topics have I missed?

Sorry, but I just had to change it from that horrible pink color. Click through if you want to grab the color-shifted fullsized image.
Sorry, but I just had to change it from that horrible pink color. Click through if you want to grab the color-shifted fullsized image.

Day 22: Perfect Gaming Environment.

I like a game environment where I have the opportunity to stand up and move. If we’re at a table, I just have to stand at times, sit at others. I think I get away with this because I’m usually running games, so when I’m standing, I’m physically elevating myself over the players and it introduces a little psychological trickery, but really I’m just antsy. When I’m playing online, I’m at my standing desk, but there’s a high stool that I use to rest on sometimes — I change stance and camera angle a few times during the game session.

So a place where I can change stances.

Daniel Solis' t-shirt design. Click and buy.
Daniel Solis’ t-shirt design. Click and buy.

Other than that, I don’t have much of a preference. I’ve run games in public at game days and conventions — my favorite game, Primetime Adventures, is fantastic for that. In PTA, there’s a rule called “Audience Participation”, a rule that I don’t know if anyone else but I have ever used, where people watching the game being played can contribute to the story. You know, I might be saving that up for the 25th, which is “Favorite Revolutionary Game Mechanic”, but you can read more about it in my PTA: Play in Public guide that I should update for the third edition.

My friend Jason loves playing at a table, but his group always spreads out in the living room. That would drive me nuts.

#RPGaDAY, Last Year: Day 23 – Best Second Hand RPG Purchase

Best Second-Hand RPG Purchase. 

Which used gamething was my best purchase? You know, I can’t think of a damn thing. Maybe some Shadowrun sourcebook or adventure, like… Yeah. Universal Brotherhood/Missing Blood, maybe. Did I pick that up on eBay or at a Half Price Books? I can’t remember. Most everything I currently have that’s recent is new; the older stuff, who knows where I got it from? The only items I own that I can truly recall as getting second-hand are some (but not all) of the Buffy: the Vampire Slayer books, my copy of Twilight: 2000 (second edition, I have a first edition still in the box), and all of my Chill (Mayfair edition) sourcebooks. Some of those Shadowrun, 2nd Edition books had to have come from HPB. The adventures, at least.

You know, I think I’ll go with a copy of West End Games’ Air Cav, which is a stack of counters wargame I picked up two weeks ago from our local recycling center’s “free stuff” barn. Inside the box was about thirty random dice, including several non-d6s. I can always use more dice.

Pile of Dice

Did you get anything cooler in the past year, Thomas?

You know, I still haven’t played Air Cav and the dice are, you know.

Okay. 

Um, yeah.

Second-hand. Huh.

I still got nothin’.