Posted by Runeslinger on July 22, 2020 · Leave a Comment
Yesterday, I sat down to chat (in the video conference sense) with Kevin Madison who hosts the Dungeon Musings YouTube Channel and Podcast. I contacted him because each year I notice him doing a fundraiser called Heroes Save Villages, and I thought it was long past time that I asked for (and shared) details about … Continue reading →
Posted by Runeslinger on June 30, 2020 · 3 Comments
If it is possible to have a perfect year for RPGaDay to be run, I imagine 2020 is that year – the year of perfect vision. Hopefully, our hindsight will be as accurate as our day to day sight, and they will conspire to improve our insight and foresight as well. Dare to dream! Some … Continue reading →
Posted by Runeslinger on September 25, 2019 · 5 Comments
When given a tool to solve a problem, it makes good sense to learn how to use it properly. One way to learn is to ask questions – including whether that tool is the right one for the job. Recently, Monte Cook Games released a free PDF and that normally innocent act has sparked off … Continue reading →
Category Actual Play, Casting the Shadows, Playing in Games, Preparation and Preparedness, Product Reviews, Running Games, Technical Questions, The Blog, The Gamers, Themes and Intentions · Tagged with gaming, roleplaying, runeslinger
Posted by Runeslinger on August 31, 2019 · Leave a Comment
This final #RPGaDay prompt, bringing us full circle to where we began, has layers of meaning beyond the surface which can, if we allow it, remind us that this is a hobby which creates and exists between the members of small groups of friends. Each group plays its games and develops its ways mainly in … Continue reading →
Posted by Runeslinger on August 18, 2019 · Leave a Comment
This is a much more personal question than I initially expected of answered outside of the context of the life of characters and their search for whatever it is their originating game puts them in want of. Do we, in our game lives, have ‘plenty’? How do we define our sense of enough? What makes … Continue reading →