Saturday, June 4, 2011
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Someone to Witch over me
By now many regular readers know I have been putting together a number of posts for an eventual Basic Era book for a Witch class.
Here is a link to the announcement I made back in March.
Also you may know that Jonathan Becker over at B/X Blackrazor is also doing a witch class for his "The Complete B/X Adventurer". I personally think that is very cool, and I dig the name of the book too.
I am looking forward to seeing else JB will do with his witch. I am sure it will be different than what I am doing and I think the Basic Retro-clone market is large and now getting diverse enough to support more than one view on the witch.
I want to talk about his ideas in a bit, but first I want to talk about my own ideas, as they are right now.
Presently this book has about 63 pages of game material and an additional 52 pages of nothing but spells. Frankly that is WAY too much material for what is essentially just one new class. Though I have much more than just that of course. The spells can be used for other classes and there are some new monsters and magic items.
Here is a small sampling of what I'll be offering, though edited to fit the narrative of the book better.
His Something Wicked... goes over a lot of the same ground I have gone over here, but he also points out that we get a lot of references to witches without any witches themselves. Now he mentions he has never read the the classic Dragon Magazine articles on witches (#5, #20, #43 and most famously #114), but I think there is a lot in those articles that bear reading. One of which is the Tom Moldvay list from my previous post.
I am looking forward to seeing how these two different, but related, interpretations are welcomed by the OSR community.
Here is a link to the announcement I made back in March.
Also you may know that Jonathan Becker over at B/X Blackrazor is also doing a witch class for his "The Complete B/X Adventurer". I personally think that is very cool, and I dig the name of the book too.
I am looking forward to seeing else JB will do with his witch. I am sure it will be different than what I am doing and I think the Basic Retro-clone market is large and now getting diverse enough to support more than one view on the witch.
I want to talk about his ideas in a bit, but first I want to talk about my own ideas, as they are right now.
Presently this book has about 63 pages of game material and an additional 52 pages of nothing but spells. Frankly that is WAY too much material for what is essentially just one new class. Though I have much more than just that of course. The spells can be used for other classes and there are some new monsters and magic items.
Here is a small sampling of what I'll be offering, though edited to fit the narrative of the book better.
- Cantrips for Original and Basic-Era Games
- Druthers
- Earth Trolls
- Familiars
- Gnomes for Basic era FRPGs
- Gypsy Elves
- Level Titles for Magic Using Classes
- Magic Hats
Plus I am very keen on doing a witch that was likely to have been built back when the Moldvay boxed set was still new. So I have spent a lot of time thinking about the role of witches and what they do in a game. Again, taking my cues from Tom Moldvay as detailed here, http://timbrannan.blogspot.com/2011/01/tom-moldvay-on-witches.html. I have tried to address all these points (and then some) in my new witch.
The other issue that is important to me is that the witch must have a role that does not take away from the Cleric or the Magic-User/Wizard. There should be overlap, that is fine, just like a fighter and thief can both use weapons to attack a monster. The cleric, magic-user and witch all use spells. They just use them in a different way.
I have done witch books for *D&D before including one for AD&D 2nd Ed and another for D&D3/d20. There will be some similarities of course, but I am more focused on the Basic Witch to create a book that feels like it was made in the later 1970s/early 1980s. I am reading witch and occult material that was popular at the time. I really want a good old-school feel, but while still taking advantage of all the research I have been doing over the last 25+ years.
Now lets go back to JB's Complete B/X Adventurer Witch.
His links are here:
- The B/X Witch
- Ooo-oo, Witchy Woman...
- and an earlier one, Something Wicked this Way Comes...
Jonathan has a good idea of what he wants and I think he is going about it in a very cool way.
His Something Wicked... goes over a lot of the same ground I have gone over here, but he also points out that we get a lot of references to witches without any witches themselves. Now he mentions he has never read the the classic Dragon Magazine articles on witches (#5, #20, #43 and most famously #114), but I think there is a lot in those articles that bear reading. One of which is the Tom Moldvay list from my previous post.
I am looking forward to seeing how these two different, but related, interpretations are welcomed by the OSR community.
AD&D1 in Dragon #400
Just was reading through some of the new articles that will be in Dragon #400. Current WotC employees are talking about their favorite Dragon moments. Mike Mearls brings back Roger Moore's Jester and keeps it as 1st Edition AD&D. Odd seeing a 1st ed character in 4e trade dress.
Anyway here it is, but you need to be a subscriber.
http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/dra/400jester#74712
Anyway here it is, but you need to be a subscriber.
http://www.wizards.com/DnD/Article.aspx?x=dnd/dra/400jester#74712
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
New Review: Northlands
Northlands
The Northlands is a very cool campaign setting for a Norse/Viking like area for use with Pathfinder. Not a setting by itself, it is designed to be easily inserted into your game world. Though there is nothing stopping you from just using this book all by itself.
In its 110+ pages you will find a area ready for adventure. There are new classes, skills, feats, weapons and spells. There are rules for variant races (humans and Dwarves) and new races from the bestial Trollkin to the Hyperborean. Everything is given a new look to reflect the cold lands of the north. The culture here is a very different one. It’s not just colder, the people (and thus the characters) are different.
The magic chapter is very cool, with new spells, and new types of magic such as grudge magic and runic magic.
The lands are detailed in both chapter 2 and chapter 5. So there is plenty to work from here. The chapter on monsters contains quite a nice number of creatures and they are not for the faint of heart.
The author capture not only the rules of playing in these lands but the feel as well. Author Dan Voyce obviously has a love for this setting and their real world counterparts that show through the writing. This is a well researched book.
The art is equally fantastic and even though it is spare and black and white, it adds to the overall feel of the book. The cover is one of the best I have seen in a very long time.
The legends of the Scandinavian countries are ripe for adventures and part of the very fiber that makes up the core of the FRPGs. The Northlands helps bring these tales to life.
I originally grabbed this because my local Pathfinder group is called "the Northlands Group" and I thought this might be a cool thing to have. But once I got it and started reading it I realized I wanted to keep it all for myself! I plan to use it for the areas in my Mystoerth games, specifically the areas right around my version of Hyborea.
Now this Northlands has nothing to do with the Frog God games Northland Saga for Pathfinder and Swords & Wizardry. But they are not incompatible.
I enjoyed it and I think you all might too.
5 out of 5 stars!
The Northlands is a very cool campaign setting for a Norse/Viking like area for use with Pathfinder. Not a setting by itself, it is designed to be easily inserted into your game world. Though there is nothing stopping you from just using this book all by itself.
In its 110+ pages you will find a area ready for adventure. There are new classes, skills, feats, weapons and spells. There are rules for variant races (humans and Dwarves) and new races from the bestial Trollkin to the Hyperborean. Everything is given a new look to reflect the cold lands of the north. The culture here is a very different one. It’s not just colder, the people (and thus the characters) are different.
The magic chapter is very cool, with new spells, and new types of magic such as grudge magic and runic magic.
The lands are detailed in both chapter 2 and chapter 5. So there is plenty to work from here. The chapter on monsters contains quite a nice number of creatures and they are not for the faint of heart.
The author capture not only the rules of playing in these lands but the feel as well. Author Dan Voyce obviously has a love for this setting and their real world counterparts that show through the writing. This is a well researched book.
The art is equally fantastic and even though it is spare and black and white, it adds to the overall feel of the book. The cover is one of the best I have seen in a very long time.
The legends of the Scandinavian countries are ripe for adventures and part of the very fiber that makes up the core of the FRPGs. The Northlands helps bring these tales to life.
I originally grabbed this because my local Pathfinder group is called "the Northlands Group" and I thought this might be a cool thing to have. But once I got it and started reading it I realized I wanted to keep it all for myself! I plan to use it for the areas in my Mystoerth games, specifically the areas right around my version of Hyborea.
Now this Northlands has nothing to do with the Frog God games Northland Saga for Pathfinder and Swords & Wizardry. But they are not incompatible.
I enjoyed it and I think you all might too.
5 out of 5 stars!
...here there be dragons...
School is winding down for my little guys and that means the summer of no school, no homework and no reading right?
Wrong!
You can't be the kid of an educator and not expect something. But this time it was my son that surprised me. I was talking with him the other day and he wants to write a book, and not just any book. He wants to write one on dragons.
Liam has been playing D&D now for years. He loves dragons and has read dozens of books on them and of course he is the original Dragonslayer in my games.
We talked and I talked with teacher, so this summer Liam will be writing his first book, "Here There Be Dragons". There will be stats, histories and all sorts of goodies about dragons. He wants to do it all for Pathfinder and maybe 4e. I also suggested doing it for OSRIC and Basic era games too.
He wants spells, prestige classes and even has come up with some very specialized dragon hunting weapons including the dragon hunter's spear ("Because getting close enough to a dragon to use a sword is stupid.")
I will be doing the layout and editing, but all the ideas will be his.
The best part?
We are going to make the book available to everyone.
I don't know all the details yet. But expect a book of dragons coming from us sometime later in the summer.
Wrong!
You can't be the kid of an educator and not expect something. But this time it was my son that surprised me. I was talking with him the other day and he wants to write a book, and not just any book. He wants to write one on dragons.
Liam has been playing D&D now for years. He loves dragons and has read dozens of books on them and of course he is the original Dragonslayer in my games.
We talked and I talked with teacher, so this summer Liam will be writing his first book, "Here There Be Dragons". There will be stats, histories and all sorts of goodies about dragons. He wants to do it all for Pathfinder and maybe 4e. I also suggested doing it for OSRIC and Basic era games too.
He wants spells, prestige classes and even has come up with some very specialized dragon hunting weapons including the dragon hunter's spear ("Because getting close enough to a dragon to use a sword is stupid.")
I will be doing the layout and editing, but all the ideas will be his.
The best part?
We are going to make the book available to everyone.
I don't know all the details yet. But expect a book of dragons coming from us sometime later in the summer.
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Cliff Chiang Bad Reputation
Making the rounds today but it is very cool. Cliff Chiang's mashup of DC women and the Runaways.
I love Black Canary singing and Z on bass.
Course I posted this to Amazon Princess, but given that it had Z in it I figured here is a good spot too.
Something nice till they completely reboot the DC universe. Again.
Other links:
http://cliffchiang.tumblr.com/post/6037210898 Cliff Chiang's tumblr.
http://dcwomenkickingass.tumblr.com/post/6037306593/omg DC Women Kicking Ass
http://girls-gone-geek.com/2011/05/31/dc-women-runaways-mash-up/ and Girls Gone Geek.
http://amazon-princess.blogspot.com/2011/06/cliff-chiang-bad-reputation.html Amazon Princess
I love Black Canary singing and Z on bass.
Course I posted this to Amazon Princess, but given that it had Z in it I figured here is a good spot too.
Something nice till they completely reboot the DC universe. Again.
Other links:
http://cliffchiang.tumblr.com/post/6037210898 Cliff Chiang's tumblr.
http://dcwomenkickingass.tumblr.com/post/6037306593/omg DC Women Kicking Ass
http://girls-gone-geek.com/2011/05/31/dc-women-runaways-mash-up/ and Girls Gone Geek.
http://amazon-princess.blogspot.com/2011/06/cliff-chiang-bad-reputation.html Amazon Princess
Long Weekend
Just getting off of a long holiday weekend. Lots of blog posts to read, picked up some games too.
More soon.
More soon.
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