Finished Reading
Thursday, 31 December 2020
Books & Stuff (NS, No 9) - Reading in Dec 2020
Gaming in Dec 2020
- 2 Dec 2020 - Blackmoor(ish) (OSE) - On-line
- 9 Dec 2020 - Blackmoor(ish) (OSE) - On-line
- 20 Dec 2020 - Wasters (OSE) - On-line
- 23 Dec 2020 - Grimbo Grotto (Christmas on-off) - On-line
- 30 Dec 2020 - Blackmoor(ish) (OSE) - On-line
- 2 Dec
All they have to do is keep Gwendolyn safe from harm... |
The party rescued a damsel in distress and were taken home to meet 'her mother'. They seemed to expect her to turn into a wolf at any minute, so didn't enjoy the tea, cake and lashings of ginger-beer as much as they might have. But they agreed to accompany the
- 9 Dec
Death by heraldic beastie... |
The group came across a group of Goatmen dragging a Halfling and a Dwarf along as prisoners. After a rescue, the two were accepted into the party (they were PCs). This was a decidedly bad idea. The Halfling (Alignment: Chaotic Stupid) decided that it would be cool if he could creep up on two dozing Wyverns and tie their tales together. Result: three PCs dead (in addition to one Retainer killed in the earlier encounter) and the rest scattered to the winds.
- 30 Dec
"Look's like goat's back on the menu boys!" |
After our Christmas excursus (see below) we returned to the mission towards the Dwarven Tomb. Giant vampire bats disposed of, the party came across a couple of Goatmen marking their territory*. They put a well-crafted plan into action, killing the one with the paint-pot and toupee**, and capturing the other. He was subsequently traumatised by the sight of the Halfling (literally) butchering his workmate and proved very helpful.
- 20 Dec - written-up here
- 23 Dec
As a Christmas treat we played this "Christmas Farcial Horror Aventure" written by Goblin's Henchman, and had an absolute blast.
Sunday, 20 December 2020
Wasters No 2: "A Quick, Clean Job"
Played 21 Nov 2020 (On-line)
This was the first session I’d played of ‘Wasters’, a cyberpunk hack of Old School Essentials. I’ve written a short outline of the setting here.
Seph | Games Master
| |
Me | “Two-Brains” - Level 1 Analyst | Retainer - “Yellow Dog” Level 2 Analyst
|
Simon | Wispa – Level 1 Infiltrator. A 12-year-old psychopath.
| Retainer – Wilber, Level 1 Sentinel
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Rodrigo | Jax – Level 1 Infiltrator
subsequently Damon – Level 1 Sentinel
| Retainer – “Meatshield”, Level 1 Sentinel.
|
Swiper | Rezzer – Level 1 Infiltrator
|
|
We were misfits from our broken society, those who had chosen to leave the dystopian slums and to go into The Wastes, scavenging for whatever we could find.
Club Lavender |
Before we set out, we managed to hire a mixed bunch of retainers. In addition, Wispa bought some tech – an amour that the vendor promised would be worthwhile. At the last minute though, she decided that it was too risky to trust it on a mission without it being tested first.
As Wispa had the most experience in The Wastes, she led us through the ruins, managing to avoid gang territories. At first travel was uneventful: we saw gang tags and heard shots, but weren’t interfered with. Towards mid-afternoon, however, we were approached by a group of nine strangers, apparently armed with knives. Warnings and threats didn’t deter them, so Wispa took a pot-shot, killing one. After that they scattered. An examination of the body found no gang marks and only meagre possessions: they were probably Muggers.
Artwork by James Chadderton |
After an uneventful night’s rest, we set out on our eastward journey. We encountered wild boar rummaging around in the ruins of a burn-out fast-food joint, but were able to avoid them easily. It was with some surprise at our good luck so far that we then entered into the Park. The rest of the day was spent scouting the block and turning over the ruins of the admin block.
Having successfully discovered the maps and surveying tools, all that remained for us to do was to return to the Safe Zone. We determined that, given the number of wild animals roaming freely, the Park wasn’t a safe place to spend the night. Therefore, we moved into an adjoining block as, despite it being deeper into the Wastes, we could see that it was unclaimed territory.
The next day, rather than returning to Club Lavender, we decided to scout this new block and to see if there was any other loot worth taking. We came across one building of interest, a relatively intact warehouse which seemed to still have power.
Unfortunately, both our Infiltrators were unable to break in without setting an alarm. It was immediately clear that we had broken into a very dangerous building indeed. Not least because in the corner was a naked, bound and gagged prisoner, chained to a chair and nodding his head wildly. Wilber took off the gag only to hear “The whole place is rigged to blow!”. As we tried to leave, the gang members erupted from the back room. Wispa and Meatshield hurried the prisoner along, but he attempted to set off the booby-trap in order to delay the axe-wielding gangstas. This was mainly futile, only managing to wound one and himself. Meatshield’s attempts to save him were unsuccessful, and the prisoner was hacked to pieces before he even managed to tell us his name*. Meatshield sacrificed himself, holding the rear and allowing the rest of us to retreat to a safe distance. When it became clear to the axemen that they weren’t going to be able to bring us to melee before we picked them off with our carbines, they stopped the pursuit.
*This was in fact Rodrigo's replacement character, Damon. After his death, Meatshield was promoted to PC, albeit briefly.
After such a bruising encounter, we made our way as directly as possible into the Safe Zone, keeping a low profile. We took a diversion to avoid a Police patrol and, later, had to dump our rations to distract some marauding boars.
On returning to Club Lavender we received the data chip. Once decrypted by Two-Brains, it contained intel on gang movements, with a street value of $5,000 in the Safe Zone or perhaps twice or three times that in The Wastes. We opted for the quick payment.
Thursday, 17 December 2020
Kickstarter Watch: Pig-Faced Goblins and Dog-Faced Kobolds
Now, as many of you will know, I'm old-fashioned (comfortably so - it's to do with my age). I likes me Orcs to be pig-faced and Kobolds to be doggy rather than lizardly.
Those of a similar bent might like the Kickstarter by RBJ Game Co for Yippers and Squealers - pig-faced Goblins and dog-faced Kobolds*. It's already well over target with a fortnight to go.
*They did pig-faced Orcs in a previous Kickstarter.
To be honest, the schnauzer-like Yippers are probably a little too cute to be successful Kobolds, but frankly they are such nice things, they're probably worth having on their own account.
International postage being what it is, I won't be backing this one. Had it been based on this side of the Atlantic, I think I probably would have some of those doggos.
Monday, 30 November 2020
Books & Stuff (NS, No 8) - Reading in Nov 2020
Finished Reading
Susanna Clarke, Piranesi
A very good book: a beautiful book. A book about isolation and being at peace with that: it’s perhaps fitting that I read it on the eve of 2nd Lockdown. I liked it.
A lot of fans of Jonthan Strange and Mr Norrell – who've been looking forward to this book for years - will be disappointed that it’s not set in their 'verse. I think, from the hints about the subject matter that have emerged from time-to-time, that there was some expectation that it would be set on Strange’s Faerie Roads. That's certainly what I expected. It's refreshing to get something different. If anything, it reminds me of books by David Mitchell: and that’s not a bad thing.
I’d deliberately avoided reading any reviews or anything that might have given a synopsis; and I’m glad. Not that I like to read reviews anyway (at least for fiction). I’m not terribly interested in what other people think, preferring to form my own opinion on something as subjective as fiction. Professional reviews are bad enough, but Goodreads is the worse. I use it as a useful tool, but the reviews! When they’re not just gushing fans, they’re people churning out half-remembered and never-fully-understood concepts from High School: talk of ‘poor characterisation’ and ‘crass diction’, etc.
HP Lovecraft, The Case of Charles Dexter WardA young scholar becomes obsessed with an ancestor who practiced the Dark Arts. A newly-discovered portrait shows an uncanny likeness between the two. What could possibly go wrong?
Despite everything about Lovecraft, it must be admitted that he writes well. Although the reader has a pretty good idea of what's going on from the very beginning, tension is held as the protagonist gradually uncovers the dreadful truth.
It took me a while to get into this (a couple of months on these round-ups!), but having done so, it was very interesting.
Another thing (along with the Norfolk Admirals) which has been languishing by my bedside for months. I decided to finish it off on finding out that Issue 3 is now out (in pdf at least).
Quintin Barry, From Solebay to the Texel: The Third Anglo-Dutch War, 1672-1674
A very good summary of the naval side of the Anglo-Dutch Wars - despite the title, almost the first half of the (short) book deals with the first two (which is fair enough, they can't be taken in isolation).
Purely narrative: don't come to it expecting any analysis.
Sunday, 29 November 2020
Gaming in Nov 2020
- 12 Nov - Blackmoor (OSE) - on-line
- 19 Nov - Blackmoor (OSE) - on-line
- 21 Nov - Wasters (OSE) - on-line
- 25 Nov - Blackmoor (OSE) - on-line
- 12 Nov
- 19 Nov
Art by Vlad Voronchiukov |
- 25 Nov
The conclusion of our caravan-guard mission. We wrangled the Snails through forest, over river and across swamp. On the way we met some very strange folk, a trio of Hags, and Giant Leeches. All nasty stuff, leading to two character deaths.
- 21 Nov - written-up here.
Artist unkown to me |
Tuesday, 24 November 2020
ALEC in Lockdown
As some of you know, I am supporting Movember, the annual effort to raise funds and awareness for men's health issues. The focus is on prostate cancer, testicular cancer and mental health issues.
It's the latter which I've had issues with, and is the the reason I support Movember - particularly this year, when we're all feeling issues of isolation.
Movember have shared some notes on mental health and suicide prevention here. What I'd like to flag is ALEC.
ALEC is a mnemonic which provides a model for 'talking to your mates about mental health'. It's a handly primer for raising this difficult issue with anyone you might be concerned with
A - Ask. Ask how they are feeling. "You don't seem yourself lately - are you OK?" Be prepared for the answer "I'm fine" and to bring up the reason you ask. If you've noticed something in particular (they've been withdrawn, haven't been as active on social media, etc) it's worth mentioning.
L - Listen. Having asked the question, give the person the chance to answer and pay attention to the reply. Odds are that you're not going to solve the problems that they raise, but it will help them to share them with someone else. Ask follow-up questions that might help the person to focus on what's at the root of the issue. "That's can't be easy. How long have you felt that way?"
E - Encourage. Encourage action. Help them focus on things that might help. Have they felt like this in the past? If so, was there anything that helped then? It might help to get back into a routine despite lockdown - patterns of sleep are particularly important. Are there other people that they trust and who they can talk to? Is it time to talk to a doctor?
C - Check-In. Having had the initial conversation, keep in touch and follow-up with prompts if necessary.
And before anyone asks, "I'm fine". I've found winter lockdown more difficult than the one earlier in the year (which, I must admit to quite enjoying), but my mental state is OK.
I'm getting out of the house most days and am in contact with people through social media. As those who follow the blog know, I'm getting quite a lot of on-line RPG gaming done. Like a lot of gamers, I've really discovered the benefits of Discord, Zoom, et al this year. I'm getting more oportunities for gaming now than ever before. And as we all know, gaming is good for mental health. Of course, I miss sitting down at a table and playing face-to-face, but I've made contact with a lot of new people and do really enjoy the sessions I take part in.
Thank you for reading this. If anyone wants to contribute to my Movember fundraiser, you can do so here.