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Inactive Forums => Forge Birthday Forum => Topic started by: Anonymous on April 07, 2004, 04:07:57 PM

Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Anonymous on April 07, 2004, 04:07:57 PM
How this works: someone describes the type of game he wants to play, then someone else gives him the name of a published game which matches those criteria.

Me first: Name me a game that does fantasy medieval (or Renaissance) political intrigue where the characters are lords and ladies who've access to a lot of money and magic.

Rexfelis
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Rexfelis on April 07, 2004, 04:10:16 PM
That post was by me, the registered Rexfelis.

(O! what an ass I am.)

Rexfelis
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Andy Kitkowski on April 07, 2004, 04:28:06 PM
From what I understand, both Heroquest and Agone may suit your needs.  There was an excellent-looking supplement for D&D (!) released in the past 18 months about that sort of thing.  Statecraft? I forget.

My turn:

A game about otherwise average people who can enter the collective unconscious to access an unlimited wealth of human and ...other... knowledge, as if it were an Organic Matrix. They "sleep" (trance out), can go in, fetch info, come out in a few seconds and then proceed to perform weird human feats. When they sleep-sleep, they adventure in weird islands floating in the collective unconscious, where metaphor is reality, and dark other powers lurk.
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Rexfelis on April 07, 2004, 04:40:54 PM
Quote from: Andy KitkowskiFrom what I understand, both Heroquest and Agone may suit your needs.  There was an excellent-looking supplement for D&D (!) released in the past 18 months about that sort of thing.  Statecraft? I forget.

Thanks. Pretty sure Heroquest ain't it. Will check out Agone and the D&D thing.

QuoteMy turn:

A game about otherwise average people who can enter the collective unconscious to access an unlimited wealth of human and ...other... knowledge, as if it were an Organic Matrix. They "sleep" (trance out), can go in, fetch info, come out in a few seconds and then proceed to perform weird human feats. When they sleep-sleep, they adventure in weird islands floating in the collective unconscious, where metaphor is reality, and dark other powers lurk.

JESUS FUCKING CHRIST. There's no way a game fitting that description has already been done, right?

Rex
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Marhault on April 07, 2004, 05:00:04 PM
The best I can think of is . . . Lacuna?

Although, you can always just use the Pool.
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Andy Kitkowski on April 07, 2004, 05:02:40 PM
Quote from: RexfelisThanks. Pretty sure Heroquest ain't it. Will check out Agone and the D&D thing.

I'd give Heroquest The Eye (mayeb ask around on the forum).  I'm thinking here, of course, "Use the Heroquest system and dump Glorantha". I haven't completely gotten my head around the system myself, but I know that all characters have access to magic, and I hear this a lot:

"Heroquest makes it so that characters with "Noble: 20" and "Long Sword: 20" are truly completely on equal footing".

That, to me, makes it sound like something that may be up your alley.

Note, sure any Generic-like game (FATE, Fudge, Action!, etc) might work, but I took your post to mean "Non-Generic Games".

QuoteJESUS FUCKING CHRIST. There's no way a game fitting that description has already been done, right?

Heh.

Well, I'm looking for more of a compatible system.  Something to emphasize the ability to immediately get lots of information, skills, and maybe even attributes instantly, without being a nightmare of number crunching....

-Andy
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: montag on April 07, 2004, 05:08:43 PM
Quote from: Andy KitkowskiA game about otherwise average people who can enter the collective unconscious to access an unlimited wealth of human and ...other... knowledge, as if it were an Organic Matrix. They "sleep" (trance out), can go in, fetch info, come out in a few seconds and then proceed to perform weird human feats. When they sleep-sleep, they adventure in weird islands floating in the collective unconscious, where metaphor is reality, and dark other powers lurk.
Incarnate, Over the Edge or any Matrix-RPG might do the trick. No perfect matches, but perhaps worth a try.
(If this is accepted, I'd like to pass on my turn on to whoever comes along next.)
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: GreatWolf on April 07, 2004, 05:11:50 PM
Quote from: Andy Kitkowski
Well, I'm looking for more of a compatible system.  Something to emphasize the ability to immediately get lots of information, skills, and maybe even attributes instantly, without being a nightmare of number crunching....

Hmm.  Would Nobilis work?  Granted, it uses broad attributes, so if you're looking for specificity, I'm not sure that it would fly.  However, what you outlined sure sounded like it could (mostly) be the outline of a rocking Nobilis game.

Seth Ben-Ezra
Great Wolf
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: taalyn on April 07, 2004, 05:20:25 PM
Ooh! Crux can SO do that, Andy! Just define the Art (fairly simple. Naming it however...) and away you go!

I suppose that means I should hurry up and finish the dang thing.
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Andy Kitkowski on April 07, 2004, 05:21:33 PM
Quote from: montagIncarnate...

Has that game been released for human consumption yet?  Last I heard was "Still waiting to find some good printers..."

If so, link me!
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: montag on April 07, 2004, 05:29:00 PM
http://gregorhutton.com/incarnate/
seems they decided to drop the printer idea. ;)

markus
Title: Name me a game that . . .
Post by: Andrew Norris on April 07, 2004, 05:39:24 PM
Neat... I'm actually running a D20 Modern game that uses that whole Collective Unconscious angle. I can therefore conclusively say that D20 isn't going to work for you. :) In practice we pretty much used Drama and Karma and kicked Fortune out the window, making those expeditions more of a collaborative storytelling situation. It worked for us because they're fairly rare compared to the 'real world' bits.

It'd be worth checking out Lacuna (http://memento-mori.com/lacuna/) for ideas, although the mechanics are very much tailored to what Jared's doing with that particular setting.