But ODDTAXI has darkness; some mysteries bubble away and begin to surface through passengers and those few others Odokawa talk to.
Izegrim Creations’ Chromatic Dungeons plans the old school feel but for the modern community
Chromatic Dungeons TTRPG. Bringing the old school feel of TSR era gaming into the modern community. That is, an OSR clone, with the feel of old school gaming, but with modern sensibilities of game design applied, and to be presented to be welcoming and representative of just how diverse our gaming community has become since the 80s.
Good Strong Hands: Face the corrupting Void as a fantastic creature or human ally
Geek Native was fortunate enough to quickly catch up with Craig Campbell, the founder of NerdBurger Games and designer of the RPG Good Strong Hands.
RPG Publisher Spotlight: Samurai Sheepdog
Last month Geek Native patrons voting in the RPG Publisher Spotlight awarded the June title to Samurai Sheepdog.
D&D 5e’s Thaemin’s Guide to Gods and Miracles is the halfway project for 12 Kickstarters in 12 months
Chamomile Has Adventures has often featured in the weekly Kickstarter roundup in the RPG news summary Routinely Itemised: RPGs. There’s a reason for that. Chamomile will launch 12 Kickstarters in 12 months.
Wolf spirits and fish: A look into the future of the Mara webcomic
Mara is a webcomic from Stuffed Rock. It’s a story of magic, monsters, gods and follows the young Mara, a girl gifted the strength of many.
DoodleMeeple: A site helps you get paid to paint miniatures (or proofread, voice act…)
Can you turn your hobby into a paying job?
VoxStory is a traditional RPG designed for the television screen
VoxStory is a traditional TTRPG made cinematic. Played in a similar way to traditional TTRPGs, VoxStory modernises by allowing players to see their actions play out on a big screen.
Knight of the Sun: The gorgeous moral dilemma of wicked 5e module
Knight of the Sun is an adventure that fully embraces that your party of so-called heroes could go the evil route.
Sensitivity reading: What does it do, and does it make RPGs better? A Paranormal Affairs Canada case study
A credit that I’ve started to see in new RPGs is “sensitivity reader”. I think it’s fair enough to wonder two things; what do sensitivity readers do? If we’re paying for them through the cost of the book, do they make RPGs better?