The stalwart and productive Leo Moracchioli’s stream of heavy metal successes continue. Some companies convert franchises to RPGs; Leo turns them into metal covers.
Archives for July 2021
A kaiju and a girl: Kaiju Decode
Kaiju Decode is an original anime from Toei and Ultraman studio Tsuburaya Productions.
Comic: Dinosaur wisdom on kindness
Have we done Dinos and Comics before? They’ve over a million followers on Instagram, so Geek Native coverage is a bit redundant.
Audio EXP: #107 – Rights, rites, wrongs and franchises
Geek Native’s highlights podcast talks Call of Cthulhu, D&D and dragon t-shirts as well as Stargates and monkeys. Typical week.
If you were a supervillain, where would you make your hidden lair?
Geek Native readers help with a range of quirky surveys, and in February, they were asked to imagine they were supervillains. No one reading really is a supervillain, right?
D&D Beyond cancels anniversary competition after a backlash
D&D Beyond’s Frame Design Contest has been cancelled after artists expressed it asked for too much and offered too little.
Danger and reward with Through the Veil: Treasure of the Feywild
One of the successes of Treasures of the Feywild is to get the balance of breadth and depth right. There’s a range of different types of equipment here and then, for the popular styles, plenty of items.
Looking for a big baddie for your RPG? Liches: Dance Macabre offers the Sorrow Lords for 5e and Pathfinder
Everyone hates liches – the Sorrow Lords – more than vampires, dragons, and demons. They are sentient, free-willed open wounds in reality who corrupt everything they touch.
Free to Download: At One With Nature a 1920s Call of Cthulhu horror
Graham James suggests the game suits two to three players and the Keeper. I think it’s much better with two players. These two characters are ideally newlywed and taking a honeymoon to 1920s Scotland.
Humble Bundle launches RPG Heroes putting $113 worth of computer games on offer
There are only three tiers, and the top is less than ten squid. So let’s take a look at how that $113 worth of cRPG divvies up!