Routinely Itemised is a weekly column on Geek Native that summarizes the latest RPG news. It is published every Friday evening and includes reviews, discoveries, tips, and interviews. The column is a one-stop shop for RPG fans who want to stay up-to-date on the latest developments in the hobby.
Keith Frye Memorial bundle published by Independence Games and others: $150 for $30
Keith was a vital part of the Traveller RPG community and was responsible for TravellerCon.
Mongoose’s Classic Play RPG bundle offers 5 years of d20 system material, including Seas of Blood
The Bundle of Holding has been a valuable partner to Direct Relief, a charity helping to find the pandemic and related problems. Once again, in this offer, Direct Relief benefits from each purchase.
Shield Maidens: Yggdrasil burns, Daughters of Freya, raise your shields as Mongoose releases a new RPG range
Mongoose’s first new IP is Alison Cybe’s Viking-cyberpunk Shield Maidens.
Mongoose is in talks with Cepheus Engine publishers over Traveller license concerns
There’s concerns Cepheus Engine publishers have a bleak future as and when Wizards of the Coast deauthorises the OGL.
The best selling sci-fi RPGs published on DriveThruRPG in 2022
Is there a dominant publisher in sci-fi? Mongoose makes the chart six times, but fellow British publisher Modiphius manage four entries as well.
Routinely Itemised: RPGs #180
A nimble recap of RPG news from Geek Native and around the web. There are deals, reviews, s, interviews and headlines from the tabletop games community.
Eyes up sci-fi fans: Two Traveller RPG bundles launched today
Traveller is, for many, the original and best sci-fi tabletop RPG. There are loads of versions, and it’s perhaps a challenge figuring out where and how to start.
Satire, not parody: Gamers push Paranoia Perfect edition beyond %500 funded
Mongoose and designer WJ MacGuffin are 5 times over the funding goal for the next edition of Paranoia.
The Quintessential Fighter: A d20 blast from the past seeks Kickstarter 5e success
Before D&D 5e, even before 4e, Wizards of the Coast opened up 3e’s d20 rules to third-party publishers.