Dungeons & Dragons community builds and minis
Dungeons & Dragons artists and hobbyists are sharing fresh character art, commissions and painted miniatures, including a completed commission for Dracule Von Eden and a redesign of a Tabaxi Monk named Kritter. One creator posted an NPC concept described as seven feet tall with a Southern accent, a love of bones and exceptionally fluffy hair. A painter showcased a finished Wyvern miniature based on a Primal Collectibles model that was community 3D printed and hand painted. Posts also highlight a Humblewood one-shot, offering an avian-themed adventure hook players and GMs can drop into quick sessions or adapt for longer campaigns.
Campaign ideas like this keep me up at night. #ttrpg #dnd #rpg #meme #ttrpgsky #ttrpgcommunity
Personally I dislike bait-and-switch campaign ideas like this. Please don't get me to create a character I would like to play and then say 'no, you get to play this one instead'. I'd be mentally checked out immediately!
i did something similar, but the players knew about it in advance when making their animal characters
This happened in my last campaign. The group was defeated by an encounter, then the DM pulled out sheets for all the side characters the party had accumulated. A 5-limbed modron An awakened dog ranger An imp And a small kitten And tasked us with a rescue op.
Bait and switch gimmicks are a violation of my trust. I think the only response should be to walk away from that table. Just trust your players tell them upfront that they're playing a group of people who's familiar has been stolen.
In honor of everyone who gave their lives on the Discourse Fronts, on the beaches of The Forge and Story-games, I present this for #TTRPG Memorial Day: aggregatecognizance.com/p/fiction-fi...
The unexpected appearance of the Forge logo caused me psyonic damage. Also, good to know that I remember correctly that both Emily and Meg were driving the conversation back then.
Of course, after checking it like bleveenteen times, there are typos.
This is good work and I enjoyed the post. I really feel the sting behind your use of 'front'. It made me think of all the groups in distant places I played with before the Internet could so easily share the (now lost) contemplative insights of quiet people unlikely to share with strangers, though~