Archive for November, 2007

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A Small Update

November 28, 2007

While being egotistical enough to look for my own stuff on Google, I came across a free RPG called Catgirl Avengers, which I can’t believe I missed before. It’s a very simple traditional game, but it has a nice gonzo manga kitchen sink thing going, and some nice artwork too. I really can’t believe I never saw this before.

Also, I mentioned this briefly in the comment thread of my last post, but Guild of Blades is planning to offer POD services for cards. (Original Thread, Update). Aside from the fact that it’s just plain cool, I’m mentioning this because one of my back-burner projects suddenly got a lot more viable. I conceived Moonsick as a superflat-inspired RPG (Junko Mizuno’s Pure Trance was a particularly strong influence). The design of the game has evolved quite a bit since I started working on it, and as it stands now it’s more or less going to be a card game with strong RPG elements. And it’s something that’d be a massive pain to work on without a good way to print up the cards. Although I could make do with running thin cardstock through the inkjet printer, a POD solution makes me much more inclined to bring the whole thing to fruition.

Which isn’t to say it’ll be getting done soon… I’m getting close to being ready to make an announcement about something that’ll keep me entirely too busy over the next several months.

Lastly, I decided to get the $6 PDF of the D&D Rules Cyclopedia the other day. I have to say, the people who are complaining that D&D4e is going to be too different apparently need to get a better historical perspective. Just from D&D to AD&D a whole hell of a lot of stuff got changed:

  • It’s basically assumed that at 9th level a character has the option of becoming a land-owner. For the higher levels, most classes list land-owning and traveling paths. If you play a fighter, when you get to 9th level you can choose to become a land-owner, or become a paladin, knight, or avenger, depending on your alignment.
  • A lot of people already know that races (Elf, Dwarf, Halfling) are treated as classes. These have strict level limits (for “balance”), though they do still gain certain benefits for amassing XP beyond what it takes to get to level 10.
  • Druids are some kind of freaky prestige class type thing for high-level neutral clerics. Monks are called “Mystics.”
  • The game includes explicit rules for high level characters seeking immortality, for strongholds and domains, for mass combat, etc.
  • The section on the planes is short and when it comes to the outer planes very, very vague. (”There are planes where dragons come from, planes where Immortals live, planes where many undead spirits collect…”) Heroes turned Immortals are an important part of the milieu, but deities aren’t really mentioned.
  • There’s a default game setting in the appendix. That’s Mystara.
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Old Video Games

November 24, 2007

The Discovery Channel has started up a documentary series called Rise of the Video Game. I’ve read up on the history of video games before, but what makes this series so fascinating (so far) is that it puts a lot of emphasis on the place video games held in human culture. It’s interesting that they brought up Godzilla, because like video games he’s changed with the times. In the original 1954 Gojira, the monster was a symbol of the horrors of the nuclear bomb–and as far as I know no other kaiju movie has ever had a protagonist see a little girl about to die from the monster’s radiation–but in the 60s and 70s he became a friendlier defender of Japan, and in the 90s and onward he became more morally ambiguous.

Video games started with guys finding new ways to use expensive military and educational equipment for fun after hours. Tennis For Two was a relatively simple repurposing of an oscilloscope (and even today those things are expensive). Games like Spacewar! not only moved video games forward, but reflected America’s fascination with outer space and the fears of where the Cold War might lead. Space Invaders, on the other hand, could be said to have some grounding in Japan’s fears and memories of outside attack.

The Magnavox Odyssey was especially important because as the first home console, it let people do something they never could before. In an era when the TV could only tune into a handful of channels, which (it being the time of the Vietnam War) always seemed to be brining ever more bad news, the Odyssey let people have some control over what was on their TV sets beyond changing channels or turning it off. As the show put it, in the early Cold War the words “push the button” could only mean the button that would bring about the end of the world. We take it for granted now in virtually every aspect of our lives–I press buttons on my computer, video games, to buy train tickets, my cell phone, iPod, etc.–but at the time it was revolutionary, and no wonder people found it so fascinating.

Going from early CRT war simulations to the prototype of the Odyssey is about 20 years of firsts in video games, but the beginning of the video game industry was with Nolan Bushnell starting up Atari. Pong was the first arcade game to catch on. The game didn’t actually have a CPU; it was basically hard-wired, and when the time came to develop a home system (the 2600) they had to start over from scratch.

Especially in light of the recent stuff about Jade Raymond, some of the comments by Bushnell and Pac-Man creator Toru Iwatani are particularly striking. According to Bushnell, when Pong was catching on as an arcade game, because women on the whole have better fine motor control than men, there were a fair number of women going around sharking people at Pong. Iwatani on the other hand was specifically trying to make a game that would appeal to women as well as the customary young male demographic when he came up with Pac-Man. Granted, he was going off of a stereotype (”Girls always want dessert after a meal”), but his intentions at least were to be inclusive. What went wrong?

Anyway, most of the rest of the first episode is about the industry crash of 1983, owing to ludicrous market oversaturation, owing partly to Warner’s mismanagement on the assumption that video games would continue to rain money down on whoever put them out. Although it’s not covered in the first episode, if you know the history, this is what set the stage for Nintendo to step in and dominate the industry.

Almost as an afterthought, the episode concludes with a few minutes on Tetris and Alexey Pajitnov. I loved Tetris from the first moment I saw it, and I’ve always liked everything I’ve heard about its creator. When talking about how the Soviet regime basically held the rights to Tetris until its fall, he basically said that the important thing to him was having been able to make something so many people enjoyed. I didn’t know until I looked at the Wikipedia page just now that he designed Hexic. I’m going to have to try it out now.

Anyway, the fun part of this post is where I try to turn these ramblings into something to do with RPGs. It’s pretty easy to draw parallels between the early histories of Atari and D&D, of course. Both were created by some impassioned guys doing their own thing, rather than following any kind of corporate plan. Both achieved meteoric success (albeit on different scales). And both were standing on the shoulders of giants. For Atari there were precedents in the form of Tennis For Two, Spacewar!, the Odyssey, etc., and for D&D there were all the different wargames that represent transitional forms from little counters representing the armies of Napoleon to character sheets representing wizards and swordsmen. For both video games and RPGs we’re well past the point where you can just step in and do whatever and hope to turn a profit.

Although it’s pretty niche compared to the legions of GTA and Madden players out there, there’s a strong retro gaming community among video gamers. Some play emulators, some still have the old systems in working order, some buy those tiny “flashback” systems, and a tiny handful have actually made new games for consoles like the Atari 2600. I think a lot of the appeal of older video games is in their elegant simplicity. This I think is what RPGs can learn from retro games, and the design aesthetic of some of the best indie games is based on a simple but engaging gameplay mechanic–Dogs in the Vineyard is probably the best possible example. Pac-Man, Space Invaders, Tetris, etc. all do something that is ultimately extremely simple, but they do it extremely well. One of the guys from Bungie once said that the way to make a good video game is to create 30 seconds of consistently engaging gameplay, and make it work over and over. That’s all of those games right there. Dodge the ghosts, eat the power pill, and come back to eat three at once before going on to clear out that corner of the maze. Hold on just a little longer until the 1×4 piece comes and gets you a tetris, etc. That’s probably why the video game I’ve been playing most over the past few days is Super Mario World… ^_^;

Aside from the “some guys doing fun stuff in a basement” thing (not to be taken literally), what OD&D and many indie games have in common is simplicity. The earlier basic versions of D&D were stapled in the middle rather than perfect-bound, and the Rules Cyclopedia, which many seem to regard as the definitive version of basic D&D, weighs in at a mere 210 pages. Whether or not you agree with the “kill things and take their stuff” meme, there’s a lot to be said for knowing what you want to do and making a game that serves it. Aside from creating a protagonist (as opposed to a paddle or a spaceship) that could be anthropomorphicized (channeling some Scott McCloud here), Pac-Man changed its essential verb from something like “shoot” to, of all things, “eat.” While other kinds of tabletop games are perhaps better suited to one-verb designs than RPGs, I think there’s (still) a lot to be explored here.

None of this is to say that I think that drawing on these things will “save” tabletop RPGs, or become “the future of tabletop RPGs.” I think it’s more important to think about what makes for good games. If the world of video games has room for both Metal Gear Solid and Cake Mania, the world of tabletop games can surely handle both Exalted and Primetime Adventures. The thing about RPGs is that if you try to strip them down as far as they’ll go you wind up with either free-form role-playing or several different possible cornerstones.

(I just realized this goes back to a post of mine from last year about how video games divide genres up by how they play rather than what the story is about).

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Catgirl: The Storytelling Game (Types of Reality)

November 21, 2007

I’m still not sure what to call the overall setting that Catgirl takes place in. Stuff like “World of Insufficient Light” both has been done and doesn’t fit where the game wound up going. The best I’ve come up with so far is “Age of False Innocence,” which is actually the title of a Blind Guardian song. So anyway, time for some more on the cosmology.

There are two distinct modes of existence: material and immaterial. Beings that are purely immaterial are called Figments, while beings that are purely material are called Others. Humans are among those who have some of both the material and immaterial within them, though it’s at best an oversimplification to call the immaterial side a “soul.” Not a few of a human being’s cognitive functions–including things like language and to some extent emotions–are at least partly a function of a physical, biological brain. On the other hand there are things like the Linker Core, an immaterial component that facilitates connections to other people, and allows one to dream. Those who are properly aware of the material and immaterial sides of themselves are called Awakened, so naturally those who are not–the great majority of mankind–are called Sleepers.

Figments are relentlessly created, disintegrated, and reformed. Every casual thought creates minor Figments, but the thoughts and dreams of many people, or even of one very determined person, can crystallize into an immaterial form that can endure for eons. For the Figments there is no such thing as “not real.” The concept of unreality is simply a fiction as far as they’re concerned, an impossible paradox. While Figments begin their existence as creations of others, especially Sleepers, they can acquire a life of their own and can change over time. The immaterial world contains entire worlds formed from the dreams of humanity.

The Others are more common and more powerful than you might think. While human science has unlocked many of the material world’s mysteries, complete understanding is still a long ways off. Thus there are Others who possess secrets and abilities that rival or exceed the greatest of the Awakened. Among the most dangerous of the Others are the Obliviators. These beings are painfully aware that beyond death only oblivion can await them, and have taken to doing anything and everything in their power to extend their lives. To that end they seek to steal the very essence of existence. They take on human form, and infiltrate the world of humans. Sleepers provide them with some sustenance, but the Awakened provide far more and far sweeter, so it is the Awakened that all but the weakest Obliviators choose to hunt.

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Dee and Dee Fore

November 19, 2007

I don’t go on therpgsite basically because between RPG.net and Story Games I’m already wasting more than enough of my life on RPG forums. By a lot. Stuart in SG linked to this thread, where people mostly bitch about D&D4e. Personally, everything I’ve heard about 4e makes it sound like it’s moving more towards something I might actually actively want to play. Some of the responses on the thread make me want to play it just to spite them. (But then, I usually feel that way about people who can’t make a point without profanity). But mostly it’ll come down to whether or not one of my friends wants to run the game.

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Catgirl: The Storytelling Game (The Shadow)

November 10, 2007

Over the past few days I finally started reading Night Watch, the first part of Sergei Lukyanenko’s gritty supernatural tetralogy set in Russia. Without getting too much into it, the concept of Twilight helped me come up with an important element to the cosmology of Catgirl: The Storytelling Game.

The Shadow, also known as the Twilight, the Between, the Divide, and so on, is the immaterial world’s intrusion into and reflection of the material world, and vice versa. It is where the Awakened are at their strongest, because both sides of them are fully expressed. The Shadow looks like an approximation of the material world, but many mental and spiritual factors are plainly manifest. The symbiotic relationship between the two sides of reality allows influences to flow both ways. People can be affected by and exert influence on things in the Shadow, often without realizing it. They can unconsciously shape the Shadow landscape around them, but changes to it can likewise affect them back.

Most Awakened have the power to enter the Shadow, though some individuals are better at it than others, and some don’t even know that they can. Catgirls don’t have any powers that let them exert special influence over the Shadow, but anyone who can enter it can do things that have an effect. If Timmy’s recurring nightmares have formed a monster in the Shadow, defeating it will most likely let the boy sleep soundly at night. For this reason, deftly entering and navigating through the Shadow can be a very powerful skill to have. Some of the most desperate and dangerous battles fought by the Awakened have been fought to control part of the Shadow, and through it exert influence on the other worlds.

For better or for worse, it is unhealthy to stay in the Shadow for extended periods of time. Existing in the physical or spiritual realms naturally saps some of one’s vitality, but existing in a place that comprises both is draining both physically and spiritually at the same time. This is why most awakened only partially immerse themselves into the Shadow. By staying rooted into the material or immaterial worlds while entering the Shadow, it is both less draining and easier to leave if need be. Of course, it does mean truly existing in two realms at once, opening up the possibility that other people will think you’re crazy for reacting to stuff they can’t see. It is possible to enter more fully into the Shadow, but going into the deep Shadow for a length of time will cause those foolhardy enough to do so to waste away and go mad.

It is tempting to think of reality as a Shadow sandwich with material and immaterial bread, but things are not that simple. There are countless peaks, valleys, whorls, and tangles that render the sandwich metaphor untenable. Those who know how to navigate the Shadow can find shortcuts through reality, cutting through one realm to gain ground in another. The variations in this structure and be very broad, or impossibly fine. Sometimes pieces of an immaterial realm can even have a needle-thin breach leading to a specific person.

I also got my copy of Werewolf: The Apocalypse (first edition) in the mail today. I haven’t had a chance to do more than flip through it, but wow. White Wolf has really changed in the 15 years since then. The old logo says “A Renaissance In Gaming(tm)” below it.

Also, does anyone know of anything similar to Night Watch that might be a good source of inspiration?

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Catgirl: The Storytelling Game (Setting Stuff)

November 3, 2007

As usual, I found something to distract me. I’ve been working more on Catgirl: The Storytelling Game, though mainly in terms of setting stuff. I even went so far as to order a $2 copy of the first edition of Werewolf: The Apocalypse from Amazon Marketplace, to get a blast of the wackier yet more pretentious original White Wolf feel.

The overall setting/cosmology is sort of a mix of weird ideas I’ve been trying to do something with and some Neil Gaiman influence, plus of course otaku culture. So far it’s turning out much more serious than I’d intended, but also cooler. The material world we live in is not a lie or an illusion, but rather an equal partner to the immaterial. There are Figments (purely immaterial) and Others (purely physical), and there are those who have some of each, though few truly realize it. There was no Golden Age that was shattered by hubris; on the contrary, the invention of stories let people look beyond the darkness and fear of the Dawn Time and start to dream. Some see the world as a tapestry, others as a song, a story, a painting, etc. Seeing the world as such is the easy part; the hard part is making the world see itself as you do.

Beings who consciously straddle the line between the material and immaterial worlds are collectively called “Awakened.” Catgirls (and other kemonomimi) are one type of Awakened, but there are also Shinigami, Magical Girls, Mascot Girls, Dreamers, and others besides. Catgirls are in a unique predicament in that all of the catboys are gone, and even the story of how they disappeared is lost. In a desperate bid for survival, 108 catgirls gathered and performed a ritual that made it so catgirls would be born at random among humans and even cats. There are three “Breeds” of catgirls: Homid (born to human parents, or to a catgirl mother who mated with a human man), Feline (born as a cat), and Transformed (a human turned into a catgirl by magic, not necessarily willingly). Although they don’t know why, catgirls are divided into five castes: Claws (warriors), Ears (diplomats/socialites), Glasses (scholars), Paws (athletes/spies), and Tails (priestesses/magicians). And yes, castes affect skills and charms. There are no Anima Banners, though I’m thinking of adding some kind of special ability per caste. Catgirls have two “Kitty Quirks,” mannerisms that mark them as being part cat. I put in a heading for “Meow Points” in the file, but I can’t remember what it was supposed to be… There are going to be some catgirl factions, including nekomimi maids, and a group that goes around finding humans to punish by transforming them into catgirls.

The Shinigami are the other Awakened that I’ve gotten the furthest in developing, and I’m very happy with how they’re turning out. There are 5 main Shinigami factions, most of which come from different anime. There are the Black Angels (ruthless death gods with black feathered wings), Chosen of the Middle Way (katana-wielding guys in black Buddhist robes), Corpses of the Unrelenting Night (amoral, decaying creatures who use a Shinigami Notebook to extend their own lives), The Girls in Black (gothic lolita girls who can work magic through their cell phones and the attached charms), and Reapers of the Gentle Dawn (kind Shinigami who see themselves as having a sacred duty to departing souls). I’m not really planning to actually make splats/spinoff games for the other Awakened, but if I did, the Shinigami book would be the first one.