ZeiruliousMakavar
The Archon of Madness
So, this is something that's been in my head for a long time. I tried it on another site before, but sadly it turned into a spiral of the players repeating the same thing over and over again, and nothing got done, so I'm trying it again here.
Hoping for a better turn out this time...
So the main premise is just that, I'll be DM/GM in a RP that has DnD like qualities. Most specifically, DnD3.5. I say DnD-esque, because it's a custom campaign that I have, and instead of a set path the story and mission system is dynamic. I say dynamic, as in there is no set goal. There is no notice board where you can find quests set from NPCs that want help. Everything is shaped by player action.
Same thing goes with skills, at least in the campaign that I'm doing. Are you a fighter, but the reward for a task was a skill tome for a wizard? Go ahead and use it and generate a magic based skill.
Everything in the campaign will be dynamic in the way that the Players shape the story, I'm only relaying NPC/Monster response to their actions. You just may make an arch-enemy out of the town bard that stays at the inn.
Think of this as a 'social' experiment. So, anyone interested?
Hoping for a better turn out this time...
So the main premise is just that, I'll be DM/GM in a RP that has DnD like qualities. Most specifically, DnD3.5. I say DnD-esque, because it's a custom campaign that I have, and instead of a set path the story and mission system is dynamic. I say dynamic, as in there is no set goal. There is no notice board where you can find quests set from NPCs that want help. Everything is shaped by player action.
Same thing goes with skills, at least in the campaign that I'm doing. Are you a fighter, but the reward for a task was a skill tome for a wizard? Go ahead and use it and generate a magic based skill.
Everything in the campaign will be dynamic in the way that the Players shape the story, I'm only relaying NPC/Monster response to their actions. You just may make an arch-enemy out of the town bard that stays at the inn.
Think of this as a 'social' experiment. So, anyone interested?