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Online/Offline Shadowrun Initiative Tracker

Jan 30

Stalker, from the Shadowrun Forums has created an interesting utility for Gamemasters. It is an Initiative Tracker that includes the ability to roll and sort the initiatives of PCs and NPCs alike. This utility can be downloaded to your local computer so that the javascript can be edited so that the PCs of the party are automatically inserted into the list of people in the fight, saving the GM some time. Currently it does all the rolling for every character placed in the initiative tracker, but Stalker is considering a way to allow Players to roll their own initiative with dice and that result just entered in for the character and sorting them into the order along with the NPCs.
This should be a great utility for most GMs to help deal with larger numbers of NPCs and since it can be downloaded to your system, doesn't require a connection to the Net to be able to use at ones gaming table. Plus it should work on tablets and other systems that support Javascript in their browsers.

Maps From the Past

Jan 14

Nostalgia: a wistful or excessively sentimental yearning for return to or of some past period or irrecoverable condition; also: something that evokes nostalgia



Remember those days when getting together with friends and running the latest adventure meant brightly colored maps in nice, neat hexagons? You know the ones. A few bright colors, with each terrain type fitting so nicely into each little area. Well, I stumbled across a site, Mystara.thorf.co.uk that resurrected or recreated quite a few of the old maps from the old D&D modules and campaigns.

On top of the color maps, the site also has a FAQ on the various fonts that were used to produce the modules and boxed sets from the TSR days. So, if you’ve ever wanted to produce your own adventures in a similar looking fashion to the old TSR modules, check out the fonts section to mimic the look of the old settings.



Character Maps - Graphical Visualization Continued

A recent posting by another Savage player brought me back to the idea of using GraphViz in gaming. This particular example was in mapping player characters with their in game relationships to people, places, things and ideas to help a GM visualize how they are all interconnected.
I went through the post and created several .gv files that have presets setup to make doing more of these easier should I continue down this path with my own games.
Each relationship has a weight that is colored. Yellow is for weak, green for Normal and red for Strong. The colors can be adjusted for each edge or for each type of edge by changing the parameters either at the top of the given section (changes all of them) or right next to the connection (changes just that edge).
The first gv shows the two initial characters, Grimm and Klovis, and Grimm's connections to his initial choices.

The second gv expands on the first connections file reflecting some new comments and examples from the blog. Grimm's boss now has a name and the relationship shows how Grimm is conflicted about authority figures. No connections were defined for the other example characters, so Klovis doesn't have anywhere to link to still. The nice thing about GraphViz is that it will move nodes out to provide space for the edges that link nodes together.

The last gv adds another connection with the note about it being a negative relationship. This would probably be better represented by a different color edge rather than a note near the edge since each relationship will probably end up with some notes near them. Other links that could be added are the interconnections of the PCs, but those aren't as needed as seeing how the various PCs are connected to the NPCs in a campaign setting.
This idea would make for a great idea for dealing with games of more Political Intrigue, like Shadowrun or Legend of the Five Rings.

Of course once you go this far with mapping relationships and places, then the next step would be to build the entire world in something like a GIS database to actually show where everything and everyone is in relation to each other. A massive undertaking for any single GM, but maybe more possible with the collective masses for a popular world, like the OpenStreetMaps project.

The Temple of Elemental Evil

Dec 06

Updated Dec. 6
It's been a while since I last had something to write. Part of that is because I've been busy in a few new games. One of those is a campaign that is taking us through a very old module for D&D, The Temple of Elemental Evil. We're not even halfway through the Temple and our party has already suffered major losses and replacements within the party. I've been taking advantage of the shear scope of this dungeon to slowly improve my minuscule Lightwave Modeling skills. The GM has been nice enough to allow me to use what I draw in Lightwave in the game as a map in my character's head. So far I've gotten the floor plan down for the main floor and the sub-floors have been expanded slowly as the group has moved through the various parts of the dungeon. The height between the floors isn't well known from the descriptions read aloud from the module, so the separations are just current best guesses to make the various discovered stairways line up. The stairs were created using LWCAD for the straight steps and plugin that I found that does spiral staircases, MK ScalaChiocciola. Once I have more of the whole dungeon mapped out I'll start adding walls and other details to help flesh out the look and feel of the dungeon (walls, torches, etc...).

Pathfinder Random Treasure Generator V3.0

Oct 27

Now this is an interesting find, especially given the current playtesting our gaming group is currently running through. The Pathfinder Random Treasure Generator V3.0. It offers lots of options for controlling the kinds of treasure given out. Magic can be set to low to reduce the appearance of magical treasures, or increased to make them more common. Do you want to give out more coins? or would you rather the party found gems and other items instead? How hard was the fight the party faced? What is the average level?
Multiple lists can easily and quickly be made as they each appear below the last one on the page or can be appended together. It all just depends on the options selected.

D6 Spell List

Oct 21

I decided to bone up on some of my D6 knowledge by working my way through creating a nice, big spell list. I got a few spells done (about halfway through the A's) and decided to share the beginnings of it. Half the list of A's are placeholder sections to help me speed up a bit when it comes to creating the spells. In some ways it would be nice to have a little program to help handle the basic calculations (less prone to minor mistakes creeping in if the computer does the addition, subtraction, etc...). I did refind one little, well, wouldn't call it a gem, but a definite diamond in the rough, the D6 System - Wizard's Little Apprentice. This had been a little html/javascript based page that had been up on the old West End Games (which has since died) site, but don't appear to have survived the conversion.

Graphical Visualization as a Gamer's Tool

May 31

One interesting problem I’ve occasionally encountered when doing stuff for various games is visualizing the paths through the game. The simplest one would be the path from one adventure to another for a party. A more complicated one would be an entire campaign with various adventures broken down by either level or some other gauge of experience for the game system.
One good example of the latter was posted to the Triple Ace Games site about the game setting Sundered Skies (a Savage Worlds setting). This graph was laid out in something like Visio by hand. Each of the adventures was clustered and linked to the next adventure in the series or Plot Point.

Lego Dice Tower

Oct 18

Updated October 18

I wanted to get a dice tower/dice boot for use in at least one of my current RPGs (1st Sunday of the month Shadowrun 4th Ed Missions), but I couldn't find one at my FLGS as the item was apparently out of production. I started to dig around on the Net and found a few places that either had instructions for modifying the Chessex Dice Boot (covering the acrylic with felt) or making one from various kinds of wood that one can find at hobby stores like Michael's. Also there were a number of wooden towers available for sale, but at $50 and several weeks to delivery I wasn't willing to buy any of those. So, I dug out my two boxes of old Lego sets and built myself a tower similar to one that I had seen on another site.

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