04-06-2007, 06:29 PM | #11 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Oklahoma, USA
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Re: OpenRpg
Open RPG is a piece of software that allows table-top type play using maps, character sheets, and chat, all information is chat only and there is no rules content other than a non-rule dice roll, and any information on the character sheet. A person could concievably have information on a game idea (ala The Sorcerer's Impediments), but the software does not have many allowences for game machanics.
You have already been given the link... Also I would not be inclined to use the software on an open invite basis as In Nomine does not lend its self well to large gaming groups. It would be used on a much more private basis (esp with concern generated here). John M
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04-06-2007, 10:45 PM | #12 | ||
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Utah, USA
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Re: OpenRpg
Quote:
From http://www.sjgames.com/general/online_policy.html Quote:
Not sure if that helps clear up the situation or just muddies it further. |
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04-07-2007, 07:50 AM | #13 |
In Nomine Line Editor
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Frozen Wastelands of NH
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Re: OpenRpg
No, that helps a lot. I'll prod at the thing a bit when I'm not running off to the kid's swim class in 2 minutes, but if it's nothing that "hey, I'll email you my character sheet" couldn't do, I won't get frazzled.
There's also a possibility that the online policy and the new game-aides policy have a slight disconnect -- that's not mine to rule on, though, but I'm going to try to ask SJ about it when I get my email back. Thanks!
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--Beth Shamelessly adding Superiors: Lilith, GURPS Sparrials, and her fiction page to her .sig (the latter is not precisely gaming related) |
04-09-2007, 08:44 AM | #14 | |
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Montréal, Québec
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Re: OpenRpg
Quote:
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04-09-2007, 10:17 AM | #15 |
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Utah, USA
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Re: OpenRpg
Wheee!!!!! I was helpful! Hehe.
My own personal in no way linked to (other than loving to play) connection to anyone with any power (other than paying money for product) is that it all revolves around two specific key phrases: Environment and Game Master. Environments persist and work without the need for a Game Master: Join the channel, fire up the client and BOOM you're a half demon living in West Fantasmia even if no one else is online with you. That is most definitely NOT the online equivalent of sitting around the kitchen table throwing dice. That's Everquest, related but definitely not the same. Situations that require a GM and that are only online and live while the GM and cohorts are there (whether the channel self closes or is always there, waiting for the return of the Master) are just like the kitchen table that becomes the kingdom of Lesser Grundia every Thursday night but stays in place to serve as a simple kitchen table every other night of the week. |
04-09-2007, 10:37 AM | #16 |
In Nomine Line Editor
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Frozen Wastelands of NH
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Re: OpenRpg
What Naryt just said is indeed what I feel the difference is. If the environment persists, as that of a MUSH/MUD/MOO can, and everyone there expects to be in-character whenever they're logged in, moving around to different areas in-character... That needs an ORC.
If the environment is one room, and periodically people get together to game in it, then even if the environment is called "The Marches," and even if people tend to leave their in-character names up when they're not playing... It's still really just an online tabletop. Maybe some of the players get together and do silly semi-in-character stuff when the GM's not around, and maybe they do side-stuff and send the logs to the GM... It's still nothing that they couldn't do in real life, if they didn't happen to be in California and Norway, respectively, and having lunch together. (Well, sending the log to the GM is a bit more detailed than just sending notes...) The other distinction is that in a multiplayer M*-based game, the more players the better, as I understand it. In a tabletop game, it's a lot more like a tabletop -- one GM at a time, generally, and that GM is limited to the number of players she (or he) can cat-herd at a time. Thus, online tabletop games have a limited membership, and may be on obscure little M*s, and in obscure little rooms in an M*. And, natch, IRC doesn't even keep the channel around after everyone's left...
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--Beth Shamelessly adding Superiors: Lilith, GURPS Sparrials, and her fiction page to her .sig (the latter is not precisely gaming related) |
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