As usual, these are made for my own reference. If you choose to peruse them, I hope you find them interesting. Name Crew Worlds ...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
Roll this when a PC is exposed to exotic Dimension Rays, thrown into the space between worlds, or reads aloud from a wizard's spellbook without first studying classical pronunciation.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Inspired by the history of Milwaukee, this is a small adventure location with competing factions and easy connections to other underground lairs. It is also a dungeon with a river in it, to satisfy Loch's prompt for Glaugust 2025 and win my full participation badge.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
An introductory adventure for any number of Cloak and Sword PCs, that should be a good start to a long campaign or a simple one-shot. The DM should be explicit that conflict between PCs is likely and remind them not to optimize the fun out of it. They may then make the classic joke that anyone who gets their PC killed in the most spectacular and stylish way gets a bonus level for their next PC.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
While working on some example region contents for Manteu, I tried to lean into my keying mantra, a principle so simple as to be obvious, but which is easy to forget. "What is the most interesting thing that could be here?" If your setting could have Dracula, put his castle in a place it might be found. If your setting has a pope, put her on the map. If your setting emulates some genre, encode places and situations where the cool stuff of that genre can show up. | Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Part of the bandwagon started by Louis and Loch. Use this generator, and make 1d2 monsters in a 1d4+1 area dungeon. | Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Introduction| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
I've been running a couple sci-fi games recently, and felt the desire to write up a classic fantasy dungeon. | Whose Measure God Could Not Take
I'm a big apologist for the classic +1 sword. Especially in a game with fewer bonuses to your attack roll, wielding a magic weapon always feels cool to me, and it's useful for a very common adventure game situation. They often just want a bit of pizzazz, some loving description or historical detail.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
I imagine these are the real standard types, variations on which you will find in far-flung sci-fi starports. Perhaps many of these were a brand-name model at one point, but after decades of time and light-years of distance you can't suppress these obvious winners with intellectual property law.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Discordian FifthDragon posted an image of this tumblr post the other day:| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
I tried really really hard to make this 100% accurate to the rulebook, but was stumped a couple times. This generator won't give you the temperature of the planet, so they tend to have more water than generating a word by hand because the only modifiers temperature applies to hydrology is negative. More importantly, I couldn't account for all bonuses contributing to Tech Level, so I tried to average it out among all possible worlds by making its base roll a d7 instead of a d6. Though these co...| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Yielding Uncertainty and Unyielding Bronze| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
More fun playing with Loch and Louis's monster generator . This time, I mostly went through a list of half-formed monster ideas and used...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
Mostly summons, as a discussion in the glog discord server reminded me that I think summoning spells are cool and easy to write, but they ...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
The love of Summer burns me sore The love of Summer runs with haste A dame I met, deranged for war A man I met, bold and unchaste The dazed ...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
The original rulebook seems to have been taken down, but I still have the player-made summaries.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
As one of the last people to jump on the cloak-and-swordbandwagon, I've decided to make myself useful and compile some of the setting details you can find dispersed elsewhere, not touching on the more complicated and remote countries like Noblessie, Inferie, and the Dragoman empire.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Hopping on the "bespoke single-level Cloak-and-Sword class" bandwagon, started by Locheil's Noble's Man, and continued with Grace's Lutteur duelist, Primeumaton's Detenu paladin, deus ex parabola's Chaperone, Vayra's Cardinal's Man/Really Good Bird's Man, SunderedWorldDM's Spaniard, AntiTime's Robber thief, Hilander's Beggar, Gokun's Beggeur, TheisticGilthoniel's Huguenot, Arnold's Lackey, Ardent's Grognard fighter, WeirdWriter's Rouge thief, Random Interrupt's Misplaced Samurai fighter, Lo...| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
After rereading Nick LS Whelan's outline for exploring " flux spaces " and resolving to dig into Glaugust , I thought I would combine the t...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
Recently got into a short-series VtM 5e game, and have been interested to see how it differs from the Revised edition game I have played an...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
John Coulthart I have for you a hexcrawl, a Romanian/Moldavian-inspired fantasy region afflicted by the inadvisable procrastinations of th...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
Naparmian Fire, being composed of gelid flame, that it may bedevil any whom it contact.| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
We like fairness, don't we folks? The oldly new idea that if our PCs fall in a pit, it's because we the players failed some minor challenge, whether of preparedness or of observation of the DM's description. That's fundamental to "skill"-based play, the idea that your decisions affect the outcome for your guy. But there's some give there-- how informed does your decision have to be, and how fitting the consequence for the occasional failure?| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
Because some find it hard to get excited about a ruleset, I've made a regioncrawl to go with this one. I wanted to write out a ruleset that...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com
It is a time of concord. It is a time of discord. Peace has finally come between the thousand warring lords of Alba, but it was not won through friendship. A warlord holds the pope for a hostage, and all the great isles hold their breath. Meanwhile, hundreds of unemployed retainers and thousands of disloyal soldiers turn to brigandry on the waves or the hardscrabble life of the wanderer, as news of wealth and horror from farther and farther lands marks a new age of conquest, expansion, and mi...| Whose Measure God Could Not Take
You see a lot of empty kitchens in dungeons. Often lacking any adventure-critical features, they're a great example of an "empty" room that ...| whosemeasure.blogspot.com