“I never drink… wine…” – Three Gaming Things from Dracula (1931)

Last week, I watched the classic Todd Browning 1931 Dracula film. It’s Bela Lugosi’s career-defining masterpiece, and without doubt a horror classic. Dated, of course, and it shows its origins as the film of a play of a book a little too obviously. It’s definitely imperfect to a modern viewer like me, which means it’s ideal to mine for TTRPG advice! So here’s three things in Dracula that we can use in our games, horror or otherwise.

While you’re reading this, I should tell you about my Patreon. Patrons get access to content 7 days before they hit this site, the chance to request articles or content, and the chance to play in one-shot games, for a very reasonable backer level of £2 per month. If you like what you read, want to support the blog, and have the funds for it, please consider supporting here. Telling people about the blog, and sharing links/retweeting is much appreciated also – thanks!

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Conventional Pleasures – Five Fantastic Games at Furnace

I’ve just returned from Furnace, one of the UK’s longest-running and most cherished conventions. Every year, around 70 punters (small cons give the best games, you know) descend on the Garrison Hotel in Sheffield and play for 5 slots. That’s pretty much all they do, too – there’s no seminars, no trade hall (stalls from Patriot Games and All Rolled Up are open throughout however), and no other activities – it really is All About The Games.

And I had one of my most consistently excellent gaming experiences at a convention. Five games that all really sang in their own way – I’m going to tell you about them, and try to identify the one thing that brought the magic. For all of these, I’ve not identified the GMs, although I’d recommend all of them if you get to sign up to one of their games.

While you’re reading this, I should tell you about my Patreon. Patrons get access to content 7 days before they hit this site, the chance to request articles or content, and the chance to play in one-shot games, for a very reasonable backer level of £2 per month. If you like what you read, want to support the blog, and have the funds for it, please consider supporting here. Telling people about the blog, and sharing links/retweeting is much appreciated also – thanks!

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Prep Matters – how much I do, and why zero-prep is wrong

There’s been a bit of chatter on the #TTRPG internet again about zero-prep games, and whether this is a misnomer, a false claim, or even harmful to the hobby. So, in an attempt to clarify what some people are saying, I’d like to talk you through an example of prep for a convention game that I’ve got coming up.

While you’re reading this, I should tell you about my Patreon. Patrons get access to content 7 days before they hit this site, the chance to request articles or content, and the chance to play in one-shot games, for a very reasonable backer level of £2 per month. If you like what you read, want to support the blog, and have the funds for it, please consider supporting here. Telling people about the blog, and sharing links/retweeting is much appreciated also – thanks!

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First Look: D&D 2024 Player’s Handbook

Look, it says on the top it’s “The World’s Greatest Roleplaying Game,” which is patently false (it’s not Mouse Guard). And it’s attracted it’s fair share of deserved ire with the OGL fiasco. But, it’s still the biggest game in the world in terms of market share, and what goes on in here will cause ripples through the rest of the hobby. So I got hold of it. I’ve not played, I’ve only skimmed, I know, I hate unboxing videos too. This isn’t a review.

But I’m neither in the “Never D&D!” or the “No other games exist” camps, and so I thought I’d share my impressions of the 2024 Player’ Handbook. Here goes…

While you’re reading this, I should tell you about my Patreon. Patrons get access to content 7 days before they hit this site, the chance to request articles or content, and the chance to play in one-shot games, for a very reasonable backer level of £2 per month. If you like what you read, want to support the blog, and have the funds for it, please consider supporting here. Telling people about the blog, and sharing links/retweeting is much appreciated also – thanks!

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