DW (or other PbtA) where the playbooks are different types of furries?
DW (or other PbtA) where the playbooks are different types of furries?
DW (or other PbtA) where the playbooks are different types of furries?
Google+ community from Dec 2012 to March 2019
DW (or other PbtA) where the playbooks are different types of furries?
DW (or other PbtA) where the playbooks are different types of furries?
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So a PbtA version of Iron Claw or Mouse Guard?
So a PbtA version of Iron Claw or Mouse Guard?
Luke Green More Ironclaw than Mouseguard, at least in terms of player races.
Luke Green More Ironclaw than Mouseguard, at least in terms of player races.
Time for Albedo World!
Time for Albedo World!
There is a fantasy PbtA where you play humanoid animals. I can’t remember the name, though. It came out a hundred years ago and never got much traction.
There is a fantasy PbtA where you play humanoid animals. I can’t remember the name, though. It came out a hundred years ago and never got much traction.
Maybe this?
rpggeek.com – Whispering Willows | RPG | RPGGeek
Maybe this?
rpggeek.com – Whispering Willows | RPG | RPGGeek
Chris Shorb That’s the one!
Chris Shorb That’s the one!
I did find this on the Codex one time. (NSFW?) i.redd.it
I did find this on the Codex one time. (NSFW?) i.redd.it
Luke Green used Fellowship to good effect. I’m not familiar with Iron Claw so I don’t know if Fellowship would fit your needs.
Luke Green used Fellowship to good effect. I’m not familiar with Iron Claw so I don’t know if Fellowship would fit your needs.
Obvious suggestion: you can call your characters furries without needing the playbooks to back that up. Write different racial moves and boom, job done.
Slightly better suggestion: Fellowship. All the playbooks are different cultures, and you’re expected to define what your culture is like, including species. E.g., if you play The Orc, it’s up to you to decide if Orcs are free-roaming wandering barbarians, or fire forged machines, or mushroom people, or, say, Redwall-esque warlike badgers.
I played in a one shot set in the Armello universe a while back and it worked great. Our Halfling was a cat, and therefore he declared that cats in general were known to be sneaky and thieving, and they lived in treehouses in the forest. I was The Squire and played a mouse; that playbook is more about making relationships than about representing a culture, so I got to help us learn about the rabbit druids and the seafaring cat pirates we met.
I highly recommend it if you want to play a people as much as a character.
Edit: swordsaged!
Obvious suggestion: you can call your characters furries without needing the playbooks to back that up. Write different racial moves and boom, job done.
Slightly better suggestion: Fellowship. All the playbooks are different cultures, and you’re expected to define what your culture is like, including species. E.g., if you play The Orc, it’s up to you to decide if Orcs are free-roaming wandering barbarians, or fire forged machines, or mushroom people, or, say, Redwall-esque warlike badgers.
I played in a one shot set in the Armello universe a while back and it worked great. Our Halfling was a cat, and therefore he declared that cats in general were known to be sneaky and thieving, and they lived in treehouses in the forest. I was The Squire and played a mouse; that playbook is more about making relationships than about representing a culture, so I got to help us learn about the rabbit druids and the seafaring cat pirates we met.
I highly recommend it if you want to play a people as much as a character.
Edit: swordsaged!
James Etheridge, this is somehow the first I’ve heard of Fellowship. I thought you were throwing out random ideas when you listed mushroom people but I’m pleased to see them on the Kickstarter’s page! Thanks for the PSA 🙂
James Etheridge, this is somehow the first I’ve heard of Fellowship. I thought you were throwing out random ideas when you listed mushroom people but I’m pleased to see them on the Kickstarter’s page! Thanks for the PSA 🙂
(Sidenote: my fondness of mushroom people is born of Jeff Vandermeer’s Ambergris stories. ‘The City of Saints and Madmen’ is an incredible book in many ways)
(Sidenote: my fondness of mushroom people is born of Jeff Vandermeer’s Ambergris stories. ‘The City of Saints and Madmen’ is an incredible book in many ways)
My favorite was seeing a naga woman as one of the possible Heir examples (Heir being based on Aragorn, Jedi, Shannara, etc) Was awesome to see that.
Incidentally James Etheridge the pirates were frogs.
My favorite was seeing a naga woman as one of the possible Heir examples (Heir being based on Aragorn, Jedi, Shannara, etc) Was awesome to see that.
Incidentally James Etheridge the pirates were frogs.
Were they? Forsooth, I’ve become an unreliable narrator!
Were they? Forsooth, I’ve become an unreliable narrator!
In DW, wouldn’t a type of furry be a race? You’d only have to flesh out your racial XP question, and maybe an alignment one.
Maybe you’d need to expand the Bonds/Flags sections, too
In DW, wouldn’t a type of furry be a race? You’d only have to flesh out your racial XP question, and maybe an alignment one.
Maybe you’d need to expand the Bonds/Flags sections, too