Jason (or any of the Gauntlet crew), in one of your podcasts I remember a game being mentioned wherein the players…

Jason (or any of the Gauntlet crew), in one of your podcasts I remember a game being mentioned wherein the players…

Jason (or any of the Gauntlet crew), in one of your podcasts I remember a game being mentioned wherein the players were the skeletal sentinels of a lords tomb the progress of which involved remembering their duty, past glory etc. or sinking into oblivion as they cycled through “sleep” and activity defending the tomb. If that is an accurate recollection, then what is the name of that game?

My first question to you folks was quite fruitful, I thought I’d try another:

My first question to you folks was quite fruitful, I thought I’d try another:

My first question to you folks was quite fruitful, I thought I’d try another:

After school, I co-sponsor a gaming club at the high school, in which I am currently conducting a session of Microscope that is the setup for a PbtA game, most likely Dungeon World. I seeded the Microscope session as a post-apocalyptic story. At its most fundamental level, it has developed into a world like our own that has rapidly devolved after losing the ability to mechanically generate electricity. I want to use Dungeon World for the rules set as I am new to running a PbtA game and that is the one of which I have read and studied the most material.

Do any of you have suggestions as to which published DW setting I might use to facilitate running a PbtA adventure in this world my group and I are constructing?

Vince

Given the Gauntlet Crew’s penchant for trying new indie and trad games I thought I might pose this question to you:…

Given the Gauntlet Crew’s penchant for trying new indie and trad games I thought I might pose this question to you:…

Given the Gauntlet Crew’s penchant for trying new indie and trad games I thought I might pose this question to you: Do you have RPG suggestions I might use in a one to many circumstance that would help foster engagement with school?

An explanation to unpack that question: As a middle school special education teacher I am looking for games that might encourage increased engagement that are relatively easy to conduct, require creative thinking, and may be played in a one (teacher) to many (multiple students, possibly even an entire grade level) circumstance. It occurred to me that I might use a choose your own adventure book, posting the current story passage in my classroom door along with the path choices, and have the students that want to give feedback, do so via a blog or written comment on a log posted to the side of the door.

Thank you for the consideration, Gauntlet Crew and G+ participants!

Vince