So the podcasts are quite interresting and what brought me here.

So the podcasts are quite interresting and what brought me here.

So the podcasts are quite interresting and what brought me here. I like to talk about theory and best practice and whatnot, though and after hearing the +1 FORWARD on Custom Moves got hung up in what everyone there agreed on:

A move should only (negativily) impact the roller. Really? Like really? We, including me as an MC go to the fiction and let choices and rolls affect the characters and NPCs and just goals of the non-rollers. The last time I played a Hardholder it seemed everyone’s choices and rolls negatively impacted my investment and plans for the Hardhold.

Though I agree that it’s shitty to be on the end of all your mates foolish shenanigans, I am of the opinion that it’s often right to let the other players experience the fallout of other rolls. (Especially in Monsterhearts, in my opinion.)

So, am I missing something? Was the podcasters just promoting “Best practice to avoid the 90’s Alpha Players”, or is it the common belief in this community?

in the 5 years since I found The Gauntlet and took over running it:

in the 5 years since I found The Gauntlet and took over running it:

in the 5 years since I found The Gauntlet and took over running it:

-I have been called “The new RPG Pundit”

-I have been referred to as “just like Anna Kreider” (I don’t consider that an insult, but it was intended to be one).

-I have been called a misogynist

-I have watched as no one in my community defended me while I was being called a misogynist.

-I have been called a harasser

-I have been called a bully

-I have been referred to as having “fascist tendencies”

-I have been called a “hardcore leftist”

-I have been called a SJW

-I have been the victim of several whisper campaigns

-I have been doxxed by a major convention organizer

-I have received six harassing phone calls

-I have been banned from being on panels at Metatopia

-I have been told I am “not what people are referring to when they say ‘queer’”

-I have been told I don’t count as a person of color because I’m half-white

-I have been told my experiences as a queer POC in the hobby are invalid because I am the leader of The Gauntlet (because being in a position of authority over something automatically invalidates your other experiences, I guess?)

-I have been accused of stealing someone’s intellectual property.

-I have been asked “Why do you have a problem with white men?”

-I have been asked “Why do I only see white men in The Gauntlet?”

-I have had to deal with the insinuation that I am personally greedy ever since we launched our Patreon (note: The Gauntlet pays my cell phone bill and I repaid myself for some big expenses incurred prior to the Patreon. I otherwise work 30-40 hours per week on Gauntlet stuff on a strictly volunteer basis).

-I have been told I am not Mexican enough to criticize another Mexican-American (who is now also not Mexican enough)

-i have been called “combative”

-I have been called “abusive”

-I have been called “opinionated”

-I have been called “tyrannical”

-I have been called “a joke” by a game designer I used to admire

-Just yesterday I was gaslighted by a particularly nasty individual who has been coming for me for months.

I could actually keep going and going.

Maybe I am garbage. There are definitely some days when I feel like it. All I have ever wanted to do is create and sustain community around tabletop roleplaying games. But I feel like I just keep getting things wrong or something. I don’t know.

I posted this in our Slack channel, so I thought’d be worth also posting here.

I posted this in our Slack channel, so I thought’d be worth also posting here.

I posted this in our Slack channel, so I thought’d be worth also posting here. It’s some thoughts about sign up and play with The Gauntlet.

Responsibilities & Best Practices for Sign Up, Attendance, and Cancellations

We’ve had a bunch of new players join us in the last several months and we’re set to have visitors with us for Gauntlet Con. And we’ve had a long summer and now we’re heading into a holiday season. We’ve had a couple of issues with cancellations and both players and GMs have reached out to us to discuss that. So I want to talk about that process.

PLAYER RESPONSIBILITIES AND BEST PRACTICES

Signing up’s a commitment to play, a minor one, but still one to consider. If you take a seat, that means someone else doesn’t get that seat. Be fair to other Gauntlet Members in your attendance.

When you sign up for a game– waitlist or not– you should put it in your calendar. Yes, we don’t have that automated yet, but it’s an important minimal step you need to take. I don’t think that’s an unreasonable expectation.

There’s nothing in the system to prevent you from waitlisting to multiple sessions in the same slot. That’s not something we want to police. But if you do get into one of those events, please drop yourself from the others.

Life’s hard. Scheduling’s hard. That’s a given and we understand that work, school, family, self-care can force someone to cancel. We don’t ask or judge someone’s reasons for doing that. But the flip side is expecting you to make an effort to drop with the most notice for the GM. If you’re uncertain about making it, err on the side of dropping if people are waiting on the waitlist. Or talk to the GM about it. That’s probably the best solution.

If you drop the day of or even a few days before, contact your GM to tell them. Give them a heads up, especially if you’ve already played a session or if there’s a waitlist. This gives them the opportunity to go out and recruit people to fill in or plan around your absence.

You’re under no obligation to explain a drop, but if you swap to another session and don’t say anything, there’s every chance your GM or fellow player will spot that. Try not to burn bridges.

All our games are open table. If you didn’t enjoy a session, you don’t have to return for the other sessions. But do inform the GM of your absence and do drop yourself from the list.

Be understanding of other players who have to drop. Help the GM integrate players from the Waitlist to the session.

In short try to look ahead and try to handle attendance with respect for the GM and fellow players.

GM RESPONSIBILITIES AND BEST PRACTICES

Show up and be ready. If something happens and you can’t make it, see if you can get someone to fill in. If that’s not possible, reach out to all of your players and tell them. Do this as early as possible to give them time to find another game. If the game’s already had a session or two, consider checking if one of the players takes over.

Expect an open table. Don’t plan on your line up to be the same from session to session. Be ready to roll with that. If you have a minimum number and don’t have that many, prepare and offer a back-up entertainment.

If someone drops, be understanding about that. Don’t judge. Sometimes it will be at the last minute and that sucks. But the overall attendance rate is pretty great in the Gauntlet, so don’t let a few bad incidents sour you.

That being said, if you have a player who repeatedly drops at the last minute or without notice, give me a heads up. Let me check in with them to see how we can make the process better for them.

We’ll refine this and add it to our FAQ and our general policies document. I hope that helps. To get a better picture, in November I’m going offer GMs an informal, voluntary survey about attendance at sessions. (edited)

Age of Ravens: Timelining Trindie

Age of Ravens: Timelining Trindie

Age of Ravens: Timelining Trindie

Over at The Gauntlet Blog this week I look at the prep process for my upcoming f2f 13th Age campaign.

https://bit.ly/2ybZdE8

We start with a Microscope timeline for our new setting and then I spin off into the creation of physical props (maps, stickers, cards) for it. I go a little overboard. Below you can see the sectional map I created based on a larger map we chose. I used Cecil Howe’s amazing HexKit to do that and a city map.

A reminder that we have a Kickstarter for the Codex Volume 1 Hardcover happening right now.

A reminder that we have a Kickstarter for the Codex Volume 1 Hardcover happening right now.

A reminder that we have a Kickstarter for the Codex Volume 1 Hardcover happening right now. One of the awesome things about this campaign is we have numerous opportunities for you to play in games with some of the best game designers and GMs in the indie space. Here is a list of the online game pledge rewards still available (each comes with a book and all digital rewards):

$75 pledge – Keeper of the Fleeting Memories – An online session of Reset with Kyle Simons. This is the pledge reward I chose for myself. Everyone who pledges at this level will be participating in the same story (it’s played out over multiple sessions, one player at a time). I discussed this particular pledge reward a bit more right here: https://twitter.com/GauntletRPG/status/1048350234580066305

$100 pledge – Keeper of the Carnival of Dreams – This one gets you an online session of Crossroads Carnival with Kate Bullock for you and 3 friends. There were originally 3 spots at this pledge level, but now there is only 1 left!

$100 pledge – Keeper of the Blood-Stained Keys – This one gets you an online session of Bluebeard’s Bride with Shane Liebling for you and 3 friends.

$100 pledge – Keeper of the Scintillating Skull -This one gets you an online session of Cartel with Mark Diaz Truman for you and 3 friends.

$100 pledge – Keeper of the Bitter Harvest – This one comes with a session of The Election of the Wine Queen with Gerrit Reininghaus for you and 3 friends.

$150 pledge – Keeper of the Wicked and Divine – This one comes with a 2-session game of Monsterhearts 2: Once Again, We Return with Patrick Knowles for you and 3 friends. Patrick discussed this on the newest episode of The Gauntlet Podcast.

There are many pledge rewards to choose from. If you just want the book and/or digital stretch goals, both are priced very reasonably. Be sure to check everything out at the campaign page, linked below!

And please re-share!

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/gauntlet/codex-rpg-zine-volume-1-hardcover?ref=user_menu

Hey everyone, per the pinned post, there is no need to keep making new posts about where The Gauntlet is moving.

Hey everyone, per the pinned post, there is no need to keep making new posts about where The Gauntlet is moving.

Hey everyone, per the pinned post, there is no need to keep making new posts about where The Gauntlet is moving. We will be having community discussions about the matter starting in November.

Here’s a bit on the people who made Pluspora and their philosophy.

Here’s a bit on the people who made Pluspora and their philosophy.

Here’s a bit on the people who made Pluspora and their philosophy.

I don’t know whether a Diaspora-based solution would ever be right for this community, but at least their heads seem to be in the right place.

Originally shared by Di Cleverly

Are we all Vic Gundotra now?

A good friend of mine from my favorite social media network (+John R. Ellis) and I were chatting. He told me he had read an article about how Friendster had evolved from a nice leading platform to one that was focused on profits leading to a downturn.

“There are no known solutions to problems like trolls and hackers and spammers vs ease of use by legit members, and anything the good people can use (like a private community) then the bad people can use those too (terrorists, pedophiles, etc.). It is a tool. And the tool needs cash flow to maintain it and improve it – which means either the members pay for it, or they are a commodity used by advertisers of some sort. I have no solutions.” John lamented.

But there might be a solution! You see, another good friend ( +David Thiery) and I set up a diaspora pod of our own, named www.Pluspora.com.

We paid for a virtual private Linux cloud server, the domain name, and set up all the rules and the system. We targeted who we wanted to invite (a very small group of people we had already connected with who knew each other and had similar interests). In 36 hours, we had a pretty rocking little private party room, with a lot of friends. The advantages were that we controlled the data and privacy, we got to keep spammers and trolls out, and we got to decide the rules. And the cost was affordable and the administrative duties were light. Then the topic came up that we could link this room to other rooms on the git-hub based diaspora source code. Wow! This has been going on for about a month now. Then today came the announcement we had all feared; GPlus was shutting down for good. Everyone is asking “What comes next”?

So is this the future of social media? Small linkable git-hub based privately-run mutual interest communities.

A person could belong to 5 or 6, link all of them through a single app, and even run one for themselves for photography, or Dungeons and Dragons, easily and cheaply. The owners control who comes in, who stays, what the rules are, and who controls the data. Social media as a hobby? Are we all Zuckerberg now? Technology changes. We have the technology to set up and run our own social media sites. We no longer have to be sheep, pawns, used and stripped of our data, force fed ads for gray-hair dye we don’t need just because we are certain age group.

I don’t know where social media is headed; I know I love it. I don’t want to give it up, but I know it needs to change, and radically. The big sites won’t ever go away, but I’m ready for social 2.0 and this might just be the direction it takes! How about you? For community leaders out there, I ask you, would you consider starting a diaspora pod? Reach out to David or I to find out how. Start one based on your interest with your community, and let’s link them. We can share resources and keep the Google Plus community together. We are ALL +Vic Gundotra now.

Passing this along here since this community (that I am new to) is also looking into other options.

Passing this along here since this community (that I am new to) is also looking into other options.

Passing this along here since this community (that I am new to) is also looking into other options.

Originally shared by Robert Freeman-Day

I am also thinking more and more about decentralization and/or federation.

Looking at Secure Scuttlebutt right now.

https://www.scuttlebutt.nz/

Take about 15 min from your usual youtube train (you know you are doing it right now!) and look at this vid that explains the start of it pretty well:

https://vimeo.com/236358264

Watch and look it over and post questions/comments.

What if we were to be fully able to post publicly and (end to end encrypted) privately to people AND keep our content?

What if we were able to post offline, knowing that it would get to the wider world with little issue?

What if we weren’t beholden to a large company to hold and protect our data/writings/etc?

https://www.scuttlebutt.nz/

Hey amazings!

Hey amazings!

Hey amazings!

Just a reminder that Magpie still needs some GMs to run awesome Magpie games at Pax Unplugged! Join Team Magpie and help us making gaming at Pax U awesome!

If you run 12 hours of games, you’ll get a badge and a Magpie book of your choice! If you run 8 hours of games, we’ll give you an awesome Magpie book of your choice!

If you’d like to run games, check out the form below!

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdM7DOTcqmWS2OUMH0i8TspRkj2FNrwUkDPdBUm21qQxbr94g/viewform?usp=sf_link

Ya’ll, MeWe is garbage and I strongly recommend against it.

Ya’ll, MeWe is garbage and I strongly recommend against it.

Ya’ll, MeWe is garbage and I strongly recommend against it. This is the co-founder in my Twitter explaining how they are politically “neutral” and making the bogus “free speech” argument. If I need to explain why this a problem… that’s a problem.