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The fucking Library of Metro 2033
Trandoshan ship of Star Wars Commandos
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ojovivo

Janaina Medeiros
Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.

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noise dept.
trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art
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Kiana Khansmith

#extradirty
h

Andulka
Mike Driver

roma★

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taylor price

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@boweniscool
😂😂😂
The fucking Library of Metro 2033
Trandoshan ship of Star Wars Commandos
Building your maps in Wonderdraft, Photoshop, or Gimp? Please enjoy these (free) hand drawn map symbols I have been working on!
Download: https://2minutetabletop.com/wonderdraft-map-icons/
For those of you that like making maps, 2minutetabletop has made an (awesome) set of tokens!
Me: *Rolls 1, 7, 2, 6, 6, and 4 for character stats* Me: “Is this character going be me?”
This hurts me X3
Here’s a little trick I’ve used in D&D games where the premise of your campaign calls for the party to have access to lots of Stuff, but you don’t want to do a whole bunch of bookkeeping: the Wagon.
In a nutshell, the party has a horse-drawn wagon that they use to get around between – and often during – adventures. This doesn’t come out of any individual player character’s starting budget; it’s just provided as part of the campaign premise.
Before setting out from a town or other place of rest, the party has to decide how many gold pieces they want to spend on supplies. These funds aren’t spent on anything in particular, and form a running total that represents how much Stuff is in the wagon.
Any time a player character needs something in the way of supplies during a journey or adventure, one of two things can happen:
1. If it’s something that any fool would have packed for the trip and it’s something that could reasonably have been obtained at one of the party’s recent stopovers (e.g., rations, spare clothing, fifty feet of rope, etc.), then the wagon contains as much of it as they reasonably need. Just deduct the Player’s Handbook list price for the item(s) in question from the wagon’s total.
2. If it’s something where having packed it would take some explaining, or if it’s something that’s unlikely to have been available for purchase at any of the party’s recent stopovers (e.g., a telescope, a barrel of fine wine, a book of dwarven erotic poetry, etc.), the player in need makes a retroactive Intelligence or Wisdom check, versus a DC set by the GM, to see if they somehow anticipated the need for the item(s) in question. Proficiency may apply to this check, depending on what’s needed. The results are read as follows:
Success: You find what you’re looking for, more or less. If the group is amenable, you can narrate a brief flashback explaining the circumstances of its acquisition. Deduct its list price (or a price set by the GM, if it’s not on the list) from the wagon’s total.
Failure by 5 points or less: You find something sort of close to what you’re looking for. The GM decides exactly what; it won’t ever be useless for the purpose at hand, but depending on her current level of whimsy, it may simply be a lesser version of what you were looking for, or it may be something creatively off the mark. Deduct and optionally flash back as above.
Failure by more than 5 points: You come up empty-handed, and can’t try again for that item or anything closely resembling it until after your next stopover.
As an incidental benefit, all the junk the wagon is carrying acts as a sort of ablative armour. If the wagon or its horses would ever take damage, instead subtract a number of gold pieces from its total equal to the number of hit points of damage it would have suffered. The GM is encouraged to describe what’s been destroyed in lurid detail.
This type of method makes it *way* easier to keep track of items, and… it’s pretty darn funny when the players succeed a roll to see if they backed something outrageously stupid. Trust me, the flash backs are hilarious. Never skip out on them.
I was just trying to figure out how to do something to similar effect! This is great and will deffinatly help with current game
Homing missile!
‘’Yeah,I see’‘
(source)
@a-40k-author
So I got a copy of “I knead my mommy”. I didn’t expect to get my heart wrecked like this.
This is painful, but sweet
Keep on stimming!
Source: 🐕
I wish to know how this was constructed!
Like oh my Lord I love this!
This is amazing! Makes sense if true, and is a great joy to read.
My face when someone tells me dogs have more personality than cats, and proceeds to mention they’ve never owned a cat before.
Doctor