TTRPG on a bookmark
BREAK CONTAINMENT
It's time to set yourself free
Escape the facility! A game on a bookmark.
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seen from Malaysia
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TTRPG on a bookmark
BREAK CONTAINMENT
It's time to set yourself free
Escape the facility! A game on a bookmark.
SKELLINGTON RPG: FIGHT IN AN UNDEAD ARMY, MAKE PUNS, PLAY A TROMBONE
A microRPG I cooked up on lunch break at work based on an old wint tweet. Honestly I like the system and wouldn't mind doing more one shot stuff with it.
Kicking off 2026 with a game jam: "The Gifting Flower", a bookmark RPG for 48WordRPGJam. I want to do more art for my stuff, and cooler presentation, so I painted… well, a flower. It's very pretty though.
The game is about a mystical flower granting you one use of an awesome power that you roll for with 1d10.
A d10 table micro RPG on a bookmark. A godlike flower - what is its power?
I made a solo-play bookmark ttrpg for the TTRPG Bookmark Jam 2025 - the game is free if you wanna snag a copy! Rules-lite, all you need to do is read your book to figure out how to bring your friend back to your world alive.
OPERATION: [REDACTED] -- My first attempt at a one-page RPG
I've wanted to make one of these for a while, and finally went ahead and did it.
A fantasy micro-RPG about arguing over taxonomy.
The title of Why Necromancy Doesn't Exist comes from the memoir Why Fish Don't Exist, which includes lots of taxonomy and cladistics. I was a bookseller at the same time this book was popular, so the name stuck with me
The title of the book is based on the argument that, cladistically, "fish" is not an actual category. A salmon is more closely related to a camel than a hagfish. Why Necrromancy Doesn't Exist was based on a worldbuilding exercise I did that argued something similar about magic
In the exercise I wrote about how necromancy isn't actually an inherent school of magic, it's a trade. A dozen different schools of magic, just applied to dead bodies. It was fun to write, so I made a game out of it
I've always been interested in taxonomy (not just of animals, but as a subject), especially when it's heated and personally or politically motivated. I love odd results like the Catholic church classifying capybaras as fish. If you also enjoy this stuff, check out this game
TTRPGs About: Magical Girls!
Disaster/Peace by A Couple of Drakes
Cost: $15 USD
A Forged in the Dark game of magical teens. I don't own this one, but it has reviewed extremely well. It has simpler rules than Girl By Moonlight below (which also uses Forged in the Dark), so looks like a good option if you want to play a game with some complexity but not commit to the full Forged in the Dark experience.
And just look at that character sheet- stunning!
Girl By Moonlight by Andrew Gillis and Evil Hat
Cost: $15 USD
Girl By Moonlight is one of (if not the) best known magical girl ttrpgs. It uses a twist on the Forged in the Dark system, where crew playbooks are replaced by a series playset which defines the tone and flavour of your adventures. In this way GbM allows you to play anything from optimistic Magical Girl stories like Sailor Moon, to darker ones such as Puella Magi Madoka Magica, and trippy stories like Paprika.
Macarons, Milkshakes and Magic by StarshineScribbles
Cost: $7 USD
Another game I don't own- but it has such a distinct flavour I just had to include it! A combination of solo journaling and group storytelling, Macarons revolves around a Magical Girl themed cafe with a secret: the owner is a retired Magical Girl herself!
Magicka: a 200 Word RPG by Emmeryn
Cost: pwyw
A beautiful, succinct little game! Play as magical girls powered by FRIENDSHIP! Oh, and also you're secretly in love with one of your companions. Delicious tension.
A cool detail about this game is that if you can work your character's weakness into your action, you get to take the higher number out of the dice you've rolled. It encourages people to use their character's flaws to narrative benefit, and I'm all about that.
Got inspired when seeing the 36WordRPGJam, so I put something together and entered. You Are a Fox is a solo journaling TTRPG about dying and what you leave behind when you do. It uses 1d6 to determine if you live or die. The rest of the details are up to you!
Check it out here! Make sure to check out the other games too. I especially like the Gaping Serpent.