Two more WIP’s I’m wondering about are “The Falcon's Pirate” and “The Problem With D&D”. I’m especially interested in what the latter’s about.
WIP Ask Game
Oh - TWO non-SWTOR works!
The Falcon's Pirate is a piece of BattleTech Fanfiction. Our protagonist - an ex-Pirate, ex-Mercenary, ex-Lyran MechWarrior - is captured as a bondsman by Clan Jade Falcon post-Battle of Tukayyid. The Falcon commander is short-staffed garrisoning a Periphery world and - reluctantly - presses him into service without formally inducting him into the warrior caste. (Since that last part would require approval from her Khan, and he'll only say 'no'.) Sparks between the two reluctant allies eventually... spark.
(Yes, I know most of you probably don't know or care about BattleTech, so you have no frame of reference.)
I have no idea if I'll ever turn it into anything.
Tagging @taraum , since she was also curious about The Problem With D&D -
As the title implies - certain iterations of D&D - particularly the video game adaptations of my youth - had a problem.
The "optimal path" of most adventures - that is, the approach that resulted in the most XP, gold, magic items looted, etc., was usually the "direct" approach, resulting in the most violence. Kill everyone and everything, snatch up the goodies, then deal with it afterwards.
That's... fine? But its not for everyone. I prefer more intelligent approaches in my games, and good DMs encourage that.
So a DM puts two PCs through a solo-player dungeon. First with a Rogue - we'll call him Ralph - and then with a Barbarian - we'll call him Bruce. The quest is to acquire a magical gem being used in a ritual in a Dark Temple (TM) by Evil Snake People (TM).
Ralph puts on a show, bypassing traps, sneaking past guards, and eventually not only absconding with the gem, but replacing it with a fake. The Snake-people don't even discover the theft for days.
Ralph gets X gold and Y experience points for his trouble.
Then Bruce the Barbarian takes his turn. He sets off every trap in the dungeon, slaughters every monster and enemy in the place and leaves a path of destruction in his wake. He basically just soaks all the damage, shrugging it off before finally seizing the gem.
Bruce gets about ten times as much gold and experience points as Ralph did.
... maybe it sounded funnier in my head? 🥴
Thanks for the asks, @jjjwhovian !













