Finding the Best System for Your Horror One-Shot

As I prepare my horror RPG one-shot for a local convention, I’ve been reflecting on the Halloween themed games I’ve run over the years and what I’ve learned from those experiences. Working with the Redacted Files, I’ve seen how much they are aligned with the genre. That in mind, I want to share some things I’ve learned running and writing games for the season and for the genre. Not about story but about the system you select.

When telling your story, it is critical not to let the system cause you to stumble. If you want to disrupt the player characters’ sense of comfort and build dread (the key ingredients to a horror story), stopping with any frequency to have to check a rule or have to consider how to cram the story into the scene kills the mood. You want to use a system that works with the type of story you’re going to tell. Thankfully, there are lots of RPG systems out now that, with a little searching, you’ll find a supports your story.

I break systems into three categories depending on how easily they help tell the story:

Genre – A system that is designed for the horror genre. The rules and flavor text are all about horror, and the splat books are about telling a more in depth story using mechanics that support it.
Examples: Call of Cthulhu, Don’t Rest Your Head, World of Darkness

Generic – This is a system that is streamlined and won’t get in your way when you try telling the story. It may not be designed to tell a horror story specifically, but it won’t force you to continuously reference the rulebook as you play.
Examples: Cypher System, FATE (Core or Accelerated), Powered by the Apocalypse

Forced – RPGs designed for other genres, like high fantasy or steampunk, where telling the story is against the grain, so a splat book needs to be written to make major modifications to the core system.
Examples: Dungeons and Dragons, Iron Kingdoms RPG, Pathfinder

All of these systems are great, but they all have limits. It’s finding the system that is least limiting for your story and have enough depth to be able to support you as well. I’ve tried lots of these and, with very little practice, you can tell a one-shot with any of them with limited prep work on the system.

What I would recommend is sitting down and writing your story outline. Don’t think about rules yet, just what you want the plot to be and how you would build it. Then, look at different systems, starting with what you’re most familiar with and branching out from there. Find the system that supports your story best and won’t require you to spend weeks adapting rules or, worse, force you to on the fly modify the game to fit the system.

Remember, this is a one-shot. You’re not making a lifelong commitment to the system, and a good story will let you gloss over the rough edges too.

What’s Cool on Kickstarter

There’s many interesting items to be found on Kickstarter, and here are the coolest ones this week.

Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game
TRF was started from a desire to play Delta Green, so we’re beyond ecstatic for this Kickstarter. This is a brand new ruleset for Delta Green, based on Call of Cthulhu. There’s also the option of picking up Pelgrane’s Fall of Delta Green, a 1960’s Gumshoe system. As the Kickstarter continues new supplements will become available!

Creature that looks like a fungus holding a laptop

“Delta Green was directly inspired by the horror fiction of H.P. Lovecraft and other Cthulhu Mythos authors. Just as Lovecraft’s stories were about the intersection of cosmic terror and cutting-edge technology in the 1920s and 1930s, Delta Green is about that intersection today.

In every game of Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game, agents investigate horrifying events, seek ways to thwart them, and try to save anyone else from being exposed. They face lethal threats and awful discoveries. To keep a low profile, they rarely have the resources they want. They often must make terrible choices for the greater good, as best they can perceive it. The longer an agent is active, the greater the toll those stresses take on the agent’s health, sanity, career, and family.”

 

Pathfinder Metal Dice Set
These are some very pretty dice from one of the best companies in the business. They’re pretty pricy, but they look so nice.

The full set of the metal pathfinder dice.

“Are you a Pathfinder player? Or a dice fan? Or a fan of shiny things in general? 🙂 Then this project is for you!

Q-workshop, the manufacturer of the most unusual dice in the world, together with Paizo Inc., the publisher of the Pathfinder RPG, are extremely happy to announce their new project to make the most awesome metal dice set on Earth – and possibly in the whole Universe.”

 

Masks: A New Generation
This is a new superhero game where you aren’t the first generation of superheroes, in fact everyone has gotten used to the idea of you being around. So where do you fit in this world? That’s for you to figure out as you fight crime and super villains.

Three superhero teenagers, one with blue skin, one in a black outfit, one wearing gold and red

“Masks is a tabletop roleplaying game in which you play young superheroes who are growing up in a city several generations into its superheroic age. Halcyon City has had more than its fair share of superheroes, superteams, supervillains, and everything in between. Over the course of three different generations of super-people, Halcyon City has seen it all.

You play members of the fourth generation, young adults trying to figure out who they are and what kind of heroes they want to be. The rest of the world is telling them what to do, but they’ll find their own path amidst the noise. And kick some butt along the way. After all, what’s the point of being a hero if you can’t fight for the things you believe in?”

 

Cultists and Cthulhu
This is a game based on Flapjacks, but developed to take advantage of the nerd bacon that is Cthulhu.

Card with yog-sothoth that lets you start the next game

“Prolific Games has been around since 2008 with our most famous game being Flapjacks and Sasquatches*. We had some great ideas to change the game play of Flapjacks but decided our core fan base may not like changes in their favorite card game. So we decided to create a new game. Cultists & Cthulhu** uses the same basic mechanics of Flapjacks with some changes. The biggest change is the Sacrifices. Sacrifices are cards that can be used to help complete your ritual by adding dice to your roll every turn or discarded (sacrificed) to get automatic successes.

Why Cthulhu? We wanted to throw our hat in the Cthulhu ring but with the Prolific humor you all know and love. There are a bunch of Easter eggs in the game for those who are familiar with Lovecraft’s work. There are also images that we hope you all find laugh out loud worthy.”

 

Still active!

Project Bombshell
Galaxy Incorporated RPG
Fire and Bone 3
Charm City Blues: A Noir Game
Lovecraftesque
Bad Neighborhood Jigsaw puzzle
Tales of the Caribbean
Zucati Dice

What’s cool on Kickstarter

There’s many interesting items to be found on Kickstarter, and here are the coolest ones this week.

Lovecraftesque
There are a lot of games out there that let you create your own Lovecraftian story. But I’m really excited for this project because it’s taking Lovecraft and making it much more inclusive by removing the racist stereotypes found in much of Lovecraft’s work and taking a much more modern view on mental health. This is the sort of game that I can see fitting very comfortably in TRF’s game shelf, and I can’t wait for it to be released.

Two women sit at a table, one looks around nervously, one has bug legs

“Lovecraftesque is a GMless storytelling game of brooding cosmic horror. You and your friends will each contribute strange clues to a slow-building mystery, culminating in a journey into darkness that ends in a climactic scene of horror. You will be surprised and creeped out by your friends’ contributions, but the game is designed so that it will feel like one person was GMing it, even though you never had to break the tension by pausing for discussion. In short, Lovecraftesque is the GMless, indie-style Lovecraft game you’ve been waiting for.

When you play Lovecraftesque you’ll be creating your own mystery, and your own unique monsters that will feel like something out of Lovecraft’s notebook. There won’t be any Mi-Go or Deep Ones – you’ll get a completely fresh take on the genre.

The game focuses on a single Witness, who is at the mercy of strange and terrifying events. Lovecraft’s stories rarely featured parties of investigators, and the hero rarely wins – that’s how our game works, too. You rotate responsibility for playing the Witness, but the role is much more about revealing their inner thoughts and fears than solving the mystery or beating up cultists.”

 

Bad Neighborhood Jigsaw puzzle
My family always puts together puzzles at Christmas time, so they hold a certain sense of nostalgia for me. And when the man behind Calamityware makes a puzzle, I can’t help but be interested. This puzzles shows a bad neighborhood, full of monsters, that you might actually want to live in.

The image for the puzzle, colorful buildings and monsters move between them

“I designed the BAD NEIGHBORHOOD puzzle to give you abundant colors, beguiling details, and mild mystery. I hope you enjoy the challenge and delight in exploring this strange neighborhood.

What’s included in the drawings? This is my first venture into urban planning. I created several streets with a variety of buildings. Like most towns, there are signs, vehicles, and shop windows. All a little odd or twisted, but nothing to harm the delicate sensibilities of children. On the streets and in the buildings you’ll find an excellent demonstration of diversity—monster style. ”

 

Tales of the Caribbean
This collection includes at least 6 1920’s Call of Cthulhu scenarios set in the Caribbean. I think these would be a great way to take your campaign somewhere new and interesting, and all of the set ups sound fascinating.

A man looks at a shriveled corpse lying in a bed

“Across the azure waters of Caribbean Sea, under the warmth of the tropical sun, are more than seven hundred islands which make up many nations. Their citizens are a mix of native and colonial peoples, with unique cultures and traditions. But, there are many dark shadows in paradise. For upon these same islands are, unknown to most people, countless horrors which lurk just beyond the perception of mankind. Under the waves and deep in the jungles, beyond coral reefs and within smoldering volcanoes, stalking through sugarcane fields and banana groves, are the dark powers of the Cthulhu Mythos.

As always a few brave and resourceful men and women learn the truth. These heroes then stand before the darkness to face the untold horrors beyond human understanding. These are a few of their stories. Golden Goblin Press is very proud to bring you Tales of the Caribbean.”

 

Zucati Dice
This is another set of really pretty dice that are available. They come in aluminum, brass, tungsten, steel and copper, as well as several colors.

The colorful dice are sitting on wooden boxes

“These dice are made from solid metal and engraved using a CNC mill to be the finest, best looking and best rolling dice ever made. There’s nothing extra involved here… no gimmicks, no plating, no paint, only solid metal in either its natural state or anodized on one of several vibrant and amazing colors.”

 

Strange Nations
I think this looks like a pretty awesome guide to help you with worldbuilding in any campaign you’re building. This collection has write-ups on thirty different cultures that you can integrate into your games. I really love that he put a lot of details into each culture, like the ingredients for carrot whiskey or the salinity tolerance of plants. This is going to be available for everyone, he just needs help to pay for the art.

A being with three heads and three arms looks down disdainfully as blood drips from her hands and a spider dangles from another

“I am putting together a worldbuilding resource book with detailed cultures designed to fit into your setting with only a minimum of adaptation necessary. Everything will be released under a Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 4.0 License, so that you can use it even for commercial projects.

Strange Nations will hold detailed write-ups on thirty different cultures running the gamut from high fantasy to space opera to alternate history and the post-apocalypse.

There is the city-state of Iditt, where necromancy is accepted and self-mummification is the first step to repaying your lifelong debt to society. There are the Balas, whose buildings hang off the edge of a flat world. There are werejaguars, mad fairy refugees, and wagon-drivers with a religious injunction against touching the ground.”

 

Still active!

Project Bombshell
Recall of Cthulhu
The Incredible Chemistry Set
Ferroflow – A ferrofluid sculpture
The Cloud Dungeon: A DIY Paper Craft RPG Game
Shadow Over Sol: A Science Fiction and Horror RPG
BitCrates Component Boxes
Wargaming Basing Accessory Molds
Galaxy Incorporated RPG
Fire and Bone 3
LittleCLUUs Custom Dice
Charm City Blues: A Detective Noir Game

What’s Cool on Kickstarter

There’s many interesting items to be found on Kickstarter, and here are the coolest ones this week.

Galaxy Incorporated RPG
This new RPG sounds like an interesting setup, sort of like Shadowrun in space without the questionably racist magic background mixed with Paranoia.

Image from the Kickstarter post, a person in space

“Galaxy Incorporated is an epic space fantasy roleplaying game set in a far-future utopia, and the human race has expanded throughout the galaxy. Mega-Corporations run the galaxy with the help of worldwide Artificial Intelligence systems. These AI systems oversee the needs for every corporate citizen. Local AI systems carefully monitor corporate citizens and link to a world AI to help the bureaucrats balance all resources for everyone. Famine and disease are things of the past. Everything a citizen could ever need or want is provided for.

Player characters are part of a spaceship crew looking for a way to survive in a galaxy run by these interplanetary Mega-Corporations..”

 

Fire and Bone 3
These beautiful renders of skulls can be displayed or worn. They’re designed using 3D scans of actual skulls, and I want them all everytime they release a kickstarter.

The collection of skulls on stands, as rings, and pendants

“We make tiny, true-to-life animal skull reproductions based on high-definition 3D scans of original specimens, carefully miniaturized in a digital process, then cast in metal. This is our third collection here on Kickstarter and it’s our best yet! We keep listening to the requests and advice of our passionate customers, who are naturalists and animal lovers like us. What we’ve brought to Kickstarter this time keeps these suggestions in mind, with a couple twists of our own.

Fire & Bone pieces take full advantage of exciting new technologies, including 3D scanning and 3D printing, to create something that’s not available anywhere else: miniature skulls that are highly detailed and faithful to nature’s design. And, Fire & Bone skulls look beautiful both as pendants or when exhibited as collector’s items.”

 

LittleCLUUs Custom Dice
These dice have adorable little dragons inside them. There are also other colors of dice, and little dragons to hold your dice.

Rainbow of different dragon dice

“I’ve wanted to bring something a little more special to the world of gaming for quite sometime, and after a lot of trial and errors I landed on making some very special and custom dice. I started bringing them to fruition and noticed that everyone seemed to love them and I would LOVE to make them more commercially available. This is where you can help me out, and in return I can also bring these dice and special hand made creations to you!

All the dragons and critters are made of high quality polymer clay and each of the dice are cast in a jewelers grade epoxy resin. This not only gives very balanced dice but they are extremely durable! Plus all of the colors I create are mixed directly into the resin so theres no color fade! You will also have the option to have the numbers painted to any color of your choosing!”

 

Charm City Blues: A Detective Noir Game
I love cooperative games and Noir, so this game caught my attention pretty quickly. It looks like an interesting set up that could be a lot of fun.

Example of some cards from the game

“Charm City Blues is a cooperative detective-noir game where players take on the role of members of the Vice Squad, racing across the city trying to catch a suspect before the clock strikes 12 or the Suspicion Track fills.”

 

Still active!

Project Bombshell
Recall of Cthulhu
The Incredible Chemistry Set
Ferroflow – A ferrofluid sculpture
The Cloud Dungeon: A DIY Paper Craft RPG Game
Shadow Over Sol: A Science Fiction and Horror RPG
BitCrates Component Boxes
Wargaming Basing Accessory Molds

What’s Cool on Kickstarter

There’s many interesting items to be found on Kickstarter, and here are the coolest ones this week.

The Cloud Dungeon: A DIY Paper Craft RPG Game
I really love the idea that you’re coloring and adding on to your character as you go.

Page from the book with coloring and cut out parts

“AndHeDrew brings you The Cloud Dungeon, a DIY Adventure Game with paper craft, coloring, co-op and competitive mini games, and difficult decisions with permanent (often hilarious) consequences. It’s a creativity-inspiring co-op experience that’s fantastic to play as a family. It can be played in 90 min-120 min, or broken up into 30-45 minute sessions, as the book is divided into three chapters.

This is the first book in the DIY Adventure Games format, an entirely new way to play games. Permanent team and individual decisions and the possibility of death and resurrection as a ghost make this a unique new way to team up and create a story together.”

 

Shadow Over Sol: A Science Fiction and Horror RPG
This game is based on some of my favorite horror movies – those with Science Fiction. I think it would make a great addition to your SciFi collection. It uses the Saga Machine core system.

A metal hallway with blood and a torn up grate. A monster is at the end

“Players in Shadows Over Sol can take any number of roles, ranging from determined explorers or hardened military personnel, to corp troubleshooters or profit-driven “scrappers” that skirt the gray areas of the law.

Shadows Over Sol is inspired by a variety of science fiction and horror media, ranging from Ridley Scott’s classic film Alien and John Carpenter’s The Thing, to more recent works such as James S. A. Corey’s excellent The Expanse series.”

 

BitCrates Component Boxes
These are some really nice boxes for holding the pieces for your favorite board games. You’ll no longer have to go searching through your cupboards for some spare tupperware!

BitCrate box with pieces in it

“Components (aka Bits) have become a huge part of modern board game play. Each game though pose the same question — how do you fit all these components on the table? BitCrates were built to answer just that.

BitCrates are a carefully designed, handcrafted set of boxes made from hardwood and aluminum. They are meant to help contain, pass and save space on your gaming table while playing the board game.”

 

Wargaming Basing Accessory Molds
I’ve barely painted my own miniatures, let alone build them, but this project gives you access to some awesome bases and pieces you can add to improve what you’re creating!

Red polyurethane mold with some finished pieces

“I am asking for funding to bring my new range of accessory press molds to the market. Made from Polyurethane Rubber, simply mix your modeling putty and fill in the mold. When the putty has hardened remove the casting and add to your bases. they are designed to fit into the popular 28mm sale fantasy wargaming.

Materials: Made from performance Polyurethane Rubber. Dimensions: W 115mm, 62mm. Designed for: All 28mm wargaming”

 

Still active!

Numenera: Into the Ninth World ***Ending this week! Now with more Character Options and a new Bestiary!!!
Vurt: The Tabletop Roleplaying Game
All Fathomed Out
Project Bombshell
Recall of Cthulhu
The Incredible Chemistry Set
Ferroflow – A ferrofluid sculpture

What’s Cool on Kickstarter

There’s many interesting items to be found on Kickstarter, and here are the coolest ones this week.

Project Bombshell
Cthulhu and Friends are launching their first kickstarter to bring their world to and explore the parts we haven’t been able to see yet. They’ve already funded a comic about The Man Jack, and will be releasing issues looking at the backstory of other characters as stretch goals are met.
CaF Kickstarter logo
“When you play an real-play tabletop RPG, you always run the risk of having the dice kill one of your characters. When you play an H.P. Lovecraft inspired game, the chances of having the dice kill one of your characters is almost certain.

For our GM, saying she thinks outside the box is an understatement; she destroys the box. It’s because of these classic critical failures during gameplay that much of her storytelling must go untold. Now, in an effort to give the fans more of the rich story that they have been craving and to give our GM the creative outlet she desires, we’re going to start releasing a series of comic books.”

 

Recall of Cthulhu
This game is super adorable and would be a great way to slowly infect your child’s mind with Cthulhu, making sure those seeds of madness are planted early!
Recall of Cthulhu kawaii concept art

“Recall of Cthulhu presents the horrors of the mythos in a way they were meant to be – cute and cuddly! This classic matching game can be played by up to four of the most deranged patients in the Sanatorium, as well as young cultists aged 4 and up! The game can be played as a simple matching game, or the advanced game can be played which adds a small layer of complexity to the game.

Included in the game are 60 tiles representing 15 creatures, items, and places of the Cthulhu Mythos, as well as two player aids for playing the advanced game. What better way of improving your memory for those dusty tomes of spells than a quick game of Recall of Cthulhu?”

 

The Incredible Chemistry Set
I remember my chemistry professors reminiscing about the good old days when you bought a chemistry set and you could actually hurt yourself with what you got. Most sets you can get now involve safe experiments with little excitement. This deluxe kit gives you the resources to really understand and experiment. Plus it comes in a beautiful box.
Incredible Chemistry Set contents

“The Incredible Chemistry Set includes the glassware, chemicals, and lab apparatus necessary to perform the most interesting and exciting chemical reactions. We have spent months researching the most fascinating reactions to include in the set. All of this research has been compiled in our Experiments Book. This book includes procedures for 35 experiments. The set, along with the book, will enable you to carry out these experiments. Please keep in mind that some of the experiments require chemicals and items that cannot be shipped (such as dry ice, acid, strawberries, etc…) Also included in the set are selected physics experiments (magnetism & electricity).

Many chemistry sets fail to include exciting reactions. Our Experiments Book is packed with the best experiments that science has to offer. The book does not go into the same depth as other chemistry books, but rather provides simple, easy-to-follow instructions for performing each experiment.”

 

Ferroflow – A ferrofluid sculpture
I like pretty things that look cool, and this awesome desk sculpture definitely fits the bill.
Ferrofluid sculpture demonstration

“Every now and then you need a little distraction from staring at your monitor for hours on end, and Ferroflow is your answer! Just touch it to turn it on and enjoy the display as it moves ferrofluid around in cool and unique ways, automatically. The spikes and fluid motions will provide just the break you’re looking for, and good luck keeping your coworkers away.”

 

Still active!

Cultists of Cthulhu
Pennypult
Numenera: Into the Ninth World
AcadeCon 2015
The Things We Leave Behind
Meta Dice
Vurt: The Tabletop Roleplaying Game
Chaos of Cthulhu
All Fathomed Out

#RPGaDay2015 31: Favorite non-RPG thing to come out of RPGing

autocratik topic grid

Last year we celebrated Autocratik’s #RPGaDay, where we spend a month celebrating RPGs, discussing what we love and what we love about them. Here are the responses of the TRF crew. Be sure to tweet, blog, or post your own with the #RPGaDay!

For August 31, What is your favorite non-RPG thing to come out of RPGing?
Aser:
Megan and Aser engagement photo
Chuck: My wife, LARPing actually but I will count it.
John: Friendship with Aser, Megan, Rob, basically anyone I game with on @TRFpodcast! Also ‘The Ancient Ones’ in our all-star Skype Cthulhu games: Shep, Shannon Mac, Ed and John.
Jonn: My two sons… okay maybe not both of them. Definitely the first one though… The second one was more likely the result of alcohol. I love you kids! 😀
Landan: Making new friends
Matt: I’ve met a lot of cool people and made some really good friends because of playing RPGs.
Megan: Meeting Aser 😀 He tweeted that he wished he could find a group to play Call of Cthulhu with and I responded, and now I have a wonderful fiance.
Patrick: At the risk of sounding sexist, Chainmail Garments. Most people stop at the bikini, but the chain main halter top is also a thing. I can’t imagine the chafing, those poor women.
Rob: All the awesome friends I’ve made through gaming!

Previous #RPGaDay Posts

#RPGaDay2015 30: Favorite RPG playing celebrity

Last year we celebrated Autocratik’s #RPGaDay, where we spend a month celebrating RPGs, discussing what we love and what we love about them. Here are the responses of the TRF crew. Be sure to tweet, blog, or post your own with the #RPGaDay!

For August 30, Who is your favorite RPG playing celebrity?
Aser: Harry Dresden ummm, I guess I mean Jim Butcher.
Chuck: Vin Diesel
John: Vin Diesel maybe.
Jonn: Wil Wheaton. I’m really liking Titansgrave. I probably would have waffled between Vin Diesel and Wil Wheaton otherwise.
Landan: Wil Wheaton
Matt: Stephen Colbert. He is so unapologetically geeky about Lord of the Rings and D&D references. It is a delight to watch.
Megan: Well, Vin Diesel obviously.
Patrick: Brian Posehn
Rob: Tie between Blaine Capatch and Vin Diesel

Previous #RPGaDay Posts

#RPGaDay2015 29: Favorite RPG website/blog

Last year we celebrated Autocratik’s #RPGaDay, where we spend a month celebrating RPGs, discussing what we love and what we love about them. Here are the responses of the TRF crew. Be sure to tweet, blog, or post your own with the #RPGaDay!

For August 29, What is your favorite RPG website/blog?
Aser: DriveThruRPG 😛
Chuck: DriveThruRPG
John: TheRedactedFiles.com, Twitter.
Jonn: Reality Refracted. A.L. has a very nuanced approached to talking about role-playing games. The post are rarely antagonistic and he doesn’t spend any of his time bashing people like a lot of bloggers do.
Landan: Paizo, Monte Cook Games, TRF, Geekly Inc., and I can’t think of any others off the top my head.
Matt: The Angry GM is a good read for me. I tend to design and plan games in similar ways to him, but he has much more detailed insight into why what he does works. This has helped me understand why I do things the way I do, which in turn has helped me refine my techniques. And, while I don’t visit Penny Arcade or their forum as much as I used to, I got a lot of really good info from there.
Megan: I like Gnome Stew and Tribality quite a bit for advice and news. I also love TRF because it’s my baby 🙂
Patrick: TRF, I really don’t look anywhere else. My plate is usually full of my other gaming vices.
Rob: TRF

Previous #RPGaDay Posts

#RPGaDay2015 28: Favorite game you no longer play

Last year we celebrated Autocratik’s #RPGaDay, where we spend a month celebrating RPGs, discussing what we love and what we love about them. Here are the responses of the TRF crew. Be sure to tweet, blog, or post your own with the #RPGaDay!

For August 28, What is your favorite game you no longer play?
Aser: It’s hard to believe we haven’t played Eclipse Phase in more than a year, but that’s the sad truth. D20 Modern was fun too, though I’m not sure how those characters would’ve done in the long run.
Chuck: The old DC supers game, the first edition
John: BECMI D&D (might play again soon?) or Marvel.
Jonn: For me, it is D&D 2e/4e. I’ve enjoyed most every version of D&D but recently stopped playing 2e/4e. I have been gravitating towards games like Fate Core and Cortex. I’ve gotten the most enjoyed out of D&D than any other ruleset; however, I slowly gravitated towards simple rulesets that have less rigid systems for combat, skills and (especially) magic systems.
Landan: It has been a long time since I played Saga Ed. Star Wars RPG
Matt: D&D 3.5 did a lot of things very well, and I played it for a long time. While Pathfinder is strictly better in almost every way that matters to me, I had a lot of fun with 3.5.
Megan: WH40k: Rogue Trader. The first RPG I played, and it still has a special place in my heart. I miss Khan, the greatest explorator.
Patrick: Mage: The Awakening
Rob: RIFTS

Previous #RPGaDay Posts