Thank you! I have next to nil artistic ability, so I actually really surprised myself by managing to make something I actually liked with these labels.
AwkwardTurtle
Yeah, I don't know if that tracks. Wingspan has sold more than 1.3 million copies (as of September 2021) which is way way way more than the average board game sells.
I'd far more believe that they couldn't keep up with production than they were intentionally limiting supply.
I will strongly recommend people interested in open licenses look to the existing, more mature licenses, Creative Commons in particular.
The "unresolvable problems" that Paizo ran into with CC are actually very resolvable. If you don't want a sticky, viral license, use CC-BY. If you do want a sticky license, but not for your whole game, split out a separate SRD and put that under CC-BY-SA.
Ooo, fantastic. I've been doing sugar extractions of lemon zest for a mead recently, and we tried drying and blitzing the zests after filtering.
For us the powder was nice (partly because it got a bit candied during the process) but fairly mild in taste. I think it could still absolutely be fun to use to sprinkle on desserts of drinks, for visuals if nothing else.
The nice part is that (almost) nothing in the actual rules is changing. Instead it's clarified rules, expanded explanations, extra options, character backgrounds a la Electric Bastionland, and such.
It's not replacing 1E, it's just more of it.
Plus a nice to hold hardcover print, for those of us that have a sickness where the only cure is more nice looking TTRPG books to put on our shelves.
Also if you use The Estate box set you have a nice, episodic little campaign pre-built for Mausritter. It's a small hex crawl with a bunch of pamphlet adventures scattered around them, complete with hooks to tie them all together.
Might be a good ongoing structure, especially if you have an inconsistent group, or intend to be swapping GMs periodically.
I'd love to do so, but the price seems to jump up by an order of magnitude and it's difficult to justify. I'll probably be trying a combo of filter + sulfites going forward.
Having recently tried the filtering thing, it's still a roll of the dice unless you're using the much more expensive professional grade filters.
It does get your mead clear as hell though, and removes a ton of off flavors.
I ran the first level of ASE (plus the gatehouse mini level) using a slightly modified Electric Bastionland a while ago. We had a great time, super fun to explore. But when my players find a way down to the second floor and I read ahead to see what was coming up it got, for my money, a bit too ridiculous.
We talked it over as a group and ended up dropping the campaign to do something else.
What we played was a ton of fun, and just that first book is a very significant chunk of dungeon crawling, but I just didn't want to run the weird clowns and such that the second floor introduces. Went from wacky and fun, to just over the top weird.
My one criticism of the first floor is that most of the "factions" are intrinsically hostile and non-trivial to try and communicate or parlay with. Sort of ran against the the usual mega-dungeon faction play, but it wasn't hard to tweak on the fly to make things work better.
I've almost certainly go too many books, but for me RPG books are two things:
- Something I do or plan to use the actual contents of. Whether that be rules, tools, or adventures.
- Physical objects that are nice to look at and hold.
Happily the indie RPG scene is very good at making books that cover both of those categies. I will once in a while go through the collection and give away books that I both don't think I'll ever use, and also aren't nice enough as objects to be worth keeping around.
I also have a number of magazine bins filled with zines, which I love but also desperately needs to be pared down.
Also because I will take any opportunity to share a shelfie:
Desk RPG shelf of "close to hand" stuff (and also tall books because they don't fit on the other shelves).
Ancillary bookshelf of RPG stuff:
When in doubt, age it out!
Alternatively you could consider back sweetening, or oaking, to add some extra flavor that might counterbalance it some.
The bochet and berry meads aren't doing anything super out of the ordinary (well, out of the ordinary if you're already caramelizing your honey) but the Strawberry Lemonade one is weird enough that I keep meaning to do a full write up about it.
Just gotta actually get around to setting up a blog or website or something so I can host it someplace useful.