#20 action rpgs
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murmurlilies · 6 months ago
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been playing 1000xRESIST over the last couple days, finished it this morning. genuinely one of the most astonishingly good indie games I've ever played. hell it might be one of the best games I've ever played PERIOD. can't even describe to you the way I felt when I finally rolled credits on it. I feel empty, emotionally exhausted even, but I also feel transformed, inspired. I seriously can't give enough praise to Sunset Visitor for what they've accomplished, especially for their debut title. I'm gonna be thinking about this one for a LONG time.
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oh-meow-swirls · 8 months ago
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batshit insane statement but part of harrisville's theme sounds kinda like part of uhhhhh. one fantasy life song. i don't remember which part but it has fantasy life vibes. they probably had the same composers honestly sfdlkfjlksfjkfkjsf-
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falesten-iw · 30 days ago
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It's surreal to witness how easily some people can ignore the urgent situation in Gaza. They’re watching it unfold live: children and families in Gaza bombed, erased from their homes, but they still act like nothing’s happening. History will look back on this time, and it won't be forgiving. It won’t only remember those who supported the bombings; it will also remember those who sat back, shrugged, and scrolled past without a second thought. It will remember that we, as Palestinians, reached out for help but were met with indifference, silence, and passive inaction. There’s no difference between the Zionists and those who ignor our messages from Gaza. There’s no difference between the Zionists and those who witness our pain without acting. You are witnessing ethnic cleansing, and your reaction is ...... nothing. Blank faces, silence, a refusal to acknowledge the truth unfolding right in front of you. Are you really unable to spare $10, $15 or 20$ to save lives in Gaza? Are you too lazy to respond with even a word of support? Are we asking too much of your time?? Is 5 minutes of your time worth more than our lives in Gaza?? What are you going to tell your children, partner or loved ones when they ask what you did while all this was happening?? “Oh, I ignored their messages.” How will you justify staying silent when they flip through the history books in the future? A simple question for sharks: How do you think your followers will react when they realize you might turn a blind eye in their moments of need? What kind of influencer or artist chooses to ignore the pain of others? It’s been a year. More than 42,000 Palestinian civilians have been killed, and over 100,000 injured. Isn’t that enough? Or is the number still too small for you to care? Should we talk about the 10,000 missing or the countless unjustly imprisoned? Maybe you need to see every building in Gaza reduced to rubble before it finally “counts” for you. Do you feel a flicker of empathy? Of humanity? Or are you still waiting for the “right” moment to speak up and take action? History won’t just remember the silence. It will remember even you who ignored this post when your help and action were needed. My family in Gaza urgently needs your help, so please help us and donate now!
Vetted and shared by @90-ghost: Link.
Verified and shared by @el-shab-hussein: Link
Listed as number 282 in "The Vetted Gaza Evacuation Fundraiser Spreadsheet" compiled by @el-shab-hussein and @nabulsi : Link
Listed on the Butterfly Effect Project, number 957: Link
Additionally, Al Jazeera News has documented apart of my family's case: Link If, for some reason, you couldn't donate via GoFundMe, you can donate via PayPal instead.
Note: There’s even a raffle for a handmade Palestinian thob if you want to participate : Link
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goba-dev · 4 months ago
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CARTER's QUEST Act 1 My story-heavy character-action adventure game, inspired by the likes of Zelda, DMC, and more, is... OUT NOW ON STEAM!!
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indierpgnewsletter · 7 months ago
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The 1980 Dallas RPG was a Soap Opera Wargame?
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In 1980, SPI, a company known for its wargames did a strange thing and published an RPG based on the Dallas tv show. If you don't know anything about the tv show, don't worry, I will protect you. It's too late for me though. You go on ahead. Basically, it was a hit TV show of big money family feuding. Imagine Succession but it was written in the 1980s and instead of TV news, it was an oil company. Unlike the show, the RPG wasn't a hit. The art director of the game famously wrote that they printed 80,000 copies and that was 79,999 more than people wanted. That one person seemed to be this person's grandma who bought it for him to save his soul from D&D/Satan.
What is this game though? Well, James F Dunnigan, founder of SPI and designer of legendary wargame, Panzerblitz, seems to have applied his analytical mind to the internecine squabbles of Dallas and decided that, if you think about it, petty family drama isn't so different from CIA covert ops. And he was right.
As you'd expect from a wargame, the rules are dry and clinical to a fault. You start by picking one of the 9 characters from the show - JR, Jock, Sue Ellen, Pam, etc. They all have stats like Persuasion, Coercion, Seduction. And these stats have attack/defend values. For example, JR has a Coercion of 24 because he's a real jerk. Sue Ellen has a Seduction resist of 18, but it's 20 against JR, because again, he seems to have been a real jerk. This game genuinely went out of its way to make sure you know JR's wife really really doesn't want to go near him.
Each character starts the session ("episode") with a secret story-based objective. Jock wants to run an angry former employee out of town, JR wants to cheat an Arab oil magnate out of 100 million dollars, Sue Ellen wants to do a favour for an old boyfriend. Yeah, what can I say? Some of these objectives feel more important than others. Regardless, you achieve these objectives by controlling 4 or more specific minor characters and organisations by the end of the game. For example, to enact his 100 million dollar plan, JR has to control the Ewing Oil Company, Mustafa Quattara, Professor Bayard, the reporter Mary Cleef, and so on. But characters' objective overlap so Pam also wants Mustafa Quattara and Jock also wants Professor Bayard. These conflicting goals means players need to scheme, negotiate and attack each other so they can win.
The sessions play out in five rounds. Each round, the GM sets the scene. Then, the players can negotiate and make deals. Then, we enter the conflict phase where each player makes three moves - either trying to gain control of uncontrolled NPCs, or attacking another player to steal an NPC from under them, or protecting their own NPCs. And the game throws in little curveballs every round: Oops, some of JR's drinking buddies are in town and he can't say no to them, so his character is out of this round. Hopefully the player has some NPCs that they can use to act instead. Oops, Mustafa Quattara is being chased by assassins. Whoever controls his card has to give it up as he disappears for a bit and comes back uncontrolled. The end result is somewhere in between Vampire the Masquerade (or rather, Undying) and Blood on the Clocktower.
Sure, the math is dense (you roll 2d6 under the difference between the attack value and the defense value, plus or minus any currency spent). Sure, it takes 9 players to really sing. Sure, multiple people can complete their objective so you need to track victory points separately to decide the real winner. Sure, you have to take the homophobia out of the Seduction rules. Sure, roleplaying is completely optional. Sure, sure, sure. The game is a mess. But it's a very playable mess. I'd go so far as to say it's an electric mess. It's shockingly (sorry) fun to play. I think the secret lies in a very clear agenda for the players, a tight boardgame-like action economy, a premise that supports hilarious degrees of pettiness, and an inter-personal experience that demands everyone pay attention to what their friends are doing.
So. Am I planning a full 9 person play-by-post game of this? Yes. Am I thinking of changing the setting and the math? Yes. Is that basically designing a new game? Yes. Should this game be labelled "Powered by Dallas" or, as one of my players suggested, "Hornswoggled by Dallas"? YES.
(This was first published in the Indie RPG Newsletter.)
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thydungeongal · 4 months ago
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Recent posts about levelimg systems and health systems in RPGs reminded me of an SRD I found a while ago, which kinda combines both those things in a cool way. It's called the Xd6 System, is specifically designed for high action, larger than life stories and characters (think stuff like shonen battle anime, mecha, superheroes, etc), and works like this:
Every PC has pool of D6. A pretty big pool, the SRD recommends 20 for the start of a campaign. Whenever you do something that requires a roll, you choose how many dice you want to use, trying to get as many successes as possible. successes are 4-6, and failures are 1-3. Every failure you roll removes a die from your total pool. Also, rolling a 6 allows you to choose to let that die explode (reroll it, and if it's a success, you add that to your total successes), at the risk of it coming up as a failure. Rolling a 1, on the other hand, forces you to reroll a success.
If you run out of dice, your character's out of commission for the rest of the session. But every die lost by the players goes into a separate pool, and at the end of each session, you roll all the dice players lost, add the results to gether, and divide the total equally among the players as EXP, which they can spend to expand their maximum dice pool size, or to buy advantages and remove disadvantages.
Just wanted to share, because I think it's a neat system that encourages players to take bigger swings as a session nears its climax.
Oh this sounds pretty neat! And it's PWYW! I need to look into this, because the ideas here seem solid and it does something which I think more systems should do, which is explain their design!
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item-shoppe · 1 year ago
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Okay, now.
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I can give you this Medical Kit and half a roll of Bandages. I can personally vouch for the bandages, they do stop blood from seeping out of wounds. What do you say, do we have a deal?
Would you be interested in trading some medical supplies for an entire basket of unripened plums? You get the plums. Just curious. No reason.
-@magic-foraging-tooltips
I'll get back to you tomorrow, also how did you get in, shop's closed
I mean yes I'm interested.
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ohnoitstbskyen · 5 months ago
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hello ! do you have any thoughts about the new dragon age game and the info that's come out for it?
Some. Based on the limited footage I've been looking at (and for context, I haven't kept up with the promotion beyond the 20 minute snippet of gameplay footage they showed after the disastrous first trailer), it looks like it's trying to follow the legacy of Mass Effect 2 and Dragon Age 2 in terms of gameplay structure. Mission-based, fairly linear, constructed around setpieces and combat encounters with relatively minimal exploration and puzzles.
Which isn't necessarily a bad thing - Mass Effect 2 and Dragon Age 2 are the best games in each franchise - but I also get a sense that the combat gameplay has been streamlined down the point that it's functionally indistinguishable from any other standard 3D action hack-and-slash (somewhat in the mold of FF16), which feels very much like a play for mainstream triple-A broad audience appeal.
In the context that BioWare is pretty commonly considered to be on the EA chopping block should their next games flop, that feels like they didn't choose that combat style because it's what they really wanted, or what their core audience is interested in, or even because it's what's best for the game and its narrative and feeling. It feels like they chose it because they need John Gamer™, who buys 2-3 big triple-A game titles a year and who's never touched an RPG before, to spend some money on their game by convincing him that it's a cool fantasy hack-and-slash all about doing badass backflip jump slashes with a tone like Guardians of the Galaxy, and not a big, cheesy, lore-heavy fantasy soap opera / horny dating sim with a combat system bolted onto the side.
It feels like a creative decision pushed by someone in a suit jacket and graphic tee citing the need to be "data informed" about design decisions, and who, up until the moment Baldur's Gate 3 came out, was convinced that hard systems-driven RPGs were a niche product for a tiny audience that could never make real money because they surveyed 6000 Call of Duty players who said fantasy is for queers and losers.
Perfectly happy to be wrong about all of this, mind you, and since it'll be on GamePass, I will obviously be playing it, because even when Dragon Age is not very good, it is still Dragon Age and that's my goddamn trash right there.
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s10127470 · 3 months ago
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Nicktoons Unite: Rewritten
I'm pretty sure most of you reading this know about the Nicktoons Unite series.
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Running from 2005 to 2008 with a total of four games, the series saw some of Nickelodeon's most popular Nicktoons coming together to stop whatever the big threat of the game there was.
Even after almost 20 years, these games are still fondly remembered for how well they utilized the crossover aspect and how cool it was to see so many of Nickelodeon's most popular characters actually interacting with each other.
But apart from that, the games are pretty mid (specifically in terms of gameplay).
So recently, I've been thinking about what the Nicktoons Unite series would've been like if it actually had good gameplay and even went a little more all-out with the crossover aspect than it already did.
And being the madman that I am, I'm gonna make this a 4-part series!
Starting off with the game that started it all, Nicktoons Unite!
So without further ado, let's get this party started!
Gameplay and Presentation:
Nicktoons Unite! would still have the action-RPG style, but a little better.
And for a few reasons.
For starters, the characters will move much faster than they previously did.
Which is something I appreciate the later games for doing.
And the combat is a lot more fleshed-out.
Each character has a light attack, a heavy attack, a grab and a throw, a trip, a stun, a pop-up, an aerial attack, a block, a dodge, a ground slam, a double jump (though that varies between characters), 6 or 7 special attacks, one or two boosts, a few passive abilities, and a super attack that is able to unleash an insane amount of damage across a wider range.
Along with that, there will be enemies with specific resistances.
For example, say you’re dealing with an enemy that’s heavily resistant to energy/elemental/magical attacks.
So in order to beat that enemy, you’ll have to switch to a character who’s heavily reliant on physical attacks.
Since this is an action RPG, there will be tons of strategy.
And in terms of presentation, the worlds would be more expanded than they originally were.
Including major locations and characters that weren't in the original.
But biggest glow-up in the presentation would be with the music.
Everybody knows that Nicktoons Unite's music is pretty weak.
It's basically elevator music, and doesn't really fit the worlds we go to at all.
But here, the music would actually strive to replicate the scores of each Nicktoon.
So much so that I could imagine they would even receive help from the composers of those respective Nicktoons.
But don't worry, Guy Moon isn't gonna be giving every action its own music cue here.
The Story:
The overall story is more or less the same, but has a lot more content here.
First off, let's talk about the Nicktoons themselves.
The team still consists of Jimmy Neutron, SpongeBob SquarePants, Timmy Turner and Danny Phantom.
But this version would see five more members of the team.
These being Jenny Wakeman, Otto Rocket, Tommy Pickles (the All Grown Up! one), Tak and Avatar Aang.
As for why they're here.
I remember reading something somewhere about how Rocket Power, All Grown Up!, and Tak and the Power of Juju were all meant to be featured in Nicktoons Unite!
As for Jenny and Aang.....why shouldn't they be here?
Jenny especially since at the time of this game's release, My Life as a Teenage Robot has been around for two years.
I've always found it weird how she was never included in the main stories of any of the games.
I'm guessing that they wanted the Nicktoons to be a boys-only thing.
And given Nickelodeon's track record, I could definitely see that being the case....
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Though I have no clue why Aang was never included in these games, especially since Avatar: The Last Airbender was one of the biggest Nicktoons on the channel during its run.
Maybe it has to do with the fact that it is was the only Nicktoon at the time at was primarily serialized.
So trying to figure out where the games could take place during the three Books would've been tricky.
But given that Avatar has comics in the Nickelodeon Magazine that took place between their adventures and are presumably canon, I think they could've pulled it off.
Anyway, just like the original version of the game, these nine have teamed up thanks to The Syndicate.
Which now consists of Professor Calamitous, Plankton, Mr. Crocker, Vlad Plasmius, Vexus, Tlaloc and Zuko.
As for how they're each contributing to their team.
Calamitous is who's creating The Doomsday Machine.
Plankton, Crocker, Vlad, Tlaloc and Zuko are each obtaining energy from their respective worlds to power it.
Those energy sources being jellyfish electricity, fairy magic, ghost energy, juju magic, and waterbending & earthbending.
And Vexus is creating an army of special robots for The Syndicate to use in their respective worlds.
Thought with all being said, you're probably wondering why the hell Otto and Tommy are here since they have no notable villains to speak of.
Well it's because The Syndicate have already conquer their respective worlds and are planning to make the inhabitants into cybernetic slaves.
And so, with our heroes united, they decide to head to Ocean Shores and Eucaipah (the All Grown Up! world) to free them first from The Syndicate's rule.
Upon arriving in Ocean Shores, they find the city to be particularly deserted.
But soon enough, they do manage to run into Twister and Sam.
The two reveal that the people of Ocean Shores have been captured by the Syndicate's troops and taken away.
Luckily, Twister and Sam were able to escape.
But the likes of Reggie, Raymundo, Tito and Noelani weren't so lucky....
And with the knowledge of The Syndicate planning on turning the residents into cybernetic slaves, the Nicktoons concur that there's some kind of base in this world where the process is bound to take place.
And so, our heroes decide to search around the city in order to find said base.
The world of Ocean Shores would consist of the following sub-areas:
The Cul-de-sac, Ocean Streets, Madtown, Rocket Beach, The Boardwalk, The Woods and The Town Dump.
And during their search, The Nicktoons find themselves fighting off Syndicate Bots resembling skateboarders, roller-skaters and surfers.
After some time, our heroes run into Eddie, who also escaped capture.
He reveals that the citizens of Ocean Shores have been taken to The Pier, which has been turned into factory.
And with that, The Nicktoons decide to head there.
The Pier Factory would sport a circus/carnival theming to it.
With Syndicate Bots resembling clowns constantly attacking you.
After fighting through the hordes of robo-clowns, our heroes eventually make it to the holding area where the citizens of Ocean Shores are being kept.
Before they can free them, The Nicktoons find themselves having to fight a robotic extreme sports star known Rad-Tron 3000 (who would be voiced by Rob Paulsen).
Rad-Tron attacks with four different modes.
Skateboard mode has him speeding all over the place on his board, all while ramming you his helmeted head.
Roller-skate mode is pretty similar to skateboard mode, but he attacks you with kicks and swings from a hockey stick.
Surfing mode has him ride a surfboard that can automatically create an actual wave of water.
And snowboard is pretty similar to surfing mode, but does it with a wave of snow that can slow down The Nicktoons.
Luckily, our heroes are able to defeat Rad-Tron and free the citizens of Ocean Shores.
And with Ocean Shore now free, they decide to head to Eucaipah next.
Upon arriving there, just like with Ocean Shores, they find the place completely deserted.
However, they would soon run into Chuckie and Susie, who reveal that same thing that happened in Ocean Shores happened to them as well, and that they were only ones who manage to avoid capture.
And so, our heroes head off to find where the citizens are being taken.
The areas of this world include:
The Pickles' House, The Neighborhood, Eucaipah Streets, Jim Jr. Junior High School, and The Mall.
The Nicktoons eventually find the factory, which is now where The Java Lava used to be.
The factory here has an overall fruit-theme to it, and the Syndicate Bots use special guns that shoot juice.
As for the boss here, it's a robotic fat guy known as The Juicer (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson).
He attacks with punches, charges, throwing large fruits, and shoot powerful streams of juice out of his mouth.
Luckily, our heroes defeat him and free the people of Eucaipah.
With that out of the way, The Nicktoons finally decided it's time to take on their villains.
Their first stop is Tremorton, so they can stop Vexus.
Upon arriving, they come across a shocking sight….
Cluster Prime flying high the above the city.
Soon enough, they find themselves surrounded by Cluster Drones.
Thanks to them, our heroes find out that with the help of The Syndicate, Vexus has reclaimed her throne as the ruler of Cluster Prime.
Along with overthrowing and imprisoning the current ruler (and her daughter) Vega in the process.
But she’s not the only one.
Vexus has also imprison Nora, Brad, Sheldon and Tuck.
And if that wasn’t bad enough, Vexus has also conquered all of Tremorton and are forcing the residents to work in the factory creating the Syndicate Bots.
And so, our heroes decide to first free Tremorton from the rule of The Cluster, fighting off Cluster Drones and Syndicate Bots along the way.
The areas of this world include:
Downtown, Tremorton High School, and The Neighborhood.
After defeating all the Drones and Bots and freeing the city, The Nicktoons decide to head to Cluster Prime to confront Vexus and free Jenny’s mother and friends.
Along the way, they fight themselves fighting even more Cluster Drones.
They even run into a mini-boss against Smytus and Krackus.
Krackus attacks with a electricity ray, and Smytus attacks with punches, ground pounds, flying charges, and when he enters his rage mode, claw slashes and shooting spikes.
After defeating those two, our heroes finally reach Vexus, who has her captives right next her and starts threatening their lives.
And soon enough, the battle begins.
For her boss fight, Vexus attacks with punches, kicks, ground smashes, flying charges, teleporting attacks and energy blasts.
After defeating her, Vexus declares that the Nicktoons may’ve stopped here, they still have the rest of The Syndicate to worry about, right before fleeing through a portal.
And with Tremorton, Cluster Prime, and Jenny’s loved ones now freed, The Nicktoons decided to head to Amity Park next to stop Vlad.
Some time later, the team land in Casper High…..or where it used to be.
As they immediately find out, Vlad tore down the school to make way for his new castle.
And he’s captured Danny’s parents Jack and Maddie, Mr. Lancer, and a few of Danny’s classmates such as Dash.
When The Nicktoons try to attack him on the spot, Vlad knocks them all out and banishes them to The Ghost Zone Prison, where they’ll have to deal with Walker.
When they wake up, our heroes find themselves in a prison cell.
Luckily, they manage to escape with some help from The Box Ghost.
And soon enough, they start making their way out the prison, fighting off ghost prison guards along the way.
But right when they’re about finally be free, Walker stops them.
And thus, a boss fight commences.
Walker attacks with punches, kicks, stomps, and ecto-energy beams that he shoots with finger guns.
After defeating him, The Nicktoons finally escape and soon find themselves traversing through The Ghost Zone, trying to find the ghost portal that leads into Fenton Works.
Along the way, they find themselves fighting off all kinds of ghosts.
This section of the game will essentially be a boss-rush, with our heroes having fight against several of Danny's foes.
This include Skulker, The Lunch Lady, Ember McClain, Sidney Poindexter, Technus, Desiree, Johnny 13 and The Dragon Ghost.
As for how each boss would play out.
Skulker attacks with claw slashes, kicks, flying swipes, laser beams and missiles.
The Lunch Lady attacks with charges, throwing fast giant balls of meat, and mini meat monsters.
Ember attacks with guitar swings, sound waves from playing her guitar, and shooting fireballs from her hair.
Sidney attacks with eye beams, ink squirts from his pen, and telekinetically hurling rocks.
Technus (using his robot armor seen in Attack of the Killer Garage Sale and Prisoners of Love) attacks with ground slams, electrical blasts and mechanical tendrils.
Desiree attacks with enlarged fists, energy blasts, and various elemental blasts (fire, ice, wind and electricity)
Johnny 13 attacks with punches, kicks, chain whip strikes, ramming into you with his bike, and commanding his Shadow to attack.
And The Dragon Ghost fights with claw slashes, stomps, tail swipes and fire breath.
After defeating then all, The Nicktoons finally escape The Ghost Zone and make it to Fenton Works.
A short while later, our heroes meet up with Sam, Tucker and Jazz in the Amity Streets.
The trio reveal that they found a way into Vlad's Castle, that being a short-cut through The Graveyard.
And so, The Nicktoons head off to their destination, fighting Syndicate Bots resembling skeletons, vampires and zombies along the way.
But along the way, they actually gain a temporary ally in the form of Valerie, who's also trying to stop Vlad.
Although she refuses at first, she does eventually accept The Nicktoons' help (albeit begrudgingly since they do have the ghost she hates the most as a member of their team).
Valerie herself fights with charges on her hoverboard, her Ecto-Grenade Launcher, ecto guns and missiles.
Upon returning to the castle, the heroes destroy the generators that Vlad's been using to harness the ghost energy from The Ghost Zone.
And soon enough, The Nicktoons finally confront Vlad again in his throne room.
For his boss fight, Vlad attacks with punches, kicks, ecto-energy rays, and duplicates of himself.
He also teleports all over the place and crafts an energy shield around himself sometimes, which Danny will have to use Jack to break through.
After defeating him, Vlad flees through a portal.
And after freeing Danny's close ones, The Nicktoons end up doing the same thing when Jack, Maddie and Valerie decide to jump Danny.
And so, with Amity Park now free, the heroes decide to head to Pupununu next to stop Tlaloc.
Upon arriving in the Pupununu Village, The Nicktoons find out that the villagers have been turned into sheep once again.
Luckily, with the combined magic of Tak and Cosmo & Wanda, they're able to return about half of the village back to normal, including Jibola and Lok.
Thanks to Jibola, the heroes find out that Tlaloc is planning to steal the Tikis in order to summon the Jujus.
And upon doing so, he would instantly capture them and use a special generator to extract their magical energy.
And so, The Nicktoons find themselves having to retrieve the Tikis of Dead Juju, Dinky, Caged Juju, Two-Headed Juju, Belly Juju and Mind-Reading Juju.
This race against time will take our team to The Burial Grounds, Dryrock Canyon, Gloomleaf Swamp, Chicken Island, Wetstone Lake, and Gyre Mountain.
Along the way, they'll be accompanied by Flora and Fauna.
Flora fights with nature energy blasts, whirlwinds, leafy wind blasts and vines that sprout out of the ground and either hit or grab enemies.
Fauna fights by turning into different animals. These include a rhino, an orangutan, a ram, a bear, a boar, a crocodile, a jaguar, a eagle, a python, and an elephant.
And over the course of their journey in this world, The Nicktoons find themselves dealing with Syndicate Bots resembling monkeys, emus, sharks, tigers, alligators, wild dogs and wolves.
Along with some Nerbils.
But unfortunately, everytime, they end up being too late as the Tikis end up getting swiped by Pins and Needles.
Eventually, The Nicktoons head to Tlaloc's lair, The Dark Temple.
There, they find the summoned Jujus, including The Moon Juju, who was captured first via Tlaloc stealing the Moonstones like before, having their energy extracted.
Luckily, our heroes manage to free them and destroy the generators harnessing their energy.
And soon enough, they confront Tlaloc.
Tlaloc attacks with dark magic blasts, lightning bolts, summoning giant thorny tendrils, and casting spells that temporarily turn our heroes into animals.
After defeating him, Tlaloc flees through a portal.
With Jujus now freed and being able to return the rest of the Pupununu people back to normal, The Nicktoons decide to make The Four Nations their next stop in order to stop Zuko.
They arrive at The Southern Air Temple, where they run into Sokka, Momo and Appa.
Sokka reveals that Zuko's crew has kidnapped Katara and the three of them have trying to chase them down.
And with the knowledge of The Syndicate wanting to obtain earthbending to power their Doomsday Machine, our heroes decide to head to both Omashu and The Earth Kingdom Village to save the earthbenders there, namely Bumi and Haru.
Along the way, they find themselves fighting Syndicate-Bots that resemble Eastern dragons and Fire Nation soldiers.
And you would expect, Sokka serves as our ally for this world.
He fights with swings from his club and throws from his boomerang.
Along the way, they also fight against Zhao in Omashu.
He attacks with fiery blasts, fire circles and fire fists.
Unfortunately, the heroes end up too late both times as Zuko's crew manage to take all the earthbenders away.
But not all hope is lost, as while in The Earth Kingdom Village, they received a mysterious note revealing that Katara, Bumi, Haru and the rest of the earthbenders have been taken to The Fire Temple on Crescent Island.
(We would later find out that this note was sent by Iroh)
And so, our heroes head there to free the captives.
After freeing Katara and the earthbenders and destroying the generators, The Nicktoons finally confront Zuko.
Zuko fights with blazing rings, fire fists, fire knives, fire blades, fire streams, fire lashes, and fire walls.
After defeating him, Zuko flees through portal.
With Katara and the earthbenders now free, The Nicktoons head to The Bikini Bottom next to take on Plankton.
Upon arriving at Conch Street, they find the place completely deserted.
And soon enough, they find themselves surrounded by Syndicate-Bots resembling octopuses, eels and barracuda.
Luckily, Sandy comes to help them out.
Sandy fights with punches, kicks, karate chops and lasso grapples & throws.
After going through The Bikini Streets and rendezvousing at The Krusty Krab, Sandy reveals that Plankton has imprisoned the people of The Bikini Bottom, kidnapped Mr. Krabs and has been using jellyfish capturing harvesters to extract their electrical stinging power.
Luckily, she's been trying to take down the harvesters alongside a small resistance she's built.
Soon enough, she sends our heroes to Jellyfish Fields to destroy the harvesters and meet up with the two agents she sent.
Those agents being Patrick and Squidward (who was forced to accompany Patrick).
Unfortunately, the duo end up getting sucked up by one of the harvesters.
Aftering destroying the harvesters and going through Kelp Forest, our heroes find themselves in The Ship Graveyard, where they encounter The Flying Dutchman, who plans on making them his crew for all eternity.
Luckily, Danny persuades him to let them go in exchange for bringing back his old crewmates, which he accepts.
After retrieving all his crewmates, The Flying Dutchman let's our heroes go.
A short while later, they arrive at The Chum Bucket, where they free Patrick, Squidward and the jellyfish, and destroy the generators harnessing the jellyfishes' sting.
And soon enough, they confront Plankton on the roof on his restaurant.
Plankton attacks with a giant robotic crab, which performs swings with its claws, ground slams, and shoots powerful streams of water.
After defeating Plankton, he flees through a portal.
And so, after freeing Mr. Krabs, The Nicktoons head to Dimmsdale to stop Crocker.
Upon arriving there, they find out that Dimmsdale Elementary has been torn down and replaced with a golden fortress built by Crocker.
Soon enough, our heroes find themselves making their way through Crocker's Fortress in order to shut down the power, all while dealing Syndicate Bots resembling elves, pixies and Anti-Fairies.
Along the way, they also free some of the residents of Dimmsdale, who were enslaved by Crocker.
These include the likes of Mr and Mrs. Turner, Chester and AJ, and Trixie Tang.
After doing all that, the heroes finally decided to head to Fairy World to free the fairies and destroyed the generators harnessing their magic.
Along the way, they receive an ally in the form of Jorgen von Strangle.
He attacks with punches, kicks, ground slams and swings from his massive wand.
After that's all done, our heroes finally confront Crocker at The Big Wand.
Crocker attacks with a flying exosuit, which performs punches, flying charges, and magical energy blasts.
After defeating Crocker, he flees through a portal.
A short while later, The Nicktoons finally return back to Retroville.
Jimmy deduces that they need to go the base of The Syndicate and stop them once and for all.
Only problem: they have no clue where it is.
Also, they run into Cindy, who reveals that The Syndicate have also taken over Retroville.
However, their prayers would be answered when Jimmy discovers the Goddard has flea-bots on him, which he deduces that Calamitous had them placed on Goddard in order to spy on Jimmy, hench how he was able to know about the Universal Portal Machine.
And so, our heroes shrink themselves on got onto Goddard and find the main flea-bot.
After battling through swarms of flea-bots, they find the main flea-bot, defeat it, and uses it circuitry to locate Calamitous' lair.
Soon, our heroes make their way through the lair (fighting off all the Syndicate Bots they did before) and finally confront The Syndicate, who proceeded to activate the Doomsday Machine.
Their boss fight has the group constantly switch between member and shooting at The Nicktoons.
Each of the villains' respective dome have some kind of special projectile.
Calamitous shoots electricity, Plankton shoots water, Crocker shoots magical energy stars, Vlad shoots ecto-energy, Vexus shoots energy blasts, Tlaloc shoots dark magic, and Zuko shoots fire.
Luckily, the heroes manage to take down each of the domes' generators, taking down the domes and allowing them to defeat The Syndicate.
A short while later, The Nicktoons have turned Calamitous into the authorities and have trapped each of their respective villains.
Plankton's stuck in a pickle jar.
Crocker's trapped in a Hypercube.
Vlad's been stuffed into the Fenton Thermos.
Vexus has been deactivated and turned into pieces.
Tlaloc's been turned back into a sheep again.
And Zuko's been frozen solid.
And so, our heroes bid each other farewell and return to their respective worlds.
But not before Jimmy gives each of them a Neutronic Recaller, in case something like this happens again.
Playable Characters:
SpongeBob SquarePants:
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-Light Attack: A triple karate chop.
-Heavy Attack: A roundhouse kick.
-Grab and Throw: An elastic grab and toss.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A double-handed smack.
-Pop-Up: A high kick.
-Aerial Attack: A drop kick.
-Block: Holding foam-gloved hands out in front.
-Dodge: A roll.
-Ground Slam: An upside-down head smash.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Chops of Fury: Unleashes a flurry of karate chops onto enemies.
-Water Shoot: Soaks up water whenever they're standing in a body of it and shoots it out as a powerful stream.
-Bubble Bomb: Crafts a solid bubble and when thrown, explodes on impact.
-SpongeBall: Morphs into a ball and bounces all over the place, doing more damage with each drop.
-Jellyfish Swing: Swings a jellyfish net at enemies, trapping them in the process.
-Doodlebob Lure: Uses magical pencil to create Doodlebob, who attacks enemies on sight.
Boosts:
-Kar-Rah-Tay Fury: Taps into heart of karate, increase the damage done by his attacks.
-Bubble Barrier: Crafts bubble shields around himself and allies, decreasing damage taken.
Passive Skills:
-Spongy Skin: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-FUN Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by FUN attacks.
-Kar-Rah-Tay Master: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Sailor's Eye: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Parachute Pants: Grants the ability to glide via inflated pants.
Super Attack:
-Wipe Out: Absorbs a massive amount of water, jumps into the air and performs a ground slam, unleashing water all over the place, washing enemies away.
Jimmy Neutron:
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-Light Attack: A triple laser saber slash.
-Heavy Attack: A dashing laser saber slash.
-Grab and Throw: Goddard rushes in, grabs an enemy with his mouth and throws them.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: An electric discharge sent by watch.
-Pop-Up: An upward laser saber slash.
-Aerial Attack: A downward laser saber stab.
-Block: Crafts an energy shield around himself.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: A smash with the Neutronized Baseball Bat.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Tornado Blaster: Uses a special gun that shoots a powerful whirlwind, sucking enemies up and throwing them into the air.
-Neutron Flare: Shoots a flare from a repulsor cannon that sets enemies ablaze.
-Quarterback Gear: Uses a football helmet to charge into enemies, knocking them down in the process.
-Hey Batta Batta!: Delivers a powerful swing with his Neutronized Baseball Bat.
-Shrink Ray: Uses Shrink Ray to shrink enemies down, lowering their defenses.
-Plant Attack: Sics the Girl-Eating Plant onto enemies.
-Brain Drain: Uses the Brain Drain 8000 to confuse enemies, lowering their defenses.
Boosts:
-Speed Up: Uses Speed Shoes to increase his movement and attack speed.
-Energy Barricade: Crafts energy shields for himself and the entire team, decreasing damage taken.
Passive Skills:
-Brain Boost: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Tech Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by tech attacks.
-Laser Fighter: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Genius Sight: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Jet Pack: Grants the ability to fly via Jet Pack.
Super Attack:
-Think Big: Uses the Shrink Ray to make himself giant, and proceeds to stomp all over the place.
Timmy Turner:
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-Light Attack: A triple Cosmo Hammer swing.
-Heavy Attack: A Cosmo Hammer smash.
-Grab and Throw: Wanda turns into a giant hand, grabs an enemy and throws them.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: An magical blast sent by Wanda.
-Pop-Up: An upward Cosmo Hammer swing.
-Aerial Attack: A downward Cosmo Hammer swing.
-Block: Crafts an magical shield around himself.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: A smash with Cosmo Hammer.
-Double Jump: Yes.
Special Attacks:
-Star Flinger: Wanda turns into a special cannon that shoots magical energy stars.
-Freeze Wand: Uses a special wand that freezes enemies, bodies of water, and makes bridges.
-Magical Blast: Shoots a blast of magical energy from his eyes.
-Egg Bomb: Throws an Easter egg, exploding on impact.
-Magic Floss: Uses Magic Floss to lasso, swing around, and throw enemies.
-Magic Chucks: Cosmo and Wanda turn into a pair of nunchunks, which Timmy uses to unleashes a flurry of swings onto enemies.
-Pinata Smash: Has Cosmo and Wanda turn enemies into pinatas, with the possibility of containing goods.
Boosts:
-Cleft the Boy-Chin Wonder: Turns into his famous alter-ego, allowing him to attack enemies with punches, kicks and the Cleft-Arm.
-Crash Nebula: Changes into the costumes of one of his favorite heroes, allowing him to attack enemies with a laser gun and a laser cannon, along with granting the ability of flight.
Passive Skills:
-Godchild's Luck: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Magic Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by magic attacks.
-Hammer Time: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Star Struck: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Remedy: 40% chance that Timmy will have Cosmo and Wanda revive a fallen ally.
Super Attack:
-Balloon Bash: Has Cosmo and Wanda summon a whole bunch of balloons, which then explode all over the place.
Otto Rocket:
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-Light Attack: A triple punch.
-Heavy Attack: A roundhouse kick with rollerblades.
-Grab and Throw: A simple pull and push.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A double-handed smack.
-Pop-Up: An upward hockey stick swing.
-Aerial Attack: A downward hockey stick swing.
-Block: Immediately puts on hockey gear and holds hands out in front.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: A smash with hockey stick.
-Double Jump: Yes.
Special Attacks:
-Skate Strike: Performs a double-kick with his skateboard.
-Hockey Bash: Performs a straight of swings with hockey stick.
-Surf's Up: Rides on a surfboard, knocking down enemies in the process.
-Pucker Up: Launches hockey pucks at enemies.
-Snow Surf: Rides on a snowboard, freezing any enemies he hits.
-Alley Oop: Jumps into the air and spikes down a basketball at enemies below.
Boosts:
-Skate Speed: Rides on rollerblades to increase movement and attack speed.
-Safety Gear: Puts on skating gear, decreasing damage taken.
Passive Skills:
-Pro Skater: Increases chances of dodging attacks, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Sports Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by sport attacks.
-Rocket Bash: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Eye Coordination: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
Super Attack:
-Rocket Rush: Skates all over the place, ramming into and knocking down enemies.
Tommy Pickles:
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-Light Attack: A triple screwdriver baton swing.
-Heavy Attack: A double-handed screwdriver baton wack.
-Grab and Throw: A simple pull and push.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A screwdriver baton smack.
-Pop-Up: An upward screwdriver baton swing.
-Aerial Attack: A downward screwdriver baton swing.
-Block: Pulls out a textbook and holds it out in front.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: A smash with screwdriver baton.
-Double Jump: Yes.
Special Attacks:
-Baton Batter: Repeatedly swings his screwdriver baton at enemies.
-Blinding Shot: Uses camera to temporarily blind and stun enemies.
-Reptar Bike: Rides on a Reptar-themed bike and rams into enemies.
-Soda Shooter: Shoots enemies with a special water gun full of soda.
-Rope Whip: Whips enemies with a jump rope.
-Soda Bomb: Launches a shaken bottle of soda, which explodes upon impact.
Boosts:
-Reptar Rush: Rides around on Reptar Bike to increase movement and attack speed.
-Movie Director: Uses camera to film and distract enemies, lowering their defenses.
Passive Skills:
-Determination: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Gadget Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by gadget attacks.
-Screwdrive: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Carbonated Crush: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
Super Attack:
-Reptar Fire: Rides around the Reptar Bike while it breaths fire all over the place.
Jenny Wakeman:
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-Light Attack: A triple punch.
-Heavy Attack: A roundhouse kick.
-Grab and Throw: An Extension Arms grab and toss.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A double-handed smack.
-Pop-Up: A high kick.
-Aerial Attack: A drop kick.
-Block: Holds out the Poppin' Shield.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: An double-handed ground smash.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Laser Blaster: Morphs arm into a blaster and shoots at enemies.
-Shiva Swords: Grows more four arms, places scimitars in each one, and rapidly slashes enemies.
-Fire Blaster: Shoots fire from a cannon via her arm, setting enemies ablaze.
-Ice Blaster: Shoots ice from a cannon via her arm, freezing enemies.
-Turbine Hair: Turns her pigtails into massive turbines, blowing enemies away.
-Thunder Fist: Morphs her hand into a giant flail and smashes enemies with it.
-Buzz Saws: Morphs hands into buzz saws and slashes enemies with it.
Boosts:
-Fists of Fury: Makes her fists much bigger and spikier, increasing attack damage.
-Rocket Blades: Morphs her feet into rocket-powered roller blades, increasing her attack speed.
Passive Skills:
-Adolescent Android: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Weapons Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by weapon attacks.
-Titanium Tank: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Precise Aim: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Mechanical Might: Grants the ability to lift and move heavy objects.
-Robotic Flight: Grants the ability to fly.
Super Attack:
-Heavy Artillery: Unleashes a barrage of lasers and missiles all over the place.
Danny Phantom:
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-Light Attack: A triple punch.
-Heavy Attack: A roundhouse kick.
-Grab and Throw: An simple grab and throw.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A double-handed smack.
-Pop-Up: An uppercut.
-Aerial Attack: A drop kick.
-Block: Crafts an ecto-energy shield around himself.
-Dodge: A phasing side-step.
-Ground Slam: An double-handed ground smash.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Ecto-Strike: Channels ecto-energy all over his body and delivers a flurry of punches and kicks, doing more damage with each one.
-Ghostly Ray: Blasts a ray of ectoplasmic energy.
-Creepy Charge: Delivers a flying headbutt at enemies, knocking them back.
-Fenton Thermos: Uses the Fenton Thermos to suck enemies up and spit them out.
-Overshadow: Takes over the body of any nearby enemy, gaining their abilities.
-Ecto-Ball: Throws a massive ball of ecto-energy, which explodes upon impact.
-Frightful Flames: Throws green fireballs at enemies, setting them ablaze.
Boosts:
-Disappear: Makes himself and allies invisible, increasing their defenses due to most enemies not being able to detect them.
-Phase Shift: Makes himself intangible, allowing him to go through walls.
Passive Skills:
-Halfa Physiology: Increases chances of dodging attacks, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Ghost Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by ghost attacks.
-Phantom Pummel: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Ectoplasmic Eye: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Paranormal Power: Grants the ability to lift and move heavy objects.
-Ghostly Flight: Grants the ability to fly.
Super Attack:
-Ghostly Wail: Unleashes powerful waves of ecto-energy via a scream.
Tak:
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-Light Attack: A triple staff swing.
-Heavy Attack: A double-handed staff wack.
-Grab and Throw: A simple pull and push.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A magical discharge.
-Pop-Up: An upward staff swing.
-Aerial Attack: A downward staff swing.
-Block: Crafts a magical shield around himself.
-Dodge: A roll.
-Ground Slam: A smash with staff.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Juju Blast: Shoots a beam of juju magic.
-Thunder Strike: Summons lightning to strike enemies.
-Juju Bolts: Shoots multiple beams of juju magic at enemies.
-Jaguar Claw: Summons a giant claw to strike enemies.
-Juju Slam: Jumps high into the air and comes back down, delivering a powerful shockwave of juju magic.
-Dragon Breath: Breaths fire, setting enemies ablaze.
-Piranha Swarm: Summons a swarm a magical piranhas to attack enemies.
Boosts:
-Crazy Feet: Uses juju magic to increase the attack and movement speed of himself and his allies.
-Restoration Spell: Uses juju magic to heal himself and allies.
Passive Skills:
-Pupununu Power: Increases all resistances, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Juju Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by juju attacks.
-Staff of Dreams: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Juju Sight: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Glider Cape: Grants the ability to glide via cape.
Super Attack:
-Juju Surge: Unleashes a massive shockwave of juju magic across the battlefield.
Avatar Aang:
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-Light Attack: A triple staff swing.
-Heavy Attack: A double-handed staff wack.
-Grab and Throw: A simple pull and push.
-Trip: A sweep kick.
-Stun: A light gust of air.
-Pop-Up: An upward staff swing.
-Aerial Attack: A downward staff swing.
-Block: Crafts a windy barrier around himself.
-Dodge: A side-step.
-Ground Slam: A smash with staff.
-Double Jump: No.
Special Attacks:
-Air Ball: Hurls a powerful ball of air at enemies.
-Air Scooter: Rides on a ball of air, running down any enemies in his way.
-Air Blast: Sends a powerful gust of wind towards enemies.
-Air Cyclone: Creates a whirlwind that sucks up enemies and sends them flying.
-Water Whip: Whips enemies with a think stream of water.
-Ice Spear: Hurls a long icy shard.
-Water Wave: Rides on a wave, knocking down enemies.
Boosts:
-Air Shield: Crafts windy barriers around himself and allies, decreasing taken damage.
-Ice Shield: Crafts icy barriers around himself and allies, decreasing taken damage.
Passive Skills:
-Avatar Spirit: Increases chances of dodging attacks, along with granting a natural increase in attack and defense.
-Airbending Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by airbending attacks.
-Waterbending Mastery: Increases damage and chances for criticals done by waterbending attacks.
-Airbending Staff: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by melee attacks.
-Air Aim: Increases damage done and chances for criticals done by ranged attacks.
-Glider Staff: Grants the ability to glide via staff.
Super Attack:
Avatar State: Goes into the Avatar State and unleashes massive amounts of wind and water all over the battlefield.
Well that was Nicktoons Unite: Rewritten!
I really had fun making this one.
Expanding the story and adding more characters and worlds to explore.
You can't tell me this doesn't sound this would be the coolest thing to check out in 2005!
Anyway, let me know what you guys think about it.
And if you could, and me some ideas for the sequels.
Note: Also, I really hope that @nicktoonsunite sees this! I would really like their feedback on this.
54 notes · View notes
felassan · 4 months ago
Text
Game Informer "Hub" archive
This post was like their index/contents page of links to every article.
(Please note that in some cases article titles were updated at some point after first being published, e.g. the "A Deep Dive Into Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Expansive Character Creator" article is the same article as "Dragon Age: The Veilguard's Character Creator Is BioWare's Most Robust Yet".)
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"Dragon Age: The Veilguard Exclusive Coverage [note: the inclusion of the listing for GI's final piece of coverage on DA:TV - the art book announcement - was not captured in time by the Wayback Machine from what I can see, and so while the article itself is still available to read, it does not appear in this record of the Hub. it would have appeared here first before the listing for the article on Bellara, which is below]"
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"Everything We Know About Dragon Age: The Veilguard's Bellara Lutara We spoke to BioWare about Bellara Lutara, the first companion players will recruit in Dragon Age: The Veilguard. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 22, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Here's The Main Voice Cast For Dragon Age: The Veilguard The protagonist, Rook, will have four options to choose from. by Charles Harte on Jul 22, 2024 at 11:24 AM"
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"BioWare Leads Discuss The Making Of Dragon Age: The Veilguard Corinne Busche, John Epler, and Mark Darrah dive into BioWare's long-awaited RPG. by Alex Van Aken on Jul 19, 2024 at 02:43 PM"
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"Dragon Age: The Veilguard Is 'Respectful And Referential' To Previous Games Without Making Them Mandatory Game director Corinne Busche tells Game Informer it's about managing assumptions. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 17, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"A Deep Dive Into BioWare's Companion Design Philosophy In Dragon Age: The Veilguard BioWare says these companions are the series' best yet. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 15, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Yes, Dragon Age: The Veilguard Has Nudity, And I've Seen It And we're not talking implied nudity here. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 10, 2024 at 01:00 PM"
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"Companions Can Romance And Form Relationships With Each Other In Dragon Age: The Veilguard Giving a cold shoulder to a companion might nudge them into the warm shoulder of someone else. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 08, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Dragon Age: The Veilguard Will Feature A ‘Robust’ Transmog System At Launch You won't need to compromise fashion for function in Dragon Age: The Veilguard. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 04, 2024 at 04:00 PM"
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"Here’s How Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s ‘Unbound’ Option Lets You Customize Difficulty And More Using the Unbound difficulty option, you can customize parry timing, enemy health, and more. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jul 01, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Character Creator Is BioWare’s Most Robust Yet We spent nearly 40 minutes crafting a Rook in BioWare's best character creator yet – here's what we learned. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 27, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Dragon Age Cover Story And Shadow of the Erdtree Review | GI Show Our flagship gaming podcast covers Dragon Age: The Veilguard, our Elden Ring DLC review, Concord, Supervive, and more. by Alex Van Aken on Jun 27, 2024 at 01:57 PM"
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"Breaking Down Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Classes And Factions There are three classes and six factions to choose from for your Rook. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 25, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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"Ahead Of Dragon Age: The Veilguard, The Entire Series Is On Sale For $10 You should at least give Dragon Age: Inquisition a go ahead of The Veilguard this fall. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 21, 2024 at 08:20 AM"
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"Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Leads On The Name Change And Solas’ Role In The Story Though Solas name isn't a part of the game's title anymore, he still plays a major role in The Veilguard. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 20, 2024 at 03:00 PM"
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"A Deep Dive Into Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s Combat, Abilities, Skill Tree, And More With Veilguard, Dragon Age has completed its long shift from real-time strategy combat to full action, and we spoke to BioWare about that transition. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 18, 2024 at 02:10 PM"
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"The Dragon Age: The Veilguard Digital Issue Is Now Live! If you subscribe to the digital edition of Game Informer, you can now read all about our trip to BioWare for Dragon Age: The Veilguard. by Kyle Hilliard on Jun 18, 2024 at 12:30 PM"
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"Get Your First Look At Dragon Age: The Veilguard's Real-Time Action Combat In First Gameplay Trailer More than 20 minutes of flashy Veilguard action, coming right up. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 11, 2024 at 10:21 AM"
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"Cover Reveal – Dragon Age: The Veilguard The latest issue of Game Informer features an exclusive, in-depth feature on BioWare's return to the Dragon Age series, 10 years in the making. by Wesley LeBlanc on Jun 09, 2024 at 02:00 PM"
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thehomelybrewster · 7 months ago
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1d8 "Free" Fantasy RPGs To Replace 5e At Your Table
D&D 5e sure is a roleplaying game, and it's one that I have enjoyed a lot. However, that doesn't mean that I'd recommend it automatically for other people. This has many reasons, which I won't elaborate here. It has also shaped the perception of TTRPGs significantly thanks to its market dominance, and not in a good way.
5e has a reputation for being an expensive, complex game, and 5e players fear that other RPGs might just be the same. That it's too much of a hassle and too much of a financial burden to switch systems.
So, to help 5e players pick out a different system, I've made this handy 1d8 rolling table to help them pick a fantasy TTRPG with a combat component that they can try instead!
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Let's now go through these eight nine RPGs and see what's up with them, right below the "Keep reading" section!
I'll be listing some metrics like the page count for the rulebook(s), the core resolution mechanic, how complex the game is in terms of character creation & combat, and how well-supported the game is by their publisher and the community-at-large.
1. Cairn
Author: Yochai Gal
Release Year: 2020
Cost: Free PDF, printed copies cost between $3 to $10 depending on the print quality.
Page Count: 24
Website: https://cairnrpg.com/
Resolution Mechanic: 1d20 Roll Under system for ability checks/saving throws, attacks hit automatically, "fiction-first".
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Random character creation, class-less and level-less, advancement based on "Scars" (suffering damage that reduces your HP exactly to 0)
Setting: Implied. Low-magic European-style fantasy; mysterious woodlands.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Hit Protection and Ability damage instead of HP, Slot-Based Inventory.
Degree of Support: Very high. Available in fifteen languages (e.g. Spanish, Russian, Chinese, and German); full rules text is under CC-BY-SA 4.0; multiple published third-party adventures & supplements available; some official bonus material (e.g. bestiary, magic items/relics, and spells) is available for free on the website.
Addendum: An expanded 2nd Edition is currently on Kickstarter (ends April 26th 2024); Cairn is legitimately easy to learn, however the Hit Protection system and the connected Scars system is a very different abstraction to health and advancement compared to 5e.
2. Cloud Empress
Author: worlds by watt
Release Year: 2023
Cost: Free PDF of the rulebook and the creator-written sample adventure "Last Voyage of the Bean Barge", $20 for the print edition of the rulebook, $12 for PDF supplements, $25 for print + PDF supplements; free solo rules also available as PDF only.
Page Count: 60
Website: https://cloudempress.com/
Resolution Mechanic: d100 Roll Under system for stat checks/saving throws, critical successes or failures on doubles (11, 22, 33, etc.), 5e-style advantage/disadvantage, attacks generally hit automatically.
Action Economy: Two actions per round with no free movement.
Characters: Semi-random character creation, four classes ("jobs"), no rules for character advancement in the ruleset.
Setting: Specific. "Ecological science fantasy" heavily inspired by Hayao Miyazaki's "Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind"; costly magic, giant insects, dangerous mushrooms; only human player characters.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Damage points culminate in Wounds; Wounds and Stress as ways to track your character's physical and mental state; slot-based inventory system.
Degree of Support: Low-ish. Several official supplements exist, however third-party material is very sparse. May improve due to the recent establishment of a Cloud Empress Creators Fund, has a simple 3rd party license system.
Addendum: A supplement, "Cloud Empress: Life & Death" is currently on Kickstarter (ends April 26th 2024, yes, the same day as Cairn 2e) and as a disclaimer I even backed that current Kickstarter; Cloud Empress is built on the engine of the sci-fi horror RPG "Mothership"; clearly built for one-shots and short campaigns; has a wonderful resting system that encourages roleplay between players.
3. Iron Halberd
Author: level2janitor
Release Year: 2023
Cost: Free PDF of the rules; no print option available.
Page Count: 60
Website: https://level2janitor.itch.io/iron-halberd
Resolution Mechanic: 1d20 + Bonus Roll Over system against difficulty or armor rating, however most non-combat-related actions follow a fiction first approach without dice rolls.
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Semi-random character creation, class-less but there are four different "gear kits" that nudge your character towards certain archetypes, levelling up with XP.
Setting: Essentially non-existant. General European fantasy with magic, gods may or may not exist/shape the world, various fantastic ancestries included.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Includes rules for building strongholds and maintaining warbands; slot-based inventory with a durability mechanic.
Degree of Support: None. The game is intended to be relatively compatible with other OSR content and the creator suggests using adventures made for the D&D retroclone Old-School Essentials if you wanna use pre-published ones. An official introductory adventure, "Sea-Spray Bay", is apparently in the works. No 3rd party license available, as far as I know.
Addendum: One thing about Iron Halberd I like especially is how it uses random tables for generating equipment. Most of the equipment is listed in a numerical order by category, and the various gear kits include references on different rolling formulas for those equipment categories. For example someone taking the "soldier's kit" rolls twice on the d20 Weapons table and takes their preferred pick, while someone taking the "sage's kit" only rolls a d4 on that table.
4. Mausritter
Author: Isaac Williams
Release Year: 2020
Cost: Free PDF of the ruleset available; box set with the rules and several goodies including an adventure costs $55; additional box set + PDFs containing eleven official adventures costs $55 (or $20 digital-only).
Page Count: 48
Website: https://mausritter.com/
Resolution Mechanic: 1d20 Roll Under system, 5e-style advantage/disadvantage, attacks always hit.
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Random character creation, class-less, levelling up with XP.
Setting: Vaguely specific. You play as mice and everything is related to mouse-size; cats are the equivalents of devils or dragons; humans exist as a setting background but may or may not be present in a campaign.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Includes rules for recruiting warbands; slot-based inventory with a durability mechanic.
Degree of Support: Very high. Several official supplements exist, as well as loads of content, be it adventures or supplements, made by other creators. Available in seven languages (all of them however are European). Has a simple 3rd party license system.
Addendum: Mausritter uses the phrase "adventure site" instead of dungeons. On the website a free adventure site generator is available, as is a digital tool that can be used to generate your own item cards for the slot-based inventory system.
5. Maze Rats
Author: Ben Milton
Release Year: 2017
Cost: $4.99 for the PDF, no print option regularly available.
Page Count: 32
Website: https://questingbeast.substack.com/
Resolution Mechanic: 2d6 + Bonus Roll Over system; advantage system that uses 3d6 drop the lowest + Bonus.
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Semi-random character creation, class-less but instead there are character features (e.g. spell slots or attack bonuses), levelling up with XP.
Setting: Essentially non-existant. Magic is very irregular (s. the section below), but otherwise it implies a vaguely European fantasy setting.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Spells are randomly generated each adventuring day and spell effects are negotiated between the GM and the spellcasting player; includes several fantastic d66 tables that can be used to randomly generate worlds.
Degree of Support: Decent. The rule text is licensed under CC BY 4.0 and unofficial translations are available. Some third-party content has been made specifically for the game.
Addendum: The only purchase-only game on this list. However "unofficial" distribution of the PDF is very common. Also this is the oldest game on the list. Ben "Questing Beast" Milton is a prolific OSR blogger and runs a YouTube channel on the OSR. Great dude.
6. Sherwood - A Game of Outlaws & Arcana
Author: Richard Ruane
Release Year: 2022
Cost: Free quickstart PDF titled "Sherwood - A Quickstart of Outlaws" available; digital rulebook costs $7.50 and the print edition (including PDF) costs $15.
Page Count: 25 (Quickstart), 32 (Rulebook)
Website: https://www.r-rook.studio/
Resolution Mechanic: 2d6 + Bonus Roll Over system for skill checks (including attacks), 2d6 Roll Under system for saving throws; advantage & disadvantage system that involves rolling 3d6 and using the higher/lower of the two results; almost all rolls are player-facing
Action Economy: "Conversational", assumption of movement + action.
Characters: Largely choice-based character creation. Combine two (of six) background abilities with the benefits of seven different careers. Big focus on interpersonal relationships during character creation. Limited character advancement takes place during downtime.
Setting: Specific. Takes place in a fantastical version of 13th century England, with fey and magic coexisting with outlaws and crusaders.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: The group of outlaws possesses two shared resources (Resources and Legend) that can be spent to gain certain benefits; spellcasting is divided into two categories: arcane talents and sorcerous rites, with the former being immediate and the later taking significant time; slot-based inventory.
Degree of Support: None. No further publications exist for the game and while it is published under the CC-BY 4.0 license, no third-party content exists as far as I know. It does include a guide on how to convert D&D and Troika (N)PCs into Sherwood characters, as well as three adventure seeds (one in the Quickstart, two in the rules), which is at least something.
Addendum: Might just be the game on this list that encourages the most roleplaying; the character sheet is sadly very provisional-feeling and the Quickstart feels outdated compared to the finalized rulebook.
7. The Electrum Archive
Author: Emiel Boven
Release Year: 2022
Cost: Free Rules PDF available, zines cost $12 as digital PDFs or $24 as print + PDF combos; the first zine contains the entire contents of the Free Rules PDF
Page Count: 26 (Free Rules), 72 (Issue 01)
Website: https://www.electrumarchive.com/
Resolution Mechanic: 1d10 Roll Under system, attacks always hit.
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Largely choice-based; three archetypes roughly corresponding to fighters/rangers (Vagabonds), rogues (Fixers), and spellcasters (Warlocks); player characters are presumed to be human; levelling up with XP.
Setting: Specific. Mechanics heavily tie into the lore; humanity has abundant access to minerals but requires a rare substance known as Ink to operate certain pieces of tech (like guns) and cast spells but cannot produce Ink themselves; spirits of various sorts can be foes, targets of worship, or sources of power.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Uses a spellcasting system for the Warlock archetype that's heavily based on the one used in Maze Rats, as in it uses randomly-generated spells whose effects are negotiated between the player and the GM; slot-based inventory with a durability mechanic.
Degree of Support: Minimal. The game consists out of the free rules and (soon) two zines; a third party license exists but content produced under it is very rare.
Addendum: I need to disclaim that I recently backed the Kickstarter campaign for the second zine for this game; the free rules feature wrong page numbers in its table of contents which is unfortunate; The Electrum Archive uses incredibly simple stats for NPCs which makes creating new ones based on other games rather simple.
8. Shadowdark RPG
Author: Kelsey Dionne
Release Year: 2023
Cost: Free player and game master quickstarts exist as PDFs and are available in print for $19, the core rules cost $28 in PDF form and $57 in a print + PDF bundle
Page Count: 68 (Player Quickstart Guide), 68 (Game Master Quickstart Guide), 332 (Core Rules)
Website: https://www.thearcanelibrary.com/
Resolution Mechanic: 1d20 + Bonus Roll Over system, 5e-style advantage/disadvantage, natural 1s are critical failures and natural 20s are critical successes.
Action Economy: Movement + one action per round.
Characters: Largely choice-based; players have a fantasy ancestry and a class; levelling up with XP; class progression largely random.
Setting: Vague. General (dark) western fantasy conventions apply; alignment is a force in this universe and a sample pantheon is provided; the most potent enemies in the rules are named individuals that fit classic TTRPG monster types; illustrations and lore snippets have recurring motifs.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: The key mechanic of Shadowdark is how the game handles light, namely that light sources are tracked in real time (i.e. a normal torch lasts 1 hour), which increases tension; slot-based inventory; has a 0th-level character creation option using an eliminationist "Gauntlet".
Degree of Support: Fantastic. Several official supplements and offically sanctioned digital tools exist; lots of third-party content available under a generous third-party license.
Addendum: Definitely the most similar game to 5e on this list besides the next entry; very robust mechanically and the Core Rules features extensive lists of magic items, monsters, and spells; also for early play giving your players only access to the quickstart is a totally valid choice; and finally, before Dionne made Shadowdark, she made 5e adventures for years and it shows (affectionate).
9. Pathfinder
Authors: Logan Bonner, Jason Bulmahn, Stephen Radney-MacFarland, Mark Seifter
Release Year: 2019 (initial release), 2023 (remaster)
Cost: Free and comprehensive SRD available via the platform Archives of Nethys, free "Pathfinder Primer" abridged rulebook available via the Pathfinder Nexus (powered by Demiplane), Core books are priced $20 for PDFs and $30/$60 for print as a softcover/hardcover; a Beginner Box set with shortened soft-cover rules costs $45
Page Count: 464 (Player Core), 336 (GM Core), 376 (Monster Core), 160 (Combined Beginner Box Softcovers)
Website: https://paizo.com/pathfinder
Resolution Mechanic: 1d20 + Bonus Roll Over system, 5e-style advantage/disadvantage, four degrees of success based on result compared to target number.
Action Economy: Three action points per round; various actions may require more than one point; every character can use one reaction per round of combat.
Characters: Choice-based; players first pick an ancestry and a background and a class (the ABCs) and then tend to have meaningful choices after each level-up; levelling up with XP.
Setting: Important. Golarion, the game's setting, is a world that has been long in development and it shows; powerful magic and influential gods; very clear notions of what the societies of the various peoples of the world are like and how they should behave.
Other Noteworthy Mechanics: Balance between character classes and reliable combat challenge calculations are an important design goal; weight-based inventory system; archetype system for "multiclassing".
Degree of Support: Fantastic. Loads of content gets regularly produced by the game's publisher Paizo; the Pathfinder Infinite program (similar to D&D's Dungeon Master's Guild) provides lots of lore-compliant third-party content; uses the ORC third-party license for content produced outside of the Pathfinder Infinite program. Translations into other languages available but Paizo does not provide a comprehensive list of available languages (only German and French confirmed after brief personal research).
Addendum: The most popular and commercially successful of the listed games; but also by far the most complicated, though it is easier to GM for specificallty than 5e; also I dislike how certain feats create situations where fairly mundane actions get mechanics through these feats instead of being things you can generally do; anyway the reason why it's a 9 on a 1d8 table is because if you wanted to try out Pathfinder 2e you already would have and because while Paizo is better than WotC it's still a flawed big company.
...
So this was an exhausting little project. I hope you found this helpful and I hope you give at least one of these games a shot! A follow-up to this post is not out of the cards, but I don't plan on one.
Before we go, have this poll about which of these systems you're most looking forward to try! Shame it can only be open for one week...
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sprintingowl · 11 months ago
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High Voltage Bundle
The High Voltage bundle has launched, and is running until the end of January 2024.
It's 20 TTRPGs, 87% off, and it's primarily robust core systems.
For example, there's:
Planet Fist - A feature length Fist hack where the occult espionage action system is being used to run Planetside 2.
Vibe Check - An extremely gorgeous high effort street art take on The World Ends With You.
Bloodbeam Badlands - A vampire cowboys rpg.
Blazing Hymn - A giant homage to Symphogear.
ProtoDrive - An Initial D rpg running on the Lancer engine.
And, again, there 15 more titles on top of that, including a giant beetle befriending simulator that I wrote.
If you want to dip into the deeper indie, this is a very solid place to start!.
(And if these sound too weird for you and you want other rpg reccs, lmk. I think the games in this bundle are great, but I'm also super happy to suggest other rpgs that might match what you're looking for.)
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theoutcastrogue · 4 months ago
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The New D&D 5.5 Rogue
For people who got an advance copy of the 2024 PHB, the NDA was lifted on August 1st. This is a summary from RPG Bot's 2024 DnD 5e Transition Guide and Change Log: Everything That’s Different in the new Player’s Handbook. See also here for more commentary on previously released details. I would like to note that:
The new Weapon Mastery rules (from the playtests) give martials lovely options they didn't have before.
There are some iffy flat DCs all over the book: the actions Hide (stealth), Influence (social skills), and Thieves' Tools (to disarm traps and pick locks) are all a flat DC 15. So this is either a completely stupid change (not all locks or all Persuasion checks were made equal!), OR the DMG will include rules and guidelines to adjust these DCs for different conditions.
Which (if that's the case) would mean that now Players and DMs know different rules about fundamental aspects of the game. I hate this, I hate that skills are now even less well-defined in the PHB, and I will rant more about this at a later time.
But anyway, here's RPGBot's summary:
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Rogue
1. Expertise. No longer allows you to select Thieves’ Tools.
1. Thieves’ Cant. Also grants you an extra language proficiency.
1. Weapon Mastery. New.
3. Steady Aim. Identical to the Optional Class Feature.
5. Cunning Strike. Allows you to reduce your Sneak Attack damage in exchange for powerful rider effects like knocking the target prone or applying the Poisoned condition.
7. Reliable Talent. Moved from 11th level.
11. Improved Cunning Strike. New. Use up to 2 Cunning Strike effects on the same attack.
14. Blindsense. Gone.
14. Devious Strikes. New. Adds more Cunning Strike options.
15. Slippery Mind. Now adds proficiency in both Wisdom and Charisma saves instead of just Wisdom.
20. Stroke of Luck. Turn any d20 test into a 20. This means at least one guaranteed critical hit between each rest.
Arcane Trickster
3. Spellcasting. Now allows you to retrain a cantrip when you gain a level.
3. Mage Hand Legerdemain. Most of the 2014 feature’s capabilities were added to Mage Hand, with the exception of the ability to use Sleight of Hand and Thieves’ Tools. Now you can use Mage Hand for Sleight of Hand.
9. Magical Ambush. Now requires you to have the Invisible condition, which at a glance sounds like a huge problem, but the 2024 Hide action gives you the Invisible condition if you successfully hide.
13. Versatile Trickster. Now allows you to trip a target with your Mage Hand, but only when you use the Trip option from Cunning Strike.
Assassin
Much more reliable and less focus on disguises and infiltration. Much more stabby.
3. Assassinate. Reworked completely. Now much easier to use and much more consistently effective, but there’s no automatic critical hits.
3. Assassin’s Tools. Renamed from “Bonus Proficiencies”. Now also gives you one of each kit for free.
9. Infiltration Expertise. Reworked completely. No more false identity. Now you can perfectly mimic speech and handwriting, and Steady Aim doesn’t reduce your speed to 0.
13. Imposter. Gone.
13. Envenom Weapons. Extra poison damage when you use the Poison option of Cunning Strike. The damage applies whenever the target fails the save, which includes the additional saves at the end of each of their turns.
Soulknife
Very few changes.
3. Psionic Power. Like the Psi Warrior, the Soulknife’s Psionic Power feature now explicitly states that these dice are only for Soulknife features, the progression is tied to your Rogue level rather than your Proficiency Bonus, and you regain one die on a Short Rest.
3. Psychic Blades. The blades have the Vex Weapon Mastery, and can now be used for Opportunity Attacks.
Thief
3. Fast Hands.
Sleight of Hand. The wording here is a mess, but the Thief Rogue and only the Thief Rogue can use Sleight of Hand in conjunction with Thieves’ Tools to pick locks and disarm traps.
Now allows you to use magic items which normally take an Action to activate due to the new “Utilize” action. Existing item use case remain awesome.
3. Second-Story Work. Now much simpler, but functionally similar. A Climb speed and you use Dexterity for Athletics checks to jump.
9. Supreme Sneak. Reworked completely. Now a Cunning Strike option that allows you to attack without giving away your position.
13. Use Magic Device. Reworked completely. You no longer ignore restrictions on items, such as class requirements. Instead, you get an extra attunement slot, you have a chance to not spend charges when using a magic item, and you can use spell scrolls.
Picking Locks, Disarming Traps, Thieves' Tools, Sleight of Hand
Take a deep breath, because this one is confusing.
In the 2014 rules, you used proficiency in Thieves' Tools to disarm traps and pick locks. Sleight of Hand was used almost exclusively for picking pockets. Baldur's Gate 3 changed that when adapting the 5e rules for a video game.
In the 2024 rules, there is some confusion. Page 221 of the Player's Handbook details tools and their uses. Thieves' Tools list "Pick a Lock' and "Disarm a Trap" as two uses for the tool, which means that you apply proficiency with Thieves' Tools when performing those actions. This is the same as the 2014 rules.
The confusion sneaks in with the Thief Rogue's Fast Hands feature's Sleight of Hand option.
"Make a Dexterity (Sleight of Hand) check to pick a lock or disarm a trap with Thieves' Tools or to pick a pocket"
The lack of commas or formatting makes this text somewhat confusing. If it was intended to be three bullets, there would be commas. "Pick a lock comma disarm a trap with Thieves' Tools comma or pick a pocket". Instead, we can split your options with Fast Hands (Sleight of Hand) into two bullet points to clarify it:
Make a Dexterity (Sleight of Hand) check to pick a lock or disarm a trap with Thieves' Tools
Pick a pocket
This means that the Thief Rogue and only the Thief Rogue can use Sleight of Hand to pick locks and disarm traps while using Thieve's Tools. In fact, to do this as a Bonus Action, they're required to use Sleight of Hand. As per the rules for tools on Page 220 of the Player's Handbook, if you're also proficient with Thieves' Tools, you get Advantage on this check. All fantastic for the Thief Rogue and their ability to pick locks and disarm traps, especially since you can no longer get Expertise with tools, but you can get Expertise with Sleight of Hand.
If you are not a Thief Rogue, nothing has changed. Thieves' Tools are used for picking locks and disarming traps.
[source]
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sulphuric-onyx · 2 months ago
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ok two posts in one day, but I'm back on my bs so who cares. I've been thinking a lot about Tuckington as husbands, mostly all of the domestic shenanigans and the dynamics of it, so here's some of that:
-I think during retirement they'd start gaming together a lot, Tucker leans towards action titles and shooters and Wash while okay with those games, and actually pretty good at them, usually prefers cozy games and life simulators (animal crossing, stardew valley, etc), so they usually find a balance by playing RPG's together, with the occasional horror game when Tucker can convince Wash (also they have a shared minecraft world with like, 300 hours on it collectively).
-Related to this, Tucker 100% manages to get Wash to fall for dumb puns and those bad "ligma" jokes due to Wash not experiencing them very often thanks to spending most of his 20's in the military/project freelancer rather than like, college or something, and Tucker revels in it because it's the most he's ever been able to pull them off, and they usually go something like this:
Tucker (playing through a game on the couch with Wash on the other controller, exploring a new area) : Oh hey, there's some up-dog in here.
Wash (following behind Tucker's character, entirely genuine): What's up-dog?
Tucker (with the most shit eating grin imaginable): Nothing much man, what's up with you?
Wash: *actively opening the options menu to punch Tucker's character in the face*
---
Anyway, they're very big collective dorks to me once their married, something something they match each others freak/bring out the nerd in each other, I might write this eventually. (lying)
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feenick · 11 months ago
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JRPG, CRPG, WRPG... these aren't very useful subgenres, and geologically recent arguments have heated up the debate around them even more. So I propose throwing them out and replacing them with these 26 new, flawless categories:
ARPG - Action RPG: Do you perfom actions? Or are you stuck watching the title sequence over and over because the main menu doesn't work? BRPG - Bethesdic RPG: Can you pick up every wheel of cheese in the game and put it into a single room? Does the game needing to keep track of that eventually ruin saves? Then the game's a BRPG. CRPG - Computer RPG/Console RPG: Everyone will know exactly what you mean when you use this acronym. If need be, refer to games like Ultima IV or Final Fantasy VII, games that exclusively exist on either a personal computer or a console. DRPG - Dungeon RPG: Do you go into the prison cells underneath a castle? If you don't, are you really an RPG of any type, much less a DRPG? ERPG - Erotic RPG: A game where you find love. Did you talk to someone on an internet forum about Final Fantasy IV and get into a relationship through that? That goes here. FRPG - French RPG: Wakfu exists. I'm sure there's others. GRPG - Good RPG: They all go in here :) HRPG - Homeric RPG: Is the plot of the RPG directly ripping off 1) The Iliad 2) The Odyssey 3) A Simpsons episode? IRPG - Idle RPG: Okay, honest question. How much do you idle in these games anyway? Certainly you're setting up equipment and parties that'll auto-grind for you, right? The entire subgenre isn't just Progress Quest, right? JRPG - Judeo-Christian RPG: This category is exclusively for the 2008 game The You Testament. I'm sorry, I don't make the rules. KRPG - Kinetic RPG: You know Kinetic Novels, ie a VN that doesn't have any choices at all? Throw any RPG you want to disparge for not giving you choices in here. Alternatively, this is for any RPG that has Kinect support. LRPG - Luddite RPG: Was it released on a console 20 years after that console ceased getting games? Does it look and act like it should have been released 20 years ago? MRPG - Monster-catching RPG: Any game where you catch monsters and have them battle for you. Notably, Shin Megami Tensei is excluded; you talk, bribe, and cajole demons into working for you, which is totally different. NRPG - Natalist RPG: Does the word 'breeding' come up at any point in the game description? ORPG - Orre-game-esque RPG: Like Pokemon Colosseum or Pokemon XD Gale of Darkness, is this game a spinoff of a larger RPG series that changes a major mechanic and has a small but vocal fanbase? PRPG - Panzer Dragoon Saga-like RPG: games that make SHMUP gameplay more approachable by combining them with an RPG. Other games that fit into this category are Undertale and Sigma Star Saga. QRPG - Questionnaire-having RPG: Does the game, at some point, ask you a series of questions in order to determine something? In that case, all other categories are overwritten by this one. RRPG - 'Real' RPG: You know, in your heart of hearts, what belongs here, and everyone else is wrong. SRPG - Strategic RPG: A game in which short-term tactical gameplay decisions [strategy] are the main focus. TRPG - Tactics RPG: A game in which long-term, strategic gameplay decisions [tactics] are the main focus. URPG - Ultraviolent RPG: Can you kill a guy and have a fountain of blood erupt from them? VRPG - VIPRPG: A category reserved for any game made by someone who frequents 2ch's VIP board, or features that :3 cat person that originated there. WRPG - Weeaboo RPG: Was it made by someone outside of Asia but still have anime stylings? XRPG - eXploratory RPG: A generous term for an RPG that throws you out into the world with little direction and expects you to figure out where the game is. YRPG - Yslike RPG: Does it have bump combat? Then there you go! ZRPG - Zero-loving RPG: Are the damage numbers padded to make them look more impressive? Alternatively, does Zero from Mega Man X show up?
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hopeymchope · 2 months ago
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Kodaka did an event promoting The Hundred Line -Last Defense Academy-.
In case you're new to the game and its concept, here's a quick summary from the article:
First revealed during a Nintendo Direct back in June, The Hundred Line -Last Defense Academy- is a tactical RPG with adventure game elements. Its story follows Takumi Sumino, a regular teenager who lives in a domed city known as the Tokyo Residential Complex. After monsters invade the city, a strange creature named SIREI appears and offers Takumi the strength needed to protect those he loves, but awakening this power causes him to lose consciousness. When he finally comes to, he finds himself in a mysterious school with 14 strangers, and together, this rag-tag bunch of teenagers must band together to fend off the Invaders and survive for the next 100 days.
So here's some stuff that was news to me from this article. (I'll add some of my own thoughts in parentheticals with italics just like this.)
The game starts with a 20-minute anime-style cut scene.
Each character has their own unique attacks and abilities inspired by their personalities and certain enemies are faster than others, so players will need to think carefully about how they spend their AP and the order in which they take down the invaders.
It's possible to carry unspent AP over into the next turn, so there may be situations where it's better to end a turn prematurely rather than fruitlessly fight on.
Takumi has the ability to rewind time. So as is the case with many modern strategy RPGs, you can undo a few steps if things go south.
As they perform more actions, players will build up a special gauge known as the "Voltage Meter," which, once full, will allow them to perform a devastating attack that ends their current turn.
Players will also be able to sacrifice characters who are low on health by using the “decisive death” mechanic, although as there’s no way to revive characters in battle, they’ll need to think carefully about how and when to use this.
Decisions made both in AND out of battle can result in permanent character deaths. (So are "decisive deaths" in battle actually permanent deaths or no?)
Kodaka claims that the title is “radically different” from other games with multiple endings, with 100 “extreme despair-filled endings” available in total. Players won’t need to see all of these to understand the story, but there’s plenty of extra lore there for those who want it. (There's literally no chance in hell that these will all be radically different. No game production has ever had the time and/or money to generate 100 full-fledged, completely distinct endings... and this game is being funded independently for god's sake! So PLEASE expect, right up front, that these "endings" will mostly be minor variations on a select few endings.)
The classmates include Amemiya Darumi, an emotionally unstable girl with “crazy eyes” and a love of death games; and Takemaru Yakushiji, an “old-fashioned yankee” who rides a motorcycle into battle. (Sounds like I'm going to adore Darumi... :P)
All of the game’s main characters are voiced in some capacity and will have numerous interactions available over the course of the 100 days, encouraging players to engage with them regularly between battles.
When confronted with comparisons to Danganronpa (teenagers trapped in a school getting picked off, etc), Kodaka says that he prefers working with teenage protagonists, as they’re generally a lot more interesting than older characters and he finds it much easier to show them grow and mature as the story unfolds. (People should be constantly changing and maturing across all walks of life, imo, so this isn't the strongest answer to me. But OK.)
I'm sure plenty of these points are semi-ol dnews to people who've been following the game religiously, but my finger hasn't quite been on the pulse of its coverage the past month or two, so I may have missed some stuff.
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