North King
blech
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2004
- Messages
- 18,165
Yes. All our hopes now rest on the Brazilian NESers.
I figure I might as well pop in here, even though I've basically been AWOL for a while. It's nice to see this because I cancelled my subscription to the other WWW thread a long time ago for reasons that have been gone over already.
We need more active games![]()
I figure I might as well pop in here, even though I've basically been AWOL for a while. It's nice to see this because I cancelled my subscription to the other WWW thread a long time ago for reasons that have been gone over already.
We need more active games![]()
i think i got a new job today.
I figure I might as well pop in here, even though I've basically been AWOL for a while. It's nice to see this because I cancelled my subscription to the other WWW thread a long time ago for reasons that have been gone over already.
We need more active games![]()
How does that work? You can't keep up with the <10 active threads in the NES forum? What purpose does subscription even serve that a quick scan of the forum can't?
...why would you subscribe to WWW, though?![]()
Sometimes it helps when you're accessing by phone.I don't see a point in subscribing to any of the threads. I have the NES forum bookmarked so it is easy enough to check in every once in a while.
Same here. I'll do a roll20 campaign with willing nesers as soon as I get the starter set and read up a bit.
Which is why it pisses me off so much that Mr. Stafford and his company keep holding the God-Learners' Secret above the players' heads; it's not about letting GMs decide, it's about having something that nobody else has, and it's childish.
By 776, the heirs of these wizards, popularly called God Learners, had developed unusual magical methods to look at the world. The secret is dead with its initiates, but was evidently called the RuneQuest Sight. It apparently allowed initiates to see the world as a series of patterns, relationships, and repetitive reflections which could be organized according to the now famous Runes. Their Heroquesters followed the paths of their Runes through the Otherworld, and then shaped the Otherworld by planting those Runes into other parts of it.