Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Quest is a rules-light, fantasy tabletop role-playing game designed to welcome beginners to the hobby. [1] It was created in 2019 by T.C. Sottek, executive editor at The Verge. [2]
The game also hints at the idea of traveling to alternate universes, where mental powers, magic, or alternate technologies exist, opening up the possibility for fantasy, steampunk, post-apocalyptic, or any other game setting the players may want. The game explains time and time travel through a branching multiple timeline system.
The Primal Order, or TPO, is a religion-based fantasy roleplaying game supplement. [1] Of particular note, TPO was the first work published by Wizards of the Coast and its president, Peter Adkison. [2]
The game is based on, "the grand tradition of Space Opera, in the vein of E.E Doc Smith and ... Star Wars from George Lucas." Based on these sources the game includes: "psionic powers so prevalent in the Lensman series and in Star Wars with 'the force.'" [citation needed] Spacemaster: SF adaptation of Rolemaster: Space Quest: Spaceship Zero
Fall of Magic is a collaborative storytelling tabletop role-playing game by Ross Cowman that is played on a hand-printed canvas map. The story follows a dying magus and companions on their journey to the birthplace of magic. The players utilize the map to track game progression as they unroll it.
Mage: The Awakening is a tabletop role-playing game originally published by White Wolf Publishing on August 29, 2005, and is the third game in their Chronicles of Darkness series. The characters portrayed in this game are individuals able to bend or break the commonly accepted rules of reality to perform subtle or outlandish acts of magic ...
Unknown Armies is an occult-themed roleplaying game by John Scott Tynes and Greg Stolze, published by Atlas Games. The first edition was published in 1998, with the second and third editions being released in 2002 and 2017 respectively. The game is set in a postmodernist occult underground where characters wield magick by personal belief.
In 1999, Pyramid magazine named Pendragon as one of The Millennium's Most Underrated Games. Editor Scott Haring said, "Pendragon is one of the few RPGs that has a moral point of view ... And it's a great melding of game system with game world." [18] In 2006, Gaming Report called the 5th edition of Pendragon one of the "Best Retreads" in 2006. [19]