Reign


I finally managed to acquire @Greg Stolze 's Reign. (It's surprisingly hard to get in Europe, and shipping from the US costs a whopping €75. But a German webshop had it.)

I may talk about questionable book organization later, but first I want to talk about how frigging awesome character creation is. Of course there's boring point buy, but there's also Random, and true to its One Roll Engine, random takes only one roll. And that one roll got me:

A lowly beggar who first became a street entertainer, then joined the army as a foot soldier, but soon was promoted to leader of his squad. There, on some mission, presumably against a magical cult, he had a profound mystic experience that awoke some magical abilities in him, and also bestowed some unlikely education on him, making him a student of the occult. But the trip also left him with some unexpected windfall in the form of a really nice sword.

That's quite a lot from a single roll, isn't it? Not every roll produces results that are easy to work with, though. I'm still struggling to figure out how a noble byblow (I gather that means "bastard") became both a squad leader and a master sage.

My son gave it a try, and he had a champion in the army, press ganged into the navy, where due to some mistaken identity shenanigans he was recognized as the long lost son of a prominent noble. (We originally thought he was both a front line fighter and a gladiator, but that turns out to be impossible; he's a champion instead.)

It's a weird an glorious system. Most stats end up rather average, though. I think the tables can be improved upon, so you don't get multiple royal cobblers in the same group, and the rules recommend you customize these tables for your own campaign, so that's awesome and I will.

#ttrpg #reign #reignrpg

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Als Antwort auf Lester Ward

@Lester Ward

Nice to see MathJax used, but on mobile, those two formulae get squished together. Separating them might help.

But to be honest, the treatment of exact chances of certain combinations of sets is less interesting to me than issues like blows to the head being harder to parry, and therefore easier to make, than blows to the hands and feet.

My brief stint practicing HEMA taught me the exact opposite: hands and feet are vulnerable (or at least the sword hand and the forward placed foot), whereas head and torso tend to be surrounded by shield and sword to parry them, not to mention having eyes well positioned to see the blow coming.

Making a result of 10 hit the head sounds logical at first, because rolling 10 sounds harder than rolling 1, but that's only true when you need to roll higher. For exact matches, 1 or 10 makes no difference, except that the 10 is harder to parry. So my guess would be that Reign combat tends to see more head hits than leg hits, especially between skilled opponents who know how to parry.

Is that correct?

The high shipping costs of RPGs


I still enjoy physical books. It's absolutely practical to have a PDF, but usually I prefer to read and learn the rules from paper. Besides, some RPG books are gorgeous. But many of these are produced in the US and often not sold in the EU. An apparently getting them shipped across the ocean costs a ridiculous amount of money (but why is shipping stuff from China so much cheaper?).

My latest example: Greg Stolze's Reign. I keep hearing great stuff about it, and it sounds like it might be just what I need for a campaign idea I've got, so I want to check it out. Turns out there's just been a kickstarter for the second edition, and of course I want that version. What's more, there's a gorgeous luxury version with a fancy GM screen.

But as far as I can tell, it's only available directly from the publisher, and shipping adds a whopping 75 euro to the cost. That's a bit much. Kickstarters also often surprise me with additional shipping costs that are way higher than I expected.

There really needs to be a way to get these things more cheaply. Is there no European distributor that can handle small amounts in a more affordable way? The Atlantic is a really expensive obstacle this way.

Or maybe I should just get used to only buying PDFs.