Now this is a fun (dumb) game...
Now this is a fun (dumb) game...
This is bullshit. There is no curly S on the Sandman title like from the early comics. I’m out.
Also, if someone ever asks you to snort stranger things, at best it’s a coin toss as to whether you do it or not.
I definitley connect with the “know thyself” aspect of this article. Giant open world games are absolutely not my jam. A game that takes between 15-35ish hours to complete is a sweet spot for where I am in life.
Would love to hear from folks who were (very?) good at this when it came to online play. I often struggled in online matches with MS: Charged because a few characters seemed really over powered and/or folks figured out a few auto-score plays*
Great. Now I have to pay attention to this discussion thread for the rest of the day. Cucks, Cokes, and Big Daddy Bowser...I know where this conversation is going and I’m here for the ride.
I thought it would be Dustin & Steve: Buddy Adventures.
The Monstrous Compendium from Spelljammer 2e was a delight. I had never been able to put a Zodar into my campaigns when I was a kid, but it was one of my favorite creatures.
Teldin Moore from the Cloakmaster Cycle will be an NPC, right? Right? :)
There’s so much to ponder thanks to this box-art.
Clearly my mind snapped before I re-read what I wrote. Half of those sentences aren’t even sentences in that post. Thank you for coming on the journey with me.
Also of interest in all this hullabullo. The ghost aren’t ghosts. They are monsters. It says so “instructions” for the points and such on the arcade cabinet.
Woot! Tabletop News Coverage!
Hi Rob! This is my favorite series on io9 at the moment. I know you are just a book or two away from reading and writing about the Cloakmaster Cycle, right? Right?
It’s unacceptable to have for you to use any image of Nightwing where he isn’t showing off his main asset/weapon.
In my mind, Prospero Hall deserves some positive attention (and consumer dollars). I really like that they land in this very thin space of the Venn Diagram of creating fun “hobby level” tabletop board games that have mass market IPs which can also be picked up at big box stores.
I see people say this all the time and everywhere I look.
That original cover has some solid Walking-Dude-from-The-Stand energy. Shirtless and in jeans. Also at first glance, he appears to be floating above his camel steed.
Love the idea of Watched, Read, Played! Over on BoardGameGeek.com there’s a weekly forum post called “What Did You Play this Week?” and it’s a neat way to engage with the hobby and share what you did.
That’s a great example. Even if this particular card isn’t a complicated one, it’s 6 point font and two separate paragraphs, plus three different types of iconography.