31 Mar 23
Olivia Jaimes has been knocking it out of the part the last few years and Nancy is, as far as I know, the best of the currently-running daily strips. It’s more similar to Peanuts than to Bushmiller’s version of Nancy, but that doesn’t have to be a bad thing. Here is a gem with Fritzi struggling with the overwhelm of todo lists.
I think it’s good that non-blorby games fully take advantage of not having to be tied to the limitations of blorb. You give up the awesomeness of blorb and in return you hope for things like pick-up, zero prep, character-tailored play.
Tailoring play to character’s abilities is usually a bad idea, but in a heist scenario the upside is that you make all “roles” relevant.
30 Mar 23
The Rules Cyclopedia is my second favorite RPG that we never ever get to use (well, we use the occasional rule from it) because it’s too close but yet so far to our normal, slightly more 5e-tilted edition mashup. During the OGL scare, the RC was one of the games I considered (not that it’s open source either, but OSE and DD are and they’re reasonably compatible).
I was reading some OSR fanzines with a ton of custom classes and monsters today and they’d probably be usable with RC too, with maybe just the XP curve changing.
I have the kinda blurry (but works just fine) PoD reprint of the US original. This Japanese edition is especially beautiful.
Feilin’s move list in the original Fighter’s History 💁🏻♀️
Filmed live desk concert with theremin
“execline is a (non-interactive) scripting language, like sh - but its syntax is quite different from a traditional shell syntax.”
How do people feel about this compared to rc from Plan 9?
29 Mar 23
Org mode has an option of “comefrom” links similar to Tomboy and Howm, called “radio targets”, but it’s frustrating that you have to mark them specially. I sometimes wish every header could be a radio target.
I only used Tomboy briefly (obviously it was annoying to have to have Gnome and not be able to just rock out in Emacs) but having fully automated links without any syntax at all, just powered by n-gram indexing, was pretty awesome.
“The pipe trick uses the pipe character (“|”) to save typing the label of a piped link for several kinds of wiki links. This can avoid potentially making an error while typing the label.
An even better way to save keystrokes that doesn’t need any additional characters is by simply attaching text to the link, as in “[[train]]s”.”
Zettelkästen enabled German researchers to edit cross-referenced text non-linearly, but we’ve got something better than what they had: search.
“One of the most unforgiveable things that mainstream D&D has ever done was to make Diplomacy a skill.”
I agree 100%. This blogpost is great and is exactly how I’ve been trying to run it over the last decade, inspired by @robindlaws@dice.camp’s chapter in Unframed.
I also sort of agree with Arnold in what you need to add to 5e to make it work. Encounter checks definitively, and removing Persuation, Intimitation, and Deception—did that day one when the Starter Set came out in 2014.
Reaction rolls, I’m not so sure. Instead I have a table where I roll up something like “She knows, but doesn’t wanna say because she is afraid the PCs will get her in trouble” or “She doesn’t know, but wants to string them along and get some coin out of it”. The table is independent of the PC’s charisma bonus 🤷🏻♀️
Great approach to generating wilderness hexmaps with a lot of semanticity.
Luke Gearing generously posted some side-by-side comparisons of bullet points vs prose.
It’s great that he did this because we almost never get to see extended examples of how the exact same location would look like with bullets or with prose. I just prefer the bullets.
Paintings. Eerie mix of sharp and fuzzy, light and shadow, ornate and plain.
Warms my li’l heart to see people out there use the phrase “diegetic mechanics” in the canonical way. 🥰
28 Mar 23
“Combobulate is under active development. Expect bugs.
Combobulate is a package that adds structured editing and movement to a wide range of programming languages. Unlike most programming major modes that use error-prone imperative code and regular expressions to determine what’s what in your code, Combobulate uses Emacs 29’s tree-sitter library.”
“Seems their defence is just the threat of strength”
“Working women and suffragists seized control of the conversation, speaking out against mashers and extolling women’s right to move freely—and alone—in public.”
Character overview for the wonderful game Smash Tennis for Super Nintendo ♥
“My Friend Irma”, radio sitcom from 1947 that sorta rips off the style of “My Sister Eileen”. My Friend Irma was later adapted into two movies (that were the debut of the Dean Martin / Jerry Lewis team) and a (kind of bad) comic book by Stan Lee and Dan DeCarlo.
The voice actors for Jane and Irma are very funny and their chemistry is great.