Fantastic work from the both of you! I may make use of it -- we'll see if it helps my players remember familiars as something other than a static +2 to perception rolls.
Between Geoffrey McKinney's Carcosa and Evan's blog, I'm learning how much more fun D&D can be when the shackles of Tolkienien fantasy are thrown off and the DM runs his own subconscious mind.
There is a certain amount of irony in the fact that a blog called In Places Deep taught someone "how much more fun D&D can be when the shackles of Tolkienien fantasy are thrown off."
I took this as a foundation (the first 20) and made 100 familiars for Old School Hack, here. http://fictivefantasies.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/100-familiars/
Fantastic work from the both of you! I may make use of it -- we'll see if it helps my players remember familiars as something other than a static +2 to perception rolls.
ReplyDeleteThe OSR invented the remix.
DeleteMy campaign will by the unholiest of Chop Sueys.
DeleteBest kind. D&D is like stone soup.
DeleteBetween Geoffrey McKinney's Carcosa and Evan's blog, I'm learning how much more fun D&D can be when the shackles of Tolkienien fantasy are thrown off and the DM runs his own subconscious mind.
DeleteI think for me it comes from reading Tolkien years after Moorecock.
DeleteThere is a certain amount of irony in the fact that a blog called In Places Deep taught someone "how much more fun D&D can be when the shackles of Tolkienien fantasy are thrown off."
DeleteIt's a funny old world!
DeleteFun! I'm definately going to use the combined table.
ReplyDeleteMe too, me too.
DeleteI took this as a foundation (the first 20) and made 100 familiars for Old School Hack, here. http://fictivefantasies.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/100-familiars/
ReplyDeleteThanks for the inspiration!
Fantastic! It grows and grows...
Delete