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Fun, Free, Functional
A tabletop game format is similar to Mice and Mystics, I tried to diversify some elements of gameplay to incorporate some new dynamics to skills and levelling. It's still in the early phases of developments, I'm not 100% sold on the way enemies are controlled but I haven't thought too much through it yet. You can play the game with the resources provided. It involves; one beautifully painted boardmap that a friend created and then my contribution of basic white cards with just the information necessary to play. Enjoy! - Oh no, wait. I did the character boards. You can easily tell by my addiction to neon colours that started with Rude Dog, 90s colours are the dandy things of my youth. Consider it my aesthetic rebellion against postmodernism's depthlessness, I want everything saturated heavily. And of course I can't do anything much more than poor photoshops and block shapes. Character creation The Characters
The Classes The game can accommodate four players pretty easily, with a bigger map and more enemies per stage possibly up to 8 - but the enemy variety isn't that great yet. Classes give you an ability that happens once per 'Dream'. Dream is the in-game term for the stage where enemies and players interact in combat or dialogue. Each player can only have one class and classes remain until that character is replaced for whatever reason, the class then returns to the selection and may be taken by a new character. Some classes improve your character's starting attributes giving you a higher stat base for the start of the game. The Player board and stats progression
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This was the card game I created for a project on creating something useful for fellow English students. I can't remember the exact phrasing, but it was something to that extent. Litjam was my way of introducing people to a few authors, motifs, titles and criticism in a type of card game not too far from a general format for real-games. I say real games only because I had come across a 'card game' designed to help librarians or 'information services practitioners' get a better understanding of copyright restrictions. I'm not saying it was bad idea, but some subjects don't lend themselves so readily to fun. Anyway, below are the documents I have so if you ever want to print them off you can (images are subject to copyright restrictions, but since I played that game in an academic setting they constitute fair use). You might have to cut and paste them round a little to get them on A4, I would alter it but I'm still kinda chilled from the anaesthesia and can’t really be bothered. - I had to upload a jpg instead of png because I'm not weebly pro enough for files over 10mb. The rules are at the bottom after you click read more, but you can get the pdf file - here. |
AuthorI wish someone would pay me to consult or do anything in the games industry. I'd even work for Anita Sarkesian if she'd take me. ArchivesCategories |