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Some Linques, Of Various Mixed Emotional Valences May. 16th, 2008 @ 10:45 am
[info]theferrett
This tower of geekitude has at least a hundred rooms, and each of them seems to reference some sort of nerdy thing. I wish I could get all of them, even though there are some repeats (HAL shows up at least twice). But it's amazing work.

If you are a survivor of rape, Shadesong is holding her annual healing ritual. It is, as she says, "An attempt to exchange shared pain for peace. A way of reaching out across the dark and sharing love." And if you want, she can light a candle for you to hold you in her heart.

Zombie Squad is "an elite zombie suppression task force ready to defend your neighborhood from the shambling hordes of the walking dead...When the zombie removal business is slow we focus our efforts towards educating ourselves and our community about the importance of disaster preparation. To satisfy this goal, we host disaster relief charity fundraisers, disaster preparation seminars, and volunteer our time towards emergency response agencies." Incredibly cool. I got a handout at Penguicon, and it was amazingly useful. (I do have an emergency preparation kit.)

Nerdcore: Thoughts On Roleplaying May. 16th, 2008 @ 10:30 am
[info]theferrett

One of my favorite roleplaying settings of all time is Deadlands – a juicy little setting that combines westerns, steampunk, Cthulhu, alternate history, time travel, and zombies into a rich, tasty package.

Unfortunately, Deadlands is also the poster child for a style of roleplaying I love that is always doomed to failure.

But lemme fill you in a bit on the Deadlands history first. See, in 1863, a group of Indians had had enough with being beaten down by the white man, so a batch of them travelled secretly to the Hunting Grounds and broke the bonds on all the evil Manitou that had been bound there to release magic back to the world.

The first the white men found out about this was on the field of Gettysburg, where the North and South shot at each other. And as each man fell, they rose as zombies and chewed both sides to bits.

The Indian nations, fueled by magic, suddenly thundered forth to carve out a territory of their own, and both the North and South found themselves fighting on two fronts, unable to make headway. Ten years later, they’re still at a grudging war, brought to a virtual standstill.

The white man’s also learned to use magic, which they do by playing cards with the Manitou, betting their very souls to cast spells. And they’ve also learned how to fuse magic with mad science, creating all sorts of crazy ghost rock-fuelled gadgets.

But the Manitou are evil, and their end goal was to turn the world into a place of utter fear and terror so the Reckoners could be unleashed. The wars were good, but they wanted more – so they created the foulest monsters, dredged up from the subconscious, and now all sorts of ghoulies and critters are roaming the Weird West that need to be defeated.

Enter the heroes.

The nice thing about Deadlands is that it clearly has a Story, and each sourcebook advanced that tale a little. You’d get the latest supplement and discover “Oh, the North’s now in control of Shan Fan,” or find that in fact the plots that Character X had to make a railway to the West Coast had fallen apart. And there were rich secrets to be discovered (my favorite? Discovering that the leader of the Southern Confederate Alliance had been taken over by a doppelganger bent on hell and destruction).

Things happened when you weren’t around. Which was an incentive to pick up the new books. You had movers and shakers in the Weird West that you got attached to, and wanted to see what happened to them.

Now, Deadlands isn’t perfect. It has perhaps the most flavorful mechanic system ever devised, using both poker chips and a deck of cards – so cool - but the mechanics are complex and difficult to learn. Worse, some of the characters are outright useless (I played a Huckster, the guy who plays cards with demons, only to have them admit in later supplements that you wound up getting fried three times as often as the other PCs).

And Deadlands is the deadliest game around, if you play it straight out of the box. You have to make Guts checks every time you encounter a monster, which pretty much kills you, and every firefight is deadly. They have pre-planned adventures, but looking at them and the stingy rewards you get at the end of them, one wonders how any PCs survived to the end of any of them.

But the real problem with Deadlands? It has a Story to tell.

See, I’ve been rereading the supplements lately (when I’m down, RPGs are my comfort reading), and I couldn’t remember how the story ended. I remembered that everything did in fact get wrapped up and the Reckoners were disposed of, but I was surprised given how well I remembered the rest of it that I couldn’t remember the ending.

So I read Unity, the final Deadlands supplement. And remembered how terrible it was.

The story was actually pretty good. It wrapped up things. But as an adventure, which it was supposed to be, it sucked.

Unity is pretty much this:

“Go here and fail to save this important character who does better things than you do, who must die to advance the plot. Then go here and have another important character save your bacon from the hordes of evil armies. Then a third important character handles the Reckoners for you, and you play his errand boy.”

The thing is, I like dynamic worlds. As a reader, I like RPGs that have some movement – the world of D&D isn’t that interesting to me, mainly because it never really changes. Deadlands is great because it feels like history.

As a player, however, I want the ability to affect that. And when you have A Story to tell, you can’t really knock it far off-track. If you somehow, via a Herculean effort, manage to kill the mayor of Shan Fan and take control, you have now diverged from the official storyline and all future supplements don’t apply to you. And if you can’t do that, then what’s the point of roleplaying?

As a GM, I try to allow my characters to attempt anything. There are some things they’re vastly unlikely to succeed at, and some things that are downright foolish – as in, “If you do this, I am not going to attempt to pull your fat out of the fire, which may lead to a TPK” – but they can try anything. And in some cases, they’ve succeeded wildly.

When you have A Story, however, that’s hard to do. The PCs can’t stop the Modron March, or if they do then whoops the future supplements are worthless. That’s a bad place to be in. You have to leave the villains there for other PCs to fight.

Deadlands tried gamely to fight this. They had the rule of “If you stat it, they will kill it,” so wisely they did not give statistics for the biggest and most vital player characters. And they held votes from various groups around the world – if enough PCs succeeded in this module here, then the official storyline would reflect that victory. If they failed, then the storyline would reflect the failure.

But in the end, Deadlands, though a compelling read, is ultimately a failure as a roleplaying game because it puts the characters in a little box. And that’s never fun.

Sadly, my favorite game, Planescape, did that as well… But that’s a story for another day.


Appearances May. 16th, 2008 @ 07:23 am
[info]alphabetspiral, posting in [info]writingfeedback
He spoke with lemon zest in his nostril,
tongue doused in salt,
    all the better to clean with.

Bald skin not enough when the skull
is available for coitus and orgasm.
Sodden faces appear only when he has finished
the daily duties.
His eyes: miniature chupacabras--
a Kafka interpretation of the soul.

She (his wife) requested Evangelical petting,
        crossfire.
Gasoline burns better than bones on paper,
                                                    this was not hard.

A light against the darkness May. 16th, 2008 @ 10:07 am
[info]shadesong
I last did this in 2003. Set up a poll much like this one.

Ended up lighting 236 candles. And it was not just me - people across the country lit candles.

Why?

A sort of alchemy. An attempt to exchange shared pain for peace. A way of reaching out across the dark and sharing love.

You are not alone. We are not alone. We are strong, even if it doesn't always feel that way. We are loved. We will survive this.

Why do I do this on the anniversary of my rape? Not to revisit the darkness. To honor the light. To remind myself that I emerged from that. To hold my flaming sword high.

I lived. More than that - I survived. And more even than that.

Let me light a candle for you. Let me hold you in my heart, if only for a moment - let me remind you that you made it through, too. That you're not alone.

And take whatever healing I can pass on.

If you feel comfortable talking about what happened to you, please do so here. Either way,please take the poll - I'll be buying candles (tealights, as that's what I can afford hundreds of) based on this headcount, and it's a good semi-anonymous way to disclose. Only I will ever see the results of this poll.

Please feel free to pass this on to any other survivors you know.

Poll #1188827
Open to: All, results viewable to: None

Are you a survivor of rape and/or sexual assault?

Yes; please light a candle for me.
12 (75.0%)

Please light a candle for one of my loved ones.
7 (43.8%)

May I have your name (and/or the name of anyone you want a candle lit for)?

Tell me what happened, if you want to (not mandatory).

Tunes: candles

Batman of the Future, Caveman of Steel. World's Finest 151, 1966 May. 16th, 2008 @ 09:15 am
[info]mysteryfangirl, posting in [info]scans_daily
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )

Friday! May. 16th, 2008 @ 09:56 am
[info]shadesong
Administration
Happy early birthday to [info]goddessfarmer, [info]kissmythistle,[info]oneagain, [info]theloriest, and [info]tofu_cat, who all advance a year over the weekend!

Medical
Still mind-numbingly exhausted. Pain levels are low, though.

Help a kid get to camp!
[info]mslaynie's son goes to diabetes camp every summer. The camp is paid for - but the transportation isn't, and it's a bear.

[Bad username: mslaynie says:]here</a> to help. Also to see a cute picture of a sea slug.

Myanmar
[info]hammercock explains just how bad it is.

Link Soup
* Adorable tiny hog species saved from extinction
* Self-defence with a Walking-stick: The Different Methods of Defending Oneself with a Walking-Stick or Umbrella when Attacked under Unequal Conditions.
* Fabulous scrap metal sculptures. Also robot sex.
* "After 9,000 years of silence, Chile's Chaitén volcano (pictured on May 3) is erupting with lava, ash — and lightning."

Daily Science
In a boon to cancer treatment and regenerative medicine, scientists have discovered that a trick used by tumor cells that allows them to migrate around the body can cause normal, adult cells to revert into stem cell–like cells.

Large quantities of these reverted cells could be used to treat anything from spinal cord injury to liver damage without the risk of tissue rejection, said Robert Weinberg, a biologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and co-author of a study appearing in Cell. Learning more about how cancer cells move around the body is also providing scientists with new insights that could thwart the spread of the disease.


Daily BPAL
The Buggre Alle This Bible, The Ifrit, Nanny Ashtoreth, The Stormhold )

Friday memage!
Wearing: Grey tank top and matching girly-boxers.
Reading: Scar Night,by Alan Campbell; WisCon workshop manuscripts.
Writing: I need to get further on Katrianna's visit, and hopefully some more of her mother's story.
Planning: Today, lunch with the fabulous [info]mendozaand the return of the medical wrangling from yesterday; tomorrow, one or two parties, depending on transport. Sunday may be family movie day.

You?

And a bonus: remember me blathering on about roller skating? Have a picture (by [info]drwex). And if you're local, come skate with us!

Have a happy Friday and a great weekend!

Tunes: Blue October - Congratulations

Regular Guy May. 16th, 2008 @ 01:29 pm
[info]brown_sharpie


Copyright © 2008 Brown Sharpie. Thanks for reading Brown Sharpie! Check out the shop: Brown Sharpie at cafepress
:)

Tree removal May. 16th, 2008 @ 08:38 am
[info]smilezok, posting in [info]austincommunity
I'm wondering if anyone else is dealing with a situation where a tree on a neighbor's property fell on to your property. I haven't been able to find anything in the city code defining legal responsibility for such a situation, but I realize that with an act of God like a storm, you take care of what fell on your property.

My concern is that the part of the tree that didn't fall on our property probably needs to come down now that the tree is split in half and I'm not sure I can convince them they're responsible for that through rhetoric alone.

I should add that these neighbors have been a constant problem and we have a very unpleasant relationship. I would appreciate hearing about any experiences others have had with navigating a similar situation. I'm not asking for legal advice, but it would be great to know if there's any way to get the city involved.

I'm starting by getting an estimate for both the removal of half the tree from our property and for removing the entire tree. If anyone can recommend a tree service that provides free estimates, that would be great, too.

Thanks!

XKCD, FTW May. 16th, 2008 @ 08:47 am
[info]temujin9
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
Mood: amused
Tunes: Gorillaz - New Genious (Brother)
Tags: ,

Women and Games May. 16th, 2008 @ 09:41 am
[info]haikujaguar
By happy chance yesterday I caught glimpse of a sign for a new game store, one that had opened literally just a couple of hours earlier. I did a u-turn and went for a visit. It's been a while since I've stepped foot in place like that, since most of the RPGs I've bought lately I've gotten online.

Imagine my delight to find that 90% of the store was devoted to... meeting space. Places to play card games and tabletop RPGs. Refrigerators full of food and drinks. Even a more cozy room in the back for people who want a quieter zone.

I got to talking with the owners, ex-IT guys who'd rather make less money doing something they enjoy than go back to coding (there's an interesting story there I'd like to hear). Anyway, since I was a woman with a baby, the topic came up: Why don't more women hang out at this places? Because... well, they're no longer dark, mysterious little caves crammed full of angry miniatures, posters of scowling dwarves and elves in chain mail bikinis. They're... well... social clubs. Places for people to get together and play games. And a lot of women now play games, thanks to MMPORGs.

So they asked, "How can we get more women in here?"

And I started to answer and... I had no idea. How to get all the women in their Horde Warrior or Alliance Warlock t-shirts into a store like this. How to get all the women who loved reading Harry Potter and Narnia to try rolling some dice or roleplaying a fwooshy elf lord.

I just don't know. But looking at the place, I don't want it to go out of business (and not just because they offered to sell my artwork on consignment). It's a hang-out, a way to meet people who like similar things, and it's far more wholesome than having your teenage daughter (or son) socializing at a bar. Plus, you know, we all spend a lot of time staring at computers. Having a place for face-time is important.

So... how would you do it? If you're a woman, what would get you into a place like that? Or if you already hang out at gaming places, what attracts you to them? If you're a guy, why do you think women don't come 'round? How can I help this place get the other 50% of the population?



Stardancer Home.
Mood: perplexed
Tunes: Disney - Honor to Us All (in Spanish)

CLAMP May. 16th, 2008 @ 08:21 am
[info]temujin9
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
Mood: giddy
Tunes: Enigma - Modern Crusaders
Tags: ,

Carol Ann Duffy - 'Text' May. 16th, 2008 @ 11:29 pm
[info]mspixieears, posting in [info]greatpoets
I thought this would be an excellent follow-up to the (equally excellent) previous poem 'E-Mail'. It's taken from Duffy's collection Rapture.

Text

I tend the mobile now
like an injured bird.

We text, text, text
our significant words.

I re-read your first,
your second, your third,

look for your small xx,
feeling absurd.

The codes we send
arrive with a broken chord.

I try to picture your hands,
their image is blurred.

Nothing my thumbs press
will ever be heard.

I've been waiting for the GD bus all day May. 16th, 2008 @ 05:05 am
[info]cute_overload

I can't believe they raised bus fare to one squirmy wallaby.

Used to be one hamster round trip.

I don't even wanna know how this photo got taken

Flavia A., I suggest you unicycle to work.


May. 16th, 2008 @ 03:06 pm
[info]yelise, posting in [info]cat_macros

May. 16th, 2008 @ 03:59 pm
[info]kuteev
Обновилось портфолио.



Marc Gouby

May. 16th, 2008 @ 12:58 pm
[info]warren_ellis
It's Friday, it's FREAKANGELS: http://www.freakangels.com/?p=37

May. 16th, 2008 @ 07:56 am
[info]avemonster, posting in [info]onesentence
My ass speaks in tounges!

May. 16th, 2008 @ 03:52 pm
[info]kuteev



Tom Joy

Green Room - Week 27 - Day 5 May. 16th, 2008 @ 07:41 am
[info]clauderainsrm, posting in [info]therealljidol
Good morning!

So who watched LOST last night? *looks around for raised hands and then realizes he's online and can't actually see anyone raising their hand, kicks computer for being some tricksy*

Speaking of tv, what do you think of the Final Two of Our Inferior Television Cousin? At this point, with 7 left and no telling where things are going to bounce next, I have no clue who's going to win OUR Idol. But I can say, without a shadow of a doubt, that it won't be someone named David. Unless of course someone changes their name between now and then - and the leading candidate for changing their name, [info]gypsy_moon *probably* wouldn't choose "David" even if she wasn't on the jury.*G*

***

Anything interesting going on? People with reports on the Spydie Tour? People with reports on Avoiding The Spydie Tour (due to the traffic backups it creates)?

***

I'm still waiting for 6 jury members to report in. I'll let you know when they do so you can see what I'm throwing at you next!*G*

Daily Twittering May. 16th, 2008 @ 07:36 am
[info]pete_wisdom
  • 08:21 @pitbull : What did you think? #
  • 11:09 ~/o "I'm not sick, but I'm not well" o/~ #
  • 17:44 Would you like a jellybaby? #
  • 19:10 I ache. #
  • 19:30 All elephants are pink. Nelly is an elephant. Therefore, Nelly is pink. Logical? #
  • 20:54 @wilw : Amen. I think I'll adapt that philosophy to my own blog/twitter/etc. #
  • 20:57 "There is unrest in the forest, there is trouble with the trees, for the maples want more sunlight and the oaks ignore their pleas..." #
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