This weekend finally arrived this dice tower inspired and based on the cover art designed by D.A Trampier from the original first edition D&D Player's Handbook. By removing the head topper you can insert the dices to roll. It's a straight chute so the dices come out at considerable speed. Be sure to have a tray to catch them or you'll be crawling looking for them! I would've preferred something like the usual dice towers, where you can hear the dices bump inside the chute. The fire is LED illuminated and has a switch to turn it on and off, but it would have been better if it was a flickering one. Besides those minor improvements it looks great
Since I started playing Dungeons & Dragons back there in 1987 I've had many characters. With some of them I played long-term campaigns and with others just a few sessions. With time I started playing other games than D&D. This blog is dedicated to all of them and the hours of fun we've had together. Here they are along with other musings...
Tuesday, December 07, 2021
Monday, December 06, 2021
Virtual Greyhawk Con 2 recap
I've just found the time to write about the games I played at Virtual Greyhawk Con 2.
Friday - I played a gnoll druid named Tharakx in "Escape from the Vault of the Drow" run by DM Josh. The rest of the party were:
- Sifu, a dwarven paladin
- Elengos, an elven warlock
- Ourxrek, a gnoll fighter
- Grek, a troglodyte monk
- Krovas the Tall, a human fighter/thief from Safeton,
- Enoch Pratt, a human fighter from Hardby,
- Kred, a dwarven fighter,
- Taira Trelop, a female half-elf thief
- Pharmakeia, female assassin,
- Nivara, female fighter,
- Deleri Karv, male magic user,
- Veldrin, male fighter/magic user
- Against Tsathogga
- Baron's Gambit
- Grimmsgate
- Cyclopean Deeps Chapter 1
- Cyclopean Deeps Chapter 2
Monday, September 27, 2021
My Virtual Greyhawk Con 2 Schedule - update
Saturday, September 25, 2021
Hobbs & Friends of the OSR zines
Friday, September 17, 2021
James Earl Mackie
James Earl “Jimmy” Mackie, was born on March 17th, 1855 (Age 24) in Sewanee, Tennessee.
His father died during the Civil War at Third Battle of Chattanooga in 1863, and he and his mother fled to Nashville. After a pause in the hostilities, they moved to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1865.
His mother died in 1869, shortly after they arrived in Little Rock, Arkansas, where some relatives lived. He didn’t stay long with them and decided to go West to Fort Smith, where many refugee slaves, orphans, Southern Unionists, and others came here to escape the guerrilla warfare raging in Arkansas, Missouri, and the Border States. The place, despite the absence of federal troops since 1871, thrived and was a bustling community full of brothels, saloons and outlaws, just across the river from Indian Territory (Coyote Confederation).
After robbing a bank in Fort Smith he fled to Tulsa, in the Coyote Territories, and changed his name to Jordan Eugene “Dusk” McCoy. There is a bounty of $600 for his capture. When money ran out he traveled South into Texas and, with two associates, tried to rob a bank in Dallas. The heist went awry, with one of his associates dead and another missing. Unable to go back to the Coyote Territories he fled towards the Mexican border and now goes by the name of Johnatan Edmund Mackay, AKA John E. “Johnny” Mackay.