Sunday, July 27, 2014

Savage Samurai Character Sheet
Hello all! The character creation session for Savage Samurai (a mash up of Legend of the Five Rings and Deadlands) is still a month away, but that doesn't mean I'm not busy preparing. Here is an image of the character sheet we'll be using. I'll be happy to accept any and all feedback.

-Mad-Willy



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Savage Samurai, Zach's birthday one-shot was a success! There have been a large number of requests for me to run this game again, so I will be doing so in the near future. Watch this space! I'd love to post a summary of our exploits and derring-do, but I don't want to ruin it for future players. That's right, I'm not above recycling an adventure or two. Twice the fun and half the prep? That's math I can get behind.

In the meantime, here's the teaser for the final chapter in the Star Wars: Long Arm of the Hutt saga!


Friday, July 18, 2014

In our recent D&D game our heroes battled with some creepy blind zombies called "the Eyeless" on the ruins of an ancient bridge above a great underground chasm. Realizing that the creatures hunted by smell, the wizard and bard conspired to use magic to make the half-orc barbarian smell strongly of sandalwood to distract their creepy foes. It worked! Mostly... Here is the impromptu (and unedited) song the party bard wrote during the encounter!


The Ballad of Sandalwood

There once was a half-orc named Urg,
Who had the ridiculous notion I’ve heard.
To smell of Sandalwood,
This idea, he thought, was good.
But I thought the idea absurd!

The smell, it lingered so long.
It’s effects were ever so strong.
It confused the strange guys
(With big hands and no eyes!)
And caused me to write this song.

Urg’s power, and powerful smell
Did help us all so well.
We chased down those creatures,
With their large, grotesque features,
And gave them a little taste of hell.

A rickety bridge we did cross.
We hoped our lives wouldn’t be lost.
The bridge, it did creak,
And I gave a small shriek.
But not all of us made it across.

Marthus, he frost-bowed the beast.
Which was a relief, to say the least.
Whilst, from ledge, Storm did hang.
But she climbed while I sang,
And lived through a dangerous feat.

Luckily, our Storm packed a rope,
Which gave us all great hope.
Across the cavern, she did throw.
With the rope tied, we did go,
And across that rope I did lope.

Marthus, he dangled and swayed.
With no place to go, there he stayed.
On the ledge we were stuck,
Quickly running out of luck.
So, on this drum, I continue to play.

From the rope, dear Marthus did fall.
Plunged into darkness, were we all.
Now no one could see,
And, Marthus, where could he be?
Down into the pit we should crawl.

Auziviir, with a torch, gave us light.
It was such a wonderful sight!
To be able to see,
Yet to know we’re not free,
Did continue to add to my fright.

Urg, with his Sandalwood smell,
Went down into the chasm of hell.
With the taunt of dangling rope,
Marthus felt like a dope,
And Urg found where our dear Marthus fell.

From the pit, we heard a “Go Azi!” cry.
“Don’t call me Azi!” was Auziviir’s reply.
Raging, the undead she impaled.
Their weapons repelled by her chainmail,
As Urg clamored up towards the sky.

From the cavern, Marthus and Urg did appear,
And crossed the pit with no fear.
We took a rest for some time,
While Marthus drank down his wine,
And continued to anger poor Auziviir.

The pungent smell of Sandalwood,
Which Urg insisted was good,
Did linger too long,
Through the end of this song.

And thus concludes the Ballad of Sandalwood.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Savage Samurai

Here's the teaser for our next Short Shot, Savage Samurai.My friend Zach asked me to run a special birthday Short Shot. His first two choices were Deadlands and Legend of the Five Rings. So, I decided to combine the two! Enjoy...



Road to Prosperity


 I was headed for Prosperity. No, that ain't no metaphor. It's a town. Rumor has it there's buried Yobanjin gold. Or was it a bandit's stolen treasure hidden under the floorboards? Or maybe it was a wealth of jewels in a dark tomb beneath the temple? Don't matter. I was gonna find it either way. Or so I thought.

I had an hour to kill before my train arrived, so I decided to have a drink or three. On my fourth cup of cold sake, some toughs walked in. They didn't wear any clan colors, but I could tell from their tattered uniforms they used to belong to the glorious army of the Unified Northern Clans. Deserters.

They strode up to me in a clump of malice and stared down at me. The leader, a tough looking woman spoke, "Ronin, Scum. Stand and face your betters."

"Good day, samurai-sama," I replied, with all the false courtesy I could muster, "I'll be sure to do that, if they show up. In the meantime, have a seat.  Y'all eaten rice today?"

"Rice, doesn't concern us, scum. We're after something much richer. Word is, you are headed to Prosperity Village. We want to...hire you to show us the way."

"When you say it real sweet like that, how can I refuse? Lemme see here...how about, nope." The former Matsu frowned at this, nearly turning red before leaning in and whispering, "Then give us one good reason we shouldn't kick your ass and make you show us the way?"

"Can't think of one." The Matsu woman smiled murderously, but I continued, "However, my friend Kaiu Koto has thought of 5..." Questions formed on the faces of my assailants, but I didn't wait for realization to dawn. They hadn't noticed the fivegun at my side. I kicked the table forward and showed it to them, fanning the hammer until it clicked. Empty. Fanning looks fancy but is inaccurate as hell. Luckily my foes had done me a favor and stood in a tight group not five feet from me. They fell. Probably not dead, but unlikely to bother me for a long time. 

I stood up, but nearly tripped over my chair as I saw a flash of steel near the saloon door and a blast of thunder and smoke. I felt searing hot pain in my left arm, and turned to see the sixth enemy, the one I hadn't noticed, pointing a smoking large-bore black powder pistol at me. If I hadn't tripped it would gotten me in the heart. Thank the fortune of sake for that one. The woman at the door dropped her pistol and went into void stance. Lucky for me, northerners favored single shot pistols. Unlucky for me, I noticed a tiny Kakita family mon sewn into her kimono. Kakita were known to be the best duelists in the world. Shit. But I had no choice and settled into void stance as well. Then we stared at each other. I shifted once. She didn't move. The world was silent, save for the drip of sake from a broken bottle onto the wooden floor. The bell tolled noon. We struck...

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Welcome to Short Shots!

I grew up on gaming, but I've found that as my friends and I get older, get careers, get mortgages, have kids it becomes harder and harder to to find the time for a full-fledged role playing campaign. Even when we found the time there were constant re-schedules, last-minute conflicts, or leaky baby related emergencies. Playing RPG's started to become more of a stressor and a chore, when they should have been a relief and a refuge. A shame! Grown-up life has a little too much reality sometimes. We need RPG's more than anyone.

And that's how Short Shots was born! Most people are familiar with the idea of a pickup game. We do it with baseball, basketball, and other sports all the time, so why not with role playing games?

How Does It Work?

 My friend/Short-Shots co-creator Charles and I made an email list of our friends who wanted to play games, but couldn't commit to a campaign. When someone wants to run a game they post to the list with a short description, the time and place, and how many players they want. Then players read it and sign up if they are interested and have the time. It's first come, first serve, but players will sometimes swap spots or fill in for each other if something comes up. Games are 1-3 sessions long and 3-5 hours a session.

And that's it! The basics anyway. This blog is about the wacky one-shots, cool home-brew games, and bizarre adventures and mishaps we have along the way! I hope you'll join us, and maybe start a local short shots group of your own.