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The sheets look great and have lots of features.
However the print is way too small for my middle-aged eyes.
A version with dark print and size 10 font would be appreciated.
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I really like the "Dungeons & Dragons 5e Directory".
It is incredibly useful and regularly updated.
This latest version has bigger print and is nicely styled.
However, I much prefer the older print-friendly style with white pages and much lower page count.
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I am vey impressed! I picked this up for a look, even though I haven't played OSR rules since the 1990's. I discovered this 71 page adventure site is well-written, well-formatted, and nicely illustrated.
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Meh. It looks professionally done but I don't like the game system. I find it too qualitative and arbitrary, so you can't be sure that gameplay will be consistent unless you really know your GM.
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Creator Reply: |
Thanks for the review! The game system hasn\'t been published yet; this 12-page preview is just an introduction to the book. It contains no rules. :) |
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This is a really big book of weird godlings. It is rich with ideas and contains a good dose of humour, too. It is OSR-based; I would like to see stats for related game systems.
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This product portrays an interesting creature for Pathfinder. It would ne nice to see variations with different challenge ratings. I liked the imaginitive artwork. Lots of adspace included.
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I liked this product well enough, though I only skimmed it. The NPCs are potentially useful.
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I am very happy with the Ultramodern4 OGL. Despite some minor typesetting issues and typos (the most notable being "d28" in several places where it should be "2d8", this is a quality product full of useful game info. As far as I know, it has all the crunch and at least some of the fluff from the full-game product. You do need a copy of the 4th edition D&D Players Handbook or D&D Essentials Rules Compendium to use the OGL in a game.
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It's nice to get a bundle of free stuff. I found the sharkjaw skeleton to be interesting. Most of the rest of the articles lacked crunch and conisted of lists, names, and short descriptions of campaign features.
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We need a print friendly version!
I love this product, and it is free, too!
It is 160 pages long, though. I hope they will produce a print-friendly version. For examples:
- no border art
- each section starts at the top of a new page (so I can easily separate, say the Merits section from the Conditions section from the Integrity section, for example).
- place the fluff pieces and artwork on separate pages.
This would make it so much easier to print copies to hand out relevent pages of the new rules to my players.
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It's just a list. I didn't find it useful. If there were descriptions of the locations, and perhaps how they may be linked together, the document would make a helpful DM's resource.
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I would have liked to see a bit more detail about how to use the game mechanics, especially with regard to the magic system. I liked the original "Mage: The Ascension" book, but this quickstart would not have convinced me to buy it.
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Just a list. I prefer to make up NPCs off the top of my head, based on where the PCs are and what they are up to.
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Not bad. I'm not sure whether I prefer this product, or the Paizo psionics books. I need to look closer for comparisons.
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Nice to have numbered hexes, but fairly small so not too useful without taping several together.
Fits well with Traveller standard maps, I think.
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