this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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If it's a PbtA please expand on your system of choice!

I'll start:
I really enjoyed Sexy Battle Wizards, but I think The Witch is Dead speaks to me more. I like player characters just being little weak dudes and struggling against normal stuff. (both of these are free by grant howitt and 1 page of rules)

I also enjoyed rude detectives, it has a surprisingly juicy dice system for a game that's just 4-5 pages. It's themed around child detective stories.

PbtA I like magpies stuff, like avatar and root, but my favorite until now was Fellowship 2e I think. Just so extremely versatile, and it's a joy to give a lot of narrative control to players.

Last one is kinda cheating: my current favorite game is rules light within it's genre. 13th Age is the easiest 'dnd' I've ever seen, and the amount of dumb rules and bookkeeping it prunes has reinvigorated 20f games for me! But compared to other games, it's still a bunch of rules of course.

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[–] ThreeHalflings@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's pretty cool. The only thing that would make me a little more comfortable is some guidance on how to set the DCs for some example actions.

[–] Eagle0600@yiffit.net 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

There are no DCs. Each player chooses a number between 2 and 5 to represent their characters' aptitudes. High means they're better at Lasers "(technology; science; cold rationality; calm, precise action)", and low means they're better at Feelings "(intuition; diplomacy; seduction; wild, passionate action)". The GM only needs to decide which of those two any action is (they need to roll under their number to succeed at Lasers, and over their number to succeed at Feelings), and also whether the character is prepared (based on the situation), or an expert at the subject (based on their characters' chosen expertise), and for each one they get an extra die. The target number is always the player characters' own chosen number.

[–] funkyb@ttrpg.network 1 points 1 year ago

My favorite little twist is that rolling your number results in "laser feelings", which instructs the DM to reveal something important to the PC.

It's basically a narrative shove forward every time it happens and keeps the game fast and fresh.