this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2023
3 points (100.0% liked)

rpg

3066 readers
2 users here now

This community is for meaningful discussions of tabletop/pen & paper RPGs

Rules (wip):

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I have a pretty sizeable group of friends who like to hang out and play RPGs together. We've done a handful of games, ranging from crunchy stuff through rules-lite games. But one common theme is that our games can go pretty slow. We're a group of 7 most of the time, which means 6 players + 1 GM, which is can make stuff very slow. Iterations of D&D all suffer from this, and it gets really bad in games like Dark Heresey for us. But even tropey, free-form games like Blades in the Dark and most stuff on the Apocalypse engine feel sluggish, since they're so tightly based on the Player-GM feedback cycle.

The only types of games that I've found play quickly with a large group are the light, beer & pretzels games like Everyone Is John, Paranoia, but those don't extend well beyond 1 session. I also like the higher-stakes, longer-form RPGs where the players can shape the world at scale.

Are there games that can support both longer-term campaigns AND large groups, or am I looking for the impossible here?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] mavnn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago

I've found pretty much any system that allows you to "compress" action resolution by allowing you to choose the level of detail you want for each scene. What do I mean by that?

  • Feng Shui was great because it had "mook" rules, where the majority of opponents in fights could be taken out with a single success/failure roll of the dice. No hit points to track, no record keeping. The skill system was lightweight, and if you wanted a particular opponent to be a "boss" fight there was rules for that too.
  • FATE Accelerated let you easily do things like treat groups of opponents as a single "stat block" to fight against, or in other types of scenes pick a "lead" character to make the rolls while still allowing the rest of the group to contribute bonuses and boosts to the result.
  • HeroWars (now QuestWorlds https://www.chaosium.com/questworlds-system-reference-document/ ) let's you resolve the direction of entire scenes in a single dice roll.

This tends to be a feature of games that focus on more abstract, high level descriptive, mechanics rather than action by action resolution (which games like DnD or Hero tend to lean into more heavily) which may not be everyone's cup of tea... but they're definitely easier to keep flowing with bigger groups and all allow for longer term campaigns.