This seemed like a good place to put this. Yesterday may first 2019 i played D&D with Blandco even though i had never met him before in my entire life. how? Because Blandco did something cool, he used the power of Roll20.com and Discord (voice chat service) to be able to play with random people on the internet, and he live streamed the whole event. if you are one of the very few who actually watched the livestream i played Sir Whinnaggan the Kobold Paladin.
I thought that live streaming a game of dnd who the people who play were just viewers of the channel who clicked two links and joined a game was really cool, and i was surprised that to my knowledge no other dnd channel has really attempted before. Though, i can see why no matter how cool the idea, someone like Matthew Colville wouldn't be able to do it effectively with the amount of people who would want to play. But playing D&D in this style on the internet can allow people who don't really have a group to play with, to have fun playing D&D, and if you don't think you can have fun with people you just met i can assure you that everyone who played last night had a great time.
I also believe that playing in this way has the opportunity to bring together friends who would have otherwise never met each other, and bring those in the D&D community closer together and i think more people should run games like this. Let me know what you think. (PS blandco said he would like to try this again and continue the story )
This seemed like a good place to put this. Yesterday may first 2019 i played D&D with Blandco even though i had never met him before in my entire life. how? Because Blandco did something cool, he used the power of Roll20.com and Discord (voice chat service) to be able to play with random people on the internet, and he live streamed the whole event. if you are one of the very few who actually watched the livestream i played Sir Whinnaggan the Kobold Paladin.
I thought that live streaming a game of dnd who the people who play were just viewers of the channel who clicked two links and joined a game was really cool, and i was surprised that to my knowledge no other dnd channel has really attempted before. Though, i can see why no matter how cool the idea, someone like Matthew Colville wouldn't be able to do it effectively with the amount of people who would want to play. But playing D&D in this style on the internet can allow people who don't really have a group to play with, to have fun playing D&D, and if you don't think you can have fun with people you just met i can assure you that everyone who played last night had a great time.
I also believe that playing in this way has the opportunity to bring together friends who would have otherwise never met each other, and bring those in the D&D community closer together and i think more people should run games like this. Let me know what you think. (PS blandco said he would like to try this again and continue the story )