I'm a reasonably experienced (on and off since 2e) player looking for a group, hopefully for a long-term campaign. I'm looking for one of two kinds of game:
1) Players with a strong sense of character and how their character helps move the storyline and themes forward, DM who doesn't believe there's such thing as too convoluted a plot. Challenges may be solved with diplomacy, elaborately planned capers, investigation into secrets best left hidden, or some good ol' monster-cleaving and a fireball or ten.
2) Experimental/absurdist/Fluxx-style; rules likely to change (based on agreed-upon conditions), player characters (if not necessarily players) who are completely engaged in their absurd/surrealist world; maybe even a campaign where who the DM is can change unexpectedly.
Either way, I was just enough of a drama nerd in high school to love the collaborative improvisational storytelling side of D&D. I have a number of characters-in-progress who I just need a world in which to write a backstory (and maybe some coordination with other players) before I'm ready to play. I have one other campaign where I'm the DM, so at the moment I'm not able to DM another campaign (at least full-time; game style #2 above would be an exception).
I'm on the West Coast of the US, Pacific time zone (UTC-7 in the summer). I'm not available M-F 8am-5pm, and not available Monday or Tuesday evenings, but my other times are open. I'd prefer to join (or start) a group able to choose a time that will work for everyone long-term; short pick-up games (public AL-style) are fun, but I'd like to play a character long enough to develop and grow over time. LGBTQ+-inclusive only, please.
If you have a group, or are in the process of starting one, please either send a message here or contact me on Discord (M Manu Rere#9496); I'm fine with any online communication and campaign tools (Discord, roll20, Zulip, Jitsi, etc.).
Also -- if anyone knows about the technical parts of making a stream or podcast work, I'd be all over that. Maybe bring in some audience participation to take it to the next level?
I'm a reasonably experienced (on and off since 2e) player looking for a group, hopefully for a long-term campaign. I'm looking for one of two kinds of game:
1) Players with a strong sense of character and how their character helps move the storyline and themes forward, DM who doesn't believe there's such thing as too convoluted a plot. Challenges may be solved with diplomacy, elaborately planned capers, investigation into secrets best left hidden, or some good ol' monster-cleaving and a fireball or ten.
2) Experimental/absurdist/Fluxx-style; rules likely to change (based on agreed-upon conditions), player characters (if not necessarily players) who are completely engaged in their absurd/surrealist world; maybe even a campaign where who the DM is can change unexpectedly.
Either way, I was just enough of a drama nerd in high school to love the collaborative improvisational storytelling side of D&D. I have a number of characters-in-progress who I just need a world in which to write a backstory (and maybe some coordination with other players) before I'm ready to play. I have one other campaign where I'm the DM, so at the moment I'm not able to DM another campaign (at least full-time; game style #2 above would be an exception).
I'm on the West Coast of the US, Pacific time zone (UTC-7 in the summer). I'm not available M-F 8am-5pm, and not available Monday or Tuesday evenings, but my other times are open. I'd prefer to join (or start) a group able to choose a time that will work for everyone long-term; short pick-up games (public AL-style) are fun, but I'd like to play a character long enough to develop and grow over time. LGBTQ+-inclusive only, please.
If you have a group, or are in the process of starting one, please either send a message here or contact me on Discord (M Manu Rere#9496); I'm fine with any online communication and campaign tools (Discord, roll20, Zulip, Jitsi, etc.).
Also -- if anyone knows about the technical parts of making a stream or podcast work, I'd be all over that. Maybe bring in some audience participation to take it to the next level?