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Worlds Without Master, Issue 10
by Michael I. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 09/01/2023 11:53:13

This issue includes the EXCELLENT narrative games Swords without Master! Swords without Master created a new mechanic where the tone of each scene is rolled and also and an interesting way to determine who's turn it is. If you have any interest in narrative fantasy games, you should look up reviews of Swords without Master and then pick this issue up!



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
Worlds Without Master, Issue 10
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Vast & Starlit
by Mike I. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 04/16/2021 23:28:32

The background just makes it too hard to read. I gave up after a while and a couple attempts. It might be a great game but it's a terrribly rough read!



Rating:
[2 of 5 Stars!]
Vast & Starlit
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Wolfspell
by Sadbh d. B. K. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 07/13/2020 08:44:43

So! I picked this up on a whim because I had $15 in my paypal, and it seemed cool; played it for the first time yesterday.

I was initially a little surprised- I knew the PDF was short, but it seemed... sparse, to be honest. I felt a bit apprehensive, having read it cover to cover a few times and still feeling a bit shaky on.. what exactly to do. Turns out it's actaully really easy to refer to while playing, which is the important part. I never found myself stuck as to how something worked or what to do, and the shortness of the PDF both gave me space to do my own thing, and made searching specifically for anything specific really easy.

Myself and 3 friends played for a solid 4.5-5 hours, taking the 'rescuing a fae-stolen child' spell. We went in with absolutely no preperation. I took the role of "winter" (the GM), and we started asking questions of one another's characters- both those demanded by the rules, and eventually just settling into a flow. (We're usually a very RP-heavy group, so this was pretty normal/natural for us)

By the end of the game, we'd told a very satisfying-feeling story, they'd rescued the child at great personal cost, and had build up a wonderful odd world for their wolves to exist in. Being Winter felt less like GMing to me, and more like being just another player with a different role (which I view as a plus, honestly) The tips on what to do as Winter was a really nice touch; suggestions like 'foreshadow a threat you haven't dreamed up yet' or 'skip time ahead' were two in particular I wouldn't have thought up, but appreciated for their simplicity, and usefulness of getting one out of a rut.

All in all, a fun, whimsical system that's brilliant for pushing your imagination a bit, quite easy to use for a one-shot (probably a longer campaign too), and lets everyone live out that fantasy they had as a kid of turning into a wolf and going on a grand magical adventure.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
Wolfspell
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Wolfspell
by Shervyn v. H. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 05/22/2020 16:32:28

the original version of this game can be found in World Without Masters Vol 1, Issue 2. it is a brilliant game about being transmogrified in wolves and the difficult tasks ahead. But while that's a great teason to pick up this game, the reason to pick up this edition is the absolutley amazing art by Shel Khan. It is stunningly beautiful.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
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Worlds Without Master, Volume 1, Issue 3
by Jeremy S. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 06/29/2018 12:11:22

Curious about Swords without Master?

I was too, the name kept popping up in conversations but I never really got a chance to check it out, until recently.

I found that I needed to closely read the rules and it took a second read through to start to understand the finer points of the system, especially how the players interact with it as the character creation is spread out through out the book in sidebars. Aside from this minor gripe, I heartily recommend checking this game out.

SWM concerns itself more with the structure of your story and less with the fiddly details of combat or skill checks. The three phases of the game each create a natural back and forth at the table and give everyone a chance to add to the fiction of the game. You should play this game if you are interested in creating tight short story sessions and want to be suprised even as the GM by where the story takes you.

The community for Swords without master is active on Discord and Google +, the Author also streams the game regularly, I highly recommend checking out an actual play videos they are short and sweet and will serve as a great introduction to how the game works in practice.

In short, I recommend Swords without master if you are looking for a fresh take on player roles at the table, or if you enjoy narrative driven story telling games.

G Plus Community: https://plus.google.com/u/0/communities/104194230537983273846

Discord: https://discordapp.com/invite/u9BxdyY

Youtube Playthrough: https://youtu.be/x6P8I-tEMNk



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
Worlds Without Master, Volume 1, Issue 3
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Vast & Starlit
by Jesse R. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 01/15/2016 08:26:29

Is there anyway to get a version without the background? It's nearly impossible to read because of it. Might be an amazing game but the background takes away so much from it as to make it nearly illegible.



Rating:
[2 of 5 Stars!]
Vast & Starlit
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Vast & Starlit
by Jason C. [Featured Reviewer] Date Added: 01/02/2016 22:57:30

As always, I roll into a review ready to talk primarily about things only tangentially related to what I'm reviewing. If you don't feel like reading through all of it, here's the TL;DR version: this is a truly remarkable and above all else, complete, light science fiction RPG. It is worth both your time and your money. The suggested price of $2.99 is a steal - but go ahead and take it for free if you want to make that "steal" more literal.

Often times in roleplaying game rulebooks we hear that among the many unique virtues of the roleplaying game form is that players are both creator and audience. But if players are both performer and audience, who are we playing to, exactly? Each other? Ourselves? Does the GM have a special audience role as well as a special performance role? Let's say there's a line on our science fiction RPG character sheet that says "Alien Epidemiology" and a rating that says we're okay at being alien epidemiologists, and we write that at the beginning of the campaign and nobody else ever knows it's there, a common event that any experienced RPGer can relate to. You thought it would be cool but for whatever reason it didn't ever come up in play. I can see an argument that this skill perhaps informs the performance of the character - the player knows it's there even if no other player (or GM) knows (or remembers) it's there, or knows its significance. The opposite argument urges the foolishness of taking something that's imaginary in the first place (there really aren't any xenoepidemiologists out there reading this, right?) and, instead of making it realer by requiring real people (the other players) to make statements about, challenge, and respond to it, letting it remain pure internal imagination. If that mediocre and irrelevant skill never impacts everyone else's experience, how much value can it really have? Why waste your time with it?

The answer to this apparent dilemma, I am increasingly coming to believe, comes at a lower level than individual players' decisions - it depends on what the mechanics of the games are and the goal of the game. Since I'm a three ring idiot, it always takes someone demonstrating this in the mechanics of a game for me to figure this out. This brings us to Vast and Starlit, a 2013 game by Epidiah Ravachol, a game that has provoked a lot of thought in me about this very challenge.

In Vast and Starlit, the player characters are all escapees from a prison ship, crossing the galaxy in an attempt to find a home. You are told this in the first sentence of the game. Character creation is conducted not by individuals weighing resources against anticipated opportunities which might be provided by a GM, but instead by a conversation centering around the strengths and needs of each character; and you don't get to speak up about your own character until your turn comes. Furthermore, the only people who are able to evaluate whether your strength is sufficient to overcome a situation are the other players. In other words, if I say my guy is a top-notch biochemist due to his long work as a poisoner and chef (to use a character in a similar situation from a past campaign), that's awesome; but the extent of my biochemistry knowledge and skills in a specific situation are decided on by the other players. To put it another way, I'm playing my biochemistry skill to the other players. (There's no GM in the game.)

As each person's turn comes, they set a scene, select who is there and what is happening (old hat to a Primetime Adventures veteran like myself). Some crewmembers will be "focused" on; others will not. You can either play your own character or an NPC in the scene. When something that's Dangerous or Difficult is attempted, that's decided on by the other players. The consequences of attempting it are explained by the other players and the player of the character making the attempt decides what to do about it. If you're playing a non-focused character, then you end up having to take a result without knowing what it is in advance. If you're playing a focused character, you get to hear all the different options before choosing the one that's best.

This is a very simple cycle, starting with the need that your ship has that you can't fulfill right now. As you move forward the cycle will keep the game going - a situation arises, characters interact, if they're not doing anything dangerous or difficult, they go about their business. If they are, then their incremental failure or endangerment drive new situations and new opportunities into the plot.

If there was anything to criticize in the "base rules" (really the complete rules of the game) it would be that it doesn't assist the players in determining how to create interesting injuries, dangers, or needs on an ongoing basis. If you've seen a bunch of space science fiction TV shows and movies, you probably won't have a problem with doing this, but it seems likely that in a group of four you might have different ideas of what seems like a reasonable consequence.

(Oh yeah, definitely try to have at least four to play this game - although it's fine with a smaller number, having different voices and points of view in the choices make for a much more exciting game with many more twists and turns.)

This game also comes with several supplements! The first, Bodies in the Dark, is one of the most provocative supplements I've seen in a while. It provides additional rules for interpersonal interactions. There's a brief look at command, but what leapt out at me was the rules for hostility and romance. Yes, they are tracked on the same track. For everyone who's played Mass Effect, this will definitely spark some ideas about interspecies romance and other transgressions. As always, your fellow players will let you know the consequences of "moves" (ahem) you make with respect to hostilities or romances. If you've ever watched a showdown in any kind of show or movie and thought "These enemies just need to screw each other and get it out of their system" then you will love this system. There's also a map of the galaxy, which again is primarily for provoking situations for your crew to have to deal with. Similarly, there's rules for introducing or developing new technologies.

The whole packet is done in 16 pages (some of which are front and back covers.) This leads to my main problem with this game, the format. Although the NASA pictures are gorgeous, putting them in the background makes it so printing the book ranges from marginal to a waste of time. There also aren't layers letting you turn off the background (and if there were, the white letters would immediately disappear on several pages.) Even on a pretty decent home color printer you're likely to have plenty of bleed on some of the grey circles in the Technical Manual, be unable to check off those boxes unless you have a white-ink pen (but then how do you erase and move it?) you're unlikely to be able to make much sense out of the galaxy map, there's a giant star flare slightly off-center in the Bodies in the Dark track, and in general it's just a huge pile of blah. I can't emphasize enough that you should copy-paste the text outta this thing, build your own tracks for Bodies In The Dark and Technical stuff, and attach them to the ship drawing your group creates. (You can use the Galaxy Map on your tablet or smartphone, since you don't need to consult it in the same way and it's only one page.)

There is no reason whatsoever for this game to be a PDF. An app or, heck, a HTML or well-laid out RTF document, would be just fine. I can't give this game a perfect score because its form is just way, way off from what its function is.

To sum up, you're going to be in the spotlight when you play this game; and your fellow players are going to be lobbing challenges at you based on their view of the situation, not based on your view of your character's capabilities. You will only be as safe in this game as your fellow players will let you be. You won't be able to hide beneath a really big number on a character sheet. If that excites you, you shouldn't waste any more time on this review, put your money down and Get This Game. If you want more to your character to belong specifically to you, with a game system that will protect that against others' evaluation, then give it a pass. This is a game where you will be forced by your fellow players to make some tight, tough decisions and where they will tell you that things don't work out for you even when you try really hard. In other words, it will be really, really, exciting and tense to try something dangerous or difficult. Isn't that a feeling worth seeking out?



Rating:
[4 of 5 Stars!]
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Worlds Without Master, Volume 1, Issue 3
by Derek K. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 11/20/2015 18:08:56

This is brilliant fiction and brilliant gaming with wonderful illustrations to bring it all to life. It's a steal at $4.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
Worlds Without Master, Volume 1, Issue 3
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Vast & Starlit
by Emanuele R. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 04/15/2015 11:35:41

The graphical presentation is so bad it's almost unreadable: think 90's bad web sites, with ugly fonts over colourful space photographs. The content is, well almost nothing, actually.



Rating:
[1 of 5 Stars!]
Vast & Starlit
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Vast & Starlit
by Joel W. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 01/10/2014 14:07:39

I am so excited to play this game. The ENTIRE rules for this beautiful game are in two pages. TWO PAGES! The rules are also the GM Screen. :)

Except, there is no GM! That's right, no hours of prep work to be ruined by adventurers. No looking up or creating stat blocks. The scene framing is very Fiasco-esque, which is a plus for me. The resolution is diceless, with other players determining what the possible or actual consequences of Dangerous and Difficult actions are.

The artwork is stunning and evocative and real! All the art was taken from NASA photos and beautifully framed and colored. I have trouble believing how much awesome can appear in TWO PAGES!

Not only do you get the core game, but you also get 3 SUPPLIMENTS! Each supplement is an additional two pages, lavishly illustrated. I plan on playing with only the core rules for the first session, then adding in a supplement per session.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
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Time & Temp: Paperless Office Edition
by Jason P. [Verified Purchaser] Date Added: 12/29/2013 22:13:06

When temporal paradoxes threaten, you need to send a crack team of world renowned experts to fix the problem. Unfortunately, they are too sensitive to the aforementioned paradoxes and you need to find some alternate human resources to do the job. You need someone so disrespected and unimportant that the timestream won't care about their meddling in the past. You need temporary help.

Tons of fun and totally worth your while.



Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]
Time & Temp: Paperless Office Edition
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