I don't know how we got on the subject of sharktopi yesterday, but we did. And I laughed so hard when I watched this trailer yesterday that I embarrassed my boss in the middle of a conference call.
This is a short adventure I wrote for my kids and a few of their friends last weekend. We wound up with a party of seven 1st level characters, including Hannah playing Sneakatara Boatman as a warlock of Loki , Emma playing a drow paladin of Hades named Victoria , and my wife Sally playing Maleeka , a mute half-orc barbarian. We had a total of five kids under age 12, and they all had a good time. This adventure is set in Breakwater Bay , a small fishing village on the Isle de Mont Deserette along the northen frontier in the Wanderhaven setting. That said, you shouldn't have any trouble transporting it into a different setting if that better suits your game.
We've been using these rules in our home game for months, but I've only just gotten around to writing them up for you. We see that you've been reading our original Mermaid article , so hopefully you'll like the revision. Mermaids from ancient myth...
My daughter Hannah goes to an agricultural high school in Trumbull, and what with COVID-19 having shut down the planet, we’re currently hosting her class’s guinea pigs. It turns out that they make good pets. They’ve become family favorites, which means that it’s now time to figure out how to work them into our home Dungeons & Dragons campaign. Yours truly with Giblet, the Lord of Guinea Pigs. If you've never been around guinea pigs, then you might not realize how loud and distracting they can be. My base theory is that they're mostly useless in combat save for this ability to serve as a distraction. However, there are any number of ways that they might work in-game beyond simple combat. Thinking through some of that has been an interesting exercise.
Comments
Post a Comment