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Finding Things To Be Inspired By Sticky

A topic by Hy Libre! created Sep 22, 2019 Views: 492 Replies: 8
Viewing posts 1 to 6
Host (2 edits) (+1)

Post games that you want to see people respond to here. Later, peruse the forums for inspiration!

IF YOU HAVE A GAME ONLINE, AT LEAST ONE OF THE GAMES YOU POST HERE HAS TO BE YOUR OWN. We're so humble sometimes. Don't be. If you really don't want to, or don't have anything online yet, no sweat.

Host(+1)

Riley Rethal's "Best Day Ever!" is a game that sells you the fantasy of Phineas and Ferb. It's quite clever and compact, even emulating the B-plot.

"(Charlie Loves) The Spring & The Fall" is a game about a cat. It's one of the only games that's ever made me cry.

--Paul Czege's "Bacchanal" is a very horny Game Chef game that uses a lot of dice.

--E.E. Coli's "Fatimah's Busy Day" is maybe the densest 200-word game I can think of, even though it's elegant and very easy to read.

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And I guess I should follow the rules, huh?

Mere Object is my game for #YourMoveJam, about looking at scenes through a lens of things.

What It Takes is my game for #CureLightWoundsJam, about how far you'll go to heal somebody. It has ritual elements and groveling toward indifferent gods!

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C.M. Ruebsaat, "The Day We Leave Our Forests To Die In Beautiful Silence"

linda c, "who will you save? who will you serve?"

Mitch Alexander, "Tusks: The Orc Dating Sim"

Host

Wow, all of these are fantastic!

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My 200-word RPG from 2018 No Devil-child May Rule Us is about excessive certainty in politics, and allegorically about government scandals where law enforcement and intelligence agencies are involved.

In the Threeforged contest, I thought the "Space Race-punk" aesthetic of Shadow of Ares (by Victor Andrade, Ashton McAllan, and Chris Bennett) was brilliant. We're a little past the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing now. That era still has some powerful imagery and feelings attached but we don't often see it used it in science fiction.

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Another 2018 200-word RPG I thought was interesting was Can you hear me? by Eleanor Tursman. It has a mechanism where you add drops of color to water to make it harder to see through over the course of the game (drops of ink in the original). It seems like you could maybe do some interesting things with this, for example a token draw mechanic where it becomes harder over the course of the game to figure out which color token you're drawing from the colored water. It would probably take some physical experimentation to see what works and would be practical for actually playing.

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An idea I've had that I don't think I would ever develop on my own is to combine the gradually color-changing water idea with melting ice: you make ice cubes out of intensely colored water, put the cubes into a container of clear water, and then as the ice melts the water gets progressively more tinted. I figure you would incorporate this with some sort of token-draw mechanic, where it's easy to tell the tokens apart through clear water and impossible to distinguish them in the fully tinted water, so it's easier to pick exactly the result you want in the early game but it becomes harder to pick the ones you want in the late game. (There might also be a painfulness tradeoff related to immersing your hand in ice water). I think the broad strokes of this idea are sound, but it would probably take some experimentation to figure out if it would actually work.

Since preparing the water/ice thing would be pretty elaborate to set up, it seems like it would make sense to make the game some sort of party game. Like Can you hear me?, I think the idea of the obscuring water being related to psychic visions makes sense. So my thought is that the game would be a "murder mystery party" kind of game, with the hook being that all of the guests are psychics and the way you have a "psychic vision" is to stick your arm into the slowly-obscuring water/ice container and draw something from the bottom.

Although I think this is an idea that could work it's not really the kind of game that I have any experience with, so I don't think I'd develop it on my own. If somebody who felt more confident about the party-game/LARPy elements was interested in pursuing this I might be open to collaborating (or if a group of people think it's a good idea feel free to run with it without me).

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Well, I was part of the design team for TRANSIT: The Spaceship RPG, a PbtA game of Artifical Intelligences controlling starships and exploring the galaxy and their own existence. Obviously you should buy a copy, but if you want to respond to it for the jam give me a ping and I can send a PDF your way.

I played For The Queen recently, and that struck a chord. A very interesting storytelling experience, with an ending set not-quite in stone.

Oh, and speaking of story games pretty much any of the games in Seven Wonders would be interesting, although I'm partial to Heroes of the Hearth and Before the Storm.