Emma and Gil welcome Sen-Foong Lim back to the show to discuss the differences—and similarities—between board games and roleplaying games. We go through the perspectives of playing them, designing them, and examining the culture of play between both.
Sen originally appeared on Ludology 134: There's No "I" in Team with frequent co-designer Jay Cormier.
SHOW NOTES
0m41s: Board games Sen has designed or co-designed: Junk Art, Belfort, D&D: Rock Paper Wizard. RPGs Sen has designed, co-designed, or written for: Jiang-Shi: Blood in the Banquet Hall, Kids on Bikes, The Curse of the House of Rookwood, North Sea Epilogues
3m39s: If the comparison between RPG and improv intrigues you, wait till you hear Ludology 237...
4m47s: An example of a crunchy old-school RPG: Traveller
5m10s: Chainmail was the game that D&D evolved from.
5m20s: While Gil agrees with Sen that encumbrance as implemented by a game like D&D tends to bog down gameplay, a nice counter-example is Torchbearer, a dungeon-crawling TTRPG in which encumbrance is a central mechanism.
7m44s: You can see one Emma's chats with Peter Adkison (who founded Wizards of the Coast and owns Gen Con) here.
11m34s: Sen is currently watching Black Sails.
12m31s: RPGs where your character is likely to die: Fiasco, Paranoia
17m55s: The RPG Masks: A New Generation.
19m14s: Gil and Sen's friend and beloved loudmouth Errol Elumir.
19m40s: This is literally Errol's first rule of escape room puzzle design.
20m36s: Critical Role (with GM Matt Mercer) is the most popular of the vibrant active play scene.
21m46s: The party game Cranium.
22m25s: Save Against Fear, a convention about gaming in therapy.
23m01s: Roll20 is an online platform for playing RPGs, as is Role. Tabletop Simulator can handle crunchy RPGs like D&D as well.
28m21s: Formula D (née Formula Dé)
30m00s: We had Mike Selinker on the show for Ludology 189: Missing Selinker.
31m13s: Sen's favorite D&D module, Expedition to the Barrier Peaks
31m30s: Star Frontiers
33m05s: You can hear more from Jiang-Shi co-designer Banana Chan on Ludology 228: The Roles We Play.
35m51s: Emma's storytelling games ...And Then We Died (...And Then We Held Hands is a different game)
45m02s: "Jay" is Jay Cormier, Sen's frequent collaborator. "Jesse" is game designer Jesse Wright.
45m30s: Jay and Sen's tabletop escape game Scooby Doo: Escape from the Haunted Mansion.
47m20s: The TV show Bob's Burgers.
48m50s: Itch is an online platform for digital games, but has a lot of downloadable PDFs for tabletop games. DriveThruRPG
offers PDFs and PODs of many RPGs.
50m12s: RPGs that Emma mentions: Burning Wheel, Paranoia, FATE Core System, Ryuutama, Over the Edge.
51m58s: For more about safety tools in RPGs, check out Ludology 227: Respect the X.
53m04s: You can access all these tools via the TTRPG Safety Kit.
56m05s: Gil's board game safety tool Check-In Cards.
1h07m06s: Board games that allow for relaxed conversation: Sagrada, Lotus.
1h08m27s: More about the semiotic function.
1h09m57s: Sen mentions psychologist Lev Vygotsky.
1h10m30s: Emma is a Mythic-tier Magic player!
1h11m55s: More info about the D&D Adventurers League.
1h14m13s: Jay and Graeme's game In the Hall of the Mountain King. Jay also created the Fail Faster playtesting notebook.
1h19m31s: Sen's web series, the Meeple Syrup Show, with Jessey Wright and Erica Hayes-Bouyouris.
1h20m59s: Sen's licensed games: Batman: The Animated Series - Rogues Gallery, Legend of Korra: Pro-Bending Arena, and the Scooby Doo and D&D games mentioned above.
1h22m01s: The manga and anime My Hero Academia.
1h23m08s: Follow Sen on Twitter!
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