Tabletop
Tabletop is your one stop shop for any and all P&P RPG discussions. Anything from D&D to Warhammer 40K goes.
Rules & Regulations
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Keep it civil
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Submissions don't have to be directly about tabletop games, but they should be closely related. For example, posting that Amazon has a sale going on would be off topic, but posting that Amazon has a sale going on that includes RPG books would be on topic. Spam (blatant, such as mh101 or Irish dry cleaners) will be deleted.
More will be added if they become necessary.
Publishers
TBD
- /v/dungeonsanddragons - The name says it all. If you need in depth discussions of or information on D&D, pop on over to this subverse.
- /v/turnbased - Every now and then video games will be mentioned here when they relate to P&P games. /v/turnbased is dedicated to, you guessed it, turnbased video games.
- /v/rpgmaps - Sooner or later your game is going to need a map of some sort. /v/rpgmaps can help you out with that. They encourage everything from a global view down to the castle you're currently pillaging.
- /v/boardgames - If you're itching to talk Arkham Horror, RISK, The Settlers of Catan, or any other board game then this is your destination.
Resources
DriveThruRPG - If it's a digital RPG book, they (likely) sell it. They've even started providing Print on Demand for certain titles.
RPGNow - This is a sister site to DriveThruRPG, but it has an emphasis on indie RPGs.
Pen & Paper Games - If you're looking for a group, or advertising a group, and Voat just isn't producing results give this site a go. While their forum isn't exclusively for matchmaking, their extra features (ie: search for users within certain geographical areas, days available, etc) are geared for it.
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[–] Vhaine 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Necromunda was the best table top game GW put out since 40k 2nd edition. It was literally the last good product they made. Gorka Morka wasn't terrible...but it was just Necromunda with trucks in alot of ways. I still have a ton of converted Catchan plastics that made great orlocks.
[–] More_Bort [S] 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
It was the only GW game I could really afford to play back in the day, since big 40k armies were expensive. 40k armies have only gotten bigger and more expensive. It’s crazy, not just as a moneysink but a time sink to properly paint up such huge forces.
I’ve been easing friends into tabletop gaming with smaller games. I’m eyeing the new Necromunda book. A game shop also runs games of Infinity, a competing game that seems manageable small in scale.
[–] Vhaine ago (edited ago)
I'd been collecting IG since the very early 90's. Back in the day I could field like 12,000 points including epicast rules for baneblades and shadow swords. 90% bought used off ebay. Stripped with pinesol and repainted. If I wanted to field a viable IG army these days it'd require a dolly. The last time I put one together it had 120 minies without counting any of the vehicles at all. When I started in this hobby a big game was 1 Chaplin and 2 marine squads. Individual characters had depth with wargear and stat lines. Now it's just a wall of bodies. Who has time to paint 120 minis? It takes 30 minutes just to unpack and setup a game. If I wanted to spend all day on one game, I'd play Command Decision.
It seem like about the time they decided to kill epic is when they decided armies should have hundreds of minis. The current 40k rules would actually work better if you just made the models 1/3rd of the size and treated squads as stands like back in the day of epic. Firing one squad of IG using rapid fire rules would be 20 dice roles without heavy weapons. That's just dumb when you have 10+ squads.
[–] More_Bort [S] ago (edited ago)
Close up with a scarred veteran:
http://magaimg.net/img/5z7f.jpg
Punisher conversation:
http://magaimg.net/img/5z7g.jpg