At this Roman dinner, you eat, drink and be wary! Each turn, a player will keep a card, discard a card and pass a card to another player. It may be food or wine, or it may be poison! Don't eat too much, or your character may not be around for the end of the meal!
At this Roman dinner, you eat, drink and be wary! Each turn, a player will keep a card, discard a card and pass a card to another player. It may be food or wine, or it may be poison! Don't eat too much, or your character may not be around for the end of the meal!
At this Roman dinner, you eat, drink and be wary! Each turn, a player will keep a card, discard a card and pass a card to another player. It may be food or wine, or it may be poison! Don't eat too much, or your character may not be around for the end of the meal!
At this Roman dinner, you eat, drink and be wary! Each turn, a player will keep a card, discard a card and pass a card to another player. It may be food or wine, or it may be poison! Don't eat too much, or your character may not be around for the end of the meal!
In this game you are a time traveler, a descendant of one of the characters in the Back to the Future movies. Unfortunately, other time travelers have been tampering with events in your past, endangering your very existence. You must put things back in the ways that seem right to you, then stop Doc Brown from ever inventing time travel, which will freeze reality the way you need it to be, once and for all.
Tournament for 'Backseat Drawing'- party style game. Tournament type to depend on number of players. No experience necessary. Prizes for first and second place!
Being a member of the Solar System's number one law enforcement agency can have it's advantages: You get a great jumpsuit, for one! But, when the call came from Princess Alluriana of Planet 10, you could just tell this wouldn't be an average day for the Patrol. Roleplaying in the Pulp Science Fiction future in the vein of Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon, and John Carter.
Balancing Act: The Fine Art of Creating Balanced Characters
Description:
Mr. Perfect is a pretty dull chap. Well-rounded characters—ones folks enjoy reading about—have flaws and foibles. How do you add the right amount of baggage to a hero, villain, or sidekick? How can you avoid stereotypical troubles and latch onto something sparkling and masterful?