Dimension 20 Finally Realizes A Vampire: The Masquerade Campaign

dimension-20-finally-realizes-a-vampire:-the-masquerade-campaign

Dimension 20 Finally Realizes A Vampire: The Masquerade Campaign

Rating 20, Give upThe real-world gaming series used a few different tabletop RPG systems over its 27 campaigns. The show uses Dungeons & Dragons (5th edition) most often, but he has also experimented with Kids on Bikes, Kids on Brooms, Dropout’s Never Stop Blowing Up homebrew system, and Good Society. However, these were all intended as “side quests” or shorter campaigns that did not feature the main cast. The only time the series’ main cast (general manager Brennan Lee Mulligan and players Emily Axford, Ally Beardsley, Brian Murphy, Zac Oyama, Siobhan Thompson and Lou Wilson, collectively known as the “fearless heroes”) used anything other than Dungeons & Dragons was for the sixth main campaign, that of 2022 A starry odyssey-and even the one used SW5E, unofficial software Star Wars system which is still based on D&D5E. So it’s a big deal Rating 20the next main campaign of , City Council of Darknessembarks on something completely different: our intrepid heroes finally play Vampire: The Masquerade.

I say “finally,” not because it’s something fans were looking forward to – which it certainly isn’t, given the number of people in attendance. Rating 20 subreddit who did not know Vampire: The Masquerade When Abandonment announced City Council of Darkness last week, but because I’m overly excited for this season.

I played a lot of Vampire: The Masquerade games over the years, including New York Coteries, Shadows of New York, Night roadAnd Parliament of knives. (No, I didn’t play Lineages 2and no, I don’t want to talk about it.) But there’s just one problem: all the Vampire: The Masquerade the games I’ve played are visual novels or interactive fiction. These are offshoots of the original TTRPG. I have never played a table game Vampire: The Masquerade.

This is partly due to the difficulty of diversifying D&D in general; it’s hard enough to get a group together that can sit down and play a tabletop game for several hours straight on a semi-regular basis. So when you finally do, it’s often easier to jump straight into the system that most people are probably already familiar with – and that’s Dungeons & Dragons100 percent of the time. When I coax a group of people to embark on a magical role-playing adventure with me for an unspecified but almost certainly quite long period of time, am I really going to roll the dice and try to convince them to learn a whole new system that they (and, let’s be honest, I) might hate? No. Instead, I’ll do the easy, familiar thing that’s less likely to fall apart. So, even though I was invested in the story of Vampire: The Masquerade and the larger World of Darkness game series (which includes titles like Hunter: the results And Werewolf: The Apocalypseamong several others) of which he is one, I have never had the quintessence VTM TTRPG experience.

That’s why I’m so excited for City Council of Darkness: I’ll finally be able to get an idea of ​​what it’s like to play Vampire: The Masquerade like a table game, even if only by proxy. And yes, there are many others VTM real theater shows I could have searched for now (LA at night And New York at night are, as far as I know, fairly well regarded), but Rating 20The secret sauce of is that it is fully edited, produced and presented in approximately 2 hour episodes. This isn’t a seemingly endless livestream that I struggle to finish like most other plays. Rating 20 It suits me perfectly, unlike other plays. And now that I have a better idea of ​​what the tabletop version of Vampire: The Masquerade it’s actually like thanks to City Council of Darknessmaybe I’ll feel more confident trying to get my friends to play with me too. Or maybe I’ll end up hating it and not wanting to play it at all. Anyway, at least I’ll know.

City Council of Darkness premieres April 8 on Dropout. Why they didn’t keep it until the more thematically appropriate October, I can’t tell you, but I’m also not about to complain if it means we get to see a little earlier what our intrepid heroes do when they live by night.

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