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Post a Comment On: Playing D&D With Porn Stars

"Deck of Hurtful Things"

5 Comments -

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Blogger thekelvingreen said...

There was a playing card/NPC personality system in Traveller: The New Era. It was okay, but like many, many things with that game, it was as boring as a grey day in Milton Keynes. It might serve as a useful basis for a more interesting system though.

Clubs were indicative of a violent personality, diamonds of greed, spades of ambition, and hearts of sociability, with face cards being special instances of the parent personality type.

August 22, 2010 at 5:05 AM

Blogger Bighara said...

"the goblins throw vials of slime at people, that's just one of their things"

LOL

Green slime? :-)

August 22, 2010 at 5:58 AM

Blogger Telecanter said...

Yeah, cards are cool. They're something everyone understands and the fact that you can draw hands of cards that interact with each other means simple tools give complex results.

And npc with a five card hand for personality traits would be a complex person. Maybe he has a sliver of aggression, but tempered by sympathy, etc.

As for what the suits stand for, if you could have some sort of relationship between club-spade and diamond-heart you could tap knowledge most of us have: flushes are more powerful than random cards. Maybe clubs are aggression and spades are ambition as kelvingreen mentioned. Then an npc with all black cards would be especially bad news and players would understand that at a glance.

If they could see them . . . you might keep a hole card hidden that would take some digging by pcs to find out about.

If you wanted to get fancy, pc interactions with npcs could involve manipulating cards somehow: trading them, removing them. But then that start looking less and less like D&D.

Anyway, cool stuff thanks for sharing.

August 22, 2010 at 10:56 AM

Blogger mordicai said...

The use of the suits as a categorical is what brings it up & over the top; that is just sly & elegant.

August 22, 2010 at 1:06 PM

Blogger Delta said...

I'll come at this from the other direction and express gladness at having something to do with my old decks other than throw them out (from playing poker too hard and accidentally creasing/marking one of the cards)

August 23, 2010 at 5:20 AM

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