Monday, June 29, 2020

The Fixer: A New Class for D&D 5e


So, if you're into techno thriller fantasy (or want to get into it), this will probably be right up your alley. The Fixer is a new class for 5e authored by my friend and sometime business associate, Jim Pinto (who you may recognize from his days at AEG and, specifically, for his work on The World's Largest Dungeon, 7th Sea, and other games during his time there). And it'll set you back less than $3 (US)! 

The Fixer at DriveThruRPG

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Praise for Exalted Funeral

Many of you already know what Exalted Funeral is (and if you don't, I've dropped a link below), but what you might not have known is that Cristin of Exalted Funeral is a customer service dynamo! 

TLDR: Due to an error with a shipping label (notably, the program used to generate the label didn't encode my name or street address in the bar code, which is what the USPS uses to sort mail), a package with my copy of Death Robot Jungle was almost irretrievably lost. 

Enter Cristin!

With literally two hours on the clock before the post offices closed, she managed to suss out the error, track down my package, and make arrangements for the USPS to let me pick it up after hours. Disaster averted! 


So, if you've been thinking about ordering from Exalted Funeral, do it. You won't be disappointed with their products or their customer service. 

https://www.exaltedfuneral.com/

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Wonderful, Weird, Stock Art Resource

If you're a small-press publisher creating RPG content and need some wonderful, weird, stock art with a no fuss commercial license, check out these great offerings from Yuri Perkowski Domingos at DriveThruRPG: 

https://www.drivethrurpg.com/browse/pub/16014/Yuri-Perkowski-Domingos

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Front Range Warlock Rules (Free D&D Hack)

As some of you know, I've commercially published a couple volumes of house rules for OD&D (1974) and some free content for other editions of D&D. Well, some of that stuff is no longer available due to behind the scenes moving and shaking, but here are the bare minimum house rules I use when running older editions of D&D.

Some of these "rules" are just good common sense rulings that can be used with pretty much any RPG, while others are specific to earlier editions of D&D (but, with some work, can be used with newer editions of the game by enterprising DMs). 

Anyway, get 'em here: