chevkoch: Pathfinder I've played a game before, it felt like a DnD-style dungeon crawl (not bad at that).
rtcvb32: Well, Pathfinder
is D&D 3rd edition (
D20), except with updated rules since WotC kinda threw it away to go with 4th Edition. Safe to say that didn't do too well. Had 4th been a real computer
MMO or had a faster rule set it could have done better for miniature wargames. But I'm not really here to nit-pick at what 4th Edition failed to be, and now what 5th Edition will fail to be. I don't recommend either system, although i've played little of either, what i did play of 4th felt... odd.. and 5th i've seen review basically of what the system is and it feels too simplistic in order to be fast.
Only watched the Penny Arcade team play one of the newer DnD versions and the whole experience seemed utterly lifeless to me, I was asking myself, how come they appear to be really enjoying this? I don't get it.
chevkoch: EDIT: nvm I can't seem to post right tonight, urgh.
The setting is deliciously dark, I really like it. But the dice army you gotta manage...
Human Occupied Landfill? Hahaha, brilliant! I gotta find this.
CarrionCrow: Alongside that, other suggestions include Paranoia, Feng Shui, Unknown Armies and Don't Rest Your Head.
Seriously, HOL. I've looked on Ebay, but these prices... Well, sooner or later. Maybe I'll go to Spiel in Essen again next year and look there. This year they had lots of obscure titles.
Paranoia, maybe that's not my taste of weird; although one never knows before you've gone through a game session. The focus on competition is not something that would draw me to it really.
Feng Shui, haha, I've been wanting to play some movie Kung Fu game for a long while! I quote one faction which has me hooked already: "The Eaters of the Lotus are a group of evil eunuch sorcerers from the China of 69 AD." Sweet XD. And at character creation I saw some dude named "Big Bruiser". Love it already. Running a Chinese Ghost Story-type game would be fantastic.
Unknown Armies, looks cool too. Particularly, the madness meter system and how it lets you chart your descent into insanity.
Don't Rest Your Head, added that to my wishlist for serious consideration. The blurb alone did that.
Azilut: If you don't want to stray too far from BRP but are looking for an alternative to the usual Cthulhu settings, you might consider Delta Green. Basically, it mixes Call of Cthulhu with paranoid UFO conspiracy theories and all sorts of other craziness, and has the players as members of a rogue government agency working against the madness. This simultaneously solves the "why are these characters all doing this?" problem while avoiding the "I call in a nuclear strike on Innsmouth" issue you might otherwise get with government agents. I believe there are BRP and D20 versions currently out there, with a new version with it's own unique rules system due out in the near future.
In recent years, I've also been becoming increasingly fond of "minimalist" RPGs with very simple rulesets that are intended more as a general guide to play than a crunchy mechanics system - for example, stuff like Inspectres (think: Ghostbusters the RPG) or Fiasco (think: Guy Ritchie movie the RPG) or even Lasers And Feelings (a free-to-play sci-fi game which literally has only one stat, but still works surprisingly well for one-shot sessions).
I haven't played Cthulhutech, but I did read through the manual a few years back, and I wasn't very impressed. The theme sounded awesome, but it turned out that the setting takes itself waaaaaay too seriously for my tastes. (I was expecting more of a Pacific Rim kind of thing, but instead it's taking its cues from super-angsty mecha anime about morose pale-skinned teenagers with floppy hair who constantly whine about the responsibilities imposed on them. Which might be a plus if you're into that, but personally I'm not.) Worse still, the dice system just seemed needlessly complicated and was not something I felt like learning.
I'm aware of Delta Green and love its setting. Not played a game, but have read the "Strange Authorities" and "Through a Glass, Darkly
" novels, alas was not impressed with the quality of writing. But the theme is perfect.
InSpectres, haha, that's my type of fun too I'd say. And the unique dice mechanic/narration engine peaks my interest also. Who you gonna call, and all that :)
Fiasco I know and have played one or two games which were mad fun.
Lasers and Feelings, dude, one statistic with Lasers on one end and Feelings on the other? o_O Free, one page only? I'll download that instantly.
EDIT: Thanks for the heads-up regarding CthulhuTech, sounds like I'd feel the same about that system then. Will glance at it nevertheless, but your impressions are discouraging already.