Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Wednesday Comics: DC, October 1985 (week 3)
Monday, July 13, 2026
Goblin Games
Our Nimble game continued last night with the party leaving the city of Brookdale Mill to rescue the local patron fae Moonblossom who had been kidnapped by a band of goblins. Following the goblin's trail, the party came upon another sign of their aggression: a caravan wagon overturned and at least partially looted. Frea found some loose gold pieces and a cowering halfling, who introduced himself as Shag Marigold. Marigold says he's an artificer traveling to Ervessos to work for the nobility. He was robbed of a manastone, and the oxen that pulled his wagon was chased off.
The party promises to get him back the manastone, if they can (though not the gold). Aelarion used his Naturecraft to figure out the goblins' trail. It was a good thing he was so skilled, too, because the goblins had laid false trails that led to pit traps. The party found the ox in one!
Further into the woods, they came upon a ridge, and they heard raucous laughter. A stealthy reconnoiter revealed a group of goblins playing a "dodge ball" sort of game with stones and one goblin on a giant rat. The party tried to sneak around the ridge and surround them, but they flubbed their stealth rolls and the goblins are alerted.
The party still held the high ground, and the goblins were at a disadvantage. Aelarion, Tamarra, and Pan blasted the goblins like proverbial fish in a barrel with spells. G'Mbalisto and Frea charged in for melee.
The rat rider managed to charge up the ridge and smacked Pan, knocking him prone. The other goblins hurled the rocks they had previously used in the game at the party.
In the end, the party wins with very little injury. They even manage to nab one goblin to interrogate. He confusingly asserts that the faerie is "a power source" that "Greb" plans to use for "the juggernaut."
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This adventure is still mostly the intro adventure in the Nimble's GM's guide, though I'm mixing in some other elements to make it more interesting (to me, at least!). We're still getting used to the system. Though its lighter on paper, combat is still taking us about as long as 5e. Of course, we had 10 years' experience with 5e, so no doubt there's plenty of room for improvement here.
Friday, July 10, 2026
Wuxia State of Mind
Events have conspired to put in a wuxia mood what with the Wandering Blades draft, the impending release of the new Last Airbender movie, and the recent Criterion sale on Amazon where I picked up a couple of wuxia titles among other things. Then there's Wesley Chu's wuxia-inspired fantasy novel, The Art of Prophecy. I've been listening to the audiobook.
Chu's book is interesting because it mixes the epic fantasy elements with the wuxia ones. The people of Zhuun have been training a prophesized champion to defeat the Eternal Khan and free them from the menace of the Katuia tribes and their steam-powered roving cities of the grasslands. The first problem is the champion, a fifteen year-old boy named Jian, hasn't really received the proper training. Instead, he's just grown up spoiled by luxury and self-importance. The elder "master war artist" Ling Taishi shows up to set things right, but she's just starting to make headway with the boy when the second problem drops: the Eternal Khan is killed while drunk by a random Zhuun soldier.
With the prophecy busted, Jian is a political liability for the five Dukes of Zhuun and the delicate balance of power between them. Tiashi rescues the boy, and they both go on the run.
When while, the Katuia are thrown into chaos and the warrior Sali, decides to break tradition and delay her duty in order to try to find the only surviving member of her family. There's also the mad assassin Qisami thrown into the mix.
I like how Chu uses familiar wuxia elements but remakes them for a fantasy world. Instead of the wulin we have the lunar court as the society of martial artists, presumably related to the world's three moons and their seasonal cycles. Instead of "lightness kung fu" Tiashi's abilities are described as manipulating air with her spiritual energy. There are also the completely un-wuxia elements of the Steampunkish Katuia cities and their home grassland which is formed by gigantic blades of crash and a brittle crust of earth over a sea.
There are 2 more books in the series after this one, and I am interested in seeing where it goes.
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Wednesday Comics: DC, October 1985 (week 2)
Monday, July 6, 2026
When the Crowdfunding Rewards Arrive
With starting our new campaign in Nimble and life in general, I just haven't got around to giving the attention I'd like to to crowdfunding rpg products that have been arriving.
Two Little Mice have been busy lately and I got the physical occupy of Outgunned: Superheroes (I've had the pdf for a while) and the drafts of the Twilight Sword material. The former is the "action flick" (campaign book) for the Outgunned action movie rpg for cinematic supers. The latter is their Legend of Zelda-inspired fantasy rpg. Both look good, and I'm interested in seeing the rules implementation in both of them, more than I think either will be something I will play any time soon, admittedly. I'm always interested in rules lite-ish supers games, and I'm like to compared Twilight Sword to the similar jrpg-inspired Legends of Akeroth.
What I have spent a little bit of time reading over is the plain text draft of Wandering Blades, a wuxia rpg. Wuxia (sort of like supers) is a genre where I haven't found the system that I think perfect captures what I want to see in such a game. Wandering Blades looks pretty simple (which is a plus), but also flavorful.
These aren't the only crowdfunding rewards I haven't really given a thorough read, I'm said to say. If only these things would arrive at the moment I had maximum interest in them and time to engage with them!
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Wednesday Comics: DC, October 1985 (week 1)
Monday, June 29, 2026
Nimble and Goblins
My gaming group got together last night and did our first session of our Parsulan campaign using Nimble. Basically, we completed character generation and did one combat to try out the rules. A faerie beloved by a village they happened to be stopped in is kidnapped by goblins and the party went after them. They took out about 10 of them, but the group with the faerie got away.
The system worked pretty well. Despite our unfamiliarity, it certainly went faster than 5e would have.
Besides the Nimble rules, the players used the Local Experience tables I had come up with for the various important places. These are the characters:
g'Mbalisto (Tug): A dwarf Oathsworn (a Paladin, essentially) from the Lightbearer Republic. He's also been a gladiator in Mayura in the past.
Pan(demonium) (Gina): A darkling Songweaver (bard) from the Durendine Confederation. A forrmer rabble rouser and busker.
Frea (Andrea): A human (thought changed into a more felinoid form by a curse of a wizard of Abraxad) Cheat (thief).
Tamarra (Kathy): A human Shepherd (a cleric, more or less) from the Lightbearer Republic. Her parents died in the Kakharoth Wastes.
Aelarion (Bob): Human Stormshifter (the stuff people like about the druid). He's from a small town near the Dagard Mountains.



































