Have you looked into Dolmenwood yet? It grounds OSE into a more medieval fairytale sort of vibe.While the majority of my game hours have (and are) spent with other RPGs, in recent times I've also been perusing Old-School Essentials from Necrotic Gnome.
What a lovely version of the TSR B/X rules set. The potential, the flexibility, the freedom.
Excellent.
Have you looked into Dolmenwood yet?
I sometimes use 10mm dice on an abstract battle board and two mini 10mm polyhedral sets. Very compact.In the same mindset of keeping things simple, I've swapped out from using a range of minis to simple wooden pawns (and meeples for the PCs/major NPCs).
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I don't think that Dolmenwood precludes such an approach. I probably wouldn't touch half of what lore Dolmenwood has to offer, as I think that having to juggle things like in-world calendars is a bit too much for my tastes. It is great though for people who like or want such things, but it's not my thing.I have. The new volumes look like a great production but bigger than I personally prefer. I like the style of the bits and bats in the old Wormskin zine format (alas no longer available).
Winter's Daughter looks very good for Dolmenwood (of course it can be run as a simple standalone). I lean more towards scenarios with either only hinted at (or simply no) background campaign arcs – letting anything like that grow organically from the characters' actions and random DM inspiration.
In essence I think I've had enough of "too much lore".
One day I'd love to run a party through Starstone (Northern Sages).
Where did you get the dice in the upper right?In the same mindset of keeping things simple, I've swapped out from using a range of minis to simple wooden pawns (and meeples for the PCs/major NPCs).
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