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Blog

This is the blog of Larcenous Designs, LLC, through which I (Nathan Rockwood) will be publishing thoughts and ramblings related to my business' projects, which may include anything related to games, game design, and the use of gaming in education. 

Comments will be moderated without mercy.

Design Notes: The Deck of Tales

Nathan Rockwood

This is both a preview and a small design diary for an upcoming product I'm currently working on: The Deck of Tales, a set of randomizer cards similar to The GameMaster's Apprentice in general purpose, but quite different in execution. 

While I'm still a huge fan of giant walls of text, some of the most consistent feedback I received as to why gamers would avoid the GMA entirely was that the information and visual density was too much to handle. The steep learning curve was clearly a turn-off for many.

As an alternative that will hopefully work better for those gamers (and writers), I put together The Deck of Tales, using some of the systems and ideas from the GMA, but primarily relying on new imagery (specifically, the CC BY 3.0-licensed images available from www.game-icons.net, an amazing resource! I used art by users Delapouite and Lorc, as well as Carl Olsen, sbed, and Lord Berandas; any indie game developers reading this, GO THERE NOW! These are some amazing folks, and their work made The Deck of Tales possible!).

I'm not yet 100% sure this is done, but I've ordered a test print and am hoping to release the cards via DriveThruRPG/DriveThruCards within the next month--so any feedback or thoughts are appreciated, but the window for it to be applied is relatively small!

Games as Lit III: Y/N/Retry/Fail?

Nathan Rockwood

This is the third part of an ongoing series about teaching games--both video games and tabletop role playing games--as literature.

I’ve discussed my reasons for using games as literature in school, but I’ve mostly stuck to the theory so far. Time to address the practical side of this issue: What are the quantifiable outcomes, both benefits and drawbacks, of using games as literature?

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