Log in

View Full Version : Pen & Paper RPG - San Diego, Ca


JALU3
07-01-07, 10:47 PM
Please leave me a message in this thread if anyone is out there who would like to join a oWoD (old world of darkness) rpg group in San Diego, CA.

Boris
07-02-07, 04:23 AM
Nerd :yep:

SmokinTep
07-02-07, 06:22 AM
:rotfl: :rotfl:

JALU3
07-02-07, 12:10 PM
Damn right . . . I also lack rythem, can't dance, and I atleast use to know pi out to the 10th decimal . . . but now I am down to the standard 4th decimal. I am the most caucasian, and nerdist ABF you'll ever meet.

Sailor Steve
07-02-07, 04:07 PM
:rock:
Good for you, mate! I don't play RPGs anymore, and I haven't lived in Cantafordya for 36 years, but I do play tabletop naval wargames, and you have my condole...um, sympat...um, blessings (not that you need 'em).:sunny:

Safe-Keeper
07-02-07, 04:59 PM
Good for you, mate! I don't play RPGs anymore, and I haven't lived in Cantafordya for 36 years, but I do play tabletop naval wargames, and you have my condole...um, sympat...um, blessings (not that you need 'em).:rotfl:

Good old pen-and-paper RPG. I quit playing it when I realized it was 45% arguing, 45% joking around, and 10% playing:shifty:. Nah, not for me.

FIREWALL
07-02-07, 05:11 PM
Good for you, mate! I don't play RPGs anymore, and I haven't lived in Cantafordya for 36 years, but I do play tabletop naval wargames, and you have my condole...um, sympat...um, blessings (not that you need 'em).:rotfl:

Good old pen-and-paper RPG. I quit playing it when I realized it was 45% arguing, 45% joking around, and 10% playing:shifty:. Nah, not for me.




You mean people still use pen and paper ? hey this is 2007 get with the times.:rotfl:

JALU3
07-03-07, 04:56 AM
Yes, there are those of us in this community who harken back to a more simpler time, like playing with long and time consuming, and more then average complexity board games. For the day the power goes out after to much A/C use . . . as long as you have graphite in the wood stick, paper, and your dice one is never far out of reach from an entertaining afternoon.

Sirten Deth
08-04-07, 11:37 PM
:rock: Play NICE KIDS I tryed to play P&P D&D befor there were pc's. I seldom could find anybody that 'had the time' to sit with friends for an evening of gaming. I had most of the manuals, the die, game moduals, & character sheets, etc. till I gave them away a couple of years ago. Now I spend most of my time sitting HERE by myself, unless I am ridding my cycle or cruising logging roads or some such. Point is there is nothing wrong with spending time with friends instead of alone at a keyboard.

PLAY NICE.. Do not argue with or degrade others. WE are here to help NOT to hinder.. are we not ???

Thank You,,, LETS PLAY .!.! :sunny:

fatty
08-05-07, 07:57 AM
One of the few games I played ended with my half-orc character rolling a d20 to attempt to hurl my friend's halfling up a 100ft cliff face to get a better view of the area. It can be pretty damned fun if nobody is going into it too seriously, but otherwise it ends up frustrating for the DM.

AJ!
08-05-07, 12:55 PM
lol i didnt know that sort of game existed...... all i grew up with was Pogs, Scooters, skateboards and Pokemon cards (that fad didnt last long though)

Sailor Steve
08-05-07, 03:29 PM
Oh, you'd be surprised, AJ!. I have a friend whose hobby shop survives mostly on kids buying Pokemon cards.

JALU3
08-06-07, 05:12 AM
Those who created Magic and other Tradable Card Games created a goldmine for the Hobby Shop. Where as with other gaming items, they are really one time purchases, usually at 40-50 dollars for the core book, with 25-50 dollars for additional books . . . several dollars for dice . . . and that's it . . . the customer leaves, and if they really like that system you never see them again.
However, with Magic and other CCGs/TCGs the starting price is low . . . and you need to by more booster packs to build a good deck . . . and then you need to by the next edition because some cars become obsolete in certain rules, or the newer cards overpower the older edition cards . . . and it's an endless cycle . . . and at 2-4 bucks a pop, one doesn't think to hard about the purchase decision as compared to something 10 times as much.

But yah . . . the hardest part is finding people who you can agree with long enough, and enjoy their company, to spend that amount of time with them . . . especially given the instant pleasure that is so common these days . . . a game which takes time, and mental imagination is like a good book.