Category Archives: RPGs

Thanks

Today in the U.S. is Thanksgiving.

Many don’t wish to celebrate because it is a to them a symbol of what the Europeans did to the indigenous Americans.

I mean no disrespect to past, current, or future Native Americans.

I think it is important to choose a day to be Thankful for who you are, your family, and what you have.

While our lives may be difficult from time to time, or all the time, if you are reading this blog post, if you play RPGs, you are among a small minority of the population. Odds are, you have a roof over your head, a safe place to sleep, enough food to eat, and live in a country that doesn’t know epidemics, disease, and war.

The poorest in the world don’t play roleplaying games because they can’t afford the basics. We are truly blessed who have an opportunity to even play RPGs, let alone a choice of multiple RPGs to choose from.

Take some time to reflect on that. Do what you can for those less fortunate than yourself.

I am thankful for my sons and granddaughters, even though my house is a little crowded and sometimes it’s hard to get a moment to myself.

I would do almost anything for them.

I am very thankful for everyone who finds the PDFs, blog posts, tweets, and other social media posts, and podcast episodes interesting.

I have two patrons for my patreon, and I am very thankful for them.

I have callers for many podcast episodes, and I am thankful for the conversations and ideas they generate.

I am thankful for the amount of ideas being presented by all the podcasters, and that I have time to eventually listen to them. I also appreciate all the RPG bloggers and creators who share their ideas.

I am a gamer and I’m glad I live in a time when I can say that without fear of so called Christians losing their minds.

I am thankful for my skills that landed me my job of nearly 21 years. A job that provides for me and my family and leaves disposable income to pursue my hobby as a creator, backer of many Kickstarters, and attendee of several conventions.

I am thankful for the communitee of friends I have made, both in person and online, and look forward to meeting more face to face and making new ones in the years ahead.

I hope that whereever you are and whatever your particular life circumstances, that you are well, safe, sheltered, and fed, and have enough free time to game regularly.

UCon 2018 Recap

I talked about my Ucon 2018 experience on my podcast. But I want to share pictures, so here’s a blog article. I did share pictures to various social media, but I wanted to have them all in one place so they are found more easily. I also have some pics I didn’t get shared to social media.

While the lobby restaurant/bar was not as packed as years past, the con itself was well attended. There were three other cons this weekend, the two closest were Gamehole Con in Madison, WI and Con On The Cob in Ohio, and the Mace convention in North Carolina [EDIT 13 Dec 2022 – URL no longer exists & not in the Internet Archive]. On the podcast, I incorrectly said it was Pax Unplugged in PA. PAX Unplugged is the last week of November.

I got busy and didn’t sign up for games before the con. I got an all access pass, so any game with an opening, I could drop in and play.

I saw several old friends, and met some new friends face to face, and made more friends.

Thursday night, I ran into a couple of friends and made a new friend, and the four of us played my card game. They liked it, and had some suggestions for the two player game. I also played a two player game Friday night with one of the 3 players who played in the first two games at Gary Con 10 in the spring. Since the last rough edge was knocked out in the third game, he hadn’t played it in it’s current form. He really liked the change, as it dealt with the one issue I hadn’t worked out yet.

Thursday night play test of the card game at the bar.

I ran my Gamma World [Affiliate Link] scenario, Vault of the Ancients at 9 am Friday morning I had a sold out table of 8 players, and one of them didn’t show. Last year in that time slot, I was going to run Metamorphosis Alpha and had one player, who decided to go to another game rather than attempt a solo game. I forgot to get a picture of the table during play. We had a blast and lots of laughs.

1st session of my DCC funnel.

Friday Afternoon, I ran my DCC [Affiliate Link] funnel, Amongst the Fungus, with 6 players and they all had a blast and liked the weirdness of it. I had calls to publish it, which I am considering, but need a lot of writing, polishing, and play testing.

Saturday morning, I slept in and took my time to review things for my evening Boot Hill game, since I hadn’t played it in at least 35 years.

2nd session of my DCC funnel.

Saturday Afternoon, I ran my DCC [Affiliate Link] funnel, Amongst the Fungus with 5 players and they also enjoyed it. I love how the play test on Roll20 ended one way, and each con game was also a different game. For both games, I used a table of 200 items from Doug Kovacs, that Doug and Adam Muszkiewicz, and some other DCC game masters use. It’s up to the players to decide what those items do and can be used for. For some, it’s just a role playing device, for others, they might help advance the adventure, or solve problems. It’s all up to the players to be creative and use their imaginations.

My Boot Hill 2e session.

Saturday Evening, I ran my Boot Hill 2e [Affiliate Link] game, A Posse For the School Marm. The 6 players were ready for the game. All but one, a young woman, had played before. The young woman I think her name was Laura was so excited to play that she bought the PDF, printed it off, read the rules, and generated a character. She had read the rules and understood them, and was so eager she was looking up things as part of our prep before I could get to them. I had pregens, but gave her the choice to use a pregen or her self made character, and she chose her self made character. The players accomplished their goals and ended up with a lot of money and decided to pool it and buy a ranch. They has so much fun that they asked if I could run a game next year to find out what happens to their cattle ranch. I’ve always had players like the games I run, but this is the first time that any have asked for a sequel! I am pumped and am definitely starting to think how that might work.

Sunday Morning, I finally played in an RPG session at UCon. I played my first game in the Contessa track.

Stacy Delorfano was the UCon special guest two years ago, and I was there Thursday night and was asked to help give guests a ride to the guest welcome dinner, since I’m friends with a couple of the con staff, and my youngest son was with me and we gave Stacy a ride. So she remembered me when we ran into each other either Friday or Saturday night this year between games.

She played in the game ran by Emily Danvers, in a game they are working on. I found out that Contessa plans to open a publishing arm and will help those who are marginalized get their name on a published item, to give them a leg up with larger publishers.

The game is an OSR based system, using the standard 6 abilities, but wisdom was renamed to Spirit. The game is a werewolf theme, where the players are all werewolves in addition to having classes. Character generation was easy. We each got a note card that had the name of our class, and only the abilities that had positive bonuses. Abilities not listed were +0. Each class also had a couple of skills they could use, like hacking, healing, combat, and one skill that could be used to give a player advantage. There was also a Rage track where if you failed something miserably, you had to roll a DC to see if you lost control and became a wolf. To start the DC is 2, and each time you check it goes up. Some particularly challenging things cause the DC to go up before you roll the check. We also got to pick from a group of cards a personality trait and two background cards. My character was a spiritualist with an anxious personality and was a conspiracy theorist and had a spiritualist background. A spiritualist can identify paranormal, non-human things and communicate with the magical overlay on the WWW.

We had a good time with lots of laughter. One round of play, everyone was rolling 1’s and failing miserably. I rolled a 1 on my Rage check and became a wolf, and chomped onto a chain of a possessed whirly theme park ride and was struggling like a dog you can pick up on the end of a rope in tug of war. I may have been the only straight guy there, I guess the term is cis, and was definitely the oldest. I think the ones who didn’t know me were a little skeptical of my presence until they got to know me.

This was the first time I had ever played in a game that used the X card. I understand it better, but not enough to explain it properly. 

I caught up with several friends, I’ve lost track of what days I spoke with each of them.

Donn Stroud author of Dead Planet [Affiliate Link] for the Mothership game
[Affiliate Link]is a friend I knew online. UCon is his local con as he only lives a few miles away. I bought Mothership [Affiliate Link] and Dead Planet 
[Affiliate Link]. Then he signed them. I have yet to find time to read them. Donn is working on more adventures for Mothership [Affiliate Link]. Donn flattered me by telling me he had my PDFs from DriveThruRPG and liked them!

Adam & Katie Muszkiewicz and Stanley made it and Adam & Donn talked a bit. They have several episodes recorded of Drink, Spin, Run, and may release them. Life gets in the way, so they haven’t recorded new episodes.

My schedule didn’t match up with Brendan LaSalle’s until Sunday afternoon, but he was running the scenario he ran at UCon two years ago, so I didn’t get to play, but we did catch up a bit between games.

I also saw BJ Hensley and got to talk with her briefly, She was another special guest. I met her at Gary Con 10 earlier this year.

One of the vendors, whom I know, John Reyst of D20PFSRD had something come up and had to cancel last minute, so the small room full of vendors was a bit less crowded than in years past.

I had a great time. I’m tired and thinking about what is next, which is submitting games for Marmalade Dog before December 31, and getting my Gary Con submissions in.

If you’ve never been to a convention, I recommend it. Keep in mind that a small local convention may not be an example of a great convention, but they are more affordable and give you an opportunity to play with new people and new GMs and new game systems. If you like board games, you can get your fill of them at cons.

Great Kingdom Speaks

Yesterday, Kickstarter announced that the site for The Great Kingdom Kickstarter had been restored. Read more in yesterday’s blog post.

Today, there is an update, the first in over four years. The prior update was July 23, 2014.

Here is the update:

Nov 13 2018

…and we are back.

hi everybody. 

we are back and we are excited to move forward with THE GREAT KINGDOM. we obviously have had some setbacks, the most important of which is losing CHRIS HAIFLEY as our director. he has moved on to other projects. however, we have put together a great team to get us to the finish line.

it’s also safe to say that it will NOT be the film that we had first envisioned. this has more to do with the evolution of any documentary film. stories evolve and take on a life of their own or the original intent pivots for something even more interesting. our team believes we have something special that is uniquely focused on the history of DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS and we are lucky enough to have talented storytellers to tell you the story.

we will be making more announcements in the coming months when we will be introducing everyone to the team. for now though, THE GREAT KINGDOM (title may also be changed) is moving forward.

– james and andrew

ps. some folks have already written to us, congratulating us and also asking for a link or copy to the completed film. to those folks, we still do need to finish and release the film for their copy to be (e)mailed to them. thanks for being patient.

My Thoughts

Since I expected to never see that money again, I’ll let it ride and take advantage of their film.

I expected some sort of update from the competing Kickstarter, but I didn’t back it, so I don’t know if they are in communication with their backers.

In the meantime, there are less than three days left to back The Dreams In Gary’s Basement. Be sure to jump in on this. $100,000 is only $25,000 away and will allow all the technical things that will help make the film possible to get on Netflix.

Great Kingdom Kickstarter “Restored”

The backers of The Great Kingdom Kickstarter received an email to day that the Kickstarter page is now available since the legal dispute is resolved.

The only activity since the email was received are backers asking if this is still a thing, will there be a movie for us to see, etc?

Here is the email from Kickstarter’s Integrity Team.

[Kickstarter graphic]
Hi there,
This is a message from the Kickstarter Integrity Team. We’re writing to let you know that a project you were interested in — The Great Kingdom — is now available on the site. The process for this project’s intellectual property dispute is complete.You can visit the project here.Thanks so much for your patience! 
Kickstarter
Kickstarter · 58 Kent St, Brooklyn NY 11222 · www.kickstarter.com · Contact Us · We’re Hiring

There is no mention of why it took so long after the court case was resolved to get the web page restored. Unless they had to go back so many years to restore a backup and convert it to the current web site presentation. Why are the parties not putting an update out as soon as the page is live? Did Kickstarter just restore it and send them an email, or what?

I last wrote about this here.

Locating A Convention

I’m always advocating attendance at game conventions, especially the ones in your home state, or even in the town where you live.

Today’s podcast talks about UCon and Gamehole Con, and shares links to websites that list known conventions. I include the past two posts on the blog, plus one new to me site. If you know about a convention listing site not listed below, please let me know.

My most recent prior post on this is Where Can I Find A Gaming Convention? and Gaming Convention Clearing House.

List of Sites

Here’s the list of sites, so you don’t have to pick them out of the above blog posts:

I also talk about conventions on today’s Podcast.

Caravans & Trade My New Release on OBS

The newest PDF in my foray into RPG publishing is my attempt to scratch the itch that no other tables related to merchants and caravans have done. This volume is Caravans & Trade, PWYW, suggested price $2.00.

I have collected several articles from my site and distilled them down to the most relevant information. This reflects a lot of thought on the topic over several years. Additional information is also included that never appeared on my blog. Further, I have improved the original tables and added many new tables. 

You can see the progression of my reflections on the topic. It is more of a things to keep in mind, with a few tables mixed in.

I briefly mentioned the topic of merchants & caravans on my Podcast Episode 2, I Need A Table.

You can find all of my publications on my published page on DriveThruRPG or RPGNow.

Second PDF on OBS – Library Generation

I realized, as I’m nearly ready to post my third PDF on OBS, that I never published an article here on the blog about my second PDF.

I shared my second PDF, Library Generation Tables at the end of September, 2018. This PDF is all new information, never before appearing on the blog. I have tables to help populate a library with various rooms, book storage units, types of books, and their materials. I also have some new magic items and a new dragon, the Tome Dragon. It is $1.00 and has been downloaded over 30 times.

My first PDF, Locks, Vaults, and Hiding Places, is discussed here. I posted it to OBS at the end of August, 2018. It is PWYW, and has been downloaded over 300 times. 

You can see all of my PDFs on my publisher page.

The Great Kingdom – Silence Is Annoying

I prefer to focus on the positive, and have put all my support behind The Dreams In Gary’s Basement. A movie that exists and now has a Kickstarter for editing. It funded in 12 hours and is now on to stretch goals for extras that are full interviews instead of being chopped up in the documentary.

Keep reading if you want to know more about The Great Kingdom mess.

Investigation

The lawsuit was settled out of court and all court orders lifted as you can see here.

I sent this email on June 30:

From: Larry Hamilton via Kickstarter
Subject: New message about The Great Kingdom
Date: June 30, 2018 at 5:31:35 PM EDT

Will an update be forthcoming? It’s been two months since the case was settled. What does this mean for backers?

I received this reply on July 30:

On Monday, July 30, 2018, 10:36:20 AM EDT, TheMostEpicGame wrote:

hi larry –

thanks for reaching out. we are still working things out with kickstarter to gain access to our kickstarter page in order to make announcements. we’re excited about moving forward, so stay tuned.

  • andrew pascal

Out of Sight

I was reminded of this whole mess and dug in after I drafted my post announcing the Kickstarter to wrap up The Dream In Gary’s Basement. I sent an email to both the filmmakers and Kickstarter.

I sent this email on October 14:

On Oct 14, 2018, at 6:21 PM, Larry Hamilton wrote:

Andrew, Et. Al,

It is now over two months since your reply. You replied to my email instead of my Kickstarter message so I lost track of it.

I am working on a follow up article on my blog, Follow Me, And Die! and lack of communication is darkening my opinion of the whole thing.

If you can respond to my email from July, perhaps you can respond to this one from October.

I won’t starve over $50, but I’d rather have a movie than my money.

All of us want to know what is going on.

Larry Hamilton

I received a reply two hours later. (An encouraging sign.)

On Sunday, October 14, 2018, 10:35:18 PM EDT, TheMostEpicGame wrote:

hi larry –

we appreciate you reaching out. however, we are still under some tight restrictions, though that should be ending soon [emphasis mine. what is this?] and we will have an announcement on the kickstarter page (we’re hoping by the november). we will let everyone know what the status is and what our plans are to move forward. can’t say too much more than that, but know that we’re excited.

for now, and i know it sounds like a broken record, but thanks for being patient.

  • andrew

Waiting & Wondering

So there is still some sort of restrictions, that we have no idea what they are. Is it just the Kickstarter process to re-enable a Kickstarter that has been frozen for years? We have no way of knowing without someone in the know making it public.

Frustration

In my frustration over this whole thing, I sent a message to Kickstarter about this before I sent the email to Andrew & company. I must say the Kickstarter method of attempting to contact them is designed to prevent all but the most determined from getting through.

Message to Kickstarter:

I backed this Kickstarter, https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/720223857/the-great-kingdom, and it was made unavailable due to a lawsuit.

If you check here, https://iapps.courts.state.ny.us/nyscef/DocumentList?docketId=yrhRL9H9/SZtgTonUcRyZg==&PageNum=2&narrow=
you will see that the court orders to suspend it was lifted as they settled out of court.

What can you tell me about the status of this Kickstarter?

Is Kickstarter holding onto this money?

Have they released it to the creators?

If Kickstarter has the money, when can we expect to get it back?

If Kickstarter released the money, why is the Kickstarter page still suspended?

Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter.

Lawrence M. Hamilton, Jr.

Reply from Kickstarter

I was surprised to have a reply from Kickstarter the next day. From what I have read about others attempting to get answers out of Kickstarter, this was fast. 

Kisktarter’s Reply

On Monday, October 15, 2018, 5:59:58 PM EDT, Support <support@kickstarter.com> wrote:

##- Please type your reply above this line -##

Your request has been updated. You can add a comment by replying to this email.

Support (Kickstarter)Oct 15, 5:59 PM EDTHi Larry,

Thanks for reaching out, and for being part of this community. We appreciate your interest, but it’s our policy not to comment on any actions taken by our Integrity team. Apologies for any inconvenience this causes.

If you have any questions about the status of the project, you’ll want to contact the project creator. To do so, make sure you’re logged into your account used to pledge, visit the project page, and click on the creator’s profile image. This will open up their bio page where you can then click the blue “Contact me” button.

Best,
Raúl

Still Waiting

I know some things take time, but not being a lawyer, or having any hint of what is going on just adds to frustration. I’m sure they spend a lot of time fielding emails like mine. At some point we’ll have answers and be able to define “soon.”

The Other One

The first documentary to fund on Kickstarter, Dungeons & Dragons: A Documentary, is still viewable online. There is no update since 2016. However, the comments are active asking for an update, as they can tell that the creators have logged on. If you look, Andrew Pascal, who signed the email answers to me, has his name in the URL of the first Kickstarter under Westpaw Films. He launched the second film effort, for whatever reason. 

The same is true of their Facebook page, no activity since 2016.

Does the silence mean that they are trying to combine their efforts and are working with Kickstarter to merge? I doubt Kickstarter would do that. 

More likely they have some sort of agreement when they settled to either pool resources and work together on one film, or one will fold and refund all backers, or one will wait for the other to complete and release their film first. I think the first two options are most likely.

Until they tell us what’s going on, hurry up and wait. . . .

In the meantime, if you want to back a D&D documentary that has a rough cut and is raising funds for final editing and production, see yesterday’s article. NOTE: It hit the funding goal of $25,000 in the first 12 hours and has reached the second stretch goal. As one stretch goal is met, a new one is revealed.

Other Mentions Here On The Blog

The Dreams In Gary’s Basement

I have written several times about the movie in the works from Pat Kilbane of Dorks of Yore, and his RPG Science and History Patreon. The Dorks of Yore YouTube Channel has shared links to a presentation and Q&A by Tim Kask at Gary Con 8, and an RPG Science series.

Backers of the Patreon just got a link to the trailer, and it is awesome! Unfortunately, we were asked not to share it, so I can’t let you see it yet. See below, if you want to see it!

Footage will be shown followed by a Q&A at Gamehole Con in a couple of weeks. I’ve been a fan ever since I saw the footage shared at Gary Con 8. Due to football schedules, both Gamehole Con and UCon are often the same weekend. I decided to support UCon, since it is here in Michigan, before news of this announcement. [UCon has a Tekumel track that brings in people worldwide.]

Kickstarter

Pat has decided to launch a Kickstarter to put even more polish on the post production. There is a rough cut, and in a phone call, Pat filled me in a bit. The Kickstarter is focused on getting the film finished and no sidetracking add ons. The team on this has a lot of skill redundancy to help cover any eventuality, so if the primary person for a task can’t follow through, there is someone else on the team with that skill. They have a rough cut and the Kickstarter is to pay for editing and production costs.

This is a film of great passion undertaken by a small crew, with Pat guiding the process. It is here with far less buzz and drama than two planned movies by competing Kickstarters that settled their lawsuit, but have yet to communicate to their backers what is going on. I knew this would be the case, and I told Pat that I would do all I can to promote his film.

I’ve been an enthusiastic backer of his Patreon since it launched. Pat has paused pledges on months there was nothing new to show because he didn’t feel right taking our money. I don’t know about the others, but I told him, to take it anyway. I gladly backed the Kickstarter when it launched, even though he told me I’ve backed the Patreon at a level I’ll get the movie.

[EDIT: It funded in 12 hours and is now on to stretch goals for extras that are full interviews instead of being chopped up in the documentary.]

Images From The Trailer

Title card. Screen capture from trailer for The Dreams In Gary’s Basement.
The Gygax home when D&D began. Screen capture from trailer for The Dreams In Gary’s Basement.
Elastolin figures and dice. Screen capture from trailer for The Dreams In Gary’s Basement.
TSR Sales Graphics. Screen capture from trailer for The Dreams In Gary’s Basement.

Other Mentions Here On The Blog

Writing this article prompted me to do some digging, and I’ve got a new article for tomorrow.

DnD Sports

Yesterday, it was all over the RPG Twitter feeds of those involved that there will be a new spin on watching others play D&D, DnD Sports[EDIT: Name changed to RPG Sports]. While this might come as a surprise about this new thing, it all ties in with current trends in online RPGs. 

Why The Unexpected Should Not Surprise Us

A few months ago, the CEO of Hasbro, parent company of WOTC, the current makers of D&D, mentioned the rise of watching others play D&D online. Most figured it was Magic: The Gathering (MtG) card game that was getting the eSports treatment. Few expected it to be D&D. While D&D appears to have entered this new arena first, MtG will most likely follow soon. The CEO announced more crossovers of ideas, such as settings from MtG to D&D. That happened with the upcoming Guildmaster’s Guide to Ravnica.

Many video games are inspired by D&D and other RPGs, which led to competitive play of video games. This first foray into competitive D&D/RPGs is capitalizing on the abundance of well-watched online shows. It’s under the WOTC/D&D banner, so it is WOTC’s attempt to bring more of the audience who watch others play D&D to watch them do it competitively. [EDIT: DNDBeyond and Encounter Roleplay organized it.] There’s obviously money involved since Critical Role took their show and made a whole business out of it, in L.A. of all places. By that, I mean, California isn’t a cheap place to live, let alone run a business.

Competitive play isn’t new as their have been D&D and other RPG tournament modules, like the much maligned Tomb of Horrors [Affiliate Link], from back in the day. Few, if any, early RPG tournaments were recorded via audio or video, so we may have no record of how those went beyond written accounts. Also, tournament modules had a role playing aspect, and unlike the RPG Sports, was not directly player verses player.

Original RPG tournaments were teams of players going through the same module and competing to complete the core adventure, and as many side tasks as possible in the shortest amount of time, with the fewest character deaths.

A Different Light

RPG Sports is kicking off November 1st and is a combat elimination, basically gladiatorial combat in a dungeon setting. It will use the 5th edition rules and there will be rules of tournament play that have been play tested. According to this article, there will be four teams of four players that will pick from 16 pre-generated characters. The rules for tournament play will be released once play testing is complete.

Encounter Roleplay is a group of players that have been on Twitch for years and have been teamed up with DnDBeyond to make this happen.

Encounter Roleplay was started by DM Will Jones. Fellow DM & player, Sydney Shields is the Community Manager for RPGSports. Fellow player, Mytia Zimmer will be a caster for the first ever tournament on RPGSports.

It will use Roll20 for the Virtual Table Top (VTT). This may explain why the sudden change in Roll20 handing their subReddit over to non-employees to moderate after their customer relations nightmare a few weeks ago.

For more information and the November Schedule of games, see RPG Sports.

My Thoughts

While I find some of these shows entertaining to watch, and have friends who are a big part of it, I can’t watch regularly for a few reasons. First, I don’t get it. I know they’re really playing and having fun, it just isn’t as fun for me to watch, I’d rather play. Second, it’s a huge time sink and I’ve got too many things on my plate already.

However, no matter what you think of watching online play, the huge popularity of it has led to a great lifting of the stigma those in my generation endured. Grognards who don’t like it should keep their grumbling under their breath and be happy that those who love RPGs can make a living at it. While I’m not sure combat is the best way to do this, I haven’t seen the tournament rules as they haven’t been made public yet.

Much of this is a generational thing. And with all hobbies, there are those who would rather watch others have their fun than do it themselves. For many, this is also their gateway into RPGs. Converting more of them to customers is the smart thing for WoTC and any other RPG publisher to do. WoTC just had the best financial results for D&D ever, they want to continue that trend for as long as possible. Following the masses in this new market potential is only reasonable. 

I expect in years to come, we will see D&D experienced in ways we don’t expect. That or the technology to experience it in ways that are currently science fiction will become reality. 

I also expect that this is a strategy to ensure the longevity of 5e as they currently have the rules “right” as far as buy in and regaining their market share lost to Paizo. This will also hamper Paizo’s efforts to make a big splash with their second edition, now in the works. While the audience for RPGs is huge compared to ever before, it won’t enlarge the share of the pie for other companies if nearly all eyes are on D&D. For many newer fans of D&D, RPGs and D&D are the same thing. 

For this reason, gaming grognards should not complain. At some point tastes will change and gamers will want something else. Be open and accepting of that and welcome them. I have seen many younger gamers wanting lighter rules and checking out the styles of play loved by the OSR. I don’t have hard numbers on that, but I’ve ran old games for people in their 20’s and they had a blast.

As with everything in life, just wait, things will change.