Tuesday Games and Quiet

Again, my sleep was poor, and I was up at 6:30 to write the blog and head to Richard’s for a game in Portland at 9:30. I needed coffee, and later, I had some protein waffles for breakfast. I am near the end of the Mexican locally roasted and ground coffee. The bitterness reminds me how far we liberals have to go. I have made liberal coffee since Trump won his first term. A daily reminder of how important it is to remember who we are.

The morning was a blur as I tried to record Monday in a blog and be ready to face the traffic in the so-called war-torn Portland. I managed to get started a few minutes late, headed to Portland after rushing to take a shower and all that. It was a lovely day, and the mountains looked beautiful over Portland. I had plenty of time to look at them, as the traffic was slow. I was ten minutes late.

James and Richard had already set up most of the cooperative board game Tainted Grail. We are on opposite directions in the game, I wish to push through and complete the tasks and goals, while James wants to experience everything. Richard, being his usual gamer self, wants to collect maximum loot and powers. I also have a better memory of the previously discovered parts of the story and find that James and Richard, not role players, tend not to remember as they play mostly board games and recall mechanics and processes more effectively. I have to be patient a few times as we retrace a few steps here and there. We have not lost a combat or diplomatic encounter in multiple sessions. We are obviously too strong for our point in the story, but I am now enjoying the story, and we have some new discoveries in areas that I thought we had covered. James felt vindicated.

I am happy we reached chapter 5, and there were some close calls. The game is rising to our point in the story, and the strength level of our characters. I would say, for anyone playing this strange board game, that chapter four was when I started to find the game interesting and not a procedural slog. I also believe that we have reached a level of familiarity with the rules, allowing us to concentrate more on play than on mechanics. In other words, it is becoming more immersive. Additionally, James purchased a complete, pre-painted version, and the ‘dudes-on-a-board’ look works too.

With another session completed (about four hours), I headed back to Broadway Grill and had lunch. I had their salad and chili special and thought it was good. The Caesar salad was almost spicy from the garlic. The chili was tangy and had beans and meat. I like it more complex, but it was still good.

Deborah, working for a living, spoke and texted me a few times while I traveled in light traffic in Air VW the Gray. Later, we were happy to do FaceTime and watch together the third episode of Murders Only in the Building. We both sync our TVs by time and watch me in Oregon and her in Michigan. I thought the show had found its magic again, and I enjoyed it.

Deborah, coming off a cold and a funeral for a friend, was tired, and I was missing some sleep, so we said good night. I watched the next episode of Slow Horses on Apple+ and thought it was well done. I made popcorn as a snack (and put out butter to warm for a cake on Wednesday), but burned the first batch. Only two minutes, not the supplied 2:40, when pressing the popcorn button on the microwave. I have noticed that the popcorn packages are smaller, and I suspect that is the cause.

Somewhere, I did a load of laundry to get ready to travel on Friday. I will try to find time to clean and pack in the next few days. I will do Monday’s and Friday’s usual laundry on Thursday. No need to leave too much for me on my return.

I then, unable to get sleepy, returned to my office and assembled a new Dungeons & Dragons 5E adventure. I am not ready to switch over to the 2024 version for my writing, as few are playing it. I created my usual document style and started searching for old 4E stuff that I still have. I wrote much of what we played in that version (though we used some material that was supplied, and discovered that much of it utilized the older 4E monsters; it required more work than it should have). I plan to raid it and incorporate some of its parts into my new adventure. I am thinking of three unrelated adventures connected in a framework; this is a popular way of repurposing older material. I also retained the rhyme to give hints to the players. I find this an interesting addition as it gives players something to think about between encounters. Three will fit a single play if Clint wants me to DM this Thanksgiving, though seven would make a couple of session 5E adventures, which is my usual style.

Note: 5E was replaced by 2024, and 5E was created from 3.5, while removing most of the stacking of abilities. The 2024 version changed the rules further and removed many of the exceptions found in the magic system, and again for combining abilities into unstopable stacking. It also rewrote many of the spells, monsters, and magic items and removed many of the inherited conflicts from earlier versions. I find I have to relearn everything. The rules for hidden and grappling are simplified, thus preventing unexpected stacking.

I read in bed once, now in my PJs, once I was done reviewing my old items from 4E and even 3.5. I have the originals for them and can see a few started attempts to rewrite them into 5E. I have reviewed them to identify items to include in my new version. I think I can extract a few encounters and possibly an entire fantasy tower as part of the framework. All good.

I read until after 11 and then rolled over after I turned off the light. I woke for proof of hydration and then for my leg cramping; a glass of water stopped that. I managed some sleep.

Thanks for reading!

 

 

 

 

 

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