Back to the main page

Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

Message no. 1
From: Double D <ddmaster@**.NET>
Subject: Live-Action-Role-Playing
Date: Sat, 22 Mar 1997 19:14:22 -0600
How does one do a LARP cession? This might be a good article to write
about. But "Please!" do not ask me to do it. For they question is real.

Double D

ps it is nice to be back!
Message no. 2
From: "Paolo Falco, Explorer" <Falco@****.IT>
Subject: Re: Live-Action-Role-Playing
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 1997 10:43:29 +0100
22 Mar 97, 19:14, on the downward time curve to Armageddon,
[withheld] said:

> How does one do a LARP cession?

To do a LARP "cession", simply give the manual to somebody else.

Sorry but I couldn't resist! :)

---------------------------------------------------------------
Paolo Falco | [Kokovoko] isn't found on any map. True places
(explorer) | never are. (H.Melville, Moby Dick)
---------------------------------------------------------------
Don't join the Anarchic Lemmings Corporation. See how at:

http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/2717
Message no. 3
From: David Buehrer <dbuehrer@******.CARL.ORG>
Subject: Re: Live-Action-Role-Playing
Date: Mon, 24 Mar 1997 14:20:00 -0500
Double D wrote:
)How does one do a LARP cession? This might be a good article to write
)about. But "Please!" do not ask me to do it. For they question is real.

There's allready a couple of existing systems that could easily be
adapted. I.F.G.S, Killer, BiFrost, and WoD's LARP system. It all
depends on how detailed you want to get. IFGS has a fairly complex
system. Killer only worries about weapons and damage. BiFrost is a
pure roleplaying system with one rule, if they believe it, it
happens. I'm not up on WoD's system. There is one common
requirement for LARP games, lots of people (the Denver/Boulder (US)
chapter of IFGS boasts a couple hundred members).

-David
--
"Spare the duct tape, spoil the job."

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.