Archive for the ‘RPGN’ Category

Week 10: Rivals

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Peace and love is all well and good but what really drives a city like #Twitterville is rivalry and competition.

People, business, guilds, countries and races can all be rivals in pursuit of the same goal. Sometimes this is for power or money, occasionally it might be for love but generally it simply to prove themselves better than the other guy. Rivalry drives people and countries to war, to greatness and to great tragedy.

#Twitterville is full of rivals.

The different merchant guilds of the Golden Scale and The Silver Balance Union maintain a good natured commercial rivalry. Whereas the fight between the Wizards Guild and the M.L.F. is soaked in blood and bitterness. But what of relations between the Cloak and the Daggers Thieves’ Guilds?

Humans and Elves have long competed for the same land. Dwarves, Minotaurs, Orcs and Goblins all live in the same areas of the mountains. Areas where resources are scarce.

The gods compete for the souls of men. Their temples promise greater happiness or power than their rivals. Some gods are driven underground by the more successful priests and some like the Dragon Cult are hunted to extinction.

This week’s challenge is to create or expand on the rivalries found in the city and surrounding lands. They can be the rivalries that shape land or petty, even fun, rivalries between neighbours. But at the heart of each of there will be individuals to whom the thought of beating their opponents drives them forward. Tell us about these people, tell us about their desires, tell us about their rivals.

Week 9 Round-Up: Guilds, Brotherhoods and Cabals

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

This weeks challenge has given us new groups and expanded our knowledge of existing groups.

We also learnt more about …

Thank you every for taking part. A new challenge tomorrow.

How to Avoid Spamming Your Friends

Friday, September 11th, 2009

One of the great things about #Twitterville is that all your Twitter followers get to see your ideas and can get involved as well. One the bad things about #Twitterville is that all your Twitter followers cannot avoid your tweets.

This can lead to situations where you friends feeling like they are overwhelmed by your constant creativity. Sort of like meeting someone at a party who is really chatty and interesting but after a while you wish they would just shut-up and let other people lead the conversation.

To avoid this social gaff, I recommend.

Tweet Later

Tweet Later was the name of a web site until last week when it changed its name to SocialOomph. Which is a shame because Tweet Later was a far better name and describes exactly what you can do – Set up tweets to go at specific times. I use this service all the time, spending 20 minutes writing tweets in the morning and schedule them to go out during the rest of the day and night.

It is great for #Twitterville because you can still have the burst of creativity but arrange it so that your friends are not swamped with 20 messages in one go. It is highly recommend.

Different Accounts

There is no law to say you only can have one Twitter account. I have three – the 6d6 Fireball account, a personal account and my TintinMovie account for my Tintin web site. Creating a ‘Only for Twitterville’ account might be the way forward for you.

With a dedicated #Twitterville account you don’t need to worry about annoying your friends because they won’t be following it. In fact, no one needs to follow it. The only requirement is that it follows 6d6Fireball as this is how the automated system works.

Put Yourself in #Twitterville

If you are creating another account, why not make it an ‘in character’ account. The account could be a place in #Twitterville, such as the ‘The Bar of the Dark Tavern’. Your tweets can become rumours heard in the bar or people of have visited the bar. Alternatively the Twitter character could be a book full of the secret history of #Twitterville or a madman’s ramblings.

I’m not 100% sure how an ‘in character’ Twitterer would work but #Twitterville is about doing new things with new technology. Thanks to everyone’s creativity, #Twitterville it is turning into something special so lets take chances. Lets push the boundaries and explore how far roleplaying can go.

Week 9: Guilds, Brotherhoods and Cabals

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

“No man is an island” said John Donne, and it is as true about #Twitterville as it is anywhere else. No one individual stands apart and no single person can control or change a city. This weeks challenge is to write about the organisations that run #Twitterville, want to run #Twitterville or simply use the city as a base.

Some organisations will be above board and respected such as the Silver Balance Union. Their members will be upright members of the community. Other, organisations, like the Wizards Guild, will be legitimate but more feared than respected. Minor guilds will exist for brewers, tanners, candlestick makers and every other profession in the city. These may be small guilds, looked down on by the large guilds, but their members are the people who keep the city running. The smart people in #Twitterville know just how important these guilds are.

Not all guilds are so public or legitimate. The twin thieves guilds of the Cloak and Dagger are well known, some of their members openly flaunt their membership, and yet they are illegal. Why are the able to operate so freely? The more secretive guilds are unsuspected by many people, such as the beggars guild, known as the Reaching Palm.

Much smaller groups exist, often on the fringes of the law. No one knows how large the vigilante group The Sword Brigade is or even what its real aims are. Whispers of secret meetings by arcanists suggest that the Wizard’s guild is not entirely united or in control of magic. How many secret brotherhoods and cabals exist in the city?

Non-human races, such as the river nomads and the Gnomads are often tightly knit communities. What power structures hold these groups together. Likewise, the traders from the East work together to keep control of the spice markets. Religious groups, both acceptable and unacceptable, exist in the city along side outcasts and rebels fleeing the Empire. Who is organising them and what is their purpose?

This week’s creative writing challenge is to create and expand on all these different factions. What are these groups? What are their aims? Where are they based and most important, who are their members?

In the 140 characters of a Twitter message, can you define the people, places and organisations of #Twitterville?

Week 8 Round-Up: Its a Kind of Magic

Monday, September 7th, 2009

This week’s challenge has revealed a lot more about the city of #Twitterville and the areas around including new types of magic. Much of this is related to Metal WorkingEmpire Steel, Cold Worked Metal and Dark Metal. Buying and Selling Magic Items created or using these metals is controlled by the powerful Wizards Guild.

Not all magic is controlled by the guild. We learnt about the magic of the primitive races as well as Minotaurs and their Blessed Art. Hints of strange Eastern magic used Ashas. There is also a Magic Liberation Front and strange band of Silent Arcanists with an unknown agenda.

There were hints of the mysterious Underville, a city under a city and the magical desires of the nomadic The Halflings of #Twitterville suggest there is something going on beneath the lake. Rumours about the Psions of #Twitterville also appeared.

The sinister side of magic took shape in The Dark One and some Unsolved Murders. The positive side was also revealed in Hogarth the Cleric and we learnt more about the strange magically case of the Taunting Smith Blacksmiths.

Spreading #Twitterville over the week has been a great help, at least for me. It has given more time to think up ideas and to bounce off other people’s ideas as well. In future #Twitterville will run constantly with the weekly challenges being announced on a Tuesday and the round-up on the following Monday. If you have a great idea for a tweet to a previous week’s challenge, do not be shy and sending it anyway. All tweets will be sorted and threaded regardless of when they arrive.

Check out the full list of Week 8 tweets and a new challenge starts tomorrow.

Week 8: Magic! (and a few minor #Twitterville Changes)

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

This week’s challenge is about magic and #twitterville.

#Twitterville is a fantasy city in a fantasy world where magic is very real but how does it show itself? Magic can be expensive, the reserve of the rich, leaving the poor to struggle on without it. Or it could be so cheap, even beggars can afford to use it. This makes a huge difference on the city. If magic is cheap, light stones would fill the streets and death from disease or injury would be rare.

There is also the question of control. Does anyone restrict the supply and use of magic? Arcane powers can be profitable and a threat to those in authority. Guilds and governments both have an interest in limiting the use and availably of magic. Magic take many forms as well and these can be treated differently. White magic versus dark magic, witchcraft versus the power of the gods, wild or untrained magic versus the discipline of guild magic. All these conflicts play themselves out on the streets of #twitterville.

Then there are lost magics. Items and spells from previous times and other races that are buried in tomes or practiced only in the remotes parts of the mountains. Old magic may have left its scars on the physical world. Strange, perverted creatures left from a mad wizard’s experiments or dead zones where nothing can live after a mage war.

Putting magic, in any shape or form, is this weeks #Twitterville challenge.

Taking Part

Normal rules apply. Make sure you are following 6d6 Fireball and that your tweets include the #twitterville and the system will take care of everything else. All you need to do is be creative in the 140 characters of a twitter message.

A Week Long Challenge

Originally #Twitterville started out as a one-day challenge and I’ve kept to that model so far. This week I’m trying something different and the challenge will going on all week. Rather than sending a lot of tweets on the Tuesday, I will be creating a steady flow over the next five or six days. There is nothing to stop you focusing your efforts in one burst of creativity but the challenge runs for a week so whenever an idea hits you, tweet it.

Getting Started

Here are a couple of tweets to start things off.

The ceremonial scepter of the 1st Lord of #Twitterville can magically open any door or lock within the city walls.

The #Twitterville Night Market is the place to buy and sell magical items without having to pay a fee to the Wizards Guild.

Week 7 Round-Up: History, Ancient & Modern

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Last week’s challenge has laid the bare bones of #Twitterville’s history. With over 10,000 years of human existence in the area, there is a lot of history still to be added. Leaving plenty of scope for lost cities and civilisations for adventurers to discover.

New threads this week.

A bit of low number of responses this week and I think that was to do with the subject. As I found creating my entries history is hard to distill into 140 character bites. It needs more thought and planning that the average tweet. This is a useful reminder of the core idea of #Twitterville – a a creative writing exercise you can do anywhere. In setting the challanges I need to keep this in mind.

Week 7: History – Ancient & Modern

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Cities do not appear out of nowhere. They start small and grow over time. As wars, disease and the fickle finger of fate pass over a city they may shrink to almost nothing before blooming once again.

What is #Twitterville’s history?

Humans have lived on the shores of Lake #Twitterville for thousands of years. How many times has the city of #Twitterville been rebuilt after fires or floods? Is it even in the same place as it used to be? What of the Elves, Dwarves, Halflings and other humanoid races of the region? Have they lived here for millennium, watching human cities rise and fall? What race wars have wracked the region over the years and what external threats have brought them together?

History is not always about the big events, sometimes it is about the people. The Explorer who opens up trade routes and the geologist who discovers new mines can have a far great impact on history than a hero or a general. The names of these people is often lost but it sometimes gets remembered in the name of a village or on an old worn statue.

Not all history is ancient and recent events often seem more important than ancient battles or alliances. Murders and royal scandals, lost expeditions and border wars, superstar entertainers and powerful politicans. These are the ingredients of the history being made everyday.

This Week’s Challenge

Create a history for the city and the people that surround it. It can be recent history or way back in the mists of time. Look at the current city and ask yourself how is the people and places of the current city been shaped by their past.

The usual rules apply. Anything goes as long as you can fit in the 140 character limit of Twitter and remember to include the #Twitterville tag.

New contributors, don’t forget to start following 6d6 Fireball before you tweet, otherwise Twitterville.org won’t be able to pick your tweets up.

And here are a couple of tweets to get things going.

The fertile shores of Lake #Twitterville drew the first human settlers to the area 10,000 years ago.

At first the Elves ignored the humans, thinking of them as long lived animals. Only too late did they realise their mistake. #Twitterville

Week 6 Round-Up: Now with Added Titles

Monday, August 24th, 2009

A great re-start to the #Twitterville experiment with OccultSearcher, Frdarvin, RazorThe and above all QuestingGM kicking in some great tweets. After such a long break, it is wonderful to find everyone still keen and active.

In sorting this week’s tweets out I relished the each thread needed a title to keep it on focus. So I’ve added one and updated all the existing threads. It appears in the lists of threads and is displayed instead of the thread reference number on individual threads.

What prompted this change was the mix of tweets week 6 produced. Some were completely new and some added to an existing thread or threads. It is this intertwining of threads and stories that I love about Twitterville.

Plenty of threads have been updated as week but I forgot to keep a list. I’ll try to remember next time.

This Week’s Pick

It is hard to pick a favourite this week as the subject produced some great tweets but as I’m forced to select one, here it is.

In Deaddog Street, there’s rumors of a butcher that is willing to cut up any type of flesh. He owns a huge black dog. #Twitterville

There are two things I love about this tweet by QuestingGM. Firstly it is exactly the sort of rumour and tittle-tattle that floats around the streets of any community and secondly, it has great potential as an adventure hook. What type of meat is being cut up? Who wants the meat? And what do they do with it? This could be the start of a great adventure or a simple red herring to distract the players. It is all down to the GM decided.