I'd even buy the NORWEGIAN edition of OD&D with the printing date of 2005! *Well... I should better get the 3.5 ruleset first and stop playing with the nmad SRD...*
I'm originally from Australia, but I'm living in Vanersborg, Sweden. We play in English (my swedish isn't THAT good), and the bulk of my players are female. (3 our of 4).
I have to get all my books off Amazon. Mostly because I'm not willing to pay the STUPID book prices in scandinavia. Ironic, because my inlaws own several bookstores.
The only bookstores locally I know that sell any D&D (no Ravenloft) sell copies of say, the Book of Vile Darkness for like, US$35... not worth it. My players are into ravenloft. They're first time roleplayers all of them, so I had them play themselves, drawn into the land of mists...
I was rummaging through the threads for info on a campaign and came upon this thread and couldn't resist answering.
I'm a West Island girl (only Montrealers'll get that ) who lived the last ten years in Ottawa and recently moved to Wiltshire, England. What IS it with the Canadian fascination with Ravenloft?!
His only real danger is if stupidity is contagious and lethal. In which case, we’re all dead…-Gertrude
It has something to do with our climate or our politicians
Joël
"A full set of (game) rules is so massively complicated that the only time they were all bound together in a single volume, they underwent gravitational collapse and became a black hole" (Adams)
Ravenloft has often incorporated a lot of setting description into its works. The locals are usually very picturesque, very vibrant landscapes. Canada, or at least Ontario, is filled with similar sights - especially now in the fall. Every highway is surrounded by vast seas of forests, every little town is quaitn and picturesque.
I would suggest that the Canadian experience really makes a person receptive to the kind of details that Ravenloft writing tends to dwell on.
U.S.A here Cedar City Utah to be exact a small mormon po-dunk inthe middle of the desert.
As for the Ravenloft scene here. It's actually quite active there are three games running ravenloft at the moment in my area and I am only one of them.
Vote Cthulhu! At least then we know we are going to get screwed.
@ Desdischado: A little bit of imagination...and a few glasses of spirits of choice.
@ ScS: I think another thing which makes it appealing to Canadians is the sense of the strength and prominence of the land. You only need to lose your power once during the winter to feel how vulnerable you are to the elements. The Ice Storm of '98 brought Ottawa to a halt for at least three days, and there were towns which didn't get their power restored for weeks. And while we have our trains, planes, and automobiles, you still can't get over how vast a country it is to cross.
@ Desertrising: THREE games?!
His only real danger is if stupidity is contagious and lethal. In which case, we’re all dead…-Gertrude
Dion of the Fraternity wrote:It's kinda wild, seeing that I seem to be the only active Asian on the boards, hehe
Yeah, the usual Asian RPGers play Sword World pendants to the Mists or really nasty stuff like the Resident Evil RPG... IIRC, there's also a pretty Silent Hill RPG out there... Brrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Llana wrote:@ Desdischado: A little bit of imagination...and a few glasses of spirits of choice.
So was I the only one who noticed that the first letters in the six first lines from the Gothic Earth Gaz article detailing the quabal of the six-fingered hand form the word CANADA reverse?