Saturday, February 11, 2023

In which we actually review a product, kinda sorta

 

I use a LOT of sources to build a world and to run my weekly (?) game. Roughly two years ago I stumbled onto the products of a company called Infinium Game Studio. Their product is called FlexTale. My first work was with their combat tactics. The product was DEEP and a good idea, but you need to know the “role” for every critter and it wasn't somerhing I didn't wanna fidle with. Next up was their Social Choice product. Went DEEP into that one which is where I'll start.


You as the DM assign the role that the interlocutor plays, selects the conditions under which the interaction occurs and the player decides what approach they're taking in the interaction. Find the right chart, roll the right dice, and adjudicate the result. Easy-peasy lemon squeezy. But I HATE tables and charts and turning pages. So I took a few hours, converted the WHOLE thing onto a spreadsheet. Then when I'm playing I can use a simple filter, input the player's dice role and have my result in nothing flat. VERY happy with THAT product.


So a year later they come out with their environmental encounters product. A crapton of information. Again I converted to a spreadsheet. Since a party rarely changes environments (at least at my table) us is even faster. Again: filter, input players role, adjudicate result. Smooth. Working out REALLY well. I'm even taking steps to automate the secondary dice rolls, of which there can be many, so that the entire encounter is presented to me in one place again without having to flip through scores of pages. My party has no idea of the level of detail I'm drawing from.


Which brings me to THIS years acquisition. Their Adventure Omnibus. MY interest was in the hundreds of Places of Interest (POI) generated. From the companies text:

What is This Thing?

FlexTale Infinite Adventures is a concept that applies the Infinium Game Studio approach to points of interest on a fantasy TTRPG map.  Detailed descriptions, endless permutations of things to keep things fresh, easy-to-use tables and resources, and plenty of ideas and inspiration.

This book is the first in a series describing the various Points of Interest (POI) in the Western Realm of Aquilae.  Though it was created with this setting in mind, everything in this book was designed to be system- and setting-agnostic.

Inside, you'll find:

  • Discovery, including read-aloud text, "Why You Might Come Here", "So You Find Yourself Here", Hooks, and more.

  • Activities, including Adventure Snippets, Quests, Secrets, Threats, and more.

  • Location information, including a heatmap / location guide for the POI's presence in the Realm of Aquilae.

  • Rumors & Lore table with true, partially true, and false stories about the POI.

  • Events and Quirks, describing unique phenomena that might occur as you explore.

More interesting for players.  Easier to run for D/GMs.  Full, out of the box support for solo players.

And above all: NOT BORING!

Contents

Inside, you'll find:

  • 668 tables, 129 FlexTables (each one four tables in one), and 150 full-color maps

  • Dozens of Utility Tables: quickly and dynamically generate entire dungeon maps, traps, poisons, diseases, curses, treasure, and spells.

  • "Jump Right In" introduciton describing exactly how to use this book based on your needs as a G/DM

  • Dedicated discussion on how to use this book as a solo adventurer

  • Creature Modifiers to quickly make even the most ho-hum, boring common monster more interesting and unique

  • Much, much more!

So here's how I'm using it: every week during my game prep I RNG a POI. I read up on it. If it can fit into my immediate location I will. If NOT I'll add it to my list of rumors and perhaps add it to my library research system, in case the parties interest is piqued and they wanna go poking around. Example? I have a paladin NPC who needs a quest for his plate armor. Rolled up a castle, used the provided table for a simple quest

On the downside:

  1. Their complete quest engine is apparently in a different product.

  2. Each book seems to include more or less the same first 2-3 dozen pages – necissary perhaps but a PITA nonetheless.

In conclusion if you're a GM who just needs an occasional jump-start or a little extra seasoning in your world building soup, these products are for you.






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