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• Posted by Bryant at 07:44 AM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
[Ed: still with apologies to Television Without Pity. And to anyone who’s confused by this, actually…]
This week on Dungeon Majesty: Oliver suffers the slings and arrows of outrageous childhood, Cassie and Millie get hit on by a swim team, Alvin gets a job, Andrew uncovers secrets, and Ferdinand is mostly away this episode. We’re grumpy about that last.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 05:37 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
[Ed: with apologies to Television Without Pity.]
Will Maggie Gyllenhaal free herself from an over-protective mother? Will Philip Seymour Hoffman overcome a slight case of being Philip Seymour Hoffman? Will Owen Wilson ever stop being cute, and/or find a distributor for his documentary? Will William H. Macy discover yet another way to lose an election? And most important, will your humble recapper be able to remain coherent despite continuous references to that geeky game she always ignored in high school? We won’t find out this week, except maybe for that last one, but at least the wheels will be in motion.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 08:34 PM | Comments (3) | Followups (0)
Dear Brother #13 was pretty harrowing to write, and if I’ve written well, it should be tough to read. I can only hope I’ve done justice to the emotions of the session.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 01:09 PM | Comments (1) | Followups (0)
In this Dear Brother letter, we find out why Ben was hung on a ferris wheel and how Black got laid in Las Vegas. It’s always the other PCs getting lucky…
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 01:05 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Dear Brother #11 picks up after the PCs left Chicago and headed down to Mississippi. Chronologically speaking, these events occurred before those recorded in Dear Brother #10c, but we played them out after we played out the trip to Mexico. If I’d known we were going to do that I suppose I’d have held off on writing #10 until we’d finished playing the events leading up to it — but it doesn’t hurt the story at all, so no harm done.
On the other hand, we did wind up playing out the events described here after we played the events described in the upcoming Dear Brother #12. But this time I knew it was coming so I can write #11 and #12 in chronological order.
(None of this matters or impinges on the entertainment value one bit, so don’t worry. I’m just noting it so I’ll remember what happened years from now when I’m old and grey. And I’m not complaining, cause Rob makes it all work)
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 10:18 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Finally, the last of Dear Brother #10 brings us back to Reese Beulay. The focus of the entire session was providing a finale for Danny Greer, whose player was about to move out of town. Brilliant work on Rob’s part, if you ask me.
This entry is my favorite Dear Brother yet.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 12:55 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Chase R. Foxe was my PC in the Silver Age Knights of the Road. He’s a personamancer, meaning he does magic involving masks. His particular obsession is writing down the truth as seen by his subjects — gonzo journalism gone magical, in other words.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 12:54 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Mordecai was my PC for the Doc Lully’s Pulp Heros segment of this session. He was half-human, half-something else, a subject of great angst for him. Of course, he had a noble heart, despite his self-doubts.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 12:52 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
The next three Dear Brothers are all writeups from one session. Only one of them is by Reese. Rob did the session in three parts. The first was a sideways trip to a pulp world in which we played Doc Lully’s Pulp Heros and explored the Hollow Earth; the second was a flashback to 1968, during which we played the Silver Age Knights of the Road, kin to the Merry Pranksters. The final segment was our usual characters, albeit in a situation they didn’t remember after the fact.
I’ve ambitiously adopted two new voices for the purpose of recounting the first two sessions. If they work half as well as Reese’s voice, I’ll be very pleased.
• Posted by Bryant at 12:48 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
It’s Dear Brother #9, in which our heros visit a Hell House and live to tell some unpleasant stories about it afterwards.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 04:14 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
A special two-session Dear Brother, in which our heros undergo torture and brainwashing. Not for the faint of heart.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 11:46 AM | Comments (1) | Followups (0)
I’m reminded that the old GM notes for the Unknown USA campaign chronicled in the Dear Brother letters are — you guessed it — on the web.
• Posted by Bryant at 12:47 PM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Dear Brother #7: In which our heros go back to Washington and parley with unsavory characters.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 10:17 AM | Comments (0) | Followups (0)
Dear Brother #6 is written to Alan Greenspan, because Reese’s brother made an appearance in the episode.
(more)• Posted by Bryant at 05:44 PM | Comments (2) | Followups (0)