If 7th Sea is a game of "What Would Errol Flynn Do?", Thirsty Sword Lesbians is "What Would Julie d'Aubigny Do?" Confession, my first reaction to the the play test materials was "this is a game of 'What Would a Sapphic Errol Flynn Do?" And then I remembered there was someone from history that was THE perfect fit for this game. The swashbuckling high adventure ideals and the structure of the game built around relationships and story brought to mind the much popular game by John Wick... but for me in a much more comprehensible and to the heart package. Thirsty Sword Lesbians is a rolepaying game for telling queer stories with friends. If you love angsty disaster lesbians with swords, you have come to the right place. In this book, you’ll find: Flirting, sword-fighting, and zingers in a system designed for both narrative drama and player safety. An innovative take on the Powered by the Apocalypse family of games. Nine character types...
Battle of the Linguist Mages / Scotto Moore The description of this book caught my attention immediately , and a cover blurb from one of my favorite authors? Sign me up! The book isn't quite what is promised, and that's not necessarily a bad thing, it's just that it has so much potential. It's like how Ready Player One reads a lot different in a post Gamer Gate environment. (Also, to be fair, the description I first read when looking through review copies is different than what is up now.) Now, don't get me wrong, the premise is phenomenal. I love a good SF that takes seeds of the here and now and goes "what if?" It looks at where VR gaming is now, where streaming and MMOs are now, the balance between real life skills and game controls, and launches into a believable continuation. Then we get a little seasoning of magic and more. It made me laugh and has some neat ideas that it develops. But writing and tone wise, it feel...
The Olympian Affair (Cinder Spires #2) / Jim Butcher Previously Reviewed: The Aeronaut's Windlass It's been a long haul waiting for book two, and one that I didn't think was going to end. In 2016, I described book one as an "air-ship filled rollicking adventure that brings to mind a mash-up of Shakespeare and The Princess Bride. We have heroics, tempers, swashbuckling, dastardly villains, battles of wits, revenge, and maybe a little true love on the side. This tome drops you into the story from page one and seems much shorter than its 750 pages." So where are we in 2023? Before reading this, I strongly advise you reread book one. The cast is large, the book thick, and the two main warring governments are Spire Albion and Spire Aurora , so if you're like me and names blend together, remind yourself of who everyone is and the stage that has been set. The Olympian Affair is a story of the maneuvering and politics after the war has started but...
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