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Summer of Ferocious Gaming & Drawing

It’s been awhile since I posted, but I wanted to put in an update before my life gets even crazier for the next three weeks. King of RPGs volume 2 is just about 25 pages from completion, with Victor bravely drawing the remaining pages in the wee hours between midnight, when he stops working his day job, and 6 am when he has to get up to go work at Crunchyroll. Our target date is to have everything drawn by the end of September, and then hopefully we will meet our ship date of June 2011 for the new book!

I’m working on some new King of RPGs-related stuff, about which I should have more to say in the Fall. Sadly, I haven’t had enough time for a steady TRPG campaign lately, but I’ve at least gotten to play some 4e one-shots and a few decent board games, such as Robo Rally, Shadows over Camelot, House on Haunted Hill, and Cosmic Encounter. If someone just writes deep board game/RPGs involving cooking, manga-editing and gardening, my life will be complete. I also owe thanks to Jake Forbes, Ed Chavez, Lanny Liu, Evan Miller, Dan Bongard, Deb Aoki, Jay, Victor and a bunch of other people for helping everything come together during the summer convention season.

See you in a few weeks, when Victor and I will unleash still stranger King of RPGs revelations upon the world! If you’re not using a point-based character generation system, may all your statistics rolls be sixes!

 

My Favorite D&D Monsters

Lately, while redrawing the thumbnails for the last 30 or so pages of King of RPGs volume 2, I’ve been thinking about my favorite creatures in the fantasy genre — or more specifically, the Dungeons & Dragons/Monster Manual bestiary. Like it or not, the depictions of mythological creatures in D&D has effected how I’ve thought about them, from the idea of demons and devils and gods having hit points (so you can kill ‘em), to the idea of goblins, hobgoblins, kobolds and bugbears all being different types of distinct creatures, rather than fairly vague terms for vague fairytale/sprite/”bad thing” presences as they probably were originally intended. (With regional variations to assert that here, goblins wear red caps dyed in blood, or here, they have one big foot and hop around, and so on.)

I’m generally not that attached to the most ‘iconic’ D&D creatures (mind flayers, beholders, etc.). I’m more interested in general types of creatures that can fit into any campaign world, rather than ones which shout “Greyhawk” or “Eberron” or “Forgotten Realms.” With that in mind, here’s a few of my favorite types of beasts in fantasy, with a nod to RPGs specifically.

* Slimes and Oozes: I think I’ve loved and been chilled by slime monsters ever since I saw “The Blob” (the ’80s version is so great and disgusting!) and even earlier, when I read the Dr. Seuss book Bartholomew and the Oobleck. Green, gray or ochre, they’re great monsters in D&D, and they represent a sort of primal fear of absorption, as well as of environmental degradation — the “gray goo” apocalypse. There are few if any blob monsters in actual mythology, perhaps because ancient peoples had more concrete, immediate scary things to imagine — lions, tigers, one another, etc. But in the 20th century, as people have had to face the existence of chain reactions and bioweapons (pollution, nuclear catastrophe, chemical weapons) that could destroy the world, they’ve come into their own as horrible, horrible, compelling monsters.
* Plant Monsters: They don’t get nearly enough play in D&D, but Clark Ashton Smith wrote some great plant-monster horror-fantasy stories (The Demon of the Flower, The Maze of Maal Dweb, The Seed from the Sepulchre, etc.). There’s a long tradition of myths about man-eating plants, certainly based on exaggeration of real-life pitcher plants and venus flytraps. And of course Little Shop of Horrors, the ultimate talking-conniving-carnivorous plant story!
* Oldschool Goblins: I like them, but I’m bored by the D&D stereotype of goblins as one of a million low-level goombah monsters. I far prefer goblins as depicted by Brian Froud in Labyrinth (and, in a sense, in the novel Mythago Wood), as inscrutable, quizzical mutant muppet-spirits of insanity.
* Lizardfolk, Troglodytes, Sahuagin, Kuo-Toa: I love reptilian monsters!
* Dragons: How could you not love them? However, I prefer the more snakey, amphibious, reptilian ones to the more majestic, ornate ones commonly depicted in D&D. Things like the “wyrms” which sometimes inhabited wells and other watery places in Medieval lore. Or gigantic, titanic forces of primal darkness.
* Demons and Devils: Of course these are awesome, particularly when you can stab ‘em instead of them just being invisible and formless. Daemonology is such a chaotic and complicated mess, it’s interesting to see it refined & codified down into hit points and statistics.
* Composite Beasts: By this I mean chimeras, sphinxes, griffons and all kinds of creatures made from fusing two or more beasts together. It’s a simple way to design a monster, true, but it’s super classic, as composite beasts figure into the mythology of every human culture I can think of (Chinese, Japanese, Egyptian, etc.) To create a believably mythological ‘composite,’ just fuse a few creatures which are native to the area, and you’re good to go. These types of monsters also remind me of a Woody Allen humor piece which he wrote in the form of a Medieval bestiary. The best line: “The great roe is a mythological beast which has the head of a lion and the body of a lion, but not the same lion.”

 

Return from A-kon!

Victor, Jay and I just got back from A-kon, where we ate barbecue, drank sweet tea, played D&D and met fans. Thanks to everyone who came to “Making of King of RPGs” panel and to our table! Here’s some sketches that Victor drew at the convention, while not drawing Volume 2 pages on his Wacom tablet.

 

King of RPGs on The Tome Show

Jeff Greiner, host of The Tome Show, invited me on his show to speak about King of RPGs in The Tome Show Episode 136! It’s a mixed review, with some of the guest reviewers pleading ignorance of manga, but Jeff and I had a good conversation and it was an honor to be reviewed on such an awesome D&D podcast. Please check it out, and thanks to Jeff for having me on! I just wish I’d gotten to throw in some thoughts on Player’s Handbook 3.

 

Character Stats – King of RPGs Vol. 1, Chapter 1

To sum up the last week, here’s all the 4th edition D&D character stats from King of RPGs volume 1 on one link!

* Sophonisba
* Bill
* Kamiko
* Aerfen
* Moggrathka

 

Character Stats-Sophonisba

Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition stats for Callie’s character Sophonisba. Click on the link to access the full two-page PDF! (Only the first page of the PDF is visible on the blog.)

NEXT UPDATE: Monday, April 26!

 

Character Stats-Bill

Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition stats for Bill’s character Bill. Click on the link to access the full two-page PDF! (Only the first page of the PDF is visible on the blog.)

NEXT UPDATE: Friday, April 23!

 

King of RPGs Live: Volume 2, Chapter 7, Page 29


More time-lapse footage of Victor drawing King of RPGs! The first page in the sequence is here.

 

Character Stats: Kamiko

Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition stats for Mike’s character Kamiko. Click on the link to access the full two-page PDF! (Only the first page of the PDF is visible on the blog.)

NEXT UPDATE: Wednesday, April 21!

 

Character Stats: Aerfen

Dungeons & Dragons 4th edition stats for Jen’s character Aerfen. Click on the link to access the full two-page PDF! (Only the first page of the PDF is visible on the blog.)

NEXT UPDATE: Monday, April 19!