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Showing posts with label Mike Evans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Evans. Show all posts

Sunday, July 22, 2018

A Review of Quake Alley Mayhem! for Gathox Vertical Slum

I was kindly given a copy of "Quake Alley Mayhem!" to review.  Here's the publisher blurb:

Enter a seedy underworld of alien hyper-capitalists and wondrous ancient artifacts with Quake Alley Mayhem! 

This murderous, misshapen module foists a host of traps, puzzles, and environmental hazards upon unsuspecting players in a race against time. Structured for both tournament and campaign play, Quake Alley Mayhem! includes pregenerated characters, supplements to track the party's progress and impending doom, and hooks to fit the adventure into a larger campaign.

Designed for 3 to 6 players of levels 1 - 3.  You can purchase the adventure here

This adventure was written & illustrated by David Lewis Johnson, Edited by Mike Evans (DIY RPG) and the layout was  done by Matt Hildebrand.  The adventure is intended for Gathox Vertical Slum, however it could be easily inserted into a home brew alien world with no problems (Following the review is the publisher blurb for Gathox Veritcal Slum).

GAWD I LOVE THE ART

The adventure is setup for campaign & tournament play, which includes a handy chart for tournament scoring.  The hook is straight forward, it focuses on a team of fresh gang members and their attempt to retrieve a artifact for their boss. The thing I really dig about this module, is there are no rooms in it that are empty.  Every room has a chance for roleplay, a fight, and or a deadly trap.  In other words this isn't a vanilla dungeon with safe words! This is partially because of the tournament aspect of the adventure. 

In my humble opinion the writing is solid and evocative.  The rooms with traps are different than your average type trap, the puzzles are fun.  The adventure is setup with a timer and the GM needs  to keep track of what is going on at all times, as some environmental hazards play a big part in what happens thru out.  This is a awesome mechanic.  There is even one specific room that is dedicated to slowing down the PCs and having them enjoy a little bit of side gaming.  Of course, the hazards don't stop right!  Excellent idea. 

Here's the cool thing about this module, it's totally DIY RPG.  All of the races, aliens, places, weapons and artifacts are all made up.  It's not your typical fantasy adventure, with fantasy creatures.  It's not your typical alien world either.  However you could easily run this adventure as a "gangs of Chicago" kinda thing no problem.  (Well with a little bit of tinkering).  Heck you could easily run this in a mutant future campaign.  

DAMN I DIG THE LAYOUT (LOOKS AWESOME ON MY 8" TABLET), SINGLE COLUMN CENTERED. 

The adventure takes place in a old mill/safe house.  There are three levels, and 18 action packed rooms!  Once again, easy to pop into whatever universe you are playing in. 

The nice thing about this adventure is that it comes with pregenerated characters on very cool hand drawn character sheets (note there is a blank copy in the back of the book).  The PC races give you a bit of insight into the world of Gathox.  Included are:   

Street tough, Martial master, Soldier, Cosmic doctor, spiritualist, faith healer, mutant.

The module also includes a handy death and dismemberment table, its a d10 table, and I'm printing a copy of of it for my GM screen (when I get to a place with printer, ie work).

Honestly this is a pretty cool adventure, and if you like your gaming a little gonzo alien awesome, I think this is absolutely perfect for you.  At the end of the book are a few campaign hooks, and a wonderful rumour table.  Both of which easily setup more adventures.  While the source book Gathox Veritcal Slum is not needed to run this adventure, I'd strongly recommend it, if anything just to have a bit more background information (also to support DIY RPG, cuz they put out some awesome shit). Of course reading the sourcebook will get you even further into the mood.  

Seriously cool adventure.   


Gathox Veritcal Slum
Welcome to Gathox Vertical Slum, a far out, gonzo science fantasy campaign setting for Swords & Wizardry White Box Edition and other classic tabletop role playing games.

Aliens, mutants, spellslingers, and hardened criminals struggle for dominance in a lawless city built upon the back of a wandering, world-hopping godling. Inside this tome you’ll find:

* A fully mapped and fleshed out Vertical Slum, stuffed to the gills with greedy factions, hook-laden NPCs, and seedy locations.
* A new gangland system for running domain-level games at level 1.
* 43 fully illustrated strange and inimical monsters to spring on unsuspecting players.
* New classes, skills, ability checks, hirelings, and gear for players to work their will across the mean streets of the Great Spire.
* A vertical dungeon introductory adventure to test the skills and resourcefulness of new and seasoned players alike.
* Over a hundred lavish interior illustrations by D.L. Johnson.
* Five pieces of interconnected chapter fiction contributed by Josh Wagner.


Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Your probably living under a rock

I'm sure you know about this already, but if you don't.  The rules cyclopedia is now available thru drivethru (this has been the long awaited thing).  You can get it in dead tree format as well!

http://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/17171/DD-Rules-Cyclopedia-Basic?term=rules+cy&test_epoch=0&it=1

As well +Mike Evans has been crazy busy.  Check out his latest blog post about the upcoming products.  They all sound like a ton of fun!

https://wrathofzombie.wordpress.com/2018/02/06/upcoming-diy-rpg-productions-projects-and-some-tasty-art/

You know who else is busy? +Venger Satanis.  He just released "Dead God Excavation" and he is currently running a kickstarter for a Battle Star Trilogy Trek Wars (a supplement for Alpha Blue).  Speaking of Venger I wrote a review of "Players Handbook Like A Fucking Boss" you can check it out here.  I also have to get to reading Dead God, Venger was kind enough to send me a copy.

As for me, I finished up the "Off the wall hex crawl" vanilla weirdness fantasy that's system neutral.

I'm hoping to do an edit on "Dusty Door" after the playtest is finished.  You can watch the awesomeness of +God Emperor Leto II during the first session (subscribe to his channel to, he puts out some great stuff).

Also we are all working on "The return of the blue baron part deux", if you are up for writing a room come on over and check it out!

I'm onto working on paperwork stuff, and listening to the "Swords Of Jordoba" by the wonderful +Matt Finch Here is episode 3.

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

It's your turn Mike! - An interview with Mike Evans from DIY RPG Productions


1. How did you get your start roleplaying? What system did you use?

I had been a fan of the RPG genre in video games since NES days and playing Zelda and Final Fantasy, but didn’t’ know there was such a thing as tabletop role-playing until I was in my teens.  I started role-playing in 1995 when I was 15. 

The first system I was exposed to was AD&D and loved it, but the game fizzled out after two sessions and I started playing in a Shadowrun 2e game.  About six months into playing, I decided to start running my own Shadowrun game.

After about a month of doing that, I was playing and running AD&D games as well. 

2. How and when did you discover the OSR?

I moved from AD&D to 3.x and played that for about a decade.  I really got burnt out by the bloat of 3.x/Pathfinder and all the munchkin bullshit that came along with it.  I hungered for quick, deadly, and rules-lite.  I started researching and delving into blogs about old school role-playing.  I started fiddling with stuff here and there, but nothing solid.

It wasn’t until 2008 that I REALLY got into the OSR and it was Lamentations of the Flame Princess by James Raggi and Vornheim by Zak Smith that it really just clicked for me.  The sheer amount of content that the OSR community generates is fucking mind-boggling and inspiring!  I was hooked.

3.  Tell me about DIY RPG Productions how did it start?

DIY RPG Productions really just started as an homage of the “damn the man” punk mentality that I hold dear. 

My wife drew what I now use as my logo.  At the time, I had no aspirations of starting a publishing company, it was just a rallying cry I wanted to put on my blog.  I was so fucking tired of the ceaseless wars about which edition is better, who’s dick is bigger, and all that BS- so my symbol is there to say, “Fuck it!  Do what makes you happy and what allows YOU to have fun.  Don’t give a shit what others say or think about your fun time.”

Eventually I started writing Hubris for Dungeon Crawl Classics and Jez Gordon suggested I stop just doing the blog thing and publish the setting.  That’s when I started pondering if I wanted to submit it to another publisher or do it myself.  I realized very quickly I wanted to do a publishing company that would allow myself and others to publish on their terms and unapologetically.  

4.  Tell me about "Death is the New Pink"

When I was pondering my next project, I was really wanting to run a Mad Max/Fallout-style game, but nothing out there really vibed with me.  I like silly, I like stupid, I like quick and dirty rules.  So I stated kinda mulling what to do.  Several things were going on at that time: I was reading Tank Girl and thought it would be fun and hilarious to run a game that was of that style, I was playing Borderlands a bunch with my friends, and I was watching shit like Dredd and listening to a bunch of punk rock (I love punk rock- pretty much my go-to music).  All this shit was mulling around in my head.  I had read Chris McDowall’s Into the Odd rules about six months previous and really loved it; they are quick, easy, and fun!  All that shit merged together and lit a fire under my ass. 

Death is the New Pink is a gonzo beer and pretzel game that is great for one shots and good for long term play.  It’s doesn’t take itself seriously and players take the roll of Meat Bags going out into the wastes or into the Catacombs (a huge dungeon beneath the last remaining city, Scratchtown), to kill Nefarios (bad guys), find Doodads (high tech gadgets), and get drunk before dying a wonderfully epic death!


5.  What are you currently playing?

Currently I am playtesting Death is the New Pink: Going Medieval on Yo’ Ass, which is a fantasy version of Death is the New Pink.  It’s inspired by the above mentioned stuff and I took inspiration from Earthdawn, Warhammer, and Adventure Time.

I’m running my group through the Forever Dungeon, which is inspired by an episode of Adventure Time where there was a ceaseless dungeon on a train that just kept going in circles.   I’ve run two sessions thus far and it’s been a bunch of fun!

6. If you could campaign in any world which would it be?

I guess it would be self-serving to say Death is the New Pink or Hubris, but I’ll do that anyways.  I wrote those two settings because they are the type of things that interest me. 

Not cranking away on myself, I’d happily campaign in Feral by Jez Gordon (I love TMNT and think Jez is nailing the feel), Trey Causey’s Azurth (who doesn’t want to go to the Candy Isles?!), go through Operation Unfathomable by Jason Sholtis, flounce through Hot Springs by Jacob Hurst, or a horror game in Demon City by Zak Smith.  Those are the campaign settings that have really caught my eye recently (or for awhile in the case of Feral and Project Unfathomable).

If I had to choose official D&D stuff- I’d be Dark Sun or Ravenloft all the way.

7.  Tell me about Hubris?

Hubris is definitely my labor of love.  I started writing a horrific gonzo setting and, as I mentioned before, Jez Gordon really egged me on to publish it.  So I figured DCC would be perfect fit for the rules!  DCC is so wacky and crazed and heavy metal, I was excited about it!

I took inspiration from stuff like Conan the Barbarian and Lovecraft, but I also am heavily influenced by John Carpenter’s The Thing, Evil Dead 1&2, Army of Darkness, and heavy metal bands like Slayer, Anthrax, Marilyn Manson, TOOL, and Pantera.

I threw in a healthy dose of the weird/gonzo like Alice in Wonderland, Tetsuo Iron Man, and other shit and figured out my world.

When writing Hubris, I knew I wanted it to be different.  Too many RPG settings have that “fight against the darkness and be heroes and find the light!” and that shit doesn’t interest me too much.  I like street level superheroes and street level adventures (which is why I like Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser so much).  I wanted to emphasize that hopeless battle and that even IF you do stop the darkness, people aren’t going to give a shit.  They’re too busy worrying about their own asses. 

I also knew I didn’t want it to be filled with fluff.  Too many settings try to be special unique snowflake books filled with histories and plots and characters and none of it really impacts a table’s campaign or even comes into play.  I wanted the book to be useful to a GM.  When developing the world, I created d100 charts for random encounters and interesting locations that can be used on the fly. 

I wanted the book to be hackable for those who had no interest in playing in a bleak world like Hubris, but wanted a nasty swamp territory for their world.

Thus far the people seem to really dig Hubris. 

There will be more released for Hubris in the future!

Editors note:  Mike one an award for this awesome book! 2017 Ennie for best electronic book. 

8. Who is your favourite artist and or author?

My favorite artist is Mike Mignola.  I love his style, it’s so evocative. 
RPG artist wise- I love Zak Smith’s art (both his RPG art and non-RPG art), Matthew Adams, Kelvin Green, Jeremy Duncan, David Lewis Johnson, Gennifer Bone, and Jeffery Call.  They are all fantastic artists! 

My favorite local artist is Cordell Cordaro.  I love his use of colors and style. 


Favorite authors…?  I love Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, Lewis Carroll, J.K. Rowling, and Wiliam Gibson.

9. What is one of your favorite adventures other than something that you’ve released (or worked on)?

Vornheim by Zak Smith, Scenic Dunnsmouth by Zzarchov, Death Frost Doom by James Raggi, and Sailors Under the Starless Sea by Harley Stroh are my favorite adventures I’ve run for my players.  They are fun, unique, and easy to use.

editors note: It's amazing how many people say that they really dig Starless Sea, I must get it. 









10. When you get a chance to play a character, what type of PC do you like to play?
I tend to play warriors, rogues, or rangers.  Not huge fans of wizards and clerics.  I fucking hate bards.
Editors note:  Apparently no one in the osr community likes fucking bards.

11. What are you most excited about in the RPG scene currently?

Hands down, it’s the DIY community.  The ideas and collaborations that come out of it are truly inspiring and awesome. 

12.  Would you rather be a dwarf or a gnome?

Dwarf.  I can be a grumpy “get off my lawn” kinda dude at times- oh and I love good craft beer- so it makes sense. 


13.  What are your plans DIY RPG Productions for this year?

2017 has been a good year for me as a budding publication company.  I released two of my own books: Death is the New Pink and The Starrunner Kit: The Black Hole Edition.  I signed David Lewis Johnson to my label and we released Gathox.  And Hubris won a Silver ENnie for Best Electronic Book.

2018 is going to be busier!  For my own projects, I’ll be releasing Barbarians of the Ruined Earth, Death is the New Pink: Going Medieval on Yo’ Ass, High Noon: A Gritty White Box Western, Orcs: A High Octane Adventure for Hubris, and am working with Kelvin Green on the Forever Dungeon module for DitNP: GMoYA, and a DitNP comic book.

I will be launching a kickstarter for Zak Smith’s awesome Demon City RPG, Donn Stroud is writing a Hubris module, Kane Cathain is writing a DitNP module, Dan Domme is writing a module for DCC called The Temple of Laserface and the Kung Fu Masters of the 4th Dimension, Zzarchov has written a DCC module called The Ghoul Prince, and David Lewis Johnson is working on a Gathox adventure!

Thank fuck for coffee and booze!

editors note:  Holy Cthulhu your a busy dude!  and ahmen to the coffee and booze. 

14.  Tell me about Gathox Vertical Slum?

GathoxVertical Slum is written and illustrated by David Lewis Johnson.  David created a gonzo city setting that rests atop an inter-dimensional world-hopping godling that travels for inscrutable reasons.  David was inspired by Kowloon Walled City and created some awesome classes and tables that ooze flavor. 

One of the shining points of Gathox is the gangland mechanics.  It’s really easy to create gangs, fight for control of territories.

Here’s the page description in David Lewis Johnson’s words:

“Welcome to Gathox Vertical Slum, a far out, gonzo science fantasy campaign setting for Swords & Wizardry White Box Edition and other classic tabletop role playing games.

Aliens, mutants, spellslingers, and hardened criminals struggle for dominance in a lawless city built upon the back of a wandering, world-hopping godling. Inside this tome you’ll find:
* A fully mapped and fleshed out Vertical Slum, stuffed to the gills with greedy factions, hook-laden NPCs, and seedy locations.

* A new gangland system for running domain-level games at level 1.

* 43 fully illustrated strange and inimical monsters to spring on unsuspecting players.

* New classes, skills, ability checks, hirelings, and gear for players to work their will across the mean streets of the Great Spire.

* A vertical dungeon introductory adventure to test the skills and resourcefulness of new and seasoned players alike.

* Over a hundred lavish interior illustrations by D.L. Johnson.
* Five pieces of interconnected chapter fiction contributed by Josh Wagner.”
 Link- http://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/220062/Gathox-Vertical-Slum

15.  Chips or cheezies?

Rum. 


16. Where can we find you on the web?

Several places, actually!




DIY RPG Productions G+ Community Page- https://plus.google.com/u/0/communities/110590430291755615037

Editors note:  Thank you very much for taking the time to talk to me Mike! I appreciate it!  
If you liked this interview, I've posted a bunch on my blog as well as 2 compilations of them on drivethru (For free) 

Old School Interviews V1
Old School Interviews V2