The team also revealed lots of art from the Soulbound Starter Set.
Articles by Andrew Girdwood - Page 1089
For a taste of what's inside, Andrew Girdwood published a piece on 15th May 2019 noting: "Imagine if one of your players managed to roll two 1s on their d20 when they had an advantage. As a D&D group, you'd all get how rare that was. ". It also was tagged with Fashion.
Continue reading more articles by Andrew Girdwood below.
(Probably) the most cliche character names in D&D
As a result, we can see what the most popular names of characters playing their way through Xanathar’s Guide to Everything are.
Everything is Possible: The joy of discovering RPGs
He progresses quickly to the theatre of the mind and starts to design entire worlds.
The 1994 Japanese version of Dungeons & Dragons looks amazing
The books look amazing, using colour illustrations, limited text and spacing in a way that seems years ahead of some of their western counterparts.
Surprise and delight your players: TTRPG Achievement Badges
Imagine if one of your players managed to roll two 1s on their d20 when they had an advantage. As a D&D group, you’d all get how rare that was.
White Wolf announce a new Vampire: the Masquerade computer RPG
White Wolf and partners want to create a new genre called ‘narrative RPG’.
The Witcher and Cyberpunk tabletop miniatures announced
Monster Fight Club and R Talsorian Games today announced a partnership to produce a range of tabletop models for The Witcher and Cyberpunk.
Alien RPG: Stars of the Middle Heavens and campaign play
The map is called Stars of the Middle Heavens and shows the Core Systems, the Outer Veil and the Frontier.
Hilariously foul-mouthed D&D character background generator
If you’re okay with vast amounts of swearing and sassiness, then this site will whisk up a D&D character background for you.
Board games, models and dice caught up in US-China trade war
This is not a done deal. There will be hearings on the proposal on June 17th and if they pass then 25% tariffs could be in force by June 24th.








