Routinely Itemised is a weekly roundup of RPG news from Wizards of the Coast, Chaosium, Cubicle 7, R. Talsorian Games, PEG, Paizo and the industry.
Free to Download: Savage Worlds Test Drive Rules (with Deadlands)
The weird west Deadlands adventure Blood on the Range is also included. Created by Shane Lacy Hensley, the free adventure is part of The Horror at Headstone Hill campaign.
Innovative RPG app YARPS goes into hibernation
YARPS’ Kickstarter backers are being offered their money back.
Routinely Itemised: RPGs #71
Routinely Itemised is Geek Native’s weekly RPG news summary, complete with a roundup of new releases, freebies, interviews and reviews.
Free to Download: The Secret Files of Section D – Taster Edition
In The Secret Files of Section D, Nazi pseudoscience is real, so are monsters like the Yeti and Sasquatch, magic and miracles exist, Mummies are buried deep for a reason, and the aliens are here.
Suzerain Legends Kickstarter takes the meta-setting to the next level
Suzerain Legends is a wrapper setting; with a focus on several worlds but the potential to include whichever environment you want to take the players too (or bring baddies in from).
Folk horror RPG Holler announced by Pinnacle and Odd Bard Games
Pinnacle Entertainment Group, the publisher behind Savage Worlds and Deadlands, has teamed up with Odd Bard Games and author Tim Earley to produce the Holler RPG.
Routinely Itemised: RPGs #66
It’s a busy week of RPG news, and a quick scan will stop you missing out on the free D&D downloads from Wizards of the Coast and others, or any of the new releases and headlines.
New Bristol offers up a cosmically unique super RPG setting
After a titanic battle between good and evil, the city of New Bristol was flung into a void of dimensions, and it drifted there. The residents hardened up, coping with all the challenges of their cosmic encounters and they got their hands on new technology.
Routinely Itemised: RPGs #64
A glance at some noteworthy RPG releases this week along with yet another busy RPG news section. Kickstarter seems to get more alive with each passing day, recovering strongly from the lockdown slump.









