Why would what ants do have relevancy to what we should do?
Trumble
The Crew -games would be pretty similar to The Game.
Multi-session cooperatives:
- Arkham Horror the Card Game
Single-session cooperatives:
- Pandemic
- Paleo
- So Clover!
- Mysterium
You can also use search like this to figure out something that really fits to your table (Might take long to load!): https://bggbester.netlify.app/?b64=AhMCAgUABgAPAxAlA-gCAwsDCxUFGwMMAw0ldTAHFQUcABMDEgMRJQfqFAMVAwQCFgAZABcAGAABAhgKB-cYCgsE
I moved to using DeepSeek which should have a much better energy efficiency compared to ChatGPT with same maybe even better results.
Pretty much the only things I use LLMs with ttrpgs is when I want to customize something I have an example of.
For example when I find a some kind of random table that has great format or style I like but doesn't fit the area I would yo use it on I give it to LLM to produce similar but something that is more fitted to my need.
Edit: the other way I use LLMs is to translate texts as we don't play in English.
The Alexandrian has vast amounts of posts about it: https://thealexandrian.net/in-the-shadow-of-the-spire
I think the main way I acquire new ttrpg reading at the moment might just be Goodreads' suggestions.
Secondary sources for me are things like different ttrpg communities in lemmy and mastodon.
Trajectory of Fear is a must read: https://nerdsonearth.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Trajectory-of-Fear.pdf
And it's really important that the table has at least somewhat common understandin of what kind of narrative they are trying to achieve.
I only things I have used multiple years are mainly for DnD 5e 2014:
- Monstrous Races - a supplement that turns everything from official Monster Manuals into playable races with a lovely commentary about how these were balanced.
- Conflux Creatures - just better creatures, this is the first thing I do is to replace monsters of premade adventures with the Conflux ones. They are just much better experience compared to sacks of HP that most 5e monsters are. There is no need to read "Monsters know what they are doing" when the stat block pretty much does it for you.
- Creature Loot by Medieval Melodies: https://medievalmelodies.blogspot.com/2017/06/creature-loot-intro.html - lootsies + crafting for all of the creatures.
- The Alexandrian: thealexandrian.net for reviews, advice and remixes of official campaigns
- Official WotC products besides the campaigns: Fizban's Treasury of Dragons for all of the Dragon Lore
Had a wine & lore dump session with a partial group in our DnD 5e game. All of the speculation of my players lead me to realize how well historical events I have come up with fit to the official lore from Fizban's Treasury of Dragons. I got also to introduce a NPC who will come relevant in three levels when they can tackle one of the better adventures from Candlekeep Mysteries.
We also played Alice is Missing for the first time and while it didn't meet all of the hype, we had fun evening and I must play it again to get some more familiarity with the storytelling it assumes from the players.
I would say that most of the wisdom in Trajectory of Fear (https://nerdsonearth.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Trajectory-of-Fear.pdf) would work here as well even though it's about Horror.
If you think about the steps presented there as of Unease, Suspicion, Anticipation and Revelation then the advice should work really well.
"I can’t really do the same with my homebrew world which has very little in common with the real world." I don't think that is necessarily true but it requires the players to have a proper understanding of what is normal and expected.
Zoo and museum tickets
I would say that many Mind Flayer villains are quite interesting because they are Mind Flayers.
Everything is nature. But which closed quarters are they kept?