@action_jay

I like your idea, but you should have a look at this:

Not Fediverse, but free, self-hosted (without a server) and open-source / copyleft:

https://www.rptools.net/

I can't believe this VTT is not more widely known. If anybody wants to seriously think about a comprehensive RPG solution it should start here, not with any of the for-money subscription models.

The only hurdle is that you need to establish one or two port-forwarding rules for the host.

I have had my data stolen from Roll20 and gladly I never paid for it or I probably would have lost real money. This is way better.

#MapTool #VTT #OpenSource

HOME

<br data-mce-bogus="1">

RPTools

Mình vừa tạo công cụ bản đồ cho người nước ngoài/du mục, chỉ thả ghim để kết nối cà phê mà không cần đăng ký. Một admin cộng đồng 300 k thành viên (French Riviera) muốn phiên bản SaaS tùy chỉnh và hỏi mức giá. Mình chưa biết nên tính phí một lần hay thuê bao hàng tháng, mức giá bao nhiêu hợp lý. Các chuyên gia SaaS cho lời khuyên nhé! #SaaS #Pricing #Expats #MapTool #Startup #KhởiNghiệp #GiáCả #CộngĐồng #CôngNghệ

https://www.reddit.com/r/SaaS/comments/1qjpy96/built_a_map_tool_for_expats_got_a_3

I have to say I do actually like #maptool a lot, but that one needs players to install stuff. And it needs a server with good internet connectivity
@syntaxseed I wish the initiative tracker plugin for #ObsidianMD could integrate with #MapTool. Mainly so I can set conditions in one and have the same condition appear in the other

@Domille Looks like a pretty sweet deal and I don't even use any fancy VTTs like Foundry, only good old #MapTool

I'm definitely considering becoming a patron.

Yesterday? Maybe Saturday? Maybe a bit before that, I decided to check to see if I could get #MapTool (I think I said MapTools before ...) to properly launch from my server. I was making a bit of progress, but it just wasn't really working, and I wasn't totally sure if it was just taking a really long time, or if it was not going to move forward with what it was doing.

I decided to take a look at it today, it's really clunky to run through the ssh pipe, but I have figured that I can do that and the important thing is to use it for authorising players ... it's clunky, but for that it's not clunky enough to be more than minorly annoying, and either it would be a "one time" thing, or each session (or restarting of a session).

I was playing with stuff, and it's a nice system, it's not easy to get the basics setup (but I've yet to find something that is, unless you're playing one of their supported TTRPG systems, which I would say, "often I'm not"), and if it's working, I'd say, "hey great."

For whatever reason (and this seems to be not a really rare thing as it's happened multiple times today) it will segfault on start on my local machine, quite frequently (this is a French car company .... of a computer, I believe that it was featured (oops my bad, it's just close to that name I think it is Citroën is not citronnier), but I had spent way too long on it, and would have to tear it down, and clear it up, and the company I got it from, seemed to be, "Most of the time, the customer is wrong.")

Anyway... So I got it working sort of. But it was pretty much hanging running entirely locally. Which honestly not happy with. And there's some real frustrating things that I've run into which I feel would have been fine if this was version 0.15 not 1.15 ... the ability to spend half an hour trying to set something up, accidentally hit the wrong key, and go, "OK where's that..." and find that it's probably gone.

I easily could be wrong about that, but I don't have the patience to play with it much more right now. I was already having enough trouble with fighting with Inkscape, which it's mostly not a matter of, "I just lost a bunch of work" unless I do something "really stupid" (like shut down my computer in the middle of doing something).

Sorry, nasty rant. I'll not likely look at any of the online/commercial VTTs, if I can't find something that I can run myself, then I'll just stick to physical media. Which is what I've been doing anyway.

As for other stuff... Today was a typically weird day. I managed to feed and water the birds. Was thinking about that as it was getting dark, and ended up bringing it in already. So... I don't know. That's really about it. Quite the rant. Frustrated and impatient. I'll figure something out.

#maptool is great when it works, when the server stops working in the middle of the game it's less so.

#ttrpg

[Labyrinth Lord] Tomb of the Serpent Kings Session 1 (also MapTool)

A while ago I started playing with some people on an online server. That was about the time when I decided that I should maybe be playing more often than just GMing. Unfortunately life intervenes a lot, and lately there haven’t been that many games in the main campaign to keep me busy. I am also co-DMing a Shadowrun game lately, so there’s that, but I am missing the OSR fantasy fare. So I decided to run a game on the server, specifically with MapTool, which I have been hovering around for a while, but never actually used. In fact I never used a proper VTT to play, so this would be a first.

I decided to use Tomb of the Serpent Kings for it because it’s nicely done and available for free, and I already had it played before, and Labyrinth Lord as a game system because that has been my basic system for a while (yeah, I never updated to OSE even though I use some of the material for it).

Game Report

The group consisted of 2 elves (Damion and Eltariel) and a MU (Frondo) with his torchbearer/muscle (Big Boris). They originally were rustled up by the local bailiff to apprehend the bandit Wild Man Roberts and his two not-so-merry-men, who were seen digging somewhere at a hillside a short way off.
The bandits were easily located inside a hole they opened in the hillside. This turned out to be a hallway going into the dark, with the bandits lying dead just a short way in. Having determined they were done in by a simple poison trap in the ceiling they decided to investigate a bit further (and do some not-graverobbing) when they encountered sarcophagi with clay statues of snake-men inside. Inside the statues were small amounts of treasure and snake skeletons (turning it to actual graverobbing). Also poison gas.
A large door at the end of the hallway was trapped by a mechanism, which they devised to disable with various methods, giving them access to a larger room with three wooden coffins. Soon enough those turned out to have skeletons of snake-like beings inside that started attacking the newly minted graverobbers. Unfortunately a series of good attacks cost the life of two of the party (both elves), and the unlife of two snakes, while Frondo and his torchbearer took off almost immediately.
Out of sight of the skeleton the two decided to rearm the trap outside and trigger it after baiting the last skeleton into it’s area. The giant stone hammer coming out of the ceiling took care of the last opponent.
Frondo returned to give his companions a proper burial (and loot their bodies), then turned back to civilization to collect the bounty on the bandits.

Notes regarding MapTool

  • MapTool worked great until it didn’t. At the end we had some issues when two of us got disconnected while the others still could see things move around. I think I should have restarted the server in that case, but as it was in the very end of the 2-hour time slot we just played out the rest without it.
  • MapTool now has a function (marked as experimental) that allows to create a server and connect to it directly from other clients. No more futzing around with port forwarding in this case. Unfortunately maybe not as stable as it could be (see above). Still, the lack of such a function was one of the reasons I did not use the software before, as it would have been too much work to get it running with my network setup. Now that problem is gone, it literally has become a matter of creating a server, having players connect (they are prompted for a PIN), and their computers downloading the media files from my computer.
  • Speaking of media files, MapTool allows to use media files from the players computers to use in the game. Those are also added to the campaign file automatically. In fact it even allows to run a remote server where the campaign file is stored, I just haven’t been able to try that one yet. But other than that? Want to have a new token? Drop a picture in the related TokenTool, make a suitable token, then just add it in a folder and use it as you will. Nice.
  • I do find the use of MapTool surprisingly convenient. There are a few things that one can’t do in the tool (e.g. animated maps would be nice, but can’t be done in the current architecture), and some stuff that can be done but needs to be configured properly (no one has bothered to create a script framework for OSR games yet it seems), but I have a lot of options to show the players exactly what I want them to see. Still there are a few things that I still have to figure out.
  • The dynamic lighting in the dungeon is of course the star of the show. One can add a vision blocking layer and have PCs walk through the dungeon and have them see whatever it is that they have a) lit and b) what they can see. This can make for some interesting tactical gaming where some monster or character can see some things, but cannot see others. I noticed that it also takes a lot of mental strain from me as a DM as I don’t need to track either light or walking order in this case.
  • The other thing that helps a lot is the way one can organize a scenario here. Players can generally see 3 layers on the screen: tokens, objects, and background, and they can interact only with the first one. Another hidden layer is present, but is only available to DMs. This is useful, as it allows you to drop information (e.g. attached to a numbered token) at the appropriate places, and just call it up by going over it on the token layer. As it’s hidden it is not actually visible for players, and you can have your whole adventure in there, slowly following along as the PCs explore. Incredibly useful.
  • That said, there was an annoying issue with players moving tokens over specific (invisible to them) GM tokens with information, and me not being able to access them then. I think this might have a button that allows DMs to get a hold of tokens under others. but if it has I haven’t found it yet.
  • Not every part of the lighting system is perfect though. I still can’t make head nor tails out of elevations and depressions. I don’t quite know what to think about them. They don’t update in ways that I would expect from either. I would for example depressions with a light source inside expect to be lit inside, but they aren’t. The lighting system also takes a little to register someone has updated settings. More than once we got stuck in a place with a newly lit lantern not lighting anything because we didn’t move.
  • Doors are one of the things I will have to get into more. It is possible to create movable doors, but how is still a bit of a mystery to me.

Notes regarding Labyrinth Lord

  • we were playing by the book, but that might have been a mistake. The game might need to become a bit less deadly, so next time we should use the splintering shield rules, a death and dismemberment chart, and some rule about helmets I should first figure out (stock LL doesn’t seem to have a bonus for helmets
  • one house rule I already used for XP is XP for exploration: every new room discovered/mapped gives 50xp
  • I do wonder if I should have used Labyrinth Lord or maybe have gone even more minimal with White Box Fantasy.

Notes regarding Tomb of the Serpent Kings

  • I already played this one with another online group at the beginning of the pandemic. Unfortunately that didn’t last long, and we never managed to get to some of the more interesting parts of the dungeon.

Note: I did post a previous version of this article on the campaignwiki.org newsnet forum.

https://gmkeros.wordpress.com/2024/04/17/labyrinth-lord-tomb-of-the-serpent-kings-session-1-also-maptool/

#dnd #labyrinthlord #maptool #osr #totsk #ttrpg #ttrpgs #vtt

So our venture into the Tomb of Serpent Kings was going so well, and then the two Elves in the party were eviscerated by snakemen skeletons while the third ran for his life (but came back for his comrades. To loot them, sure, but he also gave them a proper burial).

#MapTool was actually quite convenient with a few hiccups: one was that just before the end the connection gave up and we couldn't see each others moves anymore...

#osr #ttrpg

so, tomorrow I have planned a 2 hour session of #LabyrinthLord, playing Tomb of the Serpent Kings on #maptool
I do wonder how far they can come in two hours.
It's not a long adventure, but it certainly has it's challenges.

#ttrpg #osr