VTNL: Difference between revisions
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The book contains 2 pages on rolling dice. Hold up. Let me be clear about this. I don't mean two pages about what to roll and how to interpret the dice. No, I mean two pages on how to physically pick the dice up and throw them. Two pages. These are not optional rules. If you don't use the rules correctly, the author encourages GMs to beat the fuck out of the offending player. I'm not making this shit up. It's even outlined in one of the gameplay examples. | The book contains 2 pages on rolling dice. Hold up. Let me be clear about this. I don't mean two pages about what to roll and how to interpret the dice. No, I mean two pages on how to physically pick the dice up and throw them. Two pages. These are not optional rules. If you don't use the rules correctly, the author encourages GMs to beat the fuck out of the offending player. I'm not making this shit up. It's even outlined in one of the gameplay examples. | ||
You will need a desk bell to play this. The kind you ding when you need help at a store and no one is around. Every time you buy something in the game, players will bang this little bell. You think I'm making this shit up but I swear I am not. | You will need a desk bell to play this. The kind you ding when you need help at a store and no one is around. Every time you buy something in the game, players will bang this little bell. You think I'm making this shit up but I swear I am not. Here's some proof. | ||
[[File: VTNL_desk_bell.png]] | |||
'''Setting''' | '''Setting''' | ||
The setting is on a planet called Kreat. The sun is called The Great Dragon. A long time ago a volcano boiled the sea and then there was an ice age and some continental drift. All this happened for unspecified reasons. And that's it. That's all we really know. A paragraph or so on geological history and a friendly reminder that planets are spheroids. | The setting is on a planet called Kreat. The sun is called The Great Dragon. A long time ago a volcano boiled the sea and then there was an ice age and some continental drift. All this happened for unspecified reasons. And that's it. That's all we really know. A paragraph or so on geological history and a friendly reminder that planets are spheroids. |
Revision as of 16:51, 29 October 2015
This article is a work in progress so just cool your engines. The game is written in a dead language called "Russian" that only 12 people on earth actually speak. Our translators are working tirelessly to decode this text.
VTNL is a Russian RPG that may be the usurper of FATAL's claim to Worst Fucking Roleplaying Game Ever Made. It was made by some lunatic who's name I can't pronounce because it's in Cyrillic. He claims he spent 14 years working on this.
VTNL is as acronym for Via The New Legends, whatever the fuck that even means.
System
No one knows for sure how to play this. The author claims he hasn't played an RPG in a decade in a half because he wanted this VTNL to be exactly like a videogame. He drew his autism - er, I mean - his inspiration from Diablo 1.
The book contains 2 pages on rolling dice. Hold up. Let me be clear about this. I don't mean two pages about what to roll and how to interpret the dice. No, I mean two pages on how to physically pick the dice up and throw them. Two pages. These are not optional rules. If you don't use the rules correctly, the author encourages GMs to beat the fuck out of the offending player. I'm not making this shit up. It's even outlined in one of the gameplay examples.
You will need a desk bell to play this. The kind you ding when you need help at a store and no one is around. Every time you buy something in the game, players will bang this little bell. You think I'm making this shit up but I swear I am not. Here's some proof.
Setting
The setting is on a planet called Kreat. The sun is called The Great Dragon. A long time ago a volcano boiled the sea and then there was an ice age and some continental drift. All this happened for unspecified reasons. And that's it. That's all we really know. A paragraph or so on geological history and a friendly reminder that planets are spheroids.