Bundle of Holding +4: Pay-What-You-Want Tabletop RPGs

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Bundle of Holding +4: Pay-What-You-Want Tabletop RPGs


The Bundle of Holding +4 is a collection of up to five indie tabletop RPGs in a name-your-price package that supports a couple of very worth charities.

The fine tradition of the "pay what you want" bundle is alive and well in the world of tabletop RPGs, as seen in the new Bundle of Holding +4 collection. The bundle features three exciting indie RPGs - the sci-fi thriller Psi*Run, the historical witchcraft tale Witch: The Road to Lindisfarne and the Native American tales of How We Came To Live Here - available in whatever price you care to pay.

And since you're well-versed in how these things work, it'll come as no surprise that paying more than the average will net you two bonus games: the "slapstick fantasy" Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple and the Apocalypse World-based Monster of the Week. You can divide your payments between the RPG authors, the keepers of the Bundle and charity, in this case Oxfam and Feeding America.

Unlike a lot of tabletop RPGs, these promise to be easy to learn and quick to play, with full stories completable in a single session. The games come in DRM-free PDF format, and if more are added to the bundle, anyone who's already purchased it will get them free. If you're into the tabletop gaming thing, it's a pretty solid deal.

The Bundle of Holding +4 is live now and will be available until July 19. Check it out at bundleofholding.com [http://bundleofholding.com/index/current].



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Jun 20, 2013
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Hmmm? Tabletop can be hit and miss. I'd shell out for the charities, but I'm none to keen on game-systems I can't crack open to review first.
 

Cedric Plante

New member
May 9, 2011
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Those are good games (or are at least very interesting to read). Naturally I recommend checking reviews online.
Indy roleplaying games (or "story games" as some call them) do very interesting stuff I hope that videogames designer would start reading & playing those games to eventually take inspiration or "steal" stuff from them. The "story games" library is getting very impressive, there is a lot of very interesting stuff to discover.