a question...
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visitor
a question...
hello, I have recently discovered Almaea, but I can't seem to understand what it exactly is, or how I get there... If someone would enlighten me that would be magnificant.
Thank you
Thank you
Almea is an imaginary world, created by Mark Rosenfelder. You can't physically get there, unfortunately. You can only imagine.
The man of science is perceiving and endowed with vision whereas he who is ignorant and neglectful of this development is blind. The investigating mind is attentive, alive; the mind callous and indifferent is deaf and dead. - 'Abdu'l-Bahá
- Warmaster
- Lebom

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look here for the exact answer to "How"
http://www.zompist.com/visitor.htm
and for the other questions, go to http://www.zompist.com/drill0.htm and follow the pages.
http://www.zompist.com/visitor.htm
and for the other questions, go to http://www.zompist.com/drill0.htm and follow the pages.
Don't worry Girls, Explosions fix everything!
He who is also known as Ben
He who is also known as Ben
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visitor
As people have sort of said: Almea is primarily an artistic creation, not a role-playing setting, though it started out as a setting for a game Zompist 'mastered a couple decades ago.visitor wrote:yes, I have read both, but what I actually wanted to know, on what site does the rping take place?or isn't this something done over the internet?
Huh? Anyone is willing to RPG almea?Warmaster wrote:Mark once said that anyone was willing to RPG in almea, somewhere on the board i beleive.
- Drydic
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Damn, you are truly missing a lot. There are people here that know a lot more than me, so I defer to them on explanations. Suffice to say that video game RPGs are newbies in the field.con quesa wrote:Could you explain that? The only RPGs that I know of are video games like Pokemon and Final Fantasy.I'd love to get my game on in Almea, personally. Much nicer than the Forgotten Realms!
- Dudicon
- Lebom

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I'm not a big RPGer either, but I can tell you this: Forgotten Realms is a D&D campaign setting, and it was either based on a book series or a book series was based on it (I'm guessing the former). I know quite a bit about Dragonlance, another D&D setting, and Forgotten Realms is very much like it.Drydic_guy wrote:Damn, you are truly missing a lot. There are people here that know a lot more than me, so I defer to them on explanations. Suffice to say that video game RPGs are newbies in the field.con quesa wrote:Could you explain that? The only RPGs that I know of are video games like Pokemon and Final Fantasy.I'd love to get my game on in Almea, personally. Much nicer than the Forgotten Realms!
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ran not in
Actually, the latter is the case; the Forgotten Realms began as the private campaign setting of game designer Ed Greenwood and appeared in a number of magazine articles by Greenwood, written over quite a few years. Later it became an official Advanced Dungeons & Dragons setting for TSR (now Wizards of the Coast), and campaign guides and several book series were published using it. The books were in fact one of the later stages in the process, although they have multiplied quite rapidly.Dudicon wrote:I'm not a big RPGer either, but I can tell you this: Forgotten Realms is a D&D campaign setting, and it was either based on a book series or a book series was based on it (I'm guessing the former).
p@,
Glenn
I should note that the kind of RPG (role-playing game) being discussed here is neither a computer-based one, nor a board game, but the kind played with paper and (usually) dice, in which the players take on the role of different characters in an adventure, with one person (most often known as the Dungeon Master, or Game Master) effectively providing the rest of the world. There are many such games on the market; Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) is only one of them, but it is one of the oldest and best known.
(I said "not computer-based," but there are online and E-mail versions of multi-player RPGs as well, the descendants of the old PBM (play-by-mail) games, which, amazingly enough, were played via snail mail.)
I originally played D&D back in its earlier days, in 1981 (we still have the original Advanced D&D rulebooks!). I didn't role-play for long, but my younger brother did, and still does (he belongs to at least two gaming groups in the Chicago area, and visited the last GenCon gaming convention).
I'm sorry, I was just mentioning that "Zompist has said anyone is willing to RPG almea" didn't strike me as a very idiomatic sentence. That's all I was saying. I am, however, forced to consider the possiblity that is, since no-one seemed to notice that's what I was doingran not in wrote:YES!Aidan wrote:
Huh? Anyone is willing to RPG almea?
How are we going to do this though? A collaborative role-playing story-writing campaign?
Yeah, Glenn sums it up pretty well.
A quick search brings up
http://ptgptb.org/0001/history1.html
which matches pretty well most of the things my Fantasy Role-Playing Gamer's Bible (Sean Patrick Fannon, 1st ed.) says.
- Dudicon
- Lebom

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No, I got what you were saying; it seemed like Mark was saying that everyone wanted to RPG in Almea.Aidan wrote:I'm sorry, I was just mentioning that "Zompist has said anyone is willing to RPG almea" didn't strike me as a very idiomatic sentence. That's all I was saying. I am, however, forced to consider the possiblity that is, since no-one seemed to notice that's what I was doingran not in wrote:YES!Aidan wrote:
Huh? Anyone is willing to RPG almea?
How are we going to do this though? A collaborative role-playing story-writing campaign?
- Dudicon
- Lebom

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Ah, I should have figured that out; after all, that's the case with Dragonlance as well. I'm not sure what I was thinking.Glenn Kempf wrote:Actually, the latter is the case; the Forgotten Realms began as the private campaign setting of game designer Ed Greenwood and appeared in a number of magazine articles by Greenwood, written over quite a few years. Later it became an official Advanced Dungeons & Dragons setting for TSR (now Wizards of the Coast), and campaign guides and several book series were published using it. The books were in fact one of the later stages in the process, although they have multiplied quite rapidly.Dudicon wrote:I'm not a big RPGer either, but I can tell you this: Forgotten Realms is a D&D campaign setting, and it was either based on a book series or a book series was based on it (I'm guessing the former).
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ran not in
LOL alright I see it now. I thought I read "Anyone willing to RPG in almea?" And my answer remains yes.Aidan wrote:I'm sorry, I was just mentioning that "Zompist has said anyone is willing to RPG almea" didn't strike me as a very idiomatic sentence. That's all I was saying. I am, however, forced to consider the possiblity that is, since no-one seemed to notice that's what I was doingran not in wrote:YES!Aidan wrote:
Huh? Anyone is willing to RPG almea?
How are we going to do this though? A collaborative role-playing story-writing campaign?![]()


