Telegaming Results

The virtual presence of one of the players in our D&D session last night worked reasonably well. There were some performance issues at first, but these were mostly cleared up after trying separate video and audio connections with Windows Live Messenger instead of a combined video/audio connection. Before we tried the separate connection thing, however, the audio stuttered a lot and often took on a somewhat flanged sound. This had the humorous effect of turning our remote player into a Max Headroom of sorts.

Sadly, our party of five brave adventurers did not fare as well as I had hoped they would last night. The party — consisting of a rogue, a cleric, a monk, a wizard, and a barbarian — had been exploring a cave which turned out to be an ancient crypt. The players had been tasked with finding a widow’s young lad who had gone off to explore the cave a few days prior, but who had never returned. In the previous session, the players had discovered the corpse of the young man. He had apparently died of dehydration within the crypt after being captured by a small band of frog-like humanoids who had taken up residence in the old crypt.

The players continued exploring the crypt last night, continuing where they had left off. They soon came upon a large room which consisted of a rickety wooden bridge spanning the entire length. About eight feet below the bridge was a large pool of what appeared to be tar filling the room. Foolishly, the rogue decided to take the lead and carefully began crossing the bridge without checking for traps or having a safety rope tied around his waist should he fall…and fall he did when he triggered an old trap.

About halfway across the bridge, the wooden planks beneath the rogue’s feet swung away, dropping the hapless player into the tar. However, it soon became apparent that the black substance was not tar, but rather a large, gelatinous, ooze-like creature. The substance immediately began crushing the life out of the rogue as he stumbles to his feet, waste deep in black pudding.

The barbarian and the wizard hurried to the rogue’s aid, with the barbarian lowering the wizard down from the bridge in order to pull the rogue out.  Unfortunately, the wizard’s strength gave out and he, too, fell into the pool of black death.

With the rogue’s clothes and equipment rapidly dissolving from his body and the wizard now doomed to the same fate, the cleric bravely cast upon himself a spell that momentarily protected him from the creature’s attacks and leapt into the pool.  After hoisting the wizard — whose equipment and clothes had now been dissolved completely and who was near death himself — to safety, the cleric’s protective spell ended.  Sadly, the attacks of the black pudding creature prevented the cleric from casting another such spell in order to save himself and the rogue, and he eventually succumbed to the creature’s crushing grasp.

Both the rogue and the cleric ultimately perished.

Telegaming

Tonight is going to be our first experiment in telegaming. We’re having a D&D session with one person joining us from another city via video conferencing on my laptop. We tested it all out last night and it seems to work well enough.  I had Windows Live Messenger running on my laptop, piped the video output to my 32″ TV, and had the sound going out to my stereo system.  It’s going to be interesting to see how well this “virtual presence” works out.

War!!

In the online strategy game Tribal Wars, a belligerent tribe has been causing problems with one of our tribe members. After repeated pleas for peace, the one member of the other tribe refused to stop attacking one of our tribesmen, and the leader of the other tribe simply laughed at us.

In order to protect our tribe member, I launched a series of attacks against the hostile village in order to decimate its attacking forces. After the success of my mission, however, came the cries of “not fair!” from the other tribe. Now that entire tribe is amassing a large army to attack me.

All because one player wanted the resources of another player and refused to stop attacking him when asked politely. Now our two tribes are facing war. A war born in arrogance and raised in pride.

It is no wonder there is no peace in the world.

Marty vs Microsoft

I was playing Tribal Wars on my computer earlier this morning when my keyboard suddenly stopped working. Marty, who had been running around loose in my room, had finished the job he started months ago: chewing through my keyboard cable! I had foolishly left it dangling on the floor after moving it last night to control the computer while watching episodes of The Office on my computer while in bed. That keyboard cost me $90!

So, I did a little research and found two contenders for a new keyboard:

  1. Logitech Cordless Desktop MX 5000 Laser
  2. Logitech diNovo Edge

I was leaning more toward the MX5000 because it was half the price of the diNovo Edge and appeared to have some more buttons and had an interesting LCD screen built into it, but after trying it out in the store, I did not like the feel of the keys. A buddy of mine at work recently picked up a diNovo Edge and brought it in to show me earlier this week, so I’d had a bit of experience with it. I was impressed with its size, look, and feel, and it had a built-in touch pad for controlling the mouse cursor, so I bit the bullet and dropped the $300 the store was asking for it.

It’s going to take me a little while to get used to the diNovo Edge. It feels very much like a laptop keyboard, and is quite different from the Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000 that Marty destroyed. Still, it’s quite nifty. The lighting effects on it are very stylish, and the keys have just the right give. Despite the cost, I think I’m going to be happy with this new, wireless keyboard.

Day of Judgment

I have created a coat-of-arms for the tribe I belong to in Tribal Wars. The tribe is called Day of Judgment. I think I captured the motif pretty well.

Day of Judgment coat-of-arms

I started out with the coat-of-arms for the American Heraldry Society, then completely erased the shield section, leaving only the laurels intact. This gave me the desired “clean slate” of a shield with a nice border to start with. I colored the entire shield red, then added some shading to give it a nice three-dimensional look.

I then found a cartoon image of the sun, which I erased the face off of and cleaned up a little. This is meant to represent the “day”. After that, I grabbed an image of a warhammer from the game World of Warcraft using a utility called WoW Model Viewer. The hammer is meant to represent judgment. As a bonus, the hammer has a sun on it, too!  The laurels are meant to represent peace, which is what we are striving for with our neighboring tribes.

All in all, I think it turned out rather well.