• The VOIDRUNNER'S CODEX is LIVE! Explore new worlds, fight oppressive empires, fend off fearsome aliens, and wield deadly psionics with this comprehensive boxed set expansion for 5E and A5E!

Experience Point: Are you using too much gear?

Last week I got to vacation for a full week at the NC coast with my family. Not just my wife and daughter, but the entirety of my dad’s side of the family. All my sisters, brothers-in-law, nieces, and nephews were there. It was a good-sized crowd and we had tons of fun together. Now, when I go to the beach, I’m mostly there to relax. I don’t like having a big agenda planned. However...

Last week I got to vacation for a full week at the NC coast with my family. Not just my wife and daughter, but the entirety of my dad’s side of the family. All my sisters, brothers-in-law, nieces, and nephews were there. It was a good-sized crowd and we had tons of fun together.

Now, when I go to the beach, I’m mostly there to relax. I don’t like having a big agenda planned. However, there is a short list of activities that are mandatory, including a long walk on the beach, digging a big hole, building a sandcastle, and copious body surfing. It is this last activity that caused a sudden insight about gaming. I’ll get to the gaming part in just a moment.

When I talk about “body surfing,” I’m a real minimalist. It’s just me and my body (and a swimsuit) out in the waves, surfing. I don’t use a board, boogie or otherwise. I don’t use a raft or float. I simply wait for the right moment in the wave, launch myself forward, head down, arms extended, fingertips up, and ride the wave as far as it takes me. Most of the time it’s right up into the sand.

I noticed I was the only one doing it this way. My brothers-in-law were all out there among the waves with boogie boards or rafts, having a grand old time. I wondered which one of us was “doing it right” and made some observations. I was catching at least twice as many waves as they were and typically riding them in further on the beach. Fighting their way back out into the surf with a big floating object was slowing them down considerably. And the need to get their floating platform positioned properly was limiting which waves they were catching.

Does this mean they were having badwrongfun? Of course not. We were all having a pretty good time enjoying the waves as well as the periodic war stories about how good that one was or how badly crushed we got under that big wave. I’m not suggesting I was riding these waves in the “one true way.” I just couldn’t escape the idea that their gear was slowing them down.

Flashback to my first GenCon in 2005. I had never met or gamed with most of the ENWorld posse and I wanted to make a good impression. I brought with me two games I thought were pretty good: Sky Galleons of Mars and Orcs! They both used the d20 system in one form or another, but that’s where the similarities ended. Each used very different characters and scenarios. And for each I brought minis and terrain appropriate to the adventure.

I had loaded all this stuff into a pair of rather large plastic bins and proceeded to lug these things all over GenCon. Did I mention I was staying at the Best Western three blocks on the opposite side of the convention center from where I was running most of my games? I was a ridiculous and pitiful sight schlepping these huge crates around wherever I went. One night, after running a game late and stopping by the Embassy Suites, Piratecat took pity on me and let me leave the crates in his room to pick up the next day.

Now I will say, these props made an impression. Most folks commented on how well-crafted and elaborate they were. They definitely seemed big and bold on the gaming table. Quite a few passersby stopped to ask what we were playing and took pictures. But were these props worth the hassle? I have huge doubts.

It may be difficult at this late date to separate the favorable impression I made with some ENWorlders whom I’ve come to call great friends from all this elaborate gear I was hauling. I still cherish the moment after I ran Orcs! when Piratecat said, “You’re a really good GM!” And Teflon Billy pronounced it “The Year of Rel” since he was prone to making such proclamations back in the day (that dude SERIOUSLY needs to get his butt back to GenCon). Would they have accepted me and liked me if I hadn’t had scale models of Elvish Treehouses for my Orcs! game? I think they probably would have.

As proof of this theory, I submit that I have consistently brought less and less gear with me for my GenCon games in subsequent years. Most of the response to my games has been pretty good. Also, I’ve participated in lots of games which featured no battlemat and even ones without so much as a character sheet (I’m looking at you, Fiasco), which have provided some of my favorite gaming experiences.

Amusingly, I still tend to run games with figures and terrain in my home games. I got in on the Reaper Mini Kickstarter (which I’m hoping will finally arrive any day now) as well as Dwarven Forge. I’ve got some truly amazing dungeon dressing incoming, and I plan to merrily run a dungeon crawl of epic proportions this fall. I clearly have a great fondness for “gear.”

But I also like to think I’ve absorbed an important lesson along the way: Gear is great, right up until the point that it is getting in the way of having more fun. If you are catching fewer waves and not riding them as far, is that raft really your friend? Are you spending too much time counting squares or moving dungeon tiles around and not enough time laughing and saying, “Wow!”?

Don’t let that gear slow you down.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Rel

Liquid Awesome
I can dig the idea of being prepared. I was a Boy Scout. I'm somewhat of a fan of saying, "I'd rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it."

But I've gotten a good handle on what "need" means. And "need" to me is a pretty strong word. I'm pretty big on improvising from my surroundings and view that as somewhat of a challenge.

As the Beatles said, "All you need is love." And insulin. I need insulin. Love and insulin. And a good knife.

Love, insulin, and a good knife.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

diaglo

Adventurer
this is how i know you never read any of my posts or threads.
2003 i carted around a cassion full of lead (actual lead minis) to run OD&D(1974) for anyone willing to roll 3d6 in order.
Piratecat promised (here on ENWorld) to play in one of my games.
my back is still sore.

but i learned a valuable lesson. KISS for convention games.
 

Dannyalcatraz

Schmoderator
Staff member
Supporter
When i travel,I try to pack situationally. Sometimes that means the kitchen sink, sometimes it means only what I can put in a bag.

I only do the full Monty when I'm at home.












Keep it clean!
 


Teflon Billy

Explorer
Those bins were something else man, and the Lego models were impressive enough, but if you think I liked you for any other reason that SandwichCon, you are delusional ;)
 


Rel

Liquid Awesome
Those bins were something else man, and the Lego models were impressive enough, but if you think I liked you for any other reason that SandwichCon, you are delusional ;)

Well then this proves the point beyond argument. SammichCon wasn't invented until the following year in 2006. I know because that's the year I roomed with Old One at the Embassy Suites. And I was voted Best Dressed Man to Ever Do True Dungeon.
 

nerfherder

Explorer
As you know, I'm a keen photographer. I bought an SLR in 2005, and decided to replace it last year. I was originally thinking of upgrading and getting a more expensive, larger and heavier camera, but after some careful thought about my experience of carrying a camera around I decided to buy a smaller and lighter camera.

I went to Prague earlier this month, and took only hand luggage on the flight. If I'd bought the large, heavy camera I would have left it at home, because it probably wouldn't have fitted in my bag and I wouldn't want to lug it around all day. Instead, the smaller camera with one general-purpose lens was portable and capable enough to fulfill my needs.
 


Harknail

First Post
Every week I lug 3 large plastic bins onto campus. One contains misc board games that are easy to learn, one contains my entire collection of dungeon tiles, the third has all my battlemats, cardboard miniatures, lots of dice, character sheets, home made dungeon tiles (for fast or odd sized dungeons). Also in the boxes are assorted D&D books, and over 4 dozen Magic the Gather decks. Just one box was 37 pounds! (Ok, that's the heaviest of the 3). I'm also bringing 8 large pizzas, 7 2-liter bottles of soda, a gallon of water, a 6-qt popcorn popper (and supplies), a laptop computer and iPad. And an overloaded cart to haul everything.


The fun part is, I'm not even playing D&D currently! But I'm using the dungeon tiles more than ever in the fantasy game I am playing in. The D&D stuff is just enough to support a pickup game of D&D, if needed.


I am definitely bringing too much stuff, but it's handy to have when I need it.
 

Voidrunner's Codex

Remove ads

Voidrunner's Codex

Remove ads

Top