It was really good to be honest.
randomnick
Congrats! Now don't stop driving, try at least around your home to keep practicing.
I am very interested on it if you create it!
I just suscribed to it, thanks for the link :)
Great analysis, I'm a big fan of how you explained and compared it with a great game.
As a solo player, I find it a bit more difficult to apply it, maybe I need to use a better tool too generate more interesting encounters.
I'm a big fan of Mythic GME 2ed. The chaos factor with the interrupted and altered scenes add more flavour and sometimes good twists. The only difference I implement, and it's also part of the suggested variations, is resetting the chaos factor when values are too low and the game gets dull and boring to add some surprises.
I also have got some nice games with the Adventure Crafter, getting the story to unexpected places.
And both in their deck formats are not praised enough.
For Ironsworn Starforged (and other games and supplements) I like to use pen and paper. I tried the Stargazer app for some time, and it's great, don't get me wrong, but my imagination works better when I'm away from screens.
I recently tried the Hex Flowers like this one (while playing Cairn - Barrow Delver) with pretty good results. I seriously recommend to give them a try and check the included example, easier than it looks!
I try to avoid screens while playing (phone or computer), otherwise I will get dragged into something else between notifications, links and etc. That's my attention span.
Sometimes if I have no other option for one reason or another, I have Adventuresmith and Mythic GME 2e on my phone (Android). The amazing amount of oracle's available is more than enough for my needs (even if I still keep looking for more, but that's my hoarder side).
That's a pretty good point. Time to read it again! (and this time I'll play it)
Mausritter is a mix of some easy systems, very "kid friendly", it actually won some awards because of it. The Tiny D6 systems are also good and easy to learn: two dice, if you have an attribute that helps, use three.
And I agree with you. I'm one of those playing solo boardgames and RPGs to avoid more screen time
There are discussions about boardgames and TTRPGs in Gaming, even if that community is mainly focused on videogames
It depends on the amount of roleplay vs journaling you would like to try. My first try was with D100 and Four against the Darkness, but they were closer to a boardgame from my point of view. After that I tried Scarlet Heroes, one of the best solo rules and tables to play any classic DND game. Or anything, the tables and oracles can be used in a lot of different games. Now, the standard suggestion is Ironsworn because it's great and easy to play (although the book is big, everything is variations of one move). OH, did I mention it's free?
And then you can find Mythic GME 2ed, probably the best tool available to play any TTRPG solo. It's really worth it, but there are others easier to understand (I'd suggest One Page Solo Engine).
It depends on what you'd like to play: What setting? Where would you put the focus? More throwing dice? More journaling? Adventures? Epic fantasy? Sci-fi?
I like this point of view. Also because it reminds me of Douglas Adams with his "42" thing.