I'm going to use this with one tweak - when ANY player touches a letter ALL of them recieve their babbling curse. With my group, after the first player grabs a letter and receives the curse, they would just have that single player grab all the letters.
There's a board game called 'Mountains of Madness' based on the similarly named Lovecraft story. Every player in the game gains increasingly debilitating madnesses that they have to play out when talking at the table (it's a cooperative game). The madnesses are amazing! You should look at them for more ideas for the Babbel Curse! Great room!
In a medieval fantasy setting, there's a fair chance nobody in the party will know how to read and write. In my preferred Warhammer, the vast majority of professions are commoners. With no scholar or noble in the group, there's no access to knowing the letters.
"a silly dungeon room with a single wooden door in the style of oil paint, --ar 16:9 --no window" - it took quite a few gens to pop this one out but I liked it too. Thanks!
At first it sounds like a fun concept but... what would be the reason for such room and its components to exist in the world of the game? Who would go to great lengths to build it, create an easily solvable word puzzle inside and curse separate letters? What did this person want to achieve by doing that?
For all of these sorts of rooms, unless you're playing a "funhouse" dungeon, you have to ask yourself who put that room there and why? Who maintains it? How come it's not been solved already? How come all the letters are there and haven't been removed? Also, just a word of caution, I bet that wouldn't be too much fun in a public game where some players (or onlookers) might have actual speech impediments. You don't want to find yourself being sued.
I wrote a similar comment and then scrolled down and found yours :) absolutely agree, it fits an abstract fantasy theme park, not a compelling, believable setting. Also, in a medieval fantasy setting, there's a fair chance nobody in the party will know how to read and write. In my preferred Warhammer, the vast majority of professions are commoners. With no scholar or noble in the group, there's no access to knowing the letters.
@@dabradmp1 My players and I also live in the "real life adult world", yet we found this to be a great use of time. To each their own. Enjoy your game!
@@dabradmp1 I'm one of those 'real life adults', and this would be fantastic. Why? Because its FUN. It sounds like to me that somewhere along the way to becoming an adult, that someone lost their sense of humor. Also want to point out the irony that you're an 'adult' spending his time pretending he's an imaginary fantasy character, then differentiating that others are less 'adult' for doing something comical. "Real adult time is precious, so I need to use my time judiciously, and it's been too long already--I have to get back to the tavern where I play a lesbian dragonborn bard with a pickle fetish. This room is so immature."
"Here's where it goes off the rails." 😂
😂
I'm going to use this with one tweak - when ANY player touches a letter ALL of them recieve their babbling curse. With my group, after the first player grabs a letter and receives the curse, they would just have that single player grab all the letters.
There's a board game called 'Mountains of Madness' based on the similarly named Lovecraft story. Every player in the game gains increasingly debilitating madnesses that they have to play out when talking at the table (it's a cooperative game). The madnesses are amazing! You should look at them for more ideas for the Babbel Curse! Great room!
This guy need more views
Great video, straight to the point and fun idea
10/10 amazing. Would love more like this.
great idea!
Schmennifer?!
Schmonathan!?!
Schmona?
That sounds hilarious! :)
Fun concept
In a medieval fantasy setting, there's a fair chance nobody in the party will know how to read and write. In my preferred Warhammer, the vast majority of professions are commoners. With no scholar or noble in the group, there's no access to knowing the letters.
What prompt did you use for the art work? Love the coloring
"a silly dungeon room with a single wooden door in the style of oil paint, --ar 16:9 --no window" - it took quite a few gens to pop this one out but I liked it too. Thanks!
@@level20dm awesome thank you so much for taking the time to respond with details
At first it sounds like a fun concept but... what would be the reason for such room and its components to exist in the world of the game?
Who would go to great lengths to build it, create an easily solvable word puzzle inside and curse separate letters? What did this person want to achieve by doing that?
For all of these sorts of rooms, unless you're playing a "funhouse" dungeon, you have to ask yourself who put that room there and why? Who maintains it? How come it's not been solved already? How come all the letters are there and haven't been removed?
Also, just a word of caution, I bet that wouldn't be too much fun in a public game where some players (or onlookers) might have actual speech impediments. You don't want to find yourself being sued.
Cough cough
Me
Cough Cough
Sometimes the answer is just "because it's fun."
@@verdugosilver3047 And that's a fine answer for people that enjoy that sort of thing.
I wrote a similar comment and then scrolled down and found yours :) absolutely agree, it fits an abstract fantasy theme park, not a compelling, believable setting.
Also, in a medieval fantasy setting, there's a fair chance nobody in the party will know how to read and write. In my preferred Warhammer, the vast majority of professions are commoners. With no scholar or noble in the group, there's no access to knowing the letters.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Did it hurt when you fell from heaven you sweet, sweet angel?
Would be fun until you realize you wasted 2h of the session in the same room.
some people enjoy spending time laughing with friends over "making progress" in an imaginary game with no consequences :)
@@ChucklesTheBeard in the real life adult world, session time is EXTREMELY precious.
@@dabradmp1 My players and I also live in the "real life adult world", yet we found this to be a great use of time. To each their own. Enjoy your game!
@@dabradmp1 I'm one of those 'real life adults', and this would be fantastic. Why? Because its FUN. It sounds like to me that somewhere along the way to becoming an adult, that someone lost their sense of humor.
Also want to point out the irony that you're an 'adult' spending his time pretending he's an imaginary fantasy character, then differentiating that others are less 'adult' for doing something comical. "Real adult time is precious, so I need to use my time judiciously, and it's been too long already--I have to get back to the tavern where I play a lesbian dragonborn bard with a pickle fetish. This room is so immature."
@@neepers 🤣🤣🤣