Category:One-page Games: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "One-page games are good for /tg/ because their entire ruleset can fit into a single image. When printed, the whole game will fit on a single sheet of letter-sized (USA) or A4 (t..."
 
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One-page games are good for /tg/ because their entire ruleset can fit into a single image.  When printed, the whole game will fit on a single sheet of letter-sized (USA) or A4 (the rest of the world) paper without using stupid eyestrain-small fonts.
One-page games are good for /tg/ because their entire ruleset can fit into a single image.  When printed, the whole game will fit on a single sheet of letter-sized (USA) or A4 (the rest of the world) paper without using stupid eyestrain-small fonts. Almost every one-page game is free<sup>1</sup> or [[wikipedia:Creative Commons|Creative Commons]] licensed.


Almost every one-page game is free<sup>1</sup> or [[wikipedia:Creative Commons|Creative Commons]] licensed.
<small>1: Which is important since /tg/ would never scans books and hand out free copies. *cough*</small>


<small>1: which is important since /tg/ would never scans books and hand out free copies. *cough*</small>
[[Category:Roleplaying]]

Revision as of 12:30, 12 September 2019

One-page games are good for /tg/ because their entire ruleset can fit into a single image. When printed, the whole game will fit on a single sheet of letter-sized (USA) or A4 (the rest of the world) paper without using stupid eyestrain-small fonts. Almost every one-page game is free1 or Creative Commons licensed.

1: Which is important since /tg/ would never scans books and hand out free copies. *cough*

Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.

O