Desperate Gods: Difference between revisions

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m moved Desperate gods to Desperate Gods: The article title is a proper name, and since the game capitalizes both words, so should the article.
1d4chan>Not LongPoster Again
A little cleanup and a link to the project homepage.
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Desperate Gods claims to be an open source board game built with Unity, but it's actually a perfect complete tabletop simulator created by accident. The game is designed to use absolutely no automation; players use the mouse and keyboard commands to pick up and roll physical dice, draw, flip, and rotate cards, move their game pieces, and even enforce the rules, all manually.
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'''Desperate Gods''' was intended to be an open source board game built with Unity; it is that, but it's also a perfect complete tabletop simulator created by accident. The game is designed to use absolutely no automation, so as to maximize immersion; players use the mouse and keyboard commands to pick up and roll physical dice, draw, flip, and rotate cards, move their game pieces, and even enforce the rules, all manually.


This program has enormous potential for online role playing and wargames, and it seems to be more complete than [[DERP]].
This program has enormous potential for online role playing and wargames, and it seems to be more complete than [[DERP]].
== External Links ==
* [http://www.wolfire.com/desperate-gods The homepage of Desperate Gods], with a demo video, installers for Windows and Macintosh PCs, and a link to the source code.

Revision as of 18:43, 18 January 2013

This article is a stub. You can help 1d4chan by expanding it

Desperate Gods was intended to be an open source board game built with Unity; it is that, but it's also a perfect complete tabletop simulator created by accident. The game is designed to use absolutely no automation, so as to maximize immersion; players use the mouse and keyboard commands to pick up and roll physical dice, draw, flip, and rotate cards, move their game pieces, and even enforce the rules, all manually.

This program has enormous potential for online role playing and wargames, and it seems to be more complete than DERP.

External Links