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Post by ProfGremlin on Feb 6, 2011 16:37:57 GMT -5
Partial recovery from the mini data dump of Feb 2011. Updates to be added to this post as they are found.
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zanshin Re: Silverwood Mouselings: a twist on T&T « Reply #15 on Feb 3, 2011, 12:34pm »
Thats an awesome first rpg - beats my attempts at the same age. Have a proxy exalt Gaptooth to pass on to your daughter.
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Post by theazurescribe on Nov 30, 2011 15:45:29 GMT -5
I apologize if this counts as thread necromancy, but darn it all I just have to be vocal about just how awesome this is! I love the whole Redwall/Mouse Guard genre. I was pouring over Woodland Warriors just a couple weeks ago actually (Its also very well done if any one cares). Your daughter deserves massive props on her work there!
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Post by feldrik on Nov 30, 2011 20:56:34 GMT -5
We don't worry about necromancers here, for my part I like 'em. All this T&T goodness should be brought to the forefront regularly so we can remember to use it. I am also still charmed by the Silverwood Mousling rules, it makes me happy.
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Post by gaptooth on Dec 1, 2011 10:57:08 GMT -5
Thanks! My daughter still plans to develop the game further, but we've been insanely busy since her little brother was born in April. Right now she is learning JavaScript, and for practice she is developing what could become a T&T character builder. (At this point, it's more of a T&T character sheet that can calculate Adds from ability scores that are assigned manually from real-world dice rolls.)
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Post by zanshin on Dec 1, 2011 11:22:10 GMT -5
OMG - your daughters computer capability exceeds mine by several orders of magnitude.
You must be very proud.
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Post by gaptooth on Dec 1, 2011 12:00:23 GMT -5
zanshin: We are just following the free lessons available at Codecademy, one every week, and the T&T character sheet is her way of practicing what she learns. She just learned about conditional logic last week (the "What If?" lesson), which is what she needed to get the program to calculate Adds.
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Post by ProfGremlin on Dec 1, 2011 20:44:33 GMT -5
If it helps at all, I began learning javascript years ago. I used the primers at HTML Goodies. They're written to be really easy to understand. Alas, I never finished the lessons. Also, DevGuru has a great resource for multiple web programming languages. I like it because it helps explain what each command does. Edit - fixed code. Migraines don't work well with BBCode. Must be a hardware conflict...
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