This is a highly niche question, but: what's the best TTRPG anthology you've ever read, and what made it good in your opinion?
>>97229406In the context of games, what is an anthology?
>>97229412Something like a collection of different games intentionally created/presented together (as opposed to e.g. incidentally packed together in a Bundle of Holding, or because they're all variants of the same game, etc.).
>>97229406You mean like 200wRPG Anthology? or like "Seven wonders RPG" anthology?
>>97229445I had something more like Seven Wonders in mind, but I guess something indie from completely different creators (e.g. from a game jam) would also definitely count.
>>97229438So why would someone just read them, as opposed to actually playing them?
>>97229406I've only read one TTRPG anthology, because the overwhelming majority of games are standalone products, and it was the "#Feminism" collection of really faggy improv theater prompts and other retarded party games that were extremely juvenile and overly enamored with its own silly bullshit because no one who contributed to it actually knew what the fuck "game design" actually meant.So I guess that's the best TTRPG anthology I've ever read.
>>97229534Do tell more, that sounds hilarious
>>97229468Because you don't play an anthology, you play the games in it. You read the anthology.
>>97229557I'll have to dig around in an old external HDD to see if I still have the PDF, but it was a bunch of stuff that was like>Your mother has dementia and you have to roleplay explaining to her that her lifestyle is going to have to change>put some stickers and glitter on your face and go out to a bar and pretend to be fairies or some shit>take turns writing nice things on each other with sharpieIt was a profoundly stupid pile of shit.
>>97229685>You read the anthology.So the anthology isn't a game, got it.