MU Soapbox

    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Muxify
    • Mustard

    MU* concept oddities

    Mildly Constructive
    10
    19
    5578
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Kay
      Kay last edited by

      One of my favorite things is a MU* that's different. When I was a complete newbie I had the fortune to play on Poddington-on-Slossip, an odd little place that unfortunately closed before I knew how unusual it was. It's been over sixteen years and I still remember it fondly. It was set in the British countryside between the first and second world wars, and it had this air of mystery and spookiness to almost everything.

      The downside of oddball MU*s is that once they're gone they're gone, and there's usually no way to continue your character's story. I thought I'd put up a post and see what other strange birds others may have encountered, and if there are currently running I might check out.

      As far as weird ideas of my own, I am eyeing this old scifi story and pondering how one might use it for a MU*: http://web.archive.org/web/20060719184509/www.scifi.com/scifiction/classics/classics_archive/lafferty5/lafferty51.html

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • Coin
        Coin last edited by Coin

        Not really a MU--more of a game that started on LiveJournal and then moved to a mix of LJ and private MU game when the majority of the players either turned out to be MUers or became such, but there was a game I loved where we all played the reincarnations of dead authors and poets. I met @Gingerlily there, along with many others. It's kind of irreplaceable. I'm pretty sure if I said "oh, I am considering restarting this" I would have a legion of people from the old game yelling "hooray", but I don't have the drive at the moment. Back when it existed, though, I couldn't really RP anywhere else--it was time intensive mostly because it was so submersive for me. Some people found it a lot more intense than others. Like all games, it had its share of crazy shit, but for the most part, even when there were hard OOC feelings involved, people tended to ... I don't know ... for the most part be civil, barring a very few crazy moments. I think it helps a lot that there was a lot of transparency in character action and even intent.

        "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

        Kay Gingerlily 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • Kay
          Kay @Coin last edited by

          @Coin Was it a very demanding game in terms of gamemastering? If not, I've had some success when dealing smaller groups like that to set up a couple of rooms somewhere for people to play in. Mini-MU*. All the flavor, none of the stress, at least in theory.

          Coin 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Coin
            Coin @Kay last edited by

            @Kay said:

            @Coin Was it a very demanding game in terms of gamemastering? If not, I've had some success when dealing smaller groups like that to set up a couple of rooms somewhere for people to play in. Mini-MU*. All the flavor, none of the stress, at least in theory.

            No, it really wasn't. But the community is pretty particular, and it's a game with a lot of history. Also, it's been a while.

            "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Misadventure
              Misadventure last edited by

              What did these authors DO? Be social, correct the time stream, lead social change, fight in martial arts tournaments a la Epic Rap Battles of History?

              I have a waggish sense of humor.

              Coin 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Coin
                Coin @Misadventure last edited by

                @Misadventure said:

                What did these authors DO? Be social, correct the time stream, lead social change, fight in martial arts tournaments a la Epic Rap Battles of History?

                Depends on the iteration of the game.

                Its first iteration quickly devolved into weird time-traveling shenanigans with H.g. Wells and and William Blake (who were sort of together kind of maybe) fighting Daleks..?

                But later on, those players fell away to write their own stories separately. And, more prominently in the relaunch (i.e. second iteration) there was quite a bit of emphasis on supernatural and weird shenanigans. During the first iteration, some of them had found out they were reincarnated authors, but as far as I can recall, during the second iteration, no one really knew. We still mostly used the authors's names for it--it was just a weird quirk, or "named after", or sometimes just ignored all together, like some sort of weird supernatural field of ignorance.

                It was freeform--no stats to speak of--and usually the stories were just... played. Some people chose to just hang out and socialize and do "Bar RP" or whatever, while others chose weirder stories involving the supernatural and the actual nature of the game. Lovecraft and Tolkien were, for example, good friends, and Tolkien's player and I had a great time merging the themes in their works and creating a weird, insanity-inducing plot about a ... well, ring. And the plots tended to lead or direct towards the nature of the game--i.e. reincarnation, etc.

                "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

                Thisnameistaken 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                • Thisnameistaken
                  Thisnameistaken @Coin last edited by

                  @Coin said:

                  @Misadventure said:

                  What did these authors DO? Be social, correct the time stream, lead social change, fight in martial arts tournaments a la Epic Rap Battles of History?

                  Depends on the iteration of the game.

                  Its first iteration quickly devolved into weird time-traveling shenanigans with H.g. Wells and and William Blake (who were sort of together kind of maybe) fighting Daleks..?

                  But later on, those players fell away to write their own stories separately. And, more prominently in the relaunch (i.e. second iteration) there was quite a bit of emphasis on supernatural and weird shenanigans. During the first iteration, some of them had found out they were reincarnated authors, but as far as I can recall, during the second iteration, no one really knew. We still mostly used the authors's names for it--it was just a weird quirk, or "named after", or sometimes just ignored all together, like some sort of weird supernatural field of ignorance.

                  It was freeform--no stats to speak of--and usually the stories were just... played. Some people chose to just hang out and socialize and do "Bar RP" or whatever, while others chose weirder stories involving the supernatural and the actual nature of the game. Lovecraft and Tolkien were, for example, good friends, and Tolkien's player and I had a great time merging the themes in their works and creating a weird, insanity-inducing plot about a ... well, ring. And the plots tended to lead or direct towards the nature of the game--i.e. reincarnation, etc.

                  That actually sounds pretty fun.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Coin
                    Coin last edited by Coin

                    Admittedly, a lot of it was "who's dating whoooooooo" but--but--but it was kind of hilarious in that sense, because the pairings sometimes were hilaaaaaaaarious. There were a lot of gneder-bent reincarnations, too--mostly men-to-women, though I think there were some in reverse? Not prominently, though.

                    I remember having ridiculous amounts of fun trying to figure out how Jane Austen and H.P. Lovecraft could possibly date--and they did, for a while. Hemingway and Dorothy Parker--which ended badly... several times--or a black reincarnation of Mark Twain (whose name was Mark Twain, but who wrote under the name Samuel Clemens because lulz) completely failing to seduce a female reincarnation of Aristotle because she was head over heels for one Will Shakespeare.

                    Never mind the whole Byron, Coleridge, Shelley, Godwin, and Polidori contingent. Oy vey.

                    I mean--it was crack. It was roleplaying crack, and it was a lot of fun.

                    "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                    • Thenomain
                      Thenomain last edited by

                      @Coin, look up Clone High.

                      “If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.”
                      ― Carl Sagan, Cosmos

                      Coin 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Coin
                        Coin @Thenomain last edited by

                        @Thenomain said:

                        @Coin, look up Clone High.

                        I don't need to. The tagline of the original game was "It's like Clone High on opium!"

                        "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

                        Thenomain Misadventure 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Thenomain
                          Thenomain @Coin last edited by

                          @Coin said:

                          @Thenomain said:

                          @Coin, look up Clone High.

                          I don't need to. The tagline of the original game was "It's like Clone High on opium!"

                          Then I am insanely disappointed that I never played this game, and would love to see someone do it again.

                          “If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.”
                          ― Carl Sagan, Cosmos

                          Derp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Gingerlily
                            Gingerlily @Coin last edited by

                            @Coin said:

                            Not really a MU--more of a game that started on LiveJournal and then moved to a mix of LJ and private MU game when the majority of the players either turned out to be MUers or became such, but there was a game I loved where we all played the reincarnations of dead authors and poets. I met @Gingerlily there, along with many others. It's kind of irreplaceable. I'm pretty sure if I said "oh, I am considering restarting this" I would have a legion of people from the old game yelling "hooray", but I don't have the drive at the moment. Back when it existed, though, I couldn't really RP anywhere else--it was time intensive mostly because it was so submersive for me. Some people found it a lot more intense than others. Like all games, it had its share of crazy shit, but for the most part, even when there were hard OOC feelings involved, people tended to ... I don't know ... for the most part be civil, barring a very few crazy moments. I think it helps a lot that there was a lot of transparency in character action and even intent.

                            This game was so weird but cool but weird, I didn't even know how to play and half of the time I did I think I was mostly making fun of my own character. I didn't play for very long at all, a few weeks and I got distracted. I don't even know how to describe it except once I was describing how weird it was and a super silly thing I did there on these very boards and @Coin was like "THAT WAS ME" and that's all you even need to know.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Roz
                              Roz Banned last edited by

                              WELL THANKS GUYS now I'm desperate for a Clone High game

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Derp
                                Derp Admin @Thenomain last edited by

                                @Thenomain said:

                                @Coin said:

                                @Thenomain said:

                                @Coin, look up Clone High.

                                I don't need to. The tagline of the original game was "It's like Clone High on opium!"

                                Then I am insanely disappointed that I never played this game, and would love to see someone do it again.

                                +1

                                I could get behind a game like this.

                                Racism isn't Tinkerbell. It doesn't need you to believe in it for it to exist.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Coin
                                  Coin last edited by

                                  I think the game only really works if you keep the very transparent nature of it and the journal entries/journal interactions. It was a huge part of the game, and the less people did that, the more the game died down. I think one of my favorite parts was having characters post "private" entries that others couldn't read or comment on IC, but that everyone could read and comment on OOC (for lulz) or even "friends-locked" or "locked to [specific people]" entries. It allowed a very deep, layered understanding of other people's characters and made for some really fun reading, honestly.

                                  "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

                                  Arkandel 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Arkandel
                                    Arkandel Admin @Coin last edited by

                                    What's a Clone High game?

                                    • He who takes offense when not intended is a fool. He who takes offense when intended is a greater fool.
                                    Coin Ganymede 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Coin
                                      Coin @Arkandel last edited by

                                      @Arkandel said:

                                      What's a Clone High game?

                                      Read the Thread or GTFO. >.>

                                      "Excuse the hell out of you. He's a bag of dicks. I'm a carefully curated box of cocks." -- to @GirlCalledBlu upon being misrepresented.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • Misadventure
                                        Misadventure @Coin last edited by

                                        @Coin said:

                                        ... there was a game I loved where we all played the reincarnations of dead authors and poets ...

                                        @Coin said:

                                        @Thenomain said:

                                        @Coin, look up Clone High.

                                        I don't need to. The tagline of the original game was "It's like Clone High on opium!"

                                        I have a waggish sense of humor.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • Ganymede
                                          Ganymede Admin @Arkandel last edited by Ganymede

                                          @Arkandel said:

                                          What's a Clone High game?

                                          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEmVaEItQdc

                                          What you need to know is that the show launched the careers of Phil Lord and Chris Miller, who later did this little piece of shit:

                                          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZ_JOBCLF-I

                                          “It is better to live doing the things that you like. It is foolish to live within this dream of a world seeing unpleasantness and doing only things that you do not like.” -- Yamamoto Tsunetomo.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                                          • 1 / 1
                                          • First post
                                            Last post