September
My feedback
16 results found
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178 votes
This is a super interesting idea, thank you for sharing it! We will put it in the mix ideas we’re experimenting with.
September supported this idea · -
3 votesSeptember shared this idea ·
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12 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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153 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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10 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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Allow narrator or another player to take over inactive characters as player characters after 2 weeks
26 votesAn error occurred while saving the comment -
45 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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6 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedI have problems with this myself. I am trying to create an ordered code system for locations. It's abbreviated ERZAP: Empire, Region, Zipcode, Address, Position. Every location is labelled for decreasing scope of area.
For example, if the area is a bathroom in a college bar in Los Angeles, CA USA, this is what I'd do. First I'd abbreviate the Empire as USA (for United States of America), to differentiate it from Uganda. The Empire would be USA. Then I'd count the number of regions I'm using in the US and number each. Let's say California is number 7, and that's my Region. So far, that's USA7.
Now I'd count the number of cities I'm using in California -- maybe three. So I'd label that USA7C, because I want to use alphabet letters instead of numbers there, to avoid confusion. I don't want to make myself think I have 73 States, right? There's my Zipcode: C.
Almost last, I'd find a number of buildings in Los Angeles that I am going to use in the episodes. I might have four. The bar might be the fourth building. That's my Address: 4.
So far we have USA7C4.
Last, we have two positions in the bar I'll have in my story, the Main Room and the Bathrooms. So we'll have the Bathrooms be designated as B. That's USA7C4B.
So I'd label my Location card "(USA7C4B) College Bar Bathrooms".
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32 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedThis might be done much later? I think Storium has their art appeal already planned out for now. I hope it's not cheesy when they do get around to sounds..
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedHow do you hyperlink in Storium?
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedMaybe later on, Storium could hook up with Spotify or last.fm or some other service like that, yeah.
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedThe problem is, this could link to music piracy. I wouldn't want Storium to get in trouble for that.
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9 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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4 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedThe button that increases card size only works during the editing process.
There's still a character limit and truncation on each card; this can't be bypassed presently.
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309 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedIf we can save our writing and group stories offline,it permits us greater flexibility in working with our fictional world. It also offers another layer of protection from data loss. Also, someday Storium might close its doors. We would like the ability to save all our work so that we can treasure it in our old age.
An error occurred while saving the comment September commentedIf we can save our writing and group stories offline,it permits us greater flexibility in working with our fictional world. It also offers another layer of protection from data loss. Also, someday Storium might close its doors. We would like the ability to save all our work so that we can treasure it in our old age.
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20 votesSeptember supported this idea ·
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31 votesAdminehardee (Admin, Storium) responded
The Activity Summary now lists how many cards each player has played in a given scene and how far along each challenge is and how it is trending (Weak/Strong/Neutral).
September supported this idea · -
4 votes
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23 votesAdminehardee (Admin, Storium) responded
Narrators are now able to set the scene card limits on a scene by scene basis, allowing all players anywhere from 1-5 card plays in each scene.
September supported this idea ·
Narrators can already do something better than this. It's called inviting a new player into the game and mentioning the absent player's character in their narration. There is nothing stopping the Narrator from allowing a new player (a friend of theirs even) to create an identical character, giving them identical cards, and then letting that loose into the game.
I don't think Storium will do what you're suggesting in the manner you suggest it's done. Would you advise a landlord to give away a renter's house keys because their renter is on vacation? If you need someone to stand in, be creative. Reduce challenges based on the number of people. Invite new people. Include the old character in the story as acting how they reasonably might act.