Humanity spreads to the stars and forges a galactic civilization…
Fledgling nations arise from the ruins of the empire…
An ancient line of dragon-kings dies out as magic fades from the realm…
These are all examples of Microscope games. Want to explore an epic history of your own creation, hundreds or thousands of years long, all in an afternoon? That's Microscope.
You won't play the game in chronological order. You can defy the limits of time and space, jumping backward or forward to explore the parts of the history that interest you. Want to leap a thousand years into the future and see how an institution shaped society? Want to jump back to the childhood of the king you just saw assassinated and find out what made him such a hated ruler? That’s normal in Microscope.
You have vast power to create... and to destroy. Build beautiful, tranquil jewels of civilization and then consume them with nuclear fire. Zoom out to watch the majestic tide of history wash across empires, then zoom in and explore the lives of the people who endured it.
Mock chronological order.
Defy time and space.
Build worlds and destroy them.
-Ben Robbins, the creator of Microscope.
I came across this game a week back:
lamemage.com/microscope
I bought the PDF (I know it can be found for free online, but i'm too honor bound in that regard) and am looking for people to play it with. 3 other people is the max I am going for this game and I want it to be a concentrated session that I will host on Discord.
From 3-6 PM Pacific Standard time (I live in California) on Saturday for the first session and depending on how things go follow up sessions may be scheduled.
The chosen genre is sci-fi with the following seed.
Humankind colonizes the galaxy- and happens upon disturbing revelations about the nature of existence.
I have left this deliberately vague, for this is just the seed for which the history shall sprout. However, there will be a need to make a beginning event and a ending event to the timeline along with multiple time periods where each event sprouts from.
Every player has god power in this NRP as it's more a history making game than a actual NRP. However, the more world building oriented NRPers I figure will enjoy this. You can make everything up as you go without any order- you can go to the end times and the beginning and everything in-between. You can focus on one era in particular or make tons of seperate peoples.
I chose sci-fi as the genre, but all that means is it's in space. You can change the motif of what this sci-fi entails by stating what must and what can't exist in this world before moving forward.
You do not need a app sheet, instead just show interest by answering the following in this thread:
What must exist in this world?
-
What cannot exist in this world?
-
Make a period/era of time (While I make the starting period, someone else can make the end period). Label your period as [Light] or [Dark] in tone.
-
Each player (including myself) makes a first choice on this now and a second choice on Friday if there is a desire to add more periods or creative limits. You can pass on a second choice. What you are making is what Microscope refers to as the "Palette"- which is a set of creative limitations everyone must agree on.
Here is what i've chosen myself for the palette and period:
What must exist in this world?
-Intelligent Alien life
What cannot exist in this world?
-Anything fandom related. (In other words, original content only)
Make a Period/Era of Time. Than declare if the time period is a Light or Dark period.
- (Start) FTL is invented and early colonization efforts under a united world government begin. [Light]
Limits
There's a several rules Microscope follows I should warn of off the bat-
1. Do not give suggestions to other players on what to add or collaborate out of turn. Build on what other players establish.
2. Do not contradict established events.
3. Do not use anything that is expressed as something that cannot exist.
----------
The Focus and Lens
Microscope is effectively a multiplayer history/world building game. The obvious problem is how do you keep things focused on any one time period? Microscope addresses this in the way turns are handled.
Each turn, there is a player who is the Lens who declares the current focus of the timeline. The Lens does this by writing out a focus event that each player must build on. The lens chooses the first and last event for their focus before moving onto the next Lens who declares what the new focus of history shall be on.
I'll explain more later, time is running out on my end
Fledgling nations arise from the ruins of the empire…
An ancient line of dragon-kings dies out as magic fades from the realm…
These are all examples of Microscope games. Want to explore an epic history of your own creation, hundreds or thousands of years long, all in an afternoon? That's Microscope.
You won't play the game in chronological order. You can defy the limits of time and space, jumping backward or forward to explore the parts of the history that interest you. Want to leap a thousand years into the future and see how an institution shaped society? Want to jump back to the childhood of the king you just saw assassinated and find out what made him such a hated ruler? That’s normal in Microscope.
You have vast power to create... and to destroy. Build beautiful, tranquil jewels of civilization and then consume them with nuclear fire. Zoom out to watch the majestic tide of history wash across empires, then zoom in and explore the lives of the people who endured it.
Mock chronological order.
Defy time and space.
Build worlds and destroy them.
-Ben Robbins, the creator of Microscope.
I came across this game a week back:
lamemage.com/microscope
I bought the PDF (I know it can be found for free online, but i'm too honor bound in that regard) and am looking for people to play it with. 3 other people is the max I am going for this game and I want it to be a concentrated session that I will host on Discord.
From 3-6 PM Pacific Standard time (I live in California) on Saturday for the first session and depending on how things go follow up sessions may be scheduled.
The chosen genre is sci-fi with the following seed.
Humankind colonizes the galaxy- and happens upon disturbing revelations about the nature of existence.
I have left this deliberately vague, for this is just the seed for which the history shall sprout. However, there will be a need to make a beginning event and a ending event to the timeline along with multiple time periods where each event sprouts from.
Every player has god power in this NRP as it's more a history making game than a actual NRP. However, the more world building oriented NRPers I figure will enjoy this. You can make everything up as you go without any order- you can go to the end times and the beginning and everything in-between. You can focus on one era in particular or make tons of seperate peoples.
I chose sci-fi as the genre, but all that means is it's in space. You can change the motif of what this sci-fi entails by stating what must and what can't exist in this world before moving forward.
You do not need a app sheet, instead just show interest by answering the following in this thread:
What must exist in this world?
-
What cannot exist in this world?
-
Make a period/era of time (While I make the starting period, someone else can make the end period). Label your period as [Light] or [Dark] in tone.
-
Each player (including myself) makes a first choice on this now and a second choice on Friday if there is a desire to add more periods or creative limits. You can pass on a second choice. What you are making is what Microscope refers to as the "Palette"- which is a set of creative limitations everyone must agree on.
Here is what i've chosen myself for the palette and period:
What must exist in this world?
-Intelligent Alien life
What cannot exist in this world?
-Anything fandom related. (In other words, original content only)
Make a Period/Era of Time. Than declare if the time period is a Light or Dark period.
- (Start) FTL is invented and early colonization efforts under a united world government begin. [Light]
Limits
There's a several rules Microscope follows I should warn of off the bat-
1. Do not give suggestions to other players on what to add or collaborate out of turn. Build on what other players establish.
2. Do not contradict established events.
3. Do not use anything that is expressed as something that cannot exist.
----------
The Focus and Lens
Microscope is effectively a multiplayer history/world building game. The obvious problem is how do you keep things focused on any one time period? Microscope addresses this in the way turns are handled.
Each turn, there is a player who is the Lens who declares the current focus of the timeline. The Lens does this by writing out a focus event that each player must build on. The lens chooses the first and last event for their focus before moving onto the next Lens who declares what the new focus of history shall be on.
I'll explain more later, time is running out on my end