Recensione di Jamie Sue:
"Kate and I played this Saturday morning. It's a $2 PDF nanogame RPG, 2-4 players, and about half an hour. You play a clever, strong, and loved Ethiopian girl. I don't know much about Ethiopia so I watched a Yegna music video someone posted and google'd female names to start playing.
We actually kept our first game kind of generic and really wholesome. You start the game by grabbing a nearby image to describe the situation. We had artwork of a lone cottage in the woods, so we decided we were playing two very young girls (Jazarah and Kalile) who were pretending to run away from home.
Our characters found a house while straying off the path. As we explored the location, we used successes to determine what we hoped to find versus what we feared finding. The small house appeared to have a small house inside of it - doors opened to strange places and riddles. Sometimes it was frightful and there was a room on fire or a room full of insects. One room was wonderful and beautiful and had delicious nuts to eat and pillows to bounce on. One room appeared normal, but tried to trap me with sleep until my friend called me back. One door threw us back outside into a world that seemed like our own, but wasn't, so we had to enter the house again and solve the it's riddle by pulling beetles from one of the frightening rooms and matching them with the art we found inside. Once we did that, we suddenly found ourselves in my great aunt's house where we finally got sweet snacks. See? Totally wholesome game just happened. I'm not sure why we played that way, but it was cute. I'm leaving out most details because it would be easy to give away the game's system since it's a nanogame and only 515 words.
It was fun to play and I'm always up for seeing how a 2 player RPG works. You just need this PDF, a deck of cards, and a bunch of tokens to play
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