Grey Ranks is an award-winning role-playing game for three to five players that puts you in the shoes of child soldiers during the Warsaw Uprising.
The game is designed to be played over three... More > sessions and includes a scene structure, with each scene corresponds to a specific date in 1944. You'll choose historical and dramatic elements that pique your interest to include in each scene. The game is collaborative, and together with your friends you'll work to create challenging, exciting, and poignant scenes for your crew - some mission-oriented, and some strictly personal.
Co-Winner of the 2008 Diana Jones Award for Excellence in Gaming
Winner of the 2007 Indie RPG Awards for Independent Game of the Year and Innovation in a Roleplaying Game
Winner of the Mid-Atlantic Convention Expo 2005 Game Chef Competition
PLEASE NOTE: Purchasing the print edition of Grey Ranks entitles you to a free copy of the PDF.< Less
Grey Ranks is an award-winning role-playing game for three to five players that puts you in the shoes of child soldiers during the Warsaw Uprising.
The game is designed to be played over three... More > sessions and includes a scene structure, with each scene corresponds to a specific date in 1944. You'll choose historical and dramatic elements that pique your interest to include in each scene. The game is collaborative, and together with your friends you'll work to create challenging, exciting, and poignant scenes for your crew - some mission-oriented, and some strictly personal.
Co-Winner of the 2008 Diana Jones Award for Excellence in Gaming
Winner of the 2007 Indie RPG Awards for Independent Game of the Year and Innovation in a Roleplaying Game
Winner of the Mid-Atlantic Convention Expo 2005 Game Chef Competition
PLEASE NOTE: Purchasing the print edition of Grey Ranks entitles you to a free copy of the PDF. Contact us after purchase for your download link.< Less
“London Is A Grey Sky” is a Madding Mission Jotter Book. Created by Desmond Kon Zhicheng-Mingdé, the Madding Mission Series encourages hypergraphia. It thinks Plath writes awesome... More > poems. Plath should have met Dickinson. Dylan Thomas too. Shelley. Poe. Lord Byron. Artaud and Baudelaire. Who can forget Hart Crane? Versus Eliot. John Berryman and Robert Lowell, who knew they joined these ranks? And of course, Celan. Whitman, whose “right hand points to landscapes of continents, and a plain public road…. Perhaps it is everywhere on water and on land.” Together they would write great things, Plath thinks out loud, to no one in particular. She has brought her pen to paper. There is madness in the method, and sometimes a little bit or a whole lot of genius too.< Less