Origins 2009–Low-key and loving it!

It’s about an hour and half since we arrived home from Origins 2009. I sit here with more caffiene than blood in my veins and try to unwind enough to go to bed. It was a great con. Attendance looked light, but the folks that were there had a good time. Here’s my high points of the show:

Tuesday
A rush to pack and an error made months ago with the rental car was a bit of a scare, but by the time Bill arrived, everything was A-OK. Got to bed late, but raring to go in the morning.

Wednesday
The Drive. Michele was battling a cold, so we took plenty of rest stops. I didn’t mind because we had no booth obligations and therefore no deadline. We left at a sane 7 AM and arrived about 4 PM, which allowed us to eat at the fabulous North Market. My pad thai was hotter than I could stomach, but that proved beneficial later on. We got checked in, taught Michele how to play Euchre, and got some sleep.

Thursday
Both Kat and I wisely scheduled our Thursday games to begin at noon, so that we would avoid the early-morning lull that sometimes occurs when there’s a hiccup in the registration system. This time, there was no hiccup to worry about, but there was also a noticeable shortage of attendees. Even with a huge swath of the breezeway missing due to renovation, the place didn’t feel crowded enough. I think I got a picture of the crowd present at the opening of the exhibit hall, and it wasn’t nearly as large as it’s been in the past.

Anyway, I kicked the day off w/ dropping off 5 copies of SHU with the ever-gracious and ever-upbeat Andy Kitkowski. He and his boothmates allowed me to grab a bit of space in his booth to make SHU available for sale. It was greatly appreciated.

At noon, Kat ran a new WGP… scenario, and I ran Ganakagok. I had 2 players: Cary and Amber. Thinking that 2 characters would be too few in the reaction rounds, I also made a character myself. In the end, it added nothing to the game, and I wouldn’t do it again. The game was good (as always), and I even found a few ways to improve the text that I had overlooked while editing.

After dinner, I hung out a bit w/ Luke, Thor, Jared, and Jamey. We caught up on RL stuff. I got to see the tail end of Jamey’s satirical Nicotine Girls hack. Plus, we playtested … Yonder Knights! I never would have imagined playing that in my wildest dreams! The game doesn’t really work, but there was much discussion and diagnosis of exactly WHY it doesn’t work, which was really super helpful.

Friday
Friday started w/ both Kat and I having 10AM games. Hers was, of course, some incredible, amazing WGP… and mine was SHU. I had two great players: Todd and Lisa. We stopped a serial killer whose profile was that he was hunting down children’s entertainers. As often happens, the kinda silly profile did not impede the drama and tragedy of the inevitable deaths. I can’t think of a game that I enjoy more consistently than Serial Homicide Unit.

After the SHU game, I checked out the maiden voyage of Luke and Jared’s new seminar: Practical Game Design. It was a clear and informative roadmap to take someone from the Three Questions to being able to judge whether dice or cards will do the job their game needs done. It gave me much food for thought, particularly in light of the previous night’s unfun playtest.

One of the great disappointments of this year’s construction was the closing of the kitchen in the Krema Nut Company store. NO PEANUT BUTTER MILKSHAKES! However, Thor’s clever cell phone knew of the company’s headquarters store 2 miles away. Being New Yorkers, they were going to hoof it. But with my power of Rental Car, I got us to the peanut-flavored heaven and back again in air-conditioned comfort!

Friday evening saw a nice dinner w/ Kat, Bill, and Michele, and then chatting till midnight w/ the NYC crew.

Saturday
Saturday was supposed to be my busiest day. I was scheduled to run SHU from 10AM to 2PM, and help Luke run a seminar from 1PM (fun scheduling error!) to 3PM, and then run Ganakagok from 8PM to midnight. Unfortunately, I had no players for SHU, which gave me far too much time to shop. I looked at every booth and still had time to spare before the panel.

The self publishing panel is, as Luke likes to call it, a firehose of information. We ran right up to the full 2 hour mark, barely stopping for questions and could have kept going. It’s a thrill to give that panel.

Afterwards, Luke was running a demo of Mouse Guard for a reviewer named Ben and his girlfriend Danielle. I sat in to bring the group up to three, and got to deliver the killing blow to a vicious milk snake that wanted to devour us all!

A surprising one-on-one dinner w/ Kat followed, which allowed for a nice de-stressing to occur.

After that, it was back to frozen lands of Ganakagok, where 6 players showed and we made a great myth about the splintering of the island and its fertile ground floating into the sunlit worlds.

Sunday
Today started with some great news: Mouse Guard won the Origins Award for Best RPG! Congrats to Luke and the Burning Crew for another game well-designed (and one I can actually play this time!)

Then there was just last minute shopping, lunch, The Drive, and now this. An excellent weekend in an excellent city at an excellent con. You can’t ask for more than that.

14 thoughts on “Origins 2009–Low-key and loving it!”

    • Hi, Guy.
      Origins is not nearly as much of a shopping convention as GenCon, and I’m not that much of a shopper. I picked up some out-of-print stuff for research purposes (TWERPS, some Mutants and Masterminds supplements), a Risk-variant from Looney Labs called World War V. My coolest purchase was a customized LEGO minifig of a Roman legionaire, complete with the stylized lightning bolts on the shield! Reminds me of the days of FVLMINATA.

      • Huh. I think I consistently spend more at Origins, at least, when I make both conventions. But, I’d need to do Research to know for sure — and to figure out whether that’s taking into account some oddities. About 2 years back, I bought an amber necklace and a spiffy 3 pocket smocklength vest at Origins, which breaks the normal shopping patterns.

  1. Mouse Guard is next on my list of games to run, and I think I might be buying the downloadable version of SHU for a change of pace with my Saturday group for the coming weekend.

    • I think you’ll get a lot of fun out of each of them. SHU’s particular advantage is its small “footprint” (3 hours to play, widely-understood subject matter). If you manage a game, let me know how it goes!

  2. Mouse Guard is next on my list of games to run, and I think I might be buying the downloadable version of SHU for a change of pace with my Saturday group for the coming weekend.

  3. You did not merely “sit in!” You were a vital and needed part of that demo. Also, it was super fun. Best MG game I ran all weekend.
    -L

    • Some of us can’t help but bring teh awesome, even when we’re just “sitting in.”
      In the beginning, I was holding myself back from hogging the spotlight while the other two found their feet (paws?) with the system. But once the milksnake was on us, everyone was holding their own, I thought.

  4. You did not merely “sit in!” You were a vital and needed part of that demo. Also, it was super fun. Best MG game I ran all weekend.
    -L

  5. Hi, Guy.
    Origins is not nearly as much of a shopping convention as GenCon, and I’m not that much of a shopper. I picked up some out-of-print stuff for research purposes (TWERPS, some Mutants and Masterminds supplements), a Risk-variant from Looney Labs called World War V. My coolest purchase was a customized LEGO minifig of a Roman legionaire, complete with the stylized lightning bolts on the shield! Reminds me of the days of FVLMINATA.

  6. I think you’ll get a lot of fun out of each of them. SHU’s particular advantage is its small “footprint” (3 hours to play, widely-understood subject matter). If you manage a game, let me know how it goes!

  7. Some of us can’t help but bring teh awesome, even when we’re just “sitting in.”
    In the beginning, I was holding myself back from hogging the spotlight while the other two found their feet (paws?) with the system. But once the milksnake was on us, everyone was holding their own, I thought.

  8. Huh. I think I consistently spend more at Origins, at least, when I make both conventions. But, I’d need to do Research to know for sure — and to figure out whether that’s taking into account some oddities. About 2 years back, I bought an amber necklace and a spiffy 3 pocket smocklength vest at Origins, which breaks the normal shopping patterns.

Comments are closed.