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D&D Behind Bars

Started by Patrick, November 06, 2016, 08:24:08 AM

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jeff37923

Quote from: daniel_ream;929109Was that because of the content or because you'd have to ship it directly?  The institution I worked in had a rule that inmates could receive reading material, but it had to be shipped directly from the original publisher.  Otherwise associates would hide drugs or other contraband in the binding or pages.

It was because of content. D&D products are considered contraband at that facility.
"Meh."

Omega

Quote from: jeff37923;929115It was because of content. D&D products are considered contraband at that facility.

Ran into the same thing wayyyy back in the 90s. Gaming material and magazines had to be screened.

crkrueger

Maybe it's because I saw The Night Of recently, but the first thing that came to mind was mules in visiting rooms stuffed to the gills with dice instead of balloons of heroin.
Even the the "cutting edge" storygamers for all their talk of narrative, plot, and drama are fucking obsessed with the god damned rules they use. - Estar

Yes, Sean Connery\'s thumb does indeed do megadamage. - Spinachcat

Isuldur is a badass because he stopped Sauron with a broken sword, but Iluvatar is the badass because he stopped Sauron with a hobbit. -Malleus Arianorum

"Tangency Edition" D&D would have no classes or races, but 17 genders to choose from. -TristramEvans

Rincewind1

#18
Any activity in prison that does not consist of snorting drugs and drinking bathroom swill should be encouraged, especially as low on resources and tech ones as RPGs.

QuoteCurrently, Bey plays a female halfling (he offers in a high-pitched tone—clearly his role-playing voice). Role-playing a female character in prison seems like it would take guts, but Bey isn't worried. "When you're in a setting like prison," he says, "where so much depends on bravado and presenting a credible threat, to sit down and play a game that has the word 'faerie' anywhere in it takes a certain self-confidence that I think demands respect."

Then again, Bey may be downplaying what it took to earn that respect in the first place. A couple years ago another inmate who was not a member of the group had gotten into the habit of interrupting their game to taunt the players. With each interruption, Bey became increasingly irate until one day, he couldn't take it anymore. "I told you to quit messing with us while we're playing our game," he screamed as he jabbed his pencil into the bully's thigh multiple times.

Bey's justification: "In the facility, we have three hours a day of pod time where we have access to the tables and we're not locked down. So we have very little time to game and this time has to be shared with phone calls, showers, etc. The last thing we need is a level six npc distracting the players." Prison officials sent Bey to solitary confinement, where he convinced the inmates in neighboring cells to play a game with him by yelling through the ventilation shafts.

While I can't exactly condone stabbing as a method of resolving conflict with irritating players (as effective as it no doubt was), the man's response to solitary confinement is one of my own heart.
Furthermore, I consider that  This is Why We Don\'t Like You thread should be closed

RPGPundit

Quote from: Skarg;929047Only diceless storygames for the unlucky students at those ass-butt schools... or secret underground dice games.

They could play Lords of Olympus! It's awesome.
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