Old Computer Challange 2024, Day 4 Today was game night, so not a lot of challenge-related things were done. After closing my work laptop, I almost immediately went out of the house to my RPG session... GAME MASTER SCREEN, 21st CENTURY VERSION Alas, there's an embarassing truth about my fantasy gaming setup these days: I basically had to apply the "modern equipment for work" loop hole. Back in the days, not even that long ago, going to a game meant an almost screen-less existance for a few precious hours. All you needed was a backpack full of books and some dice. Nowadays, I'm ending up staring at my laptop screen instead of a "Dungeon Master's Guide" or setting manual. The adventures & rules are PDFs, sometimes even rules wikis. That means fewer minutes spent looking up the right page. For me, it also means way more legible notes. And with today's group, I'm not the only one with a laptop. Which also means the most rare miracle of all: good notes taken by the players, like NPC names written down or clues gathered. But is it worth it? LAZINESS OR ACTUAL USE FOR THIS? Couldn't I just print things out? I like more complex rules, what's commonly referred to as "crunchy". That means more PDFs, with more pages, where the search function shines compared to an index (If the book has an index in the first place, RPGs often being pretty coffee table books with the UX of one). Besides other people at the kitchen table also having laptops, the Covid years where all gaming happened remotely, so a PC was *required* made this almost normal. PDFs being cheaper, more sustainable and "lighter" are at least a good excuse, if not a matter of fact. But that's the nice thing of this challenge: I might have paid less attention to this if it weren't a "breach of etiquette" this week. Although by now it's technically possible to stay within the limits, white still hiding behind a laptop screen at the gaming table. I've carried a ThinkPad T43 with a 1600x1200 screen as a (backup) reference and gaming map server before, pulled out when needed. And that would both be enough for game book PDFs and even the rules wiki web pages. OLD GAMING STYLE CHALLENGE I've decided to go more low tech soon again. Print out notes beforehand, get copies of all the books I need, ignore rules not in those. Let's see if the players will do the same. One benefit that might arise from this: I'll probably end up more organized. Having a whole bestiary, adventure library and random name generator always in front of me, means I can go in pretty unprepared. I feel that a bit of more work here would pay off. Also, jotting down notes forces me to type those in later, or I'll lose the context and thus wouldn't be able to read my own handwriting (yes, I'm that bad). FURTHER PLANS Tomorrow might be another game session, this time fully remote. There's simple no way to avoid this, and I won't cancel a night of fun for some digital minimalism. But I have some additional ideas for Tcl/Tk tools that would help me with preparing and running roleplaying games. After all, I don't just want to do regular "productivity" software, I'm not that into self-optimization.