Polymancer magazine

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Polymancer
Editor Andrew Bernstein
Categories Games magazine
Frequency Monthly
First Issue December 2004
Company Polymancer Studios, Inc.
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Language English
Website www.polymancerstudios.com
ISSN 1708-4474

Polymancer is a magazine covering roleplaying games and related hobbies such as miniatures, wargaming, and LARPs. The magazine is published in Canada; its first issue was published in 2004.


Contents

[edit] Nature of Magazine and Content

Polymancer Articles (except adventure scenarios) are written without reference to rules. The magazine touts itself as being “system-independent” so that “players of different game systems may make use of them”[1]

The magazine covers many gaming genres such as fantasy, sci fi, horror, modern day, pulp. Most gaming magazines just cover fantasy because Dungeons & Dragons, a fantasy RPG is the most popular game of its kind.

Polymancer is different from many magazines that cover RPGs by being printed. Many gaming magazines such as Pyramid are only available online).

There is a complete adventure scenario in every issue of the magazine “playable right out of the box.”[2] The scenario map is in the magazine’s center spread. There is downloadable material to aid the gamemaster available at the publisher’s web site for most of the scenarios.

Articles in Polymancer tend to be long (over 4 pages) and the black and white illustrations differ from the color artwork found in Dragon. Polymancer is comparable to how Dragon was in the 1980s.[3] The articles in Polymancer are eclectic but they appear under a few regular headings:

  • “Jousting With Words” is the editorial
  • “The Lich’s Niche” is a ranting opinion column written in the form of an interview with a lich.
  • “Tech Talk” is about ways to use technology (especially computers) in gaming.
  • “Gaming Digital” is about play by email games.
  • “Gauntlet” seems to be generally about problems gamemasters might face and how to solve them. They tend to be instructional in tone.
  • “Mojo” is Polymancer’s own game rules system. Each article is a new category of rules for Mojo. This means Mojo is developed on a serial basis. The article announcing it in issue #2 says Mojo is meant to be easy to convert to other game systems.
  • “Plot Fodder” is about getting adventure ideas from general topics.

[edit] Adventure Scenarios

There is a full adventure scenario in every issue. So far Polymancer has had horror, fantasy, post-apocalyptic, science fiction, pulp, cyberpunk, and Espionage scenarios. One scenario was written to be played as a set of linked miniatures wargame battles, as an RPG adventure, or both.[4] Most Polymancer adventures are written for use with any RPG rules system, however, three adventures were written for specific RPGs: C.J. Carella's Witchcraft (by Eden Studios),[5] Jovian Chronicles (by Dream Pod 9),[6] and HARP (by I.C.E.).[7] The latter two adventures had the statistics that are compatible with the rules for the games the adventures were written for side-by-side with Polymancer's own "Mojo" rules system (see below), which is written to be convertible into other game rules systems. The Witchcraft adventure contains very few references to rules so it is likely to be easy to convert into the rules for other horror RPGs.

[edit] Comics

More than one comic has appeared in Polymancer magazine. There was a serial comic called “SideQuest” about a group of gamers that appeared in issues 1 through 8. Other comics that have appeared in Polymancer are "Quotable Quotes" starting in issue #8; it is based on humorous quotes from games that have been supplied by the magazine's readers by email. "Dice Quest" began in issue #10; the characters in Dice Quest are anthropomorphized polyhedral dice).

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.polymancerstudios.com/polymancer_site_submission_guidelines.html
  2. ^ Ibid
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ B, A (2006), "Operation Burning Chain", Polymancer 1(10): 18
  5. ^ G, L (n.d.), "Hush", Polymancer 1(1): 24
  6. ^ R, T (n.d.), "Wolf In Sheep's Clothing", Polymancer 1(7): 20
  7. ^ The Unknown Gamer (n.d.), "A Darkness Whispered", Polymancer 1(8): 16

[edit] Further Reading

  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 1.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 2.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 3.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 4.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 5.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 6.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 7.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 8.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 9.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 10.
  • (n.d.) Polymancer, vol. 1, no. 12.

[edit] External links