Thanks. It's my first go-round with Mosiac Strict. In my experience with D&D and Pathfinder, I tend to like NPC rules to be really up for the GMs interpretation as much as possible. Hopefully, it's flexible enough that no two games using them have the same result.
BradyTheWriter
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Thanks. I like some of the challenging concepts in the charity space as game mechanics. There's a lot of intersectionality between goals in a typical TTRPG and that of a nonprofit. You're usually trying to do something for the greater good yet, you need to find ways to pay for it and get others to back you up.
Thanks for giving it a go!
I'm launching my free print & play deduction game inspired by me new book tonight.
https://bradythewriter.itch.io/extraordinary-obituary
Writing your obituary can be fun and easy. And a great way to get the final word in on any unresolved argument or spill the beans on a family secret you’ve been dying to tell people.
Roll the dice to determine the coded message you will hide in your obituary and see if anyone can guess it and claim your inheritance.
Obviously with one page to work with, there's not really any space to define "Mission Drift" as a concept itself. Mission Drift is a concept in organization where the purpose over time changes. This is typically seen as a bad thing. But Mission Drift can also be an evolution based on the discovered needs of your service population. Last time I went to the YMCA there were people of all ages, genders and denominations exercising, not just the young men training for seminary like their original mission stated. Here's a quick explainer of Mission Drift as a concept.
Wow, it's nice to see people downloading the game. I'm an avid RPG player and am always looking to tweak my first game so feedback is definately welcome. If you were an early downloader on day 1. I've posted small update to clarity a rule in the Grant Phase. We'll see if this creates conflict of peace in multi-player sessions.