Take Quinns' hand and let him show you worlds beyond imagination.
The Wildsea is the best, boldest new fantasy TTRPG in years, and Quinns is here to tell you why.
Lancer is a TTRPG that asks "Haven't we killed enough goblins?" and "Don't you like these mechs?" and the answer to both of those questions is "YES" in capital letters.
Heart is an TTRPG that asks "What if a dungeon was all about *you?*" If that sounds bleak, you don't know the half of it.
Call of Cthulhu? Why don't you stop calling Cthulhu for a change, give the guy a rest, and take a look at Vaesen instead.
Mothership might be the coolest, vaguely-countercultural RPG since Vampire: The Masquerade. But is it GOOD? Let's find out.
Slugblaster is an RPG that feels like it was sent back in time from a brighter, cooler future. Everybody, it's past time we stopped playing Elven Rangers and started playing a gang of teenagers who've made guns in their bedrooms.
This project was an entirely unexpected collaboration between Quinns Quest and Jump Over the Age.
Thanks so much for watching this experiment, everybody!
Back by popular demand, Quinns is offering patrons another clutch of campaign reports from his home games! Is Quinns really as good a GM as he projects? Or is he a lil' bit of a hustler, and no better or worse at it than any of you? Click play and see what you think.
Wow. Today was a teachable moment for a YouTuber like me. Turns out if you unthinkingly put a written swearword in your thumbnail, YouTube automatically age-gates your content. While I appeal this decision, please CLICK ON THROUGH to enjoy a video that was suggested by the Quinns Quest community: How to go about teaching TTRPGs. This lesson goes to some places you are probably not expecting. ???? I hope you enjoy it.
If I could only cram one tip into the soft, squeaky skull of a new TTRPG player - whether a player OR GM - it'd be this: Try and be a fan of the other players' characters. Admittedly, this would be kind of a cheat on my part, since this is a sort of umbrella tip that holds a dozen other tips. Click play on this special slice of Fan Club Content For Fans Only and you'll see what I mean.
Delta Green: Impossible Landscapes is weird, imperfect, not for everybody and pitch dark. Also? It has a strong claim for being the greatest RPG campaign ever written. Detective Quinns is on the case.
Mythic Bastionland by Chris McDowall and illustrator Alec Sorenson does the impossible. In a hobby packed tight with lightweight fantasy TTRPGs, it actually stands out and it got Quinns excited.
Triangle Agency by Caleb Zane Huett and Sean Ireland is a comedy. It's a drama. It's postmodern. It's magical realist. It's subversive. It's honest. And it even caused a conflict between Quinns and his players. This game is SO MUCH
STOP PLAYING RPGs FROM BOOKS. Story games were not supposed to have rules longer than actual stories. "What are the effects of a night's rest? Let me check the index" - Statements dreamed up by the utterly deranged. They have played us for absolute fools
This slice of paywalled cheddar is an addendum to the Delta Green & Impossible Landscapes review. Quinns talks about another standout Delta Green module (but one he's only read, not played)- Delta Green: God's Teeth.
In this Patreon video, Quinns set himself up to give you a tour of the TTRPGs of his youth. What happened instead was sort of a long, oddly-guilty reflection of how hard it is to start a TTRPG campaign, let alone keep one going. If your TTRPG-playing life isn't where you hoped it would be, take heart! These things take time.
In this fan club video, Quinns takes a long-awaited tour of Yazeba's Bed & Breakfast! And in addition to talking about this fabulous game, he reflects on his bias as a reviewer, and whether anything can be done about it or if he's just going mad
In this Patreon-exclusive video, Quinns pops open the top button of the question on everyone's lips: "Should I have more romance in my home games?"
Public Access by Jason Cordova and his talented team is a spicy blend of analog horror, nostalgic horror, desert horror and internet horror. Did I mention it's a horror game? It's a horror game.
Stonetop by Jeremy Strandberg made Quinns fall in love with the genre of fantasy adventuring again. What more can you say?
In this Patreon-exclusive video, to accompany the Public Access review Quinns looks at four of the nearly-made-its. The could-have-had-a-review. The really-very-good-indeed-in-fact-play-them-too.
It's been a while since Quinns has done a video campaign report, but apparently you guys miss 'em, so here's another one! A big one. For a big review.