For background, the original pitch:
Imagine, for a moment, we lived in an alternate universe, where I [had not immigrated] and ran a campaign [in 2004].
Now, this imaginary campaign was a lunatic Steampunk Buffy/Stargate crossover campaign set in Alta California (part of Imperial Mexico) circa 1990's where they found a 'stargate' in the Mayan ruins, not Egypt, in a world with a sort of Slayerverse level of background weird using Deadlands as the 'why'. It would have been D20 based using Monte Cookes WOD D20, Stargate D20 and Deadlands D20.
Ok, so my crazy notion is to run a thread on the gamers forum which would be the 'pre game setup' for the sequel campaign, or something like the 'league' threads that pop up now and then; creating the campaign retrospectively by tell the stories of the favourite bits from the first campaign.
The trick would be to pick the 'original' party - essentially an exercise in Fantasy RPG Game - choose your ideal player mix, ignoring geography and who was actually there at the time :) - and then those players would form the core of the thread and *within* the thread would stick to the define alt-reality; the game happened, these are true tales of the past. Outside, whatever, but this sequel campaign start-up thread would be played as a window into the timeline where it really happened.
To frame this:
- the sequel campaign start-up - the actual forum game being played would have been 2009
- the original steampunk Alta-California Buffy/Stargate game should have happened in 2003-2004
The conceit was that it was the best game ever, with a team-of-heroes table, lots of legendary tales, etc.
Other context; this would have been played on a forum where there were a strong contingent of active readers - maybe two dozen - who would read nearly everything. This was the forum for our college games society, now long passed to dust. It had pedigree of numerous successful forum games, including the mighty League and curtailed League II, so we knew a game such as described here would have been 'played' but also 'put on' for the audience of forum readers. This would have been a bit of kayfaybe where everyone pretended to be in the know about this allegedly incredibly complex and awesome game.
