Inspired by my friend
vulonkaaz's
"chan-like" site, //paperchan.club, an
imageboard that only allows user-drawn images to be uploaded, I've
began work on a new experiment I am tentatively calling Voxchan[^1]
that only allows recorded audio to be uploaded. Paperchan is an
exciting community for a number of reasons. Due to depending on
original content that takes some level of effort and creativity,
a lot of cool art pops up there every day, and the steady stream
of cool art getting posted encourages more cool art to keep
getting posted.
I don't think I've ever seen a voice clip-based platform before.
Sure, there's been group calling apps like Mumble, Skype, Discord,
et all for a long time, and there's plenty of places to upload
songs, but a forum where people post by speaking seems to be
entirely novel. Vocaroo encourages anonymous audio uploads but
it's more of a file-hosting service than a community.
Is voxchan an anonymous site? This is a fun problem to think about.
People's voices are largely unique, but I feel someone is unable to
be "doxxed" by posting with their voice alone.; and, with a little
effort, people can also alter their accent, tone, and other bits of
personally identifying data to some degree.
There's a hypothesis I have that making posts depend on voice will
have a positive effect on the quality of contributions. On an
imageboard or textboard it's pretty easy for 2 or 3 guys to try and
derail every thread but appear as the voice of the community.
Samefagging takes significantly more effort to do via voice; most
haters and losers have awful voices too so I think they would rather
not put in the effort it takes to keep up a trolling campaign. And their
parents would probably yell at them for making too much noise on the
computer.
There are a lot of lonely people in the world, especially in the world
of chan-like sites, and I think that being able to listen to the
discussions instead of just reading more text could have a positive
effect for them. People who are otherwise scared to do "voice reveals"
in communities like imageboards, Discord, IRC, et al may also be more
willing to speak in an anonymous forum.
Only time will tell how it will play out. A public release may be ready
in a few weeks. If you're interested in trying out the in-dev software,
drop me a line.
[1]: Vox being Latin for "voice", "sound"
2026-01-22 [Thu] 16:45 UTC
#games
Recently began playing Dungeons and Dragons 5e with some local friends
who have never played any kind of TTRPG game before. As the Dungeon Master,
I'm working with a pretty barebones set of "gear" to get the game rolling:
- PDFs and https://5e.tools/ -- DND is not an especially rules-heavy game;
buying a large number of expensive rulebooks does not feel especially
necessary. Having PDFs and that site at hand can make quick rules lookup
easy, and, more importantly, costs $0
- Laminated 1" square A4 paper -- I got a few of these made for about $2.
It's easy to draw maps over them with a dry erase marker and wipe them up
when done. A $30-$50 Chessex battlemap would be nice at some point, maybe,
but this is cheap, extremely portable, more than enough, and easily replaced.
I don't tape them together, so it's easy to trasnport them.
- Character tokens -- bottle caps, toys, lighters, erasers, coins, chess
pieces... any little thing can work to represent characters. I encourage
players to bring their own. For monsters, I have a ziplock bag with various
kinds of colored aquarium rocks. Cheap and plentiful!
- Homebrew DM screen -- also laminated, and taped together. A bonus of a DM
screen is that character sheets and other papers, such as the grid paper,
can be tucked inside for easy transport. I didn't laminate it for writing
purposes but rather to keep the pages in good shape.
- Tablet -- as the DM I use this for reading through adventures. Easy to
transport and easily hides behind the screen.
- Notebook -- I keep monster tables, track initiative, track XP and keep
other little notes here. I've tried loose-tracking game notes before and
they have a habit of getting lost. In battles, I keep the initiative
table on the left side where I also track monster HP and use the right
side for monster stat blocks, maps, and misc notes. Works very well.
- Dice sets -- one per player. Ideally every player would bring their own
dice but they don't break the bank and it's satisfying to keep a big bag
o' dice. Players get to choose their set on a first come, first serve basis.
(No need for dice towers because those are no fun.)
Excluding the tablet, which I already owned, all in all it was about $20 for
everything. The dice were the most expensive bit. Now that I have a base
operating set, any part (except the tablet lol) can be easily replaced if lost
or damaged. If the game price were divided up among the players, they would have
only had to chip in a few bucks to start playing.
It would be nice to play on 3D maps with little painted metal figures on a big
gaming table. But this is already enough to get everyone comfortably playing!
You can get into tabletop RPGs without breaking the bank.
I would like to try moving on to DND 1e or some OSR game later (OSRIC? OSE
Advanced?) once the players get the hang of 5e. Mechanically, 5e characters
feel a bit "samey" ... not as bad as 4e was though. I appreciate that 5e is a
bit lighter on rules than 3.5e but a bit more "crunchiness" would still improve
the game. My biggest criticism of DND 5e is that it takes a long time for people
to set up their characters, but I hope it can motivate them to strive to keep
their players alive.
