I love tabletop RPGs! I started playing D&D 3rd edition back in 2001 with some friends. I was about 12/13 at the time and begged my mom to order the starter set from this weird internet book company called Amazon. She was a little nervous to put her credit card into the internet, but eventually caved. Since then I've moved far past Hasbro's D&D, but still play a lot of TTRPGs.
Lately my primary campaign is called Redtower. Originally it was the same Redtowner from Kobold Press' Scarlet Citadel megadungeon. We ran the megadungone in 5e for a while several years ago but eventually moved on past it, but kept the town because my players had set up a bit of a base camp there. Then when we stopped playing 5e altogether and moved on to Old School Essentials the town was even more developed so we continued to run it.
At this point our campaign is hacked together one-shots yanked out of magazines, chunks of lore from the Midgard source book, some scraps of the origianl Redtower, and a whole lot of individual creativity.
Below are some things I've put together for my private group. These products are not for sale and are offered freely with no guarantee of quality. Use them as you wish.
This is a silly game that I made in a couple of afternoons. The original idea came from players always joking about becoming Liches. It seems like such a fun idea, but how would that even work? You'd have to all be liches so the power level isn't out of whack. What kind of quests would liches even go on? How does one Lich visually differentiate themself from another, aren't they all just sagging skin and exposed bones? All these questions and more are answere in Oops! All Liches.
I couldn't imagine someone making a campaign out of the kind of silliness entombed in this game, but it would probably be a fun way to kill a couple of hours when your regular campaign is out sick.
This one again uses Old School Essentials. Specifically it's taking all of the random generation tables provided by the OSE SRD and puts them into something actually usable at the table.
I love using random tables and generating things on the fly (cuts down on prep), but flipping back and forth between websites and manual pages gets old. This is just a re-statement of the tables and information they've already provided in a more digestable format. The only work here that I've done is formatting and layout.