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Basic Role-Playing (BRP) is a tabletop role-playing game which originated in the RuneQuest fantasy role-playing game. Chaosium released the BRP standalone booklet in 1980 in the boxed set release of the second edition of RuneQuest. Greg Stafford and Lynn Willis are credited as the authors.
Basic Fantasy Role-Playing Game (also commonly known as Basic Fantasy RPG and abbreviated BFRPG), is an open source retro-clone role-playing game written by Chris Gonnerman that emulates, and is largely compatible with, the 1981 Basic and Expert sets of Dungeons & Dragons.
GURPS Lite [4] A 32-page introduction to the rules of GURPS based on the core rules in the GURPS 4e Basic Set (mainly Characters).It includes basic character creation with advantages, disadvantages, skills and equipment, as well as some rules for playing.
The science-fiction roleplaying game Other Suns, published by Fantasy Games Unlimited in 1983, used the Basic Role-Playing system as well. Minor modifications of the BRP rules were introduced in every one of those games, to suit the flavor of each game's universe. Pendragon used a 1-20 scale and 1d20 roll instead of a percentile scale and 1d100 ...
Superworld is a superhero-themed role-playing game published by Chaosium in 1983 that uses the generic Basic Role-Playing rules system. The game began as just one part of the Worlds of Wonder product before being published as a stand-alone game.
SPQR rules are based on those Perrin created for the role-playing game RuneQuest, a game which was first published in 1978 by Chaosium and set in Greg Stafford's fantasy world, Glorantha. Stafford and Lynn Willis simplified the rules in order to publish a generic role-playing game system called Basic Role-Playing (BRP).
GURPS Basic Set is a role playing game publication written by Steve Jackson, Sean M. Punch, and David L. Pulver.The first edition GURPS Basic Set box was published in 1986, a standalone third edition book in 1988, and a hardcover, two-volume fourth edition in 2004.
In 1980, in an effort to create a standardized rule system, Chaosium published a generic game system called Basic Role-Playing (BRP). In 1982, Chaosium published Worlds of Wonder, a collection of three RPGs that all used BRP as their rules system. It was the industry's first multi-RPG product that would work with the same set of rules. [1]