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View Full Version : Scientific research on Pen and Paper RPG boardgames



herzsprung
2018-06-06, 07:26 PM
This research is part of the final term paper of the student Marnely Reyes, Designer at the University of Vale do Taquari - Brazil; The purpose of this research is to develop, through the use of Design, a Role-playing board game to stimulate creativity and critical thinking.

Please, answer below

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfS1a8IY-BDTDNceP1faziDpzaaTbgNkrGhkh-S0KXXWh0b6g/viewform?usp=sf_link




PS; i have already made a older post (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?555618-my-very-own-rpg-game&p=22997541#post22997541) so, yeah, now i have two

This one should serve scholar purposes. The other one is for help in general

aimlessPolymath
2018-06-06, 07:32 PM
Hello again!

The linked document is "only available to members of the creator's organization", so I can't access it.


You should also be aware that you misspelled "scientific" in the title of your post.

herzsprung
2018-06-06, 07:45 PM
Shame on me for being dumb. I think i fixed it. Thanks for the help.

aimlessPolymath
2018-06-06, 08:18 PM
It works now!

Several of your questions are free-response, but their phrasing would be better suited to a multiple choice or linear scale question.

herzsprung
2018-06-06, 08:29 PM
yeah, i know - i actually wanted to do as you suggested but Google forms thinks differently xD

Google forms doesn't really have a "number from 1 to 5" kinda option, so i had to create paragraphs

Anyway, thanks again

aimlessPolymath
2018-06-06, 08:50 PM
It actually does-

https://zapier.com/learn/google-sheets/how-to-use-google-forms/

You want a linear scale.

Jormengand
2018-06-10, 08:11 AM
I actually appreciate the open responses, which I've used to give a very Jormengand-archetypal elaboration on a bunch of the answers. I figure there's no point in me saying that I prefer pure d6s over multiple different types of dice without explaining why that's the case or what using d6s lets you do to your system.

Goaty14
2018-06-11, 01:35 PM
Going through this: what is a "DM Shield"?