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Some of My Favorite Books of Random Fantasy Tables

Hard on the heels of my review of Jason Sholtis’ The Dungeon Dozen [1], one of the best books of random fantasy tables I own, I decided to do a rundown of some of the other good ones on my shelves.

I’m a big fan of this type of book — books you can flip through, and/or roll on tables in, to get random inspiration, serendipitous bolts from the blue, and idea-jolts from unexpected quarters. I’m sure I missed some of the ones I own (because as I write, having already taken the photos for this article, I can see them on the shelf!), for which I apologize, and I know there are a) others out there (which I’d love to hear about in the comments) and b) free random generators online that rock, but on the flipside there are 18 titles in this rundown and I had to draw the line somewhere.

PS: It’s also worth noting that some of these books aren’t solely, or even largely, composed of random tables. But they all have excellent random tables for fantasy games in them, and I’ll call out the oddballs below.

PPS: This list also isn’t in any kind of order. I just grabbed books, grouped them in sextets, and wrote.

Boom! Tables, tables, tables — enough books of random tables to last you for a lifetime. (Or not, I suppose, because I can’t stop buying them!)

I’d love to hear about your favorite books of this nature in the comments, so fire away!

6 Comments (Open | Close)

6 Comments To "Some of My Favorite Books of Random Fantasy Tables"

#1 Comment By randite On April 11, 2014 @ 4:55 pm

For those without money, there’s Last Gasp’s Choose Your Own Generator and Generator Archive.
The Choose Your Own Generator lets you plug in lists of whatever, then it turns them into a computerized random table. You can then save this javascript random table as a link to drag and drop into your browser bookmarks. The result pops up in a dialogue box when you click the link.
[2]

Even better, they’ve got a fan-generated archive of ready-made generators. (See what I did there?)

[3]

I used this fantabulous technology to add two tables to my very own blog.
Goto – [4] and click the links on the right-hand menu to randomly generate a Bard’s song or see what strange thing that NPC is riding. I intend to add more as time and whimsy allow.

#2 Comment By dm610 On April 11, 2014 @ 6:50 pm

Thanks for this list Martin.

I purchased Tome of Adventure Design yesterday (after reading the article) and it seems to be good stuff. I have looked at random generators on websites previously but somehow they just didn’t “do it” for me.

I wonder whether manually rolling the dice is a positive factor. This gets me involved (at least mechanically) in the generation process and perhaps puts me in a situation where I have to suspend judgement for several minutes because the content is still evolving. There is some depth in the random generation process and that can’t hurt either.

I also got Red Tide, although it hasn’t struck the same chord (yet).

#3 Comment By MuadMouse On April 11, 2014 @ 7:04 pm

Thanks for a very interesting list! I love random generators. They throw me the curveballs I need to stay sharp.

Paul Jaquays’ Central Casting series deserves a mention, I think. The series includes volumes for random character background generation for futuristic, modern(-ish) day, and of course fantasy settings. Heroes of Legend, the fantasy background generator is definitely worthy of the name, and is one of my favourite gaming resources. The idea is that you can roll up everything from the character’s social class and birthplace onwards. The book has close to a hundred main tables through which you navigate with your dice, using a handful of random life events as your starting point. The appeal here is the web of relationships that develops as you find associations between the details of apparently unconnected events. The page flipping can feel a bit tiresome, but is well worth it!

Official copies of these late-80s gems are few and far between, but if you can get your hands on their contents they’re definitely worth a try.

The series also includes Dungeons, a random dungeon generator, but that one I’ve found to be too unwieldy, and too likely to provide boring results.

#4 Comment By Grimur Fjeldsted On April 19, 2014 @ 12:38 pm

Thank you for this list of great product. Read it yesterday and made me purchase 3 of the products already. Dungeon Dozen (awaiting Lulu shipment) and the PDF versions of D30 Sandbox Companion and Tome of Adventure Design – both of great quality and extremely useful for fleshing out details of my campaign world.

In addition I would like to mention the Gary Gygax World Builder, the largest collection of lists I have seen so far.

#5 Comment By Trace On May 2, 2014 @ 7:53 am

I read this and bought the Dungeon Dozen. It paid for its self the first session.

#6 Comment By David Schirduan On May 20, 2014 @ 4:08 pm

I recently got my hands on the Star Wars 2nd Edition GM Guide. It’s full of some fantastic tidbits and pieces of advice. I’m writing up a 5,000+ word review at the moment. good stuff!