
Hello. Welcome to this web site where you'll mainly find my music, but also some other things I've done which I may upload from time to time...
Here are the latest updates to the site. You can get the RSS feed for this page at the link in the menu above.
I've been creating a couple of dice games lately. The first one to be ready is this one: Star Trader's Luck - A dice game.
It uses the basic mechanic of rolling a bunch of dice, keeping one or more and then re-rolling (for a total of 3 rolls maximum) to determine the prices and availability of each type of good. Also, it uses a time system similar to the one in Thebes, where players can decide how much time to spend each turn.
Feedback of all types is welcomed.
There are many reasons I don't like Myspace, but there's one I think makes it quite useful: If I want to listen to a band's music to see what they do I just have to go to their myspace page and listen with no fuzz. Just click and listen.
It may seem silly, but it works. I don't believe in myspace as a substitute of a real web presence but as a complement for a musician it works well. That's why I've re-created my myspace profile for my music(the old one was erased for an unknown reason).
I've added some songs from my new acoustic project wher I'm playing guitar and singing (and also adding harmonica and/or other instruments here and there).
I've created a wiki site for the game Wizard kings. The site can be accessed at: http://wizardkings.wikidot.com
Icehouse - The Game
I've been thinking a lot about the game Icehouse lately (as opposed to the Icehouse gamesystem). It was the first game that used the pyramids and it has an interesting origin: The fiction stories of one of its creators, Andy Looney.
It also has some sort of mystique around it, some kind of aura that separates it from other games. I think this comes, in part, from the stories on the book The Empty City, where a small cast of characters live their lives around this game that in their reality has replaced Chess and Go.
Icehouse - The Game
I've been thinking a lot about the game Icehouse lately (as opposed to the Icehouse gamesystem). It was the first game that used the pyramids and it has an interesting origin: The fiction stories of one of its creators, Andy Looney.
It also has some sort of mystique around it, some kind of aura that separates it from other games. I think this comes, in part, from the stories on the book The Empty City, where a small cast of characters live their lives around this game that in their reality has replaced Chess and Go.
If you want to see older entries go to the Entries Archive