Kripke County Residential Listing, 1992-93 [MISPRINT]
A downloadable resource
A d10,000 table based on the most common first names and surnames found in the 1990 US Census, arranged like a misprinted residential telephone book for a fictional county.
Roll four ten-sided dice, reading the results as a single, four-digit number. Look up the corresponding number for a statistically probable American name.
Useful for conjuring up NPCs in just about any tabletop role-playing game with a reasonably modern setting and American characters—Bump in the Dark, FIST, Liminal Horror, Nightcrawlers, Sleepaway, and so on.
Buy the ridiculously over-designed PDF version, or download the entire table as a free CSV spreadsheet.
Status | Released |
Category | Physical game |
Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (3 total ratings) |
Author | Symbolic City |
Tags | Generator, names, npc, random-tables, Supplement, system-neutral, Tabletop, tabletop-role-playing-game, Tabletop role-playing game, ttrpg-resources |
Purchase
In order to download this resource you must purchase it at or above the minimum price of $2 USD. You will get access to the following files:
Exclusive content
Support this resource at or above a special price point to receive something exclusive.
Community copies
Community copies may be available for anyone who feels that they can't justify the cost of this tool.
Comments
Log in with itch.io to leave a comment.
Absolutely loving the effort that you put into making a PDF of this!
Love this, thanks for making it. I'd also been keen on a print version. Would it be possible to have a PDF version with single pages (rather than the faux double page spread) so I can arrange my own print copy please? Thanks again.
This may be more than you were asking for, but I’ve uploaded a reformatted, print-at-home version. Please check out this devlog entry before doing anything rash, though.
That's great, thanks. I do most of my PDF printing for personal use through Lulu so don't have to worry about eating all my toner ;)
this may sound silly but I would love to see this in print!