Hello everyone. Im looking for a simple system that can be played by something like 3-5 people, which is simple enough to be played by an 11 year old. My sister is in her Harry Potter phase so magic and fantasy wizard setting is really helpful. I need it to be simple enough where I can teach it to my family in a night, and we can get right into whatever story I end up DMing (for the first time) for them. I really want to spend some time with my sister over the summer engaging her imagination.

Suggestions please :D

Edit: you people are wonderful, I’ll check all your suggestions out for sure!

  • randomnick@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Mausritter is a mix of some easy systems, very “kid friendly”, it actually won some awards because of it. The Tiny D6 systems are also good and easy to learn: two dice, if you have an attribute that helps, use three.

    • AwkwardTurtle@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Mausritter is also great at getting people into the “old school” adventuring mindset. It’s easy for people to get that they’re a tiny moues, so they need to be careful, be clever, and run away from dangerous situations.

      Plus it’s got fantastic first and third party adventures to run.

      Might not be sufficiently fantasy magic for the brief though?

  • legendarydromedary
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    2 years ago

    If you’d like to play in a Harry Potter like setting, check out Kids on Brooms.

  • Hillock@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    At 11 years old any system can work already. If she is interested, D&D or any other mainstream system will work just fine. You just have to guide them through character creation more. Probably limit some choices or even come with pre-created character sheets they can choose from.

    But if you want something simple the Core Micro system would work. It’s free and you can download it on itch https://as-if.itch.io/core-micro The rules are very open and can be used for any setting. The stats determine how many dice you roll and you just give them the target number. Depending on how close to the target they are, they will succeed or fail with either something positive or negative happening on top of it.

    With a little homebrew, you could even turn it into a Harry Potter setting. Just add an additional 7 attributes that are named after the Harry Potter spell types (Charm, Jinx, Hex, etc.). And then she can either use traditional attributes for checks or magic. Which has the added benefit of giving her always 2 chances to succeed. For example, she has to jump across a gap. If she fails her Grace check and is falling she can still make a Transfiguration spell check to see if she can build a bridge out of something nearby.
    And the skill list is already intended to be expanded upon, so you can add stuff like Quidditch, Potion Brewing, or Rune studies.

  • decarabas42@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Kids on Brooms is a variant of Kids on Bikes https://www.huntersentertainment.com/kidsonbikesrpg that’s basically a very free-form RPG system. Kids on Bikes has a very Stranger Things feel, whereas Kids on Brooms is basically a Harry Potter RPG. It’s much more rules light than D&D and is more of a cooperative story telling session than a strictly rules driven session.

  • randomwords@midwest.social
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    2 years ago

    Mausritter, Carin, and DURF would work well for this.

    Mausritter is based on Into the Odd and features cute mice exploring a world of giant proportions.

    Carin is also based on Into the Odd and is more straight forward fantasy.

    DURF is really simple and fast. It’s really quick to make a character and get to playing.

  • kalibaar@sopuli.xyz
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    2 years ago

    Maybe Fate Accelerated? You can jump right in, just pick a High Concept (What the character is mainly about), maybe a Trouble and approaches (how you approach problems) and leave the rest to fill in. You have Fate points, which you spend to improve rolls and which you get by getting into trouble / adventure. The players have more ability to affect the story than in D&D, and is usually easier to get into for beginners than for experienced rpg players - check Book of Hanz for tips.