tl;dr: Stephen Faure and I are releasing a fork of the original Swords & Wizardry Treasure Generator created by Brian Ramsay (foont.net).
Our version incorporates a different approach by allowing you to enter the XP to generate against. From that, it will calculating the multiplier, a divided coin haul and running totals of gems/jewelry and the haul.
Our version can be found here: https://etinerra.com/swtools/
For the rest of the story…
Back in March of 2011, Brian Ramsay of foont.net released the Swords & Wizardry Treasure Generator. It’s a neat little tool, taking into account the unique way that S&W does “tradeouts” of coins to come up with the gems, jewelry and magic items of a loot haul.
It’s one of those tools that I bookmarked and have used over the years without really thinking about it.
Well, fast forward to 2023, and with the Dungeon23 project going on, I’ve been using this tool a lot more. I came to desire some changes:
- A way to calculate the gold based on the XP of the monster(s) overcome in obtaining the treasure
- A breakdown into various other coins than gold pieces.
I love it! It’s definitely an old school haul if there are thousands of copper pennies to sort through! This is exactly what I wanted the generator to do.
I was pretty happy with this. Then I looked to see who else may have forked Brian’s code and met Stephen Faure, who describes himself as “a fellow old-school RPG enthusiast and software developer.”
- Calculate a running total of the value of gems/jewelry
- Calculate a running total of the whole haul, including gems/jewelry and coins
I’ve tried to get ahold of Brian to see if he wanted to incorporate our changes into his hosted generator, or cared if we released our own fork — but as of writing of this post (3/25/2023), he’s not responded to emails or to a request through GitHub to incorporate our changes into his version. So, the release of this fork is made with all due respect and gratitude to Brian, but with the desire to share our updates and tweaks. Hopefully you will find them helpful and useful!
Cool! Thanks for doing this!
You're welcome! Big thanks to Stephen who had some great ideas