While I’m perpetually signing myself up for more things than I have time for, I’d be very down for helping make “audiobook game manual”. Maybe in 2024?
One thing I’d be interested in learning - what would be most helpful? just reading the manual straight through, word for word? Or perhaps with some intonation, comment interjections… would it be useful for me to fully understand it myself before speaking, or would students prefer to hear me verbalize my own discovery process?
More broadly… there will be a lot of times in life when you’ll get a big document tossed on your desk and be told “the answer is in there, go find it”. Are there tools or techniques or things that could be taught to solve the problem more generally than just for the FRC game manual?
And similar question for myself… when someone asks a GM-specific question, I do tend to be one of those people who tries to remind them to read and understand it. I do this because I’ve been burned by not doing so in the past - there’s a lot in there, and just because you think you have your question answered isn’t a great indicator you haven’t missed something else. Would pointing to specific sections be better? Or just letting the question sit, rather than reminding folks about reading?