Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 31
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Is there a way to use herolab on a PC thats easier to use (imagine using the ipad sheet app on a desktop) I have a surface pro 3 and Id love to be able to use it with the speed and ease of a tablet.
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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 781
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Not sure what you mean?
I use HL at the gaming table with my Surface 3 Pro, it runs my character real time. Love the clickable conditions, spell effects, abiliy effects, takes care of stacking and total numbers for AC, to hits on the fly. Far faster and more accurate than anything I have used in the past. What on the Ipad makes it better? I have 3 friends with Ipads and HL but they all use their windows Lappies at the gaming table not their Icraps. |
#2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 31
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its a 1 page layout that more closely resembles a character sheet for one. Another difference is that its easier to track spells you've used that day/sesh. In general its just a lot easier to use when gaming. I couldn't for life of me sit at a table with a bunch of laptops being used to track characters. I need to have everyone at the table focusing as little on their device as possible.
Im happy to just use my iPad, but if there were a tablet PC optimized 'play mode' that'd be great. currently hero lab functions almost entirely like an editor or postmortem tool than an on the fly gaming tool. |
#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 781
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Quote:
So far I find players will find many distractions with out worry of HL being it, in fact if my players have to be distracted I'd rather it be HL and not some other non game endeavour. I dont use an Ipad but can you make all the ability, spell, conditional adjustments liek full HL and see the dynamic changes? If not, i'd find that rather useless, may as well just have paper version myself. I am also going VTT with my campaign so everyone will be using their devices more, but this will solve alo tof issues, and make play more emersive in my opinion seeing the map with fog of view with sight and lighting taken into account, each player seeing exactly what they should based on vision and light. Table map has been great over the years, but it has some weaknesses I am hoping the VTT removes. We also have a large monitor for the GM to display player info, as when I GM I use both my lappy and my Surface, it gives me a lot of flexibility. |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 1,321
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I notice that there are going to be Black Friday Deals on Windows 8.1 tablets for under $100 for 8" and $150 for 10" models. I bet there are going to be a lot more people interested in the possibility of using Hero Lab for Windows in tablet mode next year.
Currently Running: Pathfinder Second Edition Currently Playing: Pathfinder First Edition, Star Trek Adventures Former HL Games: D&D 4e & 5e, Mutants & Masterminds 2E & 3E, Savage Worlds |
#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 781
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Quote:
I absolutely love my Surface 3 Pro and if I was not a gamer, with the dock it would replace both my desktop and lappy, but alas it cannot compete with either as a game system. I have little use for android or ipad tablets, I even wasted money on an android one thinking "how cool it would be to have one", and it turned out to not be so cool. If it can't run any windows apps, I see/have no use for it. Everything I run in Wintel based. Not saying either is bad, but just has no use for me. Windows tablet however has endless uses and I use mine almost as much as my desktop now, I can't believe I lived with out it and how others do not have one. Except, the Surface isn't cheap, but no other true tablet even comes close to matching its processing power. I may be the only one to say this, but I like Windows 8/8.1 just have to spend 4.99 to really enjoy it. Which I guess is kinda sad lol. |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 416
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Me personally, I always have wifi or cellular wherever I'm playing, so I use RDP for hero lab running on a headless server I've got at home. Works great, works on whatever device I have, from my 10" tablet, to a 6" tablet, to my phone. to a full fledged PC. I guess if all the features are there, I'd be glad to have a more touch friendly interface, but I've enjoyed the experience using the full Hero Lab at the table so far.
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 1,321
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I have a touchscreen Windows 8.1 laptop that I use when playing TRPGs, and I'm intrigued by the idea of trying the tablet-style interface if it is supported in landscape mode. (I use Classic Shell, so I didn't have to spend the 4.99 )
I do have a 7" Android tablet, which serves as my ultra-portable electronic book/magazine/newspaper with light Internet browsing capability and media watching capability. I love it to bits, but I don't try to make it do what I use my laptop for. On the other hand, the way things are going I may well be picking up a small Windows 10 tablet when it's time to replace the Android, because hey, all-purpose computing tool. Currently Running: Pathfinder Second Edition Currently Playing: Pathfinder First Edition, Star Trek Adventures Former HL Games: D&D 4e & 5e, Mutants & Masterminds 2E & 3E, Savage Worlds |
#8 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 31
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yeah I have ipads in the house I just find myself on my surface pro 3 more than anything. I paint and sculpt on the thing, DM my emerald spire campaign, and recently been playing pfs with hero lab on it.
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#9 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 13
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From what I've seen, the biggest ease-of-use my iPad-using friends have over my Asus Transformer running HeroLab is that they can easily manipulate hit points, etc. by tapping the correct area, which brings up a finger-appropriate-sized number pad to tap, whereas I have to use the touchpad or a mouse to click into box and the keyboard to input the numbers. (Just try doing that on the touchscreen, and with the built-in touch-keyboard. Total torture.)
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#10 |
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