After
Big Eyes, Small Mouth, Guardians of Order would go on to achieve significant success with another anime-based Tri-Stat dX game,
The Sailor Moon Role-Playing Game and Resource Book. The game was built on
Big Eyes, Small Mouth but featured an extensive reference to the
Sailor Moon universe. Guardians of Order similarly acquired licenses to create Tri-Stat dX role-playing games for other anime series, including
Dominion,
Demon City Shinjuku, and
Tenchi Muyo!. After the last of these,
El Hazard, the company's strategy with licensed anime series changed and it began issuing "Ultimate Fan Guides" which served the same purpose while avoiding the need to reprint the same Tri-Stat dX mechanics. All of these books included game statistics for characters in the series as well as extensive episode guides and character summaries. Guardians of Order expanded beyond anime based games when the Tri-Stat dX system was adopted for the
superhero game
Silver Age Sentinels. Guardians of Order later acquired the rights to publish the
Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game from
Phage Press. Guardians of Order also licensed the rights to produce Tri-Stat dX role-playing games based on
The Authority,
Tékumel, and
A Song of Ice and Fire.
Original properties Big Eyes, Small Mouth •
Big Eyes, Small Mouth - Guardians of Order's original game had four revisions before the company went out of business, with the third edition being in development and published by another company. • Core rules •
Big Eyes, Small Mouth (1997) - 94 black and white pages. •
Big Eyes, Small Mouth Second Edition (2000) - 280 full color pages •
Big Eyes, Small Mouth Retro Second Edition (2024) - 336 full color pages •
Big Eyes, Small Mouth Third Edition (2007) - 280 full color pages, released by ArtHaus publishing • (for Fourth Edition please see
Big Eyes, Small Mouth) • Expansions •
Big Robots, Cool Starships (1999) - Rules for
science fiction anime-inspired games, especially those featuring
mecha. • ''BESM Game Master's Screen'' (2000) •
Cute & Fuzzy Seizure Monsters (2000) - Rules for pet monster battling style games, inspired by cartoons like
Pokémon. Also published as
Cute & Fuzzy Seizure Monsters due to censorship concerns. •
Hot Rods & Gun Bunnies (2000) - Rules for modern day action adventure anime-inspired games. •
Centauri Knights (2001) - Science fiction setting •
Big Ears, Small Mouse (2001) System for playing small cartoon animals such as Rescuers, Capitol Critters, etc. •
Uresia: Grave of Heaven (2003) fantasy setting •
BESM Dungeon (2003) - Additions to
BESM for running more fantasy oriented anime-inspired games. •
Cold Hands, Dark Hearts (2003) - Rules for playing supernatural monsters in a gothic horror setting.
Other Tri-Stat games •
Silver Age Sentinels (2002) - Superhero role-playing game. Based on modified
BESM rules using ten-sided dice instead of six-sided dice. •
Tri-Stat dX (2003) - a small generic role-playing system based on
BESM. •
Ex Machina (2004) - Cyberpunk role-playing game using the Tri-Stat rules. •
Dreaming Cities (2005) - Urban fantasy role-playing game •
Reality Storm (in conjunction with
Hero Games)
d20 System •
Silver Age Sentinels d20 (2002) •
BESM d20 (2003) •
BESM d20 Revised Edition (2004) • Expansions •
Uresia: Grave of Heaven for BESM d20 (2003) fantasy setting •
Mecha d20 (2003) - Also usable as an expansion for
Dungeons & Dragons 3rd edition,
d20 Modern and other
d20 System games.
Licensed products Guardians of Order licensed the rights to a variety of titles to convert them into role-playing games. The majority were based on
Big Eyes, Small Mouth and licensed from
anime series. The books also served as resource guides, summarizing the episodes in the series and the characters.
Standalone RPGs •
The Sailor Moon Role-Playing Game and Resource Book (1998) •
Dominion Tank Police RPG And Resource Book (1999) •
Demon City Shinjuku RPG And Resource Book (2000) •
Tenchi Muyo RPG And Resource Book (2000) •
El-Hazard RPG And Resource Book (2001) •
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai RPG and Resource Book (2001) - Based on a live-action movie •
Nobilis (2002) - Original role-playing game in which players portray abstract concepts or classes of things like "time". Originally published by Pharos Press, then
Hogshead Press. •
The Authority RPG And Resource Book (2004) - Based on the
Wildstorm (later
DC Comics) comic book of the same name. Uses
Silver Age Sentinels as a base. •
Tékumel: Empire of the Petal Throne (2005) - Fantasy role-playing based on the novels of
M. A. R. Barker. The fourth published RPG based on
Tékumel •
A Game of Thrones (2005) - Uses the d20 System and based on the
A Song of Ice and Fire novels. Published in conjunction with
Sword and Sorcery Studios. •
Amber Diceless Roleplaying Game - This would have been the second published RPG based on
The Chronicles of Amber novels. However, while the rights were acquired in 2004, a new version was never published.
Resource books These books were not standalone and required a copy of either the
BESM or
BESM d20 rules to play. •
BESM Hellsing Ultimate Fan Guides:
#1 (2002),
#2 (2003). Not a self-contained RPG, relied on
BESM.
#1 covered episodes 1-6, while
#2 covered 7-13. •
BESM Hellsing d20 (2003): Reprinted fan guides as a single hardbound book. •
BESM Trigun d20 (2004): Hardbound book covered all 26 episodes of the TV series. •
The Slayers d20 Role-Playing Game (2004) - Based on the
BESM d20 rules instead of the original BESM Tri-Stat rules. Only covered the first 26 episodes. The remaining episodes were covered in later resource books:
BESM: The Slayers: Next (2004, Episodes 27-52),
BESM: The Slayers: Try (2004, Episodes 53-78) •
BESM: Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Rose Collection (2004) - Covers episodes 1 through 13. •
BESM: Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Black Rose Saga (2005) - Covers episodes 14 through 26. ==References==