Danger Patrol is a "narrative RPG" (read, most likely, Story Game). It has character Styles (sort of like races) and Roles (sort of like classes). It's meant to emulate 50's SciFi, as well as be pretty quick to set up and play it would seem (the Beta Edition is 34 pages, the Pocket Edition is seriously 2).
Looking over the RPG Geek page for this summary, it seems to have something like Fate Points:
This isn't quite an OSSR, as Danger Patrol Beta Edition came out in October of '09. This is important to note, as it was well into 4e.RPG Geek wrote:players are encouraged to take risks and accumulate "danger dice." As they fail rolls, they earn valuable power chips, but they open up the possibility of grievous injury to their characters.
The reigning king of Roleplaying had become the mad king, with it's shitastic skill challanges, great-idea-but-shitty-execution Daily/Encounter/At Will power schedule, and the court full of fools like Mearls.
And White Wolf, well...

So indies thought the coast was clear like they were the little rat-like mammals after the Age of the Dinosaurs

Which one is Luke Crane? Your guess is as good as mine.
So,
Danger Patrol is a very lean book. Whereas most gaming books would start off with silly stuff like credits, introduction, or table of contents, DP starts with "The Steps."
Ok, so I'm guessing that these will be expanded upon, but you already get a bit of the idea. The idea I'm getting so far is that, like Fiasco, Danger Patrol sells itself as an RPG, but is really more of a "Bits and Pieces German Boardgame, minus the board." That's not necessarily a bad thing, but if you're looking for a typical ongoing RPG...
- Gather Everyone At The Table
- Introduce the Style Cards
- Introduce the Role Cards, Talents, Powers & Special Abilities
- Create Names for the Heroes
- Introduce the Heroes
- Introduce Rocket City & The Solar System
- Time to Start the Show! (this isn't really a step, is it? More a... bit of ado?)
- Set Up the Action Arena
- Action! (Again, this isn't actually a step...)
- Round Two (And Beyond)
- Interlude
- Suspense!
- More Action! More Suspense!

This says kind of damning things about RPGs. Or Story Games. I'm not sure which.
It then goes into "The Stuff You Need." This is both the expected stuff (dice, table, Character Sheets) and less expected stuff ("character sheets printed from this pdf and cut in half to make 8 style cards and 8 role cards," "gaming stones," "red danger dice," paperclips, specifically a sharpie*, bowls to hold the dice).
Ok, here's where it expands on the steps.
Step 1 gives you an "opening speech" for your players:
Pretty much what I expected, really. They do a really good job of setting the mood. I'm three pages in, and so far the only real surprise is the awareness of including send ups of the genre like Venture Bros. Hell, the fact that they just mention it totally makes me want to fucking play this game. Brock's a Two-Fisted Commando, Rusty's an Intrepid Professor, Helper is a Robot Warrior... hell yes.We’re going to play Danger Patrol, an action/adventure retro sci-fi game. The idea is to create the episodes of a 50s-style TV show in the vein of the old Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials (with maybe a dash of the Venture Bros., Star Wars, and Indiana Jones).
You’re all going to play members of the elite Danger Patrol—special super-powered crime fighters who protect Rocket City from evil Stygian Adepts, the nefarious agents of the Crimson Republic, rampaging monsters set loose by mad scientists, and other crazy threats.
To make your Danger Patrol hero, you’re going to pick a Style and a role. Your style tells us what kind of being you are: A Robot, a Mystic, a cybernetic Atomic, or something else. Your role tells us what your job is on the team: A super-spy Agent, an elite soldier Commando, a wiley Detective, etc.
Are you ready? Let’s go!
The Styles are Alien (Build your own style, pick a planet to be from, which can include Pluto or Planet X), Atomic (atomic reactor powered cybernetic soldier, Metallo, but also Superman), Ghost (Klauss, from BRPD), Intrepid (Mundane brave, lucky resourceful guy), Mystic (Dr Strange), Psychic (Jean Grey), Robot (Robot), Two-Fisted (Mundane strong tough guy). Nice to see that it's cool if a style is picked by more than one person.
So every style has Traits (pick your skill level in each role), a Talent, a Power, four Special Abilities, a Danger Meter, and a condition track. So far my only real beef with this thing is that I'm on page 4, learning how to make a character, but have no clue how the damned game works.
What I get so far is "assign dice to role traits, your style gives you a unique ability like Atomic's 'suffer no penalty when taking Stuns or Injuries,' a power which you activate for power tokens which you get for being in danger, and four special abilities which have flavourful names and one or two [+]s next to each, and you have Bashed and Stunned boxes."
Personally, I like to know a game's basic resolution mechanic as soon as I can, since that tends to lend context to things like character creation.

Like this picture, the first few pages of Danger Patrol lack just enough context to be certain of which of several possible scenarios is going on.
I should have looked at page 5. It starts to explain a few things about the cards after briefly talking about the roles:
Agent (super spy manipulator/stealth guy)
Commando (tactics and shootey guy)
Daredevil (probably pretty close to the comic character of the same name--blindness and bad movie adaptations optional)
Detective (You are Batman)
Explorer (You wear a space suit, but are probably pretty much one part Great White Hunter one part Charles Darwin)
Flyboy (drivey guy)
Professor (smarty guy)
Warrior (Punchy guy)
It's frowned upon for two players to pick the same Style/Role combo, but it's probably ok for two players to share Style or role.
So character creation continues.
You get a d12 in your main role trait (you know which it is because the traits are the same as the roles, so a Commando has a d12 in the Commando trait). You then have 1d10, 2d8, 3d6, and 1d4 to distribute across the rest, no more than one die per trait.
The team chooses it's uniform colours, everyone wears the same colours, because the difference between Pulp Team and Street Gang is kind of small, to be honest.
You choose a weapon- Raygun, Electro-Blaster, Turbo-Rifle.
You get Stuff, which is probably a genericized gear pack for your role which has no use limit, but you can check off a box next to a stuff to get a bonus die. This probably means you can't use that Stuff.
It also explains the symbols on the character sheets. The system logo symbol means that an ability costs a power token, but power tokens can also be spent to do generic things like get +1 hit or reduce a hit (according to the Atomic Style Sheet).
a + means the adjacent power is an ally buff, Shield denotes defensive powers, arrow means the power involves actions, and * is misc. The [+] next to powers means you get bonus die, first a d10, then a d8, then a d6. If you have multiple [+]s next to a power it means multiple uses, not "you get +d10+d8+d6 when you use this." Well, apparently it can, but you can't have more than three bonus dice. You mark off [+]s as you use them, and refresh in interludes.
But still...

Seriously. I know what I'm rolling, but not what I'm rolling against, or how often to roll, or how I figure out who the fuck rolls when.
Your role card has a space for Uniform Colours up top (that's twice they've mentioned it, which makes me think it's actually important. It's probably not), the other four roles (you're supposed to put your Style and Role cards side by side, the first four roles, alphabetically, are on Style, the last four on Role. The Role also gives you another Talent, another Pwer, Gear and Weapons (your Stuff, I gather) and the rest of your Danger and Damage Meters. It's a pretty slick presentation still, but I'd rather have generic sheets that I write in the talents and such than have to fuck around with two half sheets.
Then you just have to name your characters (Secret Identity or Real Name, no one really cares, it's just more fluff), and you introduce your characters to each other ...because you haven't just been talking this stuff over for the past ten minutes with your bodies at least...
So yeah, you stand up and say "Hi, I'm Bob, and I'm an alcoh-" wait, sorry. No, you say "Ok, so I'm playing Doctor Palladium, an Atomic Professor. I have a cyborg body which is resistant to harm and atomic strength, speed, beams and Z-Ray vision, and I can make Crazy Theories that make it easier for me or allies to do things, and tinker with stuff. I have an Omni-scanner and a jetpack." You can also go into some background about your character, or not, whatever your group prefers.
There's a checklist for setting the game up which is handy, but I'm still waiting to learn the resolution mechanic.
So everyone makes their characters, everyone gets a rules summary, a power token, and a paperclip, and you put out bowls of red d6s as danger dice, and normal polyhedrals. The GM has a stack index cards and a sharpie for "Threat Markers."
Since that's the end of character creation and game set up, it seems a reasonable place to break the posts.
Next up-- Introduce Rocket City & The Solar System
