Friday, September 30, 2022

REDD Judge, in the wild!


As a game author, it's always wonderful to see, hear, or read people playing your game, John over at Terminal Goblin Games has done just that! He did some audio work for me as a promo for REDD Judge, and then decided to take the scenario from that audio and turn it into a solo play game.

[sniff] So proud. 

Thursday, September 29, 2022

Experience Points in Traveller

Experience Points are a staple of the role playing genre, but of course being a huge fan of the original Traveller, which was my first played game, I played without XP. In fact I've never really got the taste for XP railroad. I don't even get a hit of self-affirmation when a character I'm playing goes up a level. That's all because I started with Trav' and didn't hooked on the XP crack!

At this point I actually see XP as a concept that I reject in principal. Whatever its original purpose may have been, XP has devolved into a "reward" system that players "earn". It has become a focus, a driving force in the game play. Players make decisions based on XP that can be earned as opposed to what makes sense in the game. Yuk.

But I go even further!

Later versions of Traveller started doing the "training" thing. So you could spend "N" weeks studying and gain a new skill level. This still turns my stomach a little but for no real reason other than it will lead to skill bloat, which is a separate complaint I have with later versions. However its waaay better than giving players chocolate peanuts treats (XP). Players may have their character "train" during jump which is generally much better than encouraging the chasing down of the last orc to get a few extra XP. It certainly effects play considerably less.

When I create a Traveller character I consider it to be "fully formed", with only life to be experienced ahead. I don't look to, or to seek and "improve" the character, I'm playing to tell a great story. So I rarely consider the mechanics of improvement as worthy of consideration.

Back in the last long running Traveller campaign I started issuing XP to the players, as a joke. The points had no effect whatever in the game and they were totally arbitrary. In my opinion, that's the full extent  to which character improvement should exist in Traveller.


Wednesday, September 28, 2022

YouTube Recommendation: The Basic Expert

I have hundreds of youtube subscriptions that I've subbed to over years, but I'd like to introduce one of these to you as being an exceptional breakout. 

The Basic Expert channel is hosted by Mr Torres and he brings his calm demeanour, his smooth voice, and his insightfulness to the role playing stage. Many of the channels I subbed to have devolved into rage anti-woke rants, but not this one. 

That's not to say he doesn't bring the odd rant to the show, but its not his focus. His channel presents a mixed content of art creation, rpg stream-chats, deep dives into RPGs, topic discussions, and he recently added actual-plays into the mix too. 

I've especially loved the deep dives into Basic Fantasy, and Classic Traveller.

The Basic Expert channel



Tuesday, September 27, 2022

REDD Judge Case Files 001 released

I've just released what I expect to be the first of a series of "Case Files" products to support my REDD Judge game. departing from my usual money-grubbing I've pushed this out as Pay What You Want. I consider it as a promo for the core game/app itself, so if people decide they want it free that's fine by me,

After the first 16 hours on the store it seems to be going well, I've had one person purchase it for the suggest price of 99c, but I've also had three sales of the core game. I call that a win for Pay What You Want marketing.

The Case Files 001 is itself another pocket mod PDF like the original game, and contains 7 cases of crime that the referee can throw at his Judge players. Each case tells you what crime was committed, by whom, their motive, and some expanded details on how the NPCs will react, behave, or sourced the illegal materials. The REDD app that you get with the core rules does something similar but with less details, but this PDF means that the referee doesn't need to have a way to run the app, as its PDF/paper based.

Anyway, based on the sales I've seen so far, I'm encouraged to write a second Case Files to release the next few weeks. Who knows, these might become a regular feature!

Monday, September 26, 2022

Lovecraftian Scenario Plotter

 

This is a promo post for one of my own products, the Lovecraftian Scenario Plotter. This is a tool for the "keeper" 

Lovecraftian Scenario Plotter is a scenario generator for any horror game, but includes some elements of the Lovecraftian mythos. Using 45 cross-indexed tables of inspiring terms you can quickly “roll up” the main plot for your scenario and as many sub plots as you need.

This tool is ideal for coming up with a scenario in a hurry, or for inspiration when you have more  time. It provides the elements you need to make an exciting adventure.


Sunday, September 25, 2022

Blip-Out Baddies Bad

If you've been the DMing for any length of time you've likely run into the situation where the play characters have battled through your dungeon or tower and come up against the big-bad of your campaign. Then be it, luck, be it fate, whatever, in two rounds one of the player makes a roll that will "end" the big bad.

You panic. The campaign can't end like that! Going out like a fart in the dark! What about the rest of the session? You don't want to waste all the months of build up!

You might decide to "blip" your big bad, pretend he's not dead, have him cast a teleport spell, or slip through a hidden door, ANYTHING to stop it end this way!

Stop. Don't do it.

As bad as the fart in the dark might have been, the blipping baddie that just nopes out is worse for the players. Instead let them defeat the bad guy. Even congratulate them, tell them what a bad asses they are. Big them up.

Then, when they go to loot have them find a missive, a message cylinder, a graven tablet, or just a clue, that highlights that the recently dispatched big-bad was just a lieutenant of the real "big bad" , and that the real "big bad" is due to visit any day now.

Now you've got the set up to continue your story, a new threat. You've made the players realise that whatever they thought was going on, was a mere charade. You've turned from an unsatisfying "blip" to an exciting threat or grander mystery and everyone will be happy.


Saturday, September 24, 2022

D6 Damage

 

I remember reading in my earliest copy of D&D how there was an option where every player would roll a single D6 for damage regardless of weapon being used. Back them I thought it was a bit odd. I wondered why you'd have all the different weapons, and then make them all the same. That was because I was a fresh newbie roll-player focused entirely on the rules rather than considering story.

These days I'm much more story focused so the idea of D6 damage matters much less to me. Today, I'd rather have an historically accurate spear and shield combo, that's more important that carrying a D12 two handed sword. That extra damage is less of a concern to my style of play.

Within the rules of the game the D6 damage makes sense in the low levels, when a D6 can kill PCs and monster alike. I'm not so sure it would work at the higher levels. Once monsters get into the 80+HP level that D6 limitation is going to make combat into an incredible slog. AND that slog dose worry me, narrating too many rounds where a lowly D6 is rolled for damage would grind even the best story teller to dust. 

I'm not sure even having a D12 for damage scales well, but as PCs progress they tend to add a lot of plusses to damage from magical weapons, so there is some level of scaling there. Therefore if you allow the plusses and mods to be applied to that D6 you'd at least get the same scaling effect as they level. So I hope the D6 rules allows for that.

Please let me know below if you've used the D6 rule, and how it turned out for you.

Friday, September 23, 2022

REDD Judge RPG , the supporting App'

A while back I released REDD Judge, my drop-in drop-out game for players who come and go, to Big Geek Emporium. I've now released it on DriveThruRPG but this version includes an app'.

The app runs in your browser, so you can easily run it on a  laptop, and it doesn't need an internet connection. "But what does it do?" you scream!

It provides a constant stream of crimes. In the game fiction its a readout on the Judge's bike console. Round the table its an ideal tool for the referee, constantly feeding him new crimes to throw at the players. Alternatively the ref could turn the laptop round and let the players pick the next job.

Anyway the video below does a poor job of explaining the game and the app.



Thursday, September 22, 2022

Game Designer ADHD

Its a little known fact that creativity breeds creativity. That is, if you're making something creative, but

then brake off for a while, getting back into the creative groove can be extra hard. On the other hand staying in the creative groove means you can keep producing more stuff. But staying in the mental-creative-mode has its own problem.

There are different types of creative and in this case I'm talking in terms of RPG product creation. This process relies on the bright-idea-spark-plug, the free association of originality with well understood tropes, and for me at least, my mind can get thrown into ideas-only mode. I'll be making notes on my computer and on the pad beside my bed, or voice recording the ideas on my phone, it becomes utter chaos. But at teh same time its the very core of the RPG product production process.

The not so fun part of writing for RPGs (and board games too) is the hard grind of actual work. Translating those bright sparking ideas into human comprehensible text. Making clear rules, Play-testing. Researching. Drawing art or commissioning it. Editing text. Finagling layout issues,. Publishing process. 

All that effortful drudgery is the the exact opposite of the idea-engine. So much so in fact that it can stall the idea-engine you need to start the next product.

So here's what I do to cope with the famine and feast of ideas and drudgery. ...

Work on five different things at once. Have the projects overlap each other, so that you are in effect doing all the parts of the process at once (or at least every couple of days). It also means you don't get "stuck" in one les interesting process for weeks on end. You can keep switching up the "mode" you've got your brain working in, and that keeps the creativity running.

Now, go by my gamebook Dwarven Vengeance :)


Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Corpse of Sky God - Adventure

 "Corpse of the Sky God" is neat little dungeon delve, for any OSR game. Its currently available free  from Big Geek Emporium and is worth grabbing to add to your library. I've looked over it but haven't played it yet, but I'm thinking I'll try it solo using (of course) Scarlet Heroes.


Tuesday, September 20, 2022

What is an RPG

Throughout the ages of roleplaying nearly every published role playing game has had "that" section near


the beginning of the book. The name of the section may vary, but content rarely does. They always give a stilted explanation of what role playing is and often follow it by descending into a long drawn out example of play.

The VAST majority of people who pick up an RPG, know what it is, and know how to play RPGs. So what purpose does this section even serve? Most players would only read the poorly acted "how to play" script to laugh at it. In the end this type of content could be dropped from the books  and maybe, if you really wanted to, you could print a link URL to some online resource that explains what the hobby is.

Imagine a person deciding to take up fishing, who walks into the fishing-shop without a bloody clue about what a rod is, or a hook, or bait, or a lure, or anything. That's kind of what you're suggesting is happening with these RPG books. I guess back in the day, it made some kind of sense when D&D was just taking off and it was a new hobby, but not now, not today. The first book I noticed that took the brave step of consigning this section to the dustbin where it belongs was Weird West. bravo Stuart Robertson, bravo!

Monday, September 19, 2022

History of the Cepheus Engine

Here's a brief history of Cepheus Engine.

Back in the good old days, anyone could write Traveller products and slap the Traveller logo onto the cover. Then that liberal license was withdrawn and replaced by a much more restrictive less profitable license. That left a bunch of RPG authors wondering what to do with their creativity.

In jumps Jason "Flynn" Kemp in 2016, who took the existing Traveller SRD and generated a new SRD under the OGL and named it "Cepheus Engine".

Lots of ex-Traveller authors jumped onto Cepheus Engine and started writing under its easy to follow and liberated license.

In 2017 Samarden Press spruced up the Cepheus SRD and produced a product named "Cepheus Engine" which clarified, en-nice-ified it, making a pleasant to read PDF.

In 2021 Stellagram Publishing brought out "Cepheus Deluxe" which was an evolution on the original SRD rules. It made changes to system and character generation (including character "traits"), along with some other changes to the rules, and added in a pile or artwork.

The SRD, Samarden, and Stellagram versions are all compatible, and pretty much any product written for them or Traveller will be compatible with all of them.

Of course all this time authors were throwing out adventures, ship books, background books and so on, and then people started bringing out rules books based on Cepheus Engine in different genres. A couple of notables being Cepheus Modern for all your modern tactical battles, an Sword of Cepheus for those fancying a bit of fantasy sword play. We've even got SOLO for people who want to play with themselves.


 


Sunday, September 18, 2022

The Sandcaster in Traveller

Since the first version of Traveller all the way through to modern Mongoose Traveller and Cepheus Engine, space combat has included the "sandcaster" as defence against lasers. The simplest description of the sandcaster is as a shotgun that fires sand into the void to disrupt incoming laser beams.

Here's my take.

For a start it doesn't fire sand. If fires  polychromatic glass-like granules that have some resemblance to sand.

Furthermore it isn't a shotgun. It is a large barrelled launcher that fires the highly engineered somewhat guidable granule dispenser.

The sandcaster round is a short cylinder 8" across with rounded ends. As well as having a few small manoeuvre jets the surface is covered in perfectly arranged tiny dispenser holes. So the next questions are, why is it complicated and why isn't it a shotgun?

Imagine you're leading a stern chase and your opponent is using beam-laser bow chasers. If you shotgunned a blast of sand off the stern, that sand would likely blast past the enemy before they even fired. Much better would be to fire my sandcaster, that distributes its "sand" over time as it slowly falls behind your ship. My sandcaster would thereby give longer lasting protection.

Imagine you're not in a stern chase, but instead hiding in an asteroid belt, fire an intelligent sandcaster and you can deposit a shield of "sand" around your hiding place that not only gives you a defence if you get surprised, but also gives you some defence against enemy sensors.

Now your enemy is vectoring in on you from your port beam, a well placed intelligent sandcaster can be launched ahead of your ship and angled slightly towards the enemy, pouring out its "sand" in a perfectly arranged cloud of protection between you and the enemy.

Now you're about to emerge from behind a station into the sights of the enemy. You launch your sandcaster ahead of your planned path laying down a protected route before you even start thrusters.

Please, upgrade your sandcasters from shotguns for bags of sand, to a tactical device for increased survival. The humble sandcaster round is a complex somewhat programmable device. 


Saturday, September 17, 2022

OSR Consumables, arrow recovery

Last month I made a post about the amazing "Consumables" rule I found in the WWII OSR game The Front. As quick reminder, the rule meant you allocated your consumable resource a die type, and as you consumed the resources the die type shrank D20 > D12 > D10 > D8 > D6 > D4 until you had nothing left.

During my recent solo Basic Fantasy/Scarlet Heroes game I had a fight scene where a character ran through is arrows and got all the way down to the D4. That left me wondering about where all those arrows had gone. In normal play DMs tend to have a rule for arrow recovery, such as you can get 50% back, or roll a D6 and recover the arrow on 1-2. Clearly that doesn't work when you are not actually counting arrows. So on the spot I made up the following arrow recovery rule.

After a combat ends, if the PC has reduced the arrow-consumable die by at least one die type (or reduced from D4 to NONE), they may make an arrow-recovery roll. Roll the current consumable die type (D4 if NONE), any result of 3 or more, increases the consumable die type by 1 level.

e.g. During a scene, Wizard character fires arrows into the Death Orc and in the process reduces his arrow consumable die from D10 down to D4. After the combat is over Wizard spends the time to see if any of his arrows are reusable. The PC rolls a D4 (his current Consumable die). His result is a 3, therefore he recovers one die type for his consumable, and notes that his new die type is D6.

Clearly this rule only applies to consumables that can be recovered...bullets, grenades, fire-bombs can not be recovered as they are destroyed in use.

Friday, September 16, 2022

Bitching about Alien RPG

This post is bitching about the presentation of RPGs, or more accurately a real bugbear I have with the Alien RPG.

I love the Alien genre, the movies, the books, the comics, and even some of the games. But the layout in this RPG hurts my brain. The cover is wonderful in fact the art throughout the book is wonderful. But the problem I have is the layout of the text in the book. Nearly every page wastes a huge amount of space, in a way that seems to be strictly there to bloat the page count rather than be pleasing to user. That makes it a coffee-table book rather than a usable tool for the role player.

Many pages in the book have only a single paragraph of text, and these are not just in order to present the art. Many times this has vast empty space has art in the background, but its still empty space, such as pitch-black shadows, or distant stars appearing as specs.. 

Even the pages that have the most text are spaced out, often using puzzle piece framing that grinds my gears with its visual effects. It separates the text where normal presentation would use headings, BUT these puzzle pieces actually fracture the text in a way that breaks the flow of the text. It makes reading more difficult to read. the changing colours and contrast between paragraphs actually makes reading more difficult on the Mark I eyeball. It may be visually appealing to run your eyes over the page as its left open on the coffee table, maybe you might even read a paragraph here and there, but its just plain difficult to read as a book.

So that's the bitchin over. Its a good game, but a terrible book for the referee.

Thursday, September 15, 2022

Dungeon Traps, do they make sense?

In my time of playing OSR type games, and of course the original "Dragons & Dungeons" I think I must have read a thousand adventures. Its been starting to grind my gears a bit when I come across traps that make no sense.

For instance in my recent Basic Fantasy/Scarlet Heroes solo games I'm come across a trap that makes sense and one that didn't.

The first trap, the one that made sense was a pit trap that guarded the entrance to the dungeon. It made complete sense because if you knew there was a safe ledge on one side you could scoot past the trap. That makes sense because then the dungeon owner could go outside, and leave the dungeon protected, rather like having a key to a door. Furthermore the trap had an attached and hidden lever that could make the trap safe. Thus the dungeon owners could make it safe and transport goods on pony-back straight in over the sole entrance to the dungeon.

A similar but senseless trap was another pit trap that fully blocked the only entrance to a section of the dungeon. There was no secret side passage, nor was there any way to make it safe or reset it. That makes no sense. I mean, had the dungeon owner locked themselves in, or locked themselves out? 

Why would you lock yourself out of a dungeon? Are you a recovering alcoholic and put all the dwarf-beer on the other side? I suppose you might have found a nasty cthulhu-resurrection device and are trying to stop anyone finding it...but even then you'd be better off burying in rather than building a disguised pit.

Why would you lock yourself in? Are you entombing yourself? Beats me.

Dungeon traps need to make sense. Like the first example above they need to be resettable, re-useable, or bypass-able. Maintaining the "sense" of them makes the traps feel real to the players. Without it you run the risk of out-of-character moments while players try to work out what the heck its all about.

One other nonsense I can do without, is traps in the middle of a dungeon for no reason at all. There needs to be a reason for the trap, otherwise you might as well just randomly kill the characters without rhyme or reason. 

Please if you are including traps in your dungeon, spend some time thinking about how the denizens of the dungeon move around the trap, and why the heck it was there.

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Solo session, Shepherds of Pineford

Today I continue my solo campaign using the Scarlet Heroes rules blended with Basic Fantasy. Today we start "Shepherds of Pineford", an adventure for Basic Fantasy.

***

 Nerin, Wizard, and Lufar and drinking in the town tavern when a boy comes in and starts handing around flyers. Lufar is attracted to anything written takes one from the boy.

"Its says they are seeking swordsmen to rid Pineford of a beast. Something is killing sheep and a priest."

"A blessing then," Wizard puts down his flagon, "to be rid of a troublesome priest."

Nerin hurumphs his response into his beer. Lufar reads on. "There is a reward offered to any that rid them of the beast."

"How far is Pineford?"

Lufar ponders for a moment. "A morning's walk I should say."

Nerin stands. "Lufar make up our packs."

Wizard is incredulous. "For a priest Nerin?"

"For the reward."

***

Entering Pineford from the east, they find its a mixed population of humans and halflings forming a farming community, the road is lined with small dwellings and walled fields. They soon come to the "Shepherds Hall", the largest building in the village, and make their way inside. They're greeted by a collection of elders who offer a reward of 150gp for the destruction of the threat to the village. They also offer food and board for the duration.

When Wizard asks where the enemy is, they shrug their shoulders. The leader lays it all out. "It seems to come at twilight to kill the sheep, at least, its shortly after that we find the animals."

"So we watch the animals at night. I presume you've set watch yourselves. What did you see."


"Nothing." The other elders nod. "The animals were found dead, ripped apart, the blood gone."

That night Erin and Wizard organised a patrolling watch of five villagers. The patrol would rove around the village and stock fields, while Erin and Wizard stand watch in Pinefords one and only inn.

The night passes the patrol do not see anything, but in the morning another sheep is dead. Our two heroes wander over to the site of the attack, made obviously by the bloody remains of a fleece. Wizard studies the ground and sees a bloody trail leading into the woods.

"It comes from the forest."

"Can you track it?" Nerin readies his spear.

"Yes."

The two heroes set off into the wood following the trail. After two hours they find ground soaked with blood, and a large writhing spiked plant sitting in the center over the body of a sheep!

"We have it!" Wizard smiles.

"Put it to sleep."

"It's a plant Nerin, it does not sleep."

Nerin grunts and drops his pack extracting a flask of oil. "I'll burn it." He tosses the oil towards the spiked vine. The flask explodes into flame behind the vine. It clearly feels the heat and starts moving slowly away from the flames.

Nerin pulls out his second and final flask, and lobs that at the plant, this time it engulfs the spiked plant, which starts wickedly throwing out lengths of spiked tendrils lashing at anything within reach, Nerin and wizard keep back.

The flames burn for quite some time but when the last lick of orange light snuffs out the vine continues to move, now dragging itself towards the heroes. The back up keep their distance.

Wizard starts shooting arrows into the largest vines, many arrows miss, but those that hit, cause it to bleed red sap. He down to his last couple before the things stops moving.

While Wizard rests, Nerin builds a fire over the remains and burns the thing to ashes. Before the fire dies completely back, they head back to the village and collect the reward.

Once they get home Nerin notes the room is well kept, apart from a small table being covered in papers, clearly Lufar has been doing some of his own research. Lufar's eyes light up when Nerin hands him his 12gp share.

Notes: There is more to this adventure another whole location, apparently the evil vine came from this evil location, but there is nothing in the scenario that directs you there, so nothing drew my PCs that way. I'll likely visit that site as part of another adventure.

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

REDD Judge

Back in August I released a new RPG over on Big Geek Emporium. The game evolved out of a requirement for a certain style of play. I wanted a game that I could referee at any time with any players who turned up.

Obviously a campaign game with an ongoing story was not going to suit, I needed a story, or stories that would be simple to grasp so the new player could jump right in, and of course jump right out when the kids wake up or whatever. That was the real problem. Sure someone might not turn up to the session, and we've all dealt with that, but I was thinking of running a two hour session where one player might be there throughout but other players would drop in and out at random.

Further, I wanted the game to be open to strangers I haven't played with before. That meant there might be new players, people who've not role played before. So that meant the system needed to be really simple too. Thus 5e, CoC, and FATE like systems were waaay too big for anyone to get their head around quickly enough.

I started with the genre, asking myself how can I have players dropping in and out? A dungeon delve didn't really make sense, how would PCs pop in and out while underground? Even overground a party with PCs yoyoing in and out didn't make a lot of sense. In the end I remembered running game in the world of Judge Dredd using FATE a few years back. I know Judges are always coming and going, handing work off to other judges, dropping in to assist and so on. That settled my theme. Sadly FATE was too heavy a system, and the Mongoose version of Judge Dredd was likewise too burdensome for newbies or people in a hurry, 

Thus was born my game "REDD Judge". The background similar to Judge Dredd but set long before Dredd himself, before Lawgivers, Lawmasters, Stumm grenades, and block wars. But similar enough to Dredd, and similar enough to modern cop-dramas on TV to be approachable to pretty much everyone.

The system used in the game is entirely 1D6 based, which made it about as approachable as any game could be. The skills sets available are limited and deliberately vague, and players just choose the four they like the sound of. So players can be given a character sheet throw together a Judge in a minute, and then that PC rides into the scene being played. If the player has to leave, HQ calls their PC over the radio and diverts them to another job. Thus players can come and go without destroying the fiction.

They say necessity is the mother of invention, well if so, its also the mother of REDD Judge.


Monday, September 12, 2022

That's Lucky, that is.

Level one characters are squishy as milk, and maybe that's what you want, especially if you're running a filter. But what can you do if you don't want to your characters to be so squishy that a single hit from a dagger will kill them? Well I've a couple of ideas.

Fate points like in Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay, were/are a non-renewable and limited resource that you can spend to get your character out of trouble. Each one of these points should be narratively powerful, able to reverse a killing blow or allow an escape from a trap. These are precious life-saving points and you only start with 1-4 of them and you never get any more.


How about some "Luck" points like in Mekton, where you have a luck stat. Each session you can spend your luck points to increase the result of rolls. At the beginning of the next session the points refresh. This doesn't exactly save the characters life but would certainly help them take down opponents, and climb walls. How many luck points does your character get per session? How about having a new Luck stat or starting with a pool of 6 modded by the characters WIS mod?

Another option is Patsy-Points, these work like the Fate points I mentioned above, but rather than starting with them you earn a Patsy-Point by your character dying. Each time you lose a character you get a Patsy Point. If you lose a second character, you start your next character with 2 Patsy-Points, and so on. It kind of mediates your awfulness as a player, LOL.

Are the points systems described above very OSR.... mechanically at least , OSR is all about the unforgiving grittiness, but they do have their place. Perhaps if you are bringing in new players you can soften the blow, or perhaps if playing with kids. Have a little think about before you start your next campaign, and work out if these or a similar mechanism might be worth a go.


Sunday, September 11, 2022

Nerin and Wizard between missions

 This is an update on my current solo Scarlet Heroes campaign. I have two characters , Nerin and an unnamed Wizard (unnamed because its only level 1 and not worth the effort of getting a name), have bee through a dungeon and brought back some hundreds of gold coins. It occurred to me that if want to take these two out on another adventure, they can be carrying around all these hundreds of coins. If they go into the dungeon carrying them that'll reduce how much they carry out, so less loot!

What do they do with the coins while they go adventuring? They could just find a lonely spot and bury them, but that's hardly secure. So I decided they needed a base of some sort. The two characters only had a couple of hundred gp each so buying a castle was out of their reach. In the end I opted to rent a room for a couple of weeks and pick up a lockable chest. 

But who looks after the chest while they are away? So then I recruited a retainer, dropping this new guy 10 gp a week until we get some booty at which point he'll get a promise of 15% of Nerin's future hauls. This new recruit  also got outfitted with Hand axe, chin armour, shield, short bow and arrows. As Nerin is level 2 that means his retainer is half his level and therefore is promoted above "Normal Man" to level 1.

Considering that I don't name level 1 characters as they are so disposable, BUT I'm going to name this retainer. I'm doing this as I don't plan to take him on any missions. His job, for now, is just to look after the heroes gear, and have sandwiches ready when they get back from the job.

I'm now diving into UNE The Universal NPC Emulator to pad out the Retainer. A roll of 49 on the "Modifier" table tells me that the retainer is "scholarly" and for table 2 I roll 88 which is "professor". Serendipity, a jobless teacher! 

Now motivation, on table 3 we get "access" and on table 4 we get "service", so our guy is looking for a position of scholarly servitude. This could be great. I can see him running the "house" and using Wizard's library for research. Sure I've given him weapons, but this weedy guy's strength is brain work not swords. I like it. Table 8 Focus, and I roll 60 which is "antagonist", but you know what, if I nudge the dice to 61 it becomes "knowledge" which is much better for how I see this going.

A quick dive into an online name generator and I've named this guy "Lufar Hollie"

Name: Lufar Hollie

Focus: Knowledge

Motivation: Access Service

Modifier: Scholarly Professor

So there's our brand new retainer. 


Saturday, September 10, 2022

Empty Rooms in Dungeons

If you've been reading this blog you know my recent Scarlet Heroes games have seen me taking my two heroes through the Beneath Brymassen scenario from Basic Fantasy's  "Adventure Anthology 1".  As I was going through the dungeon I ran into a couple of effectively empty rooms. They weren't completely empty there was some description, but they WERE effectively empty.

That bugs me. What is the purpose of an empty room? How does that improve the game? What level of excitement does it add to the player experience.

None, in my view.


I'm not demanding a combat encounter in every room, I don't necessarily want my games to turn in combat slogs, but I do want the room to exist for a reason. Now that reason might be to give the players a place to rest up, but even then if its effectively empty it'll be boring. These "empty" rooms should be able to intrigue the party that wanders in, it should peek their interest. The point being that the room with no encounters should provide something some kind of resource to the PCs, something that makes it meaningful.

The form that the resource takes can vary wildly. It could be as simple as adding to the lore of the dungeon, a manuscript history for instance (Balin's tomb), a water or food source, perhaps only grass that can refresh the torches, but its should add something. Long bending corridors suffer the same problem, long empty hallways offer nothing to the player. Why does it suddenly bend to the left? There should be some rational reason for it. Having such reasons provides verisimilitudes that bring the story to life.

If you can point me at an adventure that dodges the empty room bullet, please post a comment linking to it.

Friday, September 09, 2022

Indulge your Sparkle Troll

Found this character pack going for free on DriveThruRpg, and I'm impressed with the art. It contains 100 full length character portraits in the chibi style and is branded for 5e. Even if you don't use 5e the characters are cool to look at and the stats appear entirely compatible with OSR games. At the price of "free" you can hardly go wrong, even if you only use the pre-generated stats and character details and ignore the art.

Thursday, September 08, 2022

Rules for Fishing in OSR RPGs

Fishing? Really? Yep. There isn't an online video game in the world (well, maybe one)  that doesn't include fishing as an activity. Yet as I started to write this post I went looking for fishing, and "lo" did I find Vinlocks Ultimate Guide to Freshwater Fishing. It is pretty detailed and seems a little heavy to me for normal OSR play.

Why no fishing inmost games? I can see why there wouldn't be rules, fishing after all is boring as heck. Also it gives the PCs a free way to feed themselves. Some designers might want to force PCs to buy food and use that mechanism to strip the players of gold pieces.

Personally, I think its just because fishing is boring. None the less it might be important at some point for the players to keep their characters alive! I'm presenting here some rules for you that should remove the "boring" from the act of fishing and resolve the action with the "excitement" of an exploding die. So I'm going to assume here that we are talking about survival fishing and with that assumption we are not including the use of fishing nets, spears, or traps, but rather a rod and pole of survival manufacture, or a pre-purchased rod.

Fishing Rod: A two part rod that can be fitted together to create a longer rod. A number of strands of twine-like fishing line and a number of metal/bone hooks. Costing 5gp

Manufacturing a crude-rod, line, and hook while in the wild (assuming you have at least a knife) takes at least three hours and produces a crude rod, line and hook that can only be used once.

The act of fishing takes at least an hour. 

Roll 1D6, 

+1 for having a Fishing Rod (not Crude-rod)

+1 when fishing in moving river, or a lake of 1 acre or more in size.

On a 6+ You get enough fish to feed one character for one day. 

If the die rolls a natural 6, it explodes, and continues to explode on further 6s. Each additional die rolled (regardless of result) grants enough fish for another character, and costs an additional 15 minutes. Mods do not apply to exploding die rolls.

Example: Jake has a purchased fishing rod (+1) and is fishing a moving river (+1). He sits beside the river to fish for an hour (rolls 6, +2 mods = 8) . He has enough fish to eat for a day. The 6 on the die means he gets to roll a second die (rolls a 4, no mods apply). The second die does not explode again as he didn't roll a 6, however just  rolling a second die means he gains enough fish for a second character, and this took 1 hour 15 minutes.


Wednesday, September 07, 2022

RPG idea, Joker minions

I came up with this idea while trying to fall asleep. I'm not sure if it kept me awake or if I was filling time until I could relax enough to sleep. Anyway, the big idea is that you play as a minion of the DC character The Joker. Not playing the big guy himself but rather playing one of the little people that makes his plan possible.

I see the PCs as something slightly above completely disposable. You'll play the characters that offer skills or abilities that the funny guy wants and can use. So he'll be abusive, mean, and ungrateful to them but wont kill them out of hand... hopefully. In fact the "will he kill you" question could be a mechanic of the game.

So as his minions, you're the one that's got to get the bombs on the other boat, piling the money into a nice burnable pyramid. Maybe you never even follow the big guy onto a heist, those guys are the disposable ones.

I don't see your PCs as able to take on big names, the Batman would shrug them off, the Joker likewise would shrug off any aggression from the PCs. That's not to say the PCs cant do anything, they are completely capable of defeating civilians and cops, they are thug-like henchmen that get things done.

I've no idea what system would work best for this idea, or if it even needs its own system. If you know if this idea's been done, or if you know what system might suit this idea best, please post a comment below. 

Tuesday, September 06, 2022

That Little Thing in RPGs

Maybe you've come across this, little thing. You've read through a new RPG loved every line, and then come to use it. You crack open the book and sit down to create characters, vehicles, homesteads, whatever, and then you find THE little thing.

In Scarlet Heroes the little thing I found was just the movement speed of Player Characters. I'd played two or three sessions when I wanted to work out if my halfling guy could outrun a hobgoblin.  I went back to the book, and well, I couldn't find the speed of a PC. Surely I was just missing it. I nipped online tried to DuckIt and came up without a straight answer. A few gallant attempts were made in posts referencing various spells and comparisons that could be found in the rules, but in the end it just wasn't laid out in the book in plain language.

In Traveller version 4 a.k.a. T4 there is a little thing. Having only had the 3LBBs version previously I was so delighted to get my hands on T4. When it came through the door I literally "whooped" with joy. I took it to work and read it at lunchtime I was so glad. It looked great, the art was nice, the new (to me) skill check system was good I liked that too. I knocked up a few practice characters to get the hang of it, then wanted to put together a ship to place these characters on.

[If this were audio, this is the bit where you'd hear the record scratch sound effect]

Only I couldn't build a ship. THE little thing here was the missing drive table in the ship building section. Literally an entire table needed to carry out a core action of the rules was missing. When I convinced myself I wasn't missing something I turned to DuckDuckGo, and low and behold there was official errata giving me the missing data. I was so disappointed.  Fortunately this "little" oversight was not repeated in Mongoose Traveller, or indeed in Cepheus Engine, and I still had the original Traveller to fall back on.

Another "little thing" I came across was with MERP. I've played a lot of MERP and simply ignored this little thing as it didn't get in the way, in fact it was kind of the opposite of the problems mentioned above. There was an additional spell-casting table printed right in there but no rules discussion of what the table was for or how to use it. Odd, and entirely possible that I've been playing Spell Casters completely wrong in MERP for years.



Monday, September 05, 2022

Short Sessions are Good Sessions

We were all young once, and we had free time, so much in fact that we could spend entire days playing roleplaying games. But no more. Mortgages needs to be paid, spouses want attention, children needs parenting. So we adults all have much less time to spend playing games.

But this is a good thing, and here's why! (<== What great headline.)

I remember days long games of the classics, MERP, D&D, Runequest, Traveller, Call of Cthulhu (in which we did some dungeon crawls), Spacemaster, and these games lasted the entire day. Yet... the more I think back, those days were actually long drawn out affairs. I remember them included trips to the shops for snacks, or even pizza. I remember taking breaks to watch films (on VHS!), and even the odd game on Nintendo. Therefore when I probe a little deeper, they were great fun times, but they were more "themed" around roleplaying rather than doing the actual roleplaying.

Fast forward to today, my last year long campaign was played in strict two hour sessions. My IP blast of games using FATE  to play in the Dune, Judge Dredd, and Tron universes were likewise only 2 hour sessions. When I joined a group playing Monster Hunters, they were running two hour sessions.

In short the two hour time frame is much easier for a grown ass adult to carve out and reserve for play, and the two hour sessions are packed full. I've never played a two hour game where it was session-zeroed, that sh*t would take the entire session. No, instead players were given pre-gens, rolled them up before hand, or we were playing games where characters are created through play. The point here being that no one playing wanted to "waste" time on the preliminaries.

A little note on using pregens here. When I provide pregens, they are a place holder, and if the game goes beyond one session, the player can come back to the second session with their own new character and just drop it in to replace the pregen.

With only two hours to play, the scenarios have no filler-scenes, no slow initial pacing to ease players in, the time constraint means that you drop the characters into the middle of the scenario and game just goes. There's no roleplaying of "the boring bits", the journeys between locations are reduced to "cut to the next scene". Combats can not be long drawn out affairs, with staid and reserved counting squares on the board and moving slowly, it needs to move at pace. The end result is that its a literally action packed session that everyone gets the most out of.

If you haven't tried strict short sessions, I urge you to try it. If you are still able to play for a day, try and organise your day into a series of different 2 hour games. It could be great experience, almost like a con.

There are games out there that are designed for short sessions, one of which you might want to look at is called Challenge Dungeon.


Sunday, September 04, 2022

Sparkle Trolls

"I don't know how to define it, but I know it when I see it" ~  Justice Potter Stewart

I'm almost definite that Stewart wasn't thinking of Sparkle Trolls when he made that statement, but it does kind of some up the situation. So what is a Sparkle Troll. Well I know it refers to tabletop RPG players and that they tend to be the latest generation of 5e players.

I think the term is derived from the idea of "sparkling vampires". When the glitter vampire hit TV screens it was met with derision from "real" vampire fans who picked on the sparkling aspect as their tag. In the same way, new players embracing the weird or furry character races in D&D are getting tagged as Sparkle Trolls.

But there's more to it. This term's non specific nature means that books and material such as the recent "Radiant Citadel" can be termed as "Sparkle Trolls", meaning as-or-of  Sparkle Trolls. This brand of Trollism therefore encompasses worlds, adventures, and monsters designed to appeal to the new players.

Sparkle Trollism also covers those that like to play without fear of character death, in adventures where the ultimate power is "friendship", and orcs just aint evil. Its a new generation that appear to be playing the weak-sauce version of D&D rather than games where you might lose three characters in the first half hour. Although focused around 5e, not everything 5e is encompassed by Sparkle Trollism, there is hope (LOL).

So that brings me to the mock-up card from a game that doesn't exist, included in this post. Poor old Shawn had no idea I'd abuse him by putting in this thing. But the card, I guess, represents a battle between the old guard OSR and the "invasion" of Sparkle Trolls into the hobby.

Friday, September 02, 2022

Pocketmod RPGs - Weird West

A good few years ago I was listening to the "Feat the Boot" podcast when they interviewed the author of "Weird West" which was a pocketmod PDF. I'd never heard of "pocketmod" so grabbed a copy of Weird West and investigated.

It turns out a "pocketmod" is not a type of RPG but is the name given to a booklet made from a single sheet of paper. Its pretty neat. Fold the paper in a certain way, make one short cut with scissors and you have an 8 page booklet that can fit in your top pocket.

Which leads us to a "Pocketmod PDF". This is a standard pocketmod BUT some with its 8 pages filled with the rules of an RPG. That's the core of it, a short RPG but in a tiny little form factor. Its cute! It also shows you that the core of a game can be a tiny thing and that the 400 page games are waaaay more than is really needed.

This format is also so small and cheap to print (a single side of A4/Legal), that you can print out a copy of the rules for everyone at the table. Of course you can pack it to take on holiday too if you want, or smuggle one into a prison between the sheets of a toilette paper roll!

I was so enamoured by the concept of the pocketmod RPG that I've gone on to write a few myself. I've also produced some tools for game masters in the format, as having such a small format save on printing out A$ manuals to carry around.

If you want to try it yourself, you start needing something that allows you to save to PDF. For instance Microsoft Word, or Open Office's Writer. Then write your 8 page RPG and save into PDF. Trawl the web and download the "PDF to Pocketmod" software and run your PDF through it. 


Prices of PDF

Oh my, I am shocked at the prices I see on some PDFs from DriveThruRPG. Not pleasantly surprised.

I know this is a personal thing born of a lifetime of never having spare cash but I am often appalled when I see the prices of some PDFs. Appalled for my wallet, that is. The worst part of it, is that it seems to always be the RPGs I want that are priced like this.

That's market forces I guess, those publishing these games know I want what they've got. Yet I feel that this is more than just that my inner Scrooge, I feel its a value for money thing too!

£25 for an Rpg PDF (such as the Traveller High Guard book from Mongoose) seems way too much. In fact I baulk at a purchase for a PDF if it goes over £8.99 that's the limit that my Scrooge wants to impose. I have no real idea why that's the number, it just is.

I understand the increased costs of physical media, but I just can't mentally  agree to the increased prices for a digital product that has no ongoing overhead (speaking as someone who sells digital goods). Sure I know art, editing, layout all costs. I know there's a big cost to be recovered from creating a big flashy game, even if its only in PDF. But that IS a one time cost that will get covered by ongoing sales over time.

So to sum up my argument: Whaaaaaa its not fair, I don't got that kinda money. Wahhaaaaaaa!


Thursday, September 01, 2022

Big Geek Emporium launches

Its been a while coming but the Big Geek Emporium web site has launched. 

But "What is it?" you cry! 

Its a new online site for selling RPG related products. 

Its early days, at the time of writing (16th Aug) there are only 29 products for sale. I expect more products to be added as people find out about it. From such small beginnings grow great big monsters, and I'm really hoping that this site takes off.

Will it explode into market dominance? I doubt it. I think BGE has a long slow growth path ahead of it. 

I'm going to be throwing a few products up there over the coming months, and I think that's vital for this enterprise to take off. They need a big product base in order to catch passing traffic, and to keep visitors looking through the catalogue. 

Anyway, take a look at the site, bookmark it even, and check back from time to time to see how they are doing, and of course to support the indie developers that are throwing products up there... like me!

Edit: 20th Aug, there are now 45 products, its growing.

Edit 29th Aug, there are now 66 products, yep, growing.