GAMEMASTERING: Style or Evolution?
Kevin Mason identifies four different styles:
- Rules
- Story
- Fun
- Balanced
What if the game is teaching itself to us? We all see these examples floating around, we suggest to new gamemasters to avoid traps and perils, usually from our own experience, but what if that is exactly what we are supposed to do? We learn more from making mistakes than we do from somebody telling us anything . . . at least I do.
My next evolution was one of story-telling. I wrote overly detailed notes and didn't realize that I was removing the players from the scenario. In essence, I was playing the game during prep. The story was great, and my players did enjoy this aspect of the game. Mastering this state is also one of trial and error. Spending 20-40 hours prepping an eight-hour session is a waste of energy. I learned by cutting back and experimenting with levels of story elements until I found one that satisfied the players, but was told not at the prep stage, but during play itself. If the players cannot interact with it, it isn't a game.
We buy modules, and we want a good collection of different styles. Sometimes we run them, sometimes we don't, but they are nice to have. They aren't all that practical though, by their very nature they are self-limiting, which forces the DM to either accept this limitation or start tinkering and molding modules to fit the style of the players, which eventually leads to writing your own material, and then cutting back until you are actually playing the game the way that it was originally designed to be played. At this point, I think that we start another evolution.
We discovered that the rules can either work against us, or for us. We become obsessed with them and say weird stuff like: If you aren't following all the rules to the letter, you aren't playing System X! We keep our story, but we force it to bend to the will of the rules. We become inflexible and this leads to predictability and stagnation. But, we have to know the rules before we can disobey them. This is a natural stage. Going back through the core handbooks and applying everything that we know thus far to the rules and seeing what complies and what doesn't.
We are building upon our knowledge base, and the trick is to find players who will put up with our learning the game until we decide that enough is enough. Once we get tired of looking up rules all the time, being controlled by the system, being interrupted by mechanics that we feel offer nothing to the game, we get a feel for how these specific rules function and can begin improvising our own mechanics quickly, and in a way that complies with the ruleset itself. We have mastered the rules and can once again return to the beginning, applying what we now know into the structure of a fun game that satisfies all elements in a style and is ours. Balanced! We've earned the title Gamemaster, and can now come up with our own designs.
I don't think that any of this is a mistake. Perhaps, just as a player's character advances in level, so does the DM. I remember my mother once asking me what level of DM I am, just wanting to connect with me, but maybe she wasn't all that far off base? Perhaps DM's do have levels, we do evolve, and I bet you that we all evolve the same way. This means that the system itself is teaching us how to play the game as if it were self-aware and completely independent of us. A natural progression that taps into the human mind, and maps it.
There are, no doubt, more evolutions than just the three before we hit the stage of balance, or perhaps we go through a short stage of balance prior to taking the next steps of evolution. Maybe if we can figure out what these specific evolutions are we can better understand how our minds function.
The problem with this line of thinking is that it may make the journey too easy. Are we better DM's because we took this evolution with no outside aid of any kind? We had to fight for each evolution without the knowledge that we were evolving? Or, on the other hand, if we spell it out for new users, can we as a whole benefit by them applying the established evolution faster and beginning evolutions that we will never know?
The time required before fully exploring an evolution is individual, there is no one size fits all. We can spend years on an evolution without achieving any groundbreaking success at it, or cycle through a phase fairly quickly, easily mastering it. Perhaps when we say things, such as, "My style of DMing is Character-driven" we are detailing the personal evolution which we are currently exploring?
Thoughts?
Sunday, April 23, 2017 | Labels: Miscellany, rants | 5 Comments
New AD&D Crossbow Rules (variant)
I like weapons that function differently from one another, it is a total AD&D 2e thing. We can make the rules as complex or as simple as we like. One of the things that bugs me about the system is, as the title says, The Crossbow.
The Crossbow was a terror on the battlefield, and was, at the time, considered to be much like the nuclear bomb is today. It was an unfair advantage. Bowmen had to spend hours honing their craft, it is a weapon of skill, while the crossbow was not. Anybody could pick up a crossbow and use it to kill other men.
What the crossbow lacked in distance, it made up for with accuracy. It's kind of like a shotgun today, you don't need to be a good shot with a shotgun, you just aim the barrel in the general direction of what you don't want to be there anymore, and when it gets close enough, you pull the trigger.
This factor really isn't all that apparent in the AD&D Weapons table. There are multiple ways that we can go about fixing this:
- You can have the weapon always fire against AC 10.
- This weapon was slow to load, but the power behind it was pretty impressive, much better, I feel, than the damage listed in the book. We can alter this, either up the damage die used, or if max dmg is rolled, roll the same die again and add that to the total. The problem, however, with this solution is that the die in question is fairly easy to influence, a d6 would give you much better results than the d4, or you can roll the d8 but have it only give you results of 1-4.
I do think that the damage needs to be altered, I'm not sure why it was set so low. DEX does make it more accurate and more dangerous, but I think that the best solution might be focusing on its ease of use.
- One doesn't need to spend a Prof. point on this weapon, those that do are actually now specialized in that weapon, and anybody can specialize in it at least once, fighters can spend multiple slots specializing in it further.
I also think that the Range might be set a tad too high, I don't see how a heavy crossbow could reach 250 yards and still be able to hit. Maybe it could, I've honestly never shot one, but I am kind of in the camp of cutting those numbers in half. It would remove the hand crossbow from play, but I think that I'd be happier with play-testing this system.
Thoughts?
Monday, April 17, 2017 | Labels: campaign add-ins, combat, Proficiencies, Supplemental | 13 Comments
Dave Arneson's True Genius Is out now
Dave Arneson, the co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons has been a long-standing debate in our circles for a really long time. What, exactly, his involvement is has been difficult to determine; very large egos were injured. There is a lot that we don't know about this figure, but that is now over. Robert Kuntz was there, he's been teasing us about this book for quite some time now, and it was FINALLY released today.
The book itself is a private release, click the picture and it will take you to the website where you can learn more and order your copy. Or click the link below.
https://www.threelinestudio.com/store/dave-arneson-s-true-genius/
Thursday, April 13, 2017 | | 0 Comments
Unlocking the Gygax Code, the game hidden inside of AD&D
FREE-FORM KRIEGSPIEL is the system which the designers took for granted that you knew. All wargaming systems have the same basic rules to function. When variant designers, such as Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson, published their changes they didn't really focus on the basics. Not only did the people who bought these books not want them, but, honestly, wargame players become blind to them. They are just there.
There is actually enough basic wargaming rationale in the AD&D system that it makes it fairly easy to understand the more complex processes of kriegspiel and how to get a game on a tactical level to function, and I recommend that you do! There are principles and theories that can be carried over to the D&D table which will greatly help the DM understand the art of war. Understanding is key to running Free-form Wargame scenarios.
When one thinks about wargamers, there is an image in your head which features men standing around a highly detailed battlefield moving finely painted miniatures, determining combat through highly complex rules; this game exists, but it isn't native to AD&D. Folks have incorporated that game into the system, and it can function! If you want to see how a specific large scale war will affect the world, this probably is your best bet, but it isn't necessary, and there are some serious flaws with it that make it incompatible with the D&D system.
STRICT KRIEGSPIEL
This is the image that comes to mind for most people. Those who have incorporated it into their games had to deal with pounding a square block into a round hole; it is a bad fit, and since it is a bad fit you have to alter the game until it does fit. It can be done, but it is clunky and awkward for one simple reason, the figure representing the player does not follow the same rules as the rest of the units. Elaborate rules have been introduced in an attempt to fix this, but only serve to extend an already long game into something even more tedious.
Another problem is the players themselves. Anyone who is interested in strict kriegspiel can tell you, we are rare breeds. Buying or creating these games, learning the complex rules, modifying them to your own specs, painting figures- this is the easy part. The difficult part is finding opponents.
Just because you build it, doesn't mean that players will come. Your players don't want to learn these new, very specific rules, and even if they did, strict kriegspiel is a long game that they probably don't care about and are not interested in. While not scientific in any way, I estimate that about 1-10 players of tabletop RPGs are even interested in experimenting with this system, those that find it fascinating and discover enjoyment from it, maybe 1-50.
There is also another glaring problem with the strict wargame format, it is a 2 person game. You can break up into teams, and have fun, but this is not D&D. At its heart, strict kriegspiel is nothing but a complex and heavily modified game of chess. While two players can enjoy it, a DM expecting to challenge the entire table to a strategy game is going to get destroyed. This removes the need to simulate the event and makes the act pointless.
Another problem with 4+ players as powerful as D&D characters is that it takes longer to set up the board than it takes for advanced players to destroy the enemy. This was built into the system by the designers on purpose, that purpose being to eliminate the need for strict kriegspiel altogether.
Kriegsspiel was originally invented by the Prussian military, it was not designed to be entertaining, it was designed to run thousands of scenarios which allowed the small German army to resist the overwhelming might of the French; a feat that (I believe) was successful!
The game was also used to train officers, and strict kriegspiel had the same problems with accomplishing this as we D&D players do; the participant has the ability to see the entire battlefield from an unrealistic position, overhead. This position also makes it too easy to study and accurately predict the strategies of your opponent.
To fix this, and make the game more realistic, the referees concealed the board. The participants didn't get to see it, they had to ask questions and command their troops through written messages which the referee would take into the room with the board and they would interpret the commands of the player. Commanding Officers would apply the changes to the board and decide what happens, and then update the player.
This sounds exactly like Dungeons & Dragons, and this is exactly how the game was intended to be played. This style is called Free-form Kriegspiel, and the benefits are obvious; namely that the players don't need to know the rules at all.
via Pinterest |
Free-form Kriegspiel applied to the rules which govern Dungeons & Dragons eliminate the necessity of an actual board completely. Often, the results of a player's commands to his units can be compared to the tactics which were defined by the DM prior to play, and logic will dictate if an entire battle was successful or not.
AD&D's SECRET WEAPON
Advanced players have known for years that you don't need to kill them all, you just need to figure out ways to trigger a morale check as quickly as possible. In this way, a party of 4-6 high-level adventurers can easily defeat small to medium sized armies. Even mid-level PCs can overwhelm entire armies on the field of battle if the players are skilled enough. They don't even need followers or an army to do this.
The Morale system is the key. This is the tool that makes Free-form Kriegspiel function without the need of a board. When we use this tool, even if a battle doesn't go well for the players or we want more involvement from the participants, we can update the players to the situation and use the morale system to quickly determine the actions of NPCs with very little fuss and just a few die rolls. The play doesn't stop because we have to move a bunch of little pieces and determine combat on a tactical level.
Speed and playability are always desired over specifics and realism.
Applying followers and allied soldiers to the game is made practical once we understand the mechanisms in place to govern their actions. Gygax could take the players into the midst of a full-scale battle, and decide how the player's choices interacted with the event taking place around them without ever having to set up a single miniature soldier. The only person who had to understand the inner-workings of these mechanics was the Dungeon Master.
The DM can alter the challenge of a battle and the players level of involvement by using the Morale System, Enemy morale can be high or low, the higher the level of enemy morale, the more actions and involvement will be needed on the part of the player.
The Language of Free-Form Kriegspiel
Now the folks who played in Gygax's campaign and helped him play-test the designs were all avid wargamers, this is where it can come in handy to do some study, just to acquire some common concepts and the vocabulary. The player need not write down his commands as the rules of kriegspiel were applied to soldiers, we are doing this for entertainment. You can give leeway and continue the standard D&D guideline of trying to error in the favor of the PCs, but the more specific and precise the command, the better.
Once the DM has these vocabulary words, the players will pick them up. A Unit, for instance, represents a number of people, “You see a couple of units of cavalry riding in your direction.” is a good description. The players don't know exactly how many men on horseback are approaching, but it is fair to say that it is more than 10. The statement above is enough to start a dialog, the players have time to ask specifics and come to a conclusion as to what course of action would be best depending upon the information that they were able to get before either side enters each other's range of attack. Exactly how much time and information being dictated by the DM, as always.
It is also helpful to study the old rules of CHAINMAIL, you don't necessarily need to use CHAINMAIL during the game, but it will greatly help you determine results without actually having to run them, Free-form Kriegspiel relies heavily upon the laws of averages, for example: if equal numbers of infantry attack an equal number of cavalry, the cavalry are going to win. Both sides may suffer casualties, but the infantry will be routed.
CHAINMAIL even has the mathematical principals behind exactly how many cavalry units may be lost before the infantry are slain. The actual results may vary if the scenario is physically run on a board with dice, but we want to eliminate that step, thus the averages add to playability and speed of the game.
SUMMARY
Once the DM understands the rules and logic of Free-form kriegspiel, many of the strange or obscure rules and mechanics will finally make perfect sense; the hidden wargame is revealed and the genius of the design is exposed. The system becomes neat and tidy and we discover that we were over-complicating things.
Art by Giuseppe Rava |
An unlimited number of NPC actions can be determined with very little work, it enforces the separation between player skill and character skill in a balanced way that truly has to be experienced to be appreciated. CHA matters to this game, it is not a drop stat; an enemy with a high charisma is going to be much more dangerous than a wizard with high intelligence.
This doesn't mean that we can't make complicated tactical battles if we want to, this just means that we have the ability to run them, keeping all of the players involved, and preserving the DM's ability to challenge them. If you need to keep a tactical map secret from the players, do it. If you want to play the CHAINMAIL system or the BATTLESYSTEM rules, you can do that too, but Free-form is what was intended.
Tuesday, April 11, 2017 | Labels: combat, encounters, Mechanic Series, NPC's | 4 Comments
The Complete Bards Handbook: or, What is Class?
Via Medieval Life & Times |
2127 PHBR7 The Complete Bard’s Handbook was released in April of 1992 and was designed by Blake Mobley. I know that a small, but very loud group of people think that Bards, as written in the AD&D system, are the best class ever written in the history of the written word; to those gentle readers, I suggest that you click away as I am not remotely in that camp. Those who continue reading this, you have been warned.
Despite what the title of this post says, I'm not really going to review this specific book. I have never owned it, and am never going to. I had once borrowed seen a copy and the thing is just so counter to everything that I believe that a good product should be that I wouldn't even know where to begin. If you were expecting a grade, I think that you can connect the dots. This title has been used as evidence that by 1992, the life-cycle of AD&D was already over; that statement isn't true, but this is a horrible book in every sense of the word.
I have no idea what TSR was thinking; logically The Complete Race Handbooks should've been completed before scraping the bottom of the barrel, if we have done anything here we have already established that TSR executives had no idea what they were doing.
WHAT IS A BARD?
I don't play bards; I hire them. There have been some awesome bardic characters that have appeared in literature, unfortunately, the AD&D system does not allow you to play them. They just don't fit the mold of what AD&D is about. If I could ask Dave Cook anything, I'd ask him if he included the Bard template to visually show how weak a character who can do everything is, or should be.
The AD&D bard can fight, do some thief skills, and cast spells, the catch is that he isn't very good at any of this. He can't hit, he can't steal, and he can't control his spells. One should never play a bard, and instead focus their attention on specializing in one skill set, only then do you offer anything to the team. As the bard sits, I hire them when we are dealing with mass combat, or using the morale system; THAT is their specialty. That also doesn't make for a very interesting character.
WHAT DOES CLASS MEAN?
Here is the deal, you make a fighter, or a thief, or a wizard: have him learn how to play the harp, you've got a bard. The other Complete Class Handbooks were about taking the templates and skills of a set class and using them to define what a character is, not based upon their chosen class, but upon the identity of the character itself.
Bard isn't the best example, so we'll instead examine the Druid: as it is laid out in the "2nd Edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Player's Handbook". Once you look at the entry, and read the decription, you will notice that this really isn't a class at all! It clearly defines all of the skills that specific character gets per level, as well as listing all of the requirements that must be met beyond just gaining XP to actually level up.
The Druid is a poorly labeled example of what a cleric should be, something very specific to the character that the player is using. Something unique that is only based upon the class system itself.
Now, we look at the Paladin or Ranger and I think that we see the same thing going on. None of the Sub-Classes are true classes, but examples of blending ideas together. This begs the question, are we supposed to be blending?
WHAT IS RACE?
Another example: The Barbarian, this isn't a class either, but a race of people. The template assumes that the Barbarian is a Fighter, but honestly, a barbarian can be a cleric, a thief, a whatever. Barbarian doesn't define his skill set, it defines his background.
Things got really muddied once many of the Original Dungeons & Dragons classes became races, the elf could multi-class now, he could be a Fighter/Thief/Wizard which is all fine and dandy at lower levels of play, but once the other players are fighting dragons, this guy has to hide in shadows because he's been playing 3rd level for the last eight years.
The very concept of Race is strange now, the player who chooses to play a demi-race gains all of these special abilities, but they never improve; the only thing that improves is their skills dictated by class.
There really isn't anything special about them anymore. An Elf used to be able to pick at the beginning of each session if he wants to play as a Fighter or as a Wizard, the Dwarf was a much sturdier fighter than the one that we have now; he's been lost among the other demi-races and in regards to mechanics, there is nothing really all that unique about dwarves anymore.
CLASS AS A JOB DESCRIPTION
Via: Pinterest |
Is class our job? Do the things that we are good at define who we are as characters? I have always just assumed that Fighter or whatever was nothing more than a job. A character that is really good with a specific skill set.
We can choose to play a fighter by the book, but even playing it core to the rules it doesn't really define us as characters, it just defines how our characters progress if we survive. How we define our characters is still up to us. That is what makes the fighter class so solid.
Somewhere along the lines, class attempted to define us. It got really bad with later editions, so bad in fact that the language changed. A player was no longer a Fighter but a Demon Slaying Doom Lord, or what have you, whatever they called themselves it was so precise and well-defined that one must ask if that is even truly the player's character or just some definition that they read in a book.
The idea of Min/Maxing and Powergaming is not a new concept, it happened right away, but to set it at such high levels that you can't even identify the basics anymore implies that something, somewhere, was lost in translation.
How far should we be going to blend classes? Does it change the language when we do it? If we make the connections laid out for us in the Players Handbook, we can use these strict examples of what somebody at some time did to make a character unique to them, and apply it to our games. And, we don't need a supplement or splat book to do it either.
AN EXAMPLE:
One of the things that have always irritated players the most is the Battle Mage, or why can't a wizard pick up a sword. . . Gandolf used a magic sword, I want to too!
Well, lets first identify our Battle Mage as not a wizard at all, but as a fighter. We'll place limits on the mage's spell abilities by stealing the Ranger's spell progression, but instead of cleric spells, he uses wizard spells.
We'll also borrow the XP charts from Paladin/Ranger and apply them to our Battle Mage, and DONE!
If the battle mage wants to cast a spell that requires free movement, he can't be wearing armor; he has to decide if taking it off is worth it or not. We can also stipulate that the only sword a battle mage can use is a magical one, all normal swords interfere with his spells.
The battle mage can't specialize in weapons, but he can become proficient in their use and must use the Wizards Proficiency chart of progression instead of the Fighters.
via pinterest |
You get the point; if we put enough thought into a specific idea, we can tailor it to actually identify what the character is. We just have to figure out which rules to use to keep this character fair for the world which we created it for. A real mage is going to be able to cast more spells, and a real fighter is going to be more dangerous, but the battle mage pays for the privilege of being both.
If we take this logic and apply it to the bard, we see that that is exactly what happened. In order to be an effective character, one must play a bard for a very very long time, even longer than a wizard except that low level wizards, while fragile, don't suck.
If we ignore the bard, and instead set out to make a character that better suits what we want to play; say, Will Scarlet, we can accomplish this goal better by the player and the DM sitting down and designing this character and agreeing on a set of rules and limitations that apply to him as an individual.
Bilbo never considered himself to be a burglar, Conan wasn't just a barbarian, Robin Hood was not a thief, these were just things that other people called them. They were all special cases, and this can transfer over to our game.
If we ignore the bard, and instead set out to make a character that better suits what we want to play; say, Will Scarlet, we can accomplish this goal better by the player and the DM sitting down and designing this character and agreeing on a set of rules and limitations that apply to him as an individual.
Bilbo never considered himself to be a burglar, Conan wasn't just a barbarian, Robin Hood was not a thief, these were just things that other people called them. They were all special cases, and this can transfer over to our game.
THEN YOU HAVE THE BARD'S HANDBOOK
This book, I feel, endorses a lie. It takes a misconception and instead of clarifying it, gives it flesh and blood and perpetuates it. Yes, it has some new things in it, but once again, why are we getting an entire book made for a couple of good ideas? Of course the answer is that TSR wanted money and they made poor Blake Mobley waste his time writing garbage that offers nothing to the hobby itself. This description fits much of the products that are published, good ideas are hard to come by, I get it; but does that really mean that we have to lower our standards in order to feel like we are succeeding? Well, it probably does.
With all of this said, I can perhaps skip reviewing the Complete Sub-Class Handbooks altogether, and I no doubt will. Books like this one are what irritated me at the time, and still give 2e a bad name. People remember the system for garbage and dirty tricks and forget the good stuff, the great ideas that came about in the 90's. We DMs of the period ignored the titles we didn't like, and if we were suckered into buying books like this, most of us left those things where they belong, on the shelf, collecting dust and holding the bookcase down so that it doesn't float around the room.
Medieval Life & Times: Bard
A special thanks to Mormonyoyoman from the Ruins of Murkhill Forum for inspiring this change of direction. If you experience any problems, blame him.
A special thanks to Mormonyoyoman from the Ruins of Murkhill Forum for inspiring this change of direction. If you experience any problems, blame him.
Tuesday, April 04, 2017 | Labels: pc classes, rants, Reviews | 4 Comments
Gothic Earth Session 8: Curse of the Belalp Witch
It always takes so damned long to get
into the game, but once we do we have fun. Normally we play every 4
weeks, but this time it was only 2 weeks. It really didn't change how
much we remember the previous game. I will tell you that I love my
prep style for these last few sessions, it was a ton of prep work,
taking a full four weeks to design, but we are getting a whole lot of
bang for our buck!
Everybody was tired as hell, so I cut
everyone some slack. There was also some concern on their part that
they are getting dazzled again while the witch is getting away. They
had decided to go down the mountain and follow a lead, they had heard
that a reclusive goat herder who lives at the bottom of the mountain
between Naters and Blatten is the custodian of an old medieval church
that isn't used anymore because of it's location (out in the middle
of no where) called The Church of Saint Laurentius.
Due to bad weather, it was a long climb down the mountain, but
eventually they reached the herdsman. He told them that the church
hasn't been used since his father passed away, but loaned them the
keys to help them with their research.
The
Church of Saint Laurentius is an isolated structure located well off
the beaten path out in the wilderness. Opening the door of this
ancient building, they see a very odd sight; instead of a statue of
Jesus or crosses, the symbol dictate snails and features a larger
than life statue of Saint Laurentius, the patron Saint of Librarians;
against his leg rested a wooden rack, in his left hand he held a
glacier, and in his right a mountain; an odd curvy crack went from
his heart up his face and to a snail perched on his head.
This
was definitely a clue; my wife cheated with her smart phone, but it
kind of worked; she discovered that Laurentius was also the patron of
witch hunters. I think that it got the players more excited when they
found out that this was a real Swiss Saint, and they found a picture
of him to look at. Eventually they figured out that the caretaker had
removed all of the valuables from the church in case looters broke
in, among them an old mirror elaborately decorated with the images of
St. Sebaldus, when they hung the mirror up behind the statue, an
oddly plain window perfectly framed the nearby mountain peak.
Now,
the caretaker refused to let them borrow the mirror, as it was
priceless; but he did accompany them and since it was too dark to
travel back through the forest at night, they stayed in the church.
In the morning, as they were preparing to go, and the sun was rising
over the Reiderhorn, the diamond set in the pane of glass focused the
sun into a beam, which reflected of of the mirror and for just a
second, lit up the snail on his head. (Indiana Jones lifted once
again!) They found that St. Laurentius Day was just under a week
away.
Sam
White climbed back up to Blatten and sent a pigeon message up the
mountain for Van Helsing to come down, later he messaged back that he
couldn't, as there was an uproar in Belalp.
They
had a few days, so they did some low mountain investigation. They
were able to secure some real meat, hunting a deer that had wandered
near by, and found the Blatten Lumber camp that was said to had been
torn apart by yeti. The camp was badly damaged, but the mill, that
was the scene of something very large and powerful; entire logs
looked like they had been broken over one's knee, some logs weighing
hundreds of pounds had been thrown high up through the walls and were
lodged there. The scene told them of a giant creature who wanted to
shut this operation down, probably under the orders of somebody who
didn't want the lumberjacks in the area anymore. There was something
here, but they wanted to figure out what the church mystery was
first.
After
a couple of days, they saw the spot on the wall stay longer and
longer, finally they went back to the caretaker who had planned on
bringing the mirror on St. Laurentius Day, and talked him into
letting them borrow the mirror early (we've got some smooth talking
characters that know that CHA isn't a drop stat), on the long walk
through the woods, they were ambushed by giant men, at least 20 of
them! Hiding in the dense forest and hurling rocks; we have a
character whose player has a hard time making it to games, while
everyone else is at least 7th
level, he is only 2nd,
and as the giant men had gained a surprise, they tagged him, dropping
him down to low hp before the battle could even start! Sam, the
gunfighter, gave him the mirror and Charlotte cast Sanctuary
on him. I determine targets randomly, and my dice really hated that
2nd
level thief and wanted him dead! Luckily for him, the monsters sucked
at making their Saving Throws.
On a technical note, I had wished that I had laid down the play mat and used miniatures, but we didn't; however for enemies I had so many to track I just gave them 4 hits and dead, drawing circles for each one and dividing each circle into fourths; instead of rolling damage, the party was shooting wildly into the woods, I had them just tell me when they hit or not, if they rolled 20's then I took off 2 HD but mostly it was just 1 HD per hit. It kept the combat fast and much easier to track considering the number of enemies. A combat scene which normally would had been boring because I took to long, could quickly be played out without losing anything; in fact it was probably easier on the monsters as guns dish out 2d6+1 damage, they were naturally 5HD creatures. For determining the monster targets, I throw a d10, I had 1-6 represent players, 4-10 meant that the creatures missed and targeted the giant man across from them.
It
was pretty exciting as I was nailing the players and whittling them
down, the 2nd
level thief tried to escape, but a giant man caught him, and made his
saving throw; he attempted to grab the little man, but failed, and
gave a great target for the other players to shoot at. At the end of
the combat, the party was badly beaten, Charlotte healed the worst
off of the lot; examining the bodies of the enemy, they identified
them as giant wild men, they had no money and looked like they have
lived rough their whole lives. They deduced that some of these guys
had been behind the destruction of the Blatten lumber operation.
They
made it back to the church, locked themselves in; fearing that the
witch now knew that they were up to something and was trying to stop
them, somehow they had managed to save the mirror. They took it easy
that day, and in the morning, they had just enough time to draw the
cryptic drawings that were projected onto the floor by the sunlit
snail, and wrote down a weird written phrase in an unknown language,
however the name Belalp was clearly being refereed to.
That
task done, they made their way back up into the mountains, to the
village of Belalp satisfied that they had made some sort of headway,
they planed on showing the drawing to Van Helsing, believing the
language to be Latin, which he can read, however once they get into
town they see that a large wooden pyre has been constructed in the
village green. They find everybody all in an uproar, Van Helsing
could care less about their discovery, he is trying to talk sense
into a mob who is intent on dragging the old woman being held in the
jail to the village green and burning her.
A lot
has happened while the party was away, the Belalp Sheriff lay in a
coma, the victim of witchcraft, a totem exactly fitting the
description of the one that had been used against one of the party
members last game had been used on him. The thief was able to talk
the mod down, and give them a couple of days to either clear the
woman's name or prove that she is in fact the Belalp witch. They
immediately start investigating.
Sam
and David head up into the mountains to try and find some mountain
carrots which David knows can counter the poison and the spell of the
totem doll, meanwhile the rest of the party began the investigation.
Talking their way into the jailhouse, passed the armed officers who
have the old woman in protective custody, the part is allowed access
to the evidence and Van Helsing was finally able to get a good look
at one of the totem dolls, and was able to determine how it worked,
it was some sort of contact poison, the doll contained an article of
the sheriff's clothing and he was charmed into touching it. Van
Helsing fearing for the safety of the Relic of Sebaldus and quickly
returned to their rented cabin.
The
rest of the party went to the Sheriff's house to check on him; they
startle a woman who instantly tries to escape, but they won't let
that happen. Antonia a Prussian officer and master spy has assumed
responsibility for this investigation, she orders Bart (the 2nd
lvl thief) to see what the woman was doing, and he finds a weird
drawing under the sheriff's pillow. Charlotte is able to determine
that this is a weak protection from evil spell, and identifies the
woman as a faith healer, and a spiritualist. The suspect admits to
using magic, but for good; the party warns her against it, especially
while the villagers are on a witch hunting kick, and they send her on
her way.
Eventually
the two fighters come back down the mountain, it was hard finding the
herbs that they needed but they got it done. David Marshal brewed up
the bitter mountain carrot broth and administered it to the sheriff,
the man woke up, and while he would be forced to rest for the next
couple of days, he should be fine.
Sheriff
Hoffer is in no shape to do his job, he tries to get up instantly
verifying that the old woman being held is just a crazy old lady.
Hoffer says that there is no such thing as witchcraft, he's just
allergic to those damned Alpine skinks, he must had touched one
really good for this to happen.
Their
investigation has uncovered some unsettling facts:
- All of the wives take turns helping the bachelor sheriff with his housekeeping, so all the women had access to him.
- The totem that had been used on the party member Vanessa Smith, required someone who had access to her things, the only suspect being Nela Saner who offered herself to be their housekeeper right away.
- Ivan Hoffer also had access to Vanessa's property as he was sleeping in the tent with them at the time of the attack.
- Lynn Tuller, the woman who was caught administering Sheriff Hoffer and practicing folk magic is not above suspicion either. Van Helsing says that she is no doubt a practitioner of spiritualism, a relatively new pseudo-religion that is in vogue right now, and they rarely practice alone.
- Corinne Meyer, a none-native transplant and author who moved up here for the tranquility. She lives alone in the woods and has written a book on the Belalp witch.
- Agatha Gammenthaler, the old woman kept in protective custody to protect her from allegations of witchcraft.
- Van Helsing suggested that Charlotte refrain from using her skill set, else she becomes a prime target of the current local rage, and says that he believes that they aren't looking for a human witch, but fears that they are in fact dealing with the ancient undead. He says that the only way that they will be able to identify it, is by the aura of fear that all powerful undead share.
That
is where we left off, and that is where we will begin again in four
weeks.
Sunday, April 02, 2017 | Labels: combat, Ripper's Gaming Sessions | 0 Comments
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