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  • Build Water Tanks to Support Yourself in Resafa, Then Join the League of Six Once Again

    by W. Eric Martin

    • Czech publisher Delicious Games has announced its SPIEL Essen 24 release: Resafa, a 1-4 player game from designer Vladimír Suchý, who co-owns the company with his wife Kateřina.

    Non-final cover
    Here's an overview of the game:
    The game Resafa takes place during the 3rd century AD in the area of today's Middle East. Resafa now lies in ruins in modern-day Syria, but at this time it was a fortified desert outpost that flourished as a stop along important caravan routes.

    In the game, players represent merchants who travel on business trips and buy and sell goods in the various cities in the region. Resafa had no local sources of water, so it depended heavily on large cisterns to collect the spring and winter rainwater to make the area habitable. Players build water tanks and canals to distribute that water where it is needed. In the cities, they build workshops to help their businesses grow, which will allow them to collect resources and camels. They also construct gardens between the businesses, generating more resources and also victory points.

    Prototype, with the player boards visible at top and bottom
    The game is played over six rounds. In each round, a player takes only three actions, playing action cards in this tight and exciting game.

    Delicious Games notes that the setting "was inspired by a visit to the city more than twenty years ago during Vladimír and Katka's first holiday together".

    • In 2023, Czech publisher Dino Toys published an original Suchý design, the 1-2 player game Aldebaran Duel, and for 2024 it will release League of Six: Complete Edition, a new version of Suchý's first design, which Czech Games Edition released in 2007.

    Here's the description for League of Six on BGG's game listing, with a note that it was "Taken from BoardgameNews.com" — hey, that's me from seventeen years ago! As with Suchý, I can put my past efforts to work once again:
    The year is 1430, a time of unrest and upheaval in the whole of Europe. Nearly 100 years have passed since the founding of the League of Six – a group of wealthy Lusatian towns that banded together to defend their commercial interests and preserve stability and order in the region.

    You have been sent to this embattled land in the role of tax collector. As a young, ambitious aristocrat, you hope to stand out so that you will be given a position in the court of Sigismund.

    The tax collector who brings in the most revenue for the king, while simultaneously gaining the support of the estates, has the best chance of finding himself by the side of King Sigismund.

    The game consists of six turns representing six years. Each player takes the role of a tax collector visiting one of the six cities. The goods collected are placed in the royal stores or estate stores, thus giving the players influence in the court of King Sigismund. The player who gains the most influence wins.


    Suchý has adjusted the gameplay of League of Six to "make it more player-friendly", and the game now accommodates up to six players instead of maxing out at five. The League of Six: Loyal Retinue expansion is included in this new edition, as well as a new expansion that introduces the option to play with any number of automated opponents, thereby allowing for a two-player game as well. As you might expect, Dino Toys has updated the game's graphics.

    League of Six: Complete Edition will also be available at SPIEL Essen 24.

    The original releases Read more »
  • Designer Diary: Maps of Misterra, or Only Believe What You Map

    by Timothée Decroix

    This designer diary was co-written by the three authors — Mathieu Bossu, Thomas Cariate, and Timothée Decroix — and translated from French by Nathan Morse. Originally published in French on TricTrac.

    Only Believe What You See Map...

    Writing a designer diary is a singular exercise. It's not that easy to recall how events unfolded and to present simply the questions and decisions that led to the published game. However, we will try to take you on a journey with us through the creative process for our game Maps of Misterra, which was released in January 2024 by Sit Down! and which is also playable on Board Game Arena.

    Adjust your backpack, and let's go!

    Before Setting Out

    The project was born out of a simple desire to create a game together. Mathieu and Thomas were already creating prototypes with their four hands. We met regularly with Timothée on social networks and at the Cannes Festival of Games, particularly during the famous "nights off", that is, evenings when game designers can play their prototypes with the public. We were really in a flow when one of the three of us ended up saying the sentence that started it all: "We should make a game together." This was at Cannes in February 2021.

    Cannes Festival of Games 2023: After two years of pandemic and entirely remote game development, our heroes — from left, Thomas, Timothée, and Mathieu — finally meet again, where it all began (Image: Clélie)
    We needed to find somewhere to start this venture, and as it turns out, all three of us share a fancy for maps. Such fascinating objects, aren't they? Maps are often magnificent, placing an entire world in your field of view. A map promises extraordinary voyages; it's a two-dimensional story box, which looks like it was designed for a board game. True to the theme, it's decided: The game will be about cartography.

    Scouting the Land

    Cartography, however, is already well represented in board games. Often the map mostly provides support for exploration. In the rarest of games, in which players actually draw a map, they seem to do so with complete freedom, with no need to represent any existing reality. They arguably create a world rather than a map.

    And this was the first hurdle we encountered. The first few versions of Maps of Misterra revolved around successive expeditions to discover a new world. In practice, this meant each player moved their expedition on a common board that was gradually constructed from tiles. It was an interesting way to re-transcribe the great scientific and cartographical expeditions of the 17th and 18th centuries — but the result was an exploration game, not a game dedicated to cartography.

    All Over the Map

    Very quickly, we sought to integrate aspects of cartography into the game mechanisms. One of the fascinating parts of this discipline? Cartographical errors! Whether they arise from the insurmountable imprecision of such an exercise or are motivated by...political interests.

    William Blaeu's 1635 map pinpoints El Dorado in the Guiana Plateau, near a legendary "Lake Parime", inspired by Gaspar de Carvajal (public domain) — but what is this immense lake in the middle of the Amazon that we find on most 17th century maps? Read its story here (article in French; sources in English)
    We try to preserve this aspect of cartography by allowing players to cover tiles to represent the progressive evolution of knowledge of both the terrain and of the existence of cartographical errors. But this isn't enough. The cartographical theme seems merely a pretext in an exploration game. This version is stagnating, and we are not satisfied with the direction we've taken.

    Observation is required. To portray mapping, we need two spaces: a territory (the real one) and its depiction (the map). In Maps of Misterra, we will thus have a central board on which the terrain of the island materializes, and a parchment board on which we draw a map of the island.

    This new dimension seems original and innovative enough to us to continue experimenting. We're starting from scratch — or nearly so — but with a stronger concept!

    The Truth Is Out There

    With each player playing a cartographer, each will need their own parchment board on which they sketch their own map of the island during the game. The centerpiece is a common board on which the terrain of the island — or more precisely, our common understanding of it — is revealed as our expeditions explore it.

    Photograph of the prototype, with the island board in the middle and the parchment boards where each player draws their own map
    In practice, on your own map, you do whatever you want. The players have domino cards at their disposal that depict two terrain spaces, which they place however they wish on their parchment board, without necessarily having to respect reality. Not all cartographers are competent, and few are honest. You can even superimpose these sketch cards atop each other to revise a previous decision. Seriously, who can say that they've never confused a lagoon with a jungle?

    The sketch cards to "draw" your own map on your parchment board, two spaces at a time
    When a location has been mapped, we then adjust our common knowledge of the island, showing the newly mapped terrain on the central board.

    The parchment board is the player's domain. No one can tell you what to "draw". On the central board, however, it's a different story. There you will have to interact and contend with others.

    All three of us have this idea of seeing the cartographer travel around the island to report what's there. We like this idea of depicting ancient scientific expeditions. Each player will therefore have their own pawn that they move each turn, the position of which defines the spaces "within sight" that can be mapped right now.

    From there, and from the first playtest, the foundations of the game were laid: This basic concept works and transcribes everything we wanted to say on the theme of cartography...but perhaps this merits a little further explanation.

    The Map Is Not the Territory

    At the end of a game, everyone's personal maps will be very different and not necessarily representative of the isle of Misterra, even though it's visible to everyone in the middle of the table. This can be surprising or even a little destabilizing.

    Yet this is a studied and recognized dimension of cartography. To diagram the geography of a place, a cartographer must make choices about simplification, deciding how best to depict reality. A map is also intended for a particular use: to help with navigation, to prepare for war or a project, to depict a specific scientific or economic dimension, etc. Did we mention that maps are fascinating objects? So, a cartographer will make choices of representation best suited to this desired use. For the same space, there are myriad maps, all different.

    The famous saying of the philosopher Alfred Korzybski sums it up: "The map is not the territory." Or to put it another way: Consulting a map gives us only a partial and subjective version of reality. Don't believe everything you are told.

    Because in this game, the island has no pre-existing reality, we even further push the concept that cartographers express their own opinion in their maps, and thus influence the public. Because we learn about the location via our map, we are at the mercy of what the cartographers tell us. If a road is drawn here or a border there, we will go here and stop there. Such power!

    The central board of Maps of Misterra would be better understood as the current best knowledge of the relief of the island, the result of what the player-cartographers proclaim at this stage. We see a steppe there because several cartographers have reported it so.

    What a Relief

    We quickly decided to add relief to this basic concept. The cartographers move through a territory composed of different types of terrain. For this isle to have a soul and not simply be a flat array of color swatches, the terrain must have some effects.

    Mountain is the first relief that comes to mind...followed by a revelation: "Atop a mountain, one can see further, so one can also map further." Steppes are flat and conducive to movement, a lagoon should let you fish a card from the deck and make the river flow. Jungle — [shudder] — jungle is so dense as to obscure your view and render mapping impossible.

    The jungle effect is the only one that is mandatory and negative. This strengthens interaction and forces sacrifices. It is also a way to give a veritable geography to a square of merely 5 spaces by 5 spaces. Moving into a jungle space causes you to lose the crucial mapping action, and thus generally forces you to choose another path — but if you really need to take the shortest path, it is possible to cross it to reach a part of the island not yet explored. You can also weaponize your pen by adding jungles to your map where they will hinder your opponents.

    A certain three game designers may be so perverse as to place jungles on the board as soon as the game is set up...

    Moving Mountains

    In Maps of Misterra, the terrain of the isle is not predefined. The players' actions reveal its relief as the game progresses.

    To add a little interaction and indecision, we imagined two states of knowledge about the terrain: the "hazy" phase of terrain tiles revealed with the first observation, and the "confirmed" phase from the second identical observation. But note: If another observation identifies the terrain as something else, we replace the hazy terrain with a hazy version of the new type, and so on.

    If one accepts that the central board represents the common knowledge we have of the island, this rule makes it possible to fairly faithfully illustrate the evolution of scientific knowledge in which hypotheses are refuted or confirmed by successive observations.

    In play, this provokes an aggressive rush to "observe" the terrain to one's own advantage. This principle also has the advantage of gradually locking down the island board as we approach the end of the game.

    "Knowledge dispels the haze of ignorance", excited designers...
    During evening playtests, we start catching players having fun contradicting each other's findings: "You clearly didn't get enough sleep: It's not a jungle here; it's a mountain!" and so on. We're onto something.

    Points of Interest

    "But how do I win?" you're probably asking by now.

    To offer heartbreaking choices to the players, we came up with two conflicting sources of prestige points — a classic principle of game design.

    On your personal parchment board, you must create patterns according to the hypothesis cards you received at the beginning of the game. Thematically, these are the cartographic objectives your sponsors have imposed upon you and expect you to confirm, even if it means diverging from what you see in the land. This is our representation, in the game, of the varied applications for maps that we discussed before, as well as the rivalries between the scientific societies of the great powers who finance expeditions to verify their theories.

    This fascinating book from 2018 recounts the true story of a scientific expedition sent to the equator by France to determine whether, as Newton [rightly] supposed, the earth is bulging at the equator and flattened at the poles, or whether it's flattened at the equator, as Cassini from France then supposed, based on the cosmological theories of Descartes.
    These hypotheses need to be respected only on your own parchment board. There is no need to complete them on the main board, and players often mistakenly think this is the case in their first game. The graphic design tries to remind you of this by using a parchment background for the hypothesis cards, and the terrain being depicted as it is on the sketch cards — but we are so accustomed to thinking of maps as faithful representations that a second play is sometimes necessary to get this acceptable disconnect clearly in mind.

    The hypothesis cards, or the suppositions made by the sponsors of your expedition before your departure
    On the other hand, you must also ensure that your map is not too far from the common understanding of the island's terrain because your reputation as a cartographer is at stake! Thus, you also gain prestige points for the fidelity of your map to the known relief of the island at the end of the game.

    It's up to you to pursue your personal objectives without straying too far from the reality of the terrain. For those who want still more recognition for their cartographic efforts, we have included an expert mode that further rewards fidelity of the map to the territory.

    Mine!

    Each turn, players map and trace and walk the tightrope, choosing their balance between these two sources of point...yet we felt that we were lacking an option for turns that get away from this main action to spice up the adventure a bit and to offer some excitement.

    After trial and error, we added a new alternative action and a new source of points: claims. Thematically, planting your expedition's flag atop a previously unsurveyed mountain is amazing! This adds a dose of interaction and requires you to monitor your opponent's movements on the central board a little more closely. It also offers a strategic axis that's complementary to the two main sources of points.

    Some people may also note the colonial dimension of grand scientific expeditions and the strongly political aspect of territorial control implied by cartography.

    Almost There...

    However, there are a few loose ends to tie up.

    Sometimes in a first game, players will contradict one another over and over again in the same part of the island. When this happens, the game state doesn't move toward resolution, so we need to encourage game progression and limit the maximum duration.

    Rather than encouraging advancing (we three designers are a little twisted), we would prefer to discourage standing still. At the end of the game, you lose prestige points if your personal map is incomplete.

    To constrain the game to a reasonable number of turns, we also introduce a third endgame trigger that's more artificial, but necessary: exhausting the sketch card deck. Some clever calculations guarantee that this condition is triggered without any player getting a disadvantage.

    You Have Reached Your Destination

    From an evening playtest via Tabletop Simulator to a brainstorming session, to cutting out the prototype, to clever calculations — mountain by mountain or steppe by steppe, if you will — it took us a year to arrive at the quasi-final version of Maps of Misterra. We presented it to several publishers, and the game won over the Sit Down! team, who would do a fantastic job (beyond our expectations!) of materially and graphically staging the game, then getting it to your home.

    The Maps of Misterra box is full of promise, isn't it?
    Also, thanks to the entire team, notably Stanislas Puech for the illustrations, Anthony Moulins for the graphic design, Michaël Derobertmasure for the development, Marie Ooms for the artistic direction, Sophie Troye for the communication, and Didier Delhez for managing the project. You have all made this dream come true.

    We thank you, as well, for reading this. Enjoy playing Maps of Misterra, and remember, only believe what you map!

    Four cartographers, ready to sink their teeth into an adventure Read more »
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    DriveThruRPG.com Newest Items

  • Oops! All Dragons (Level Up: Advanced Fifth Edition) Foundry Module
    Publisher: Legendary Games

    Captain Scaley has a big problem—he checked on his hoard and there was no gold, only other dragons!

    This 60 page sourcebook details 45 dragons that range the gamut from the corrupted and cursed to ninjas and pirates, robots and steamworks, holy and void, and more! Get all of these amazing dragons for Foundry VTT!

    • Bezkusmet the Unscaled
    • Cannibal Dragon
    • Corrupted Dragon
    • Cursed Dragon
    • Energy Dragon
    • Midnight Dragon
    • Ninja Dragon
    • Pirate Dragon
    • Radioactive Dragon
    • Reflection Dragon
    • Robodragon 2.0
    • Soulhoarder Dragon
    • Steamwork Dragon
    • Forest Dragons
    • Ghost Dragons
    • Holy Dragons
    • Sea Dragons
    • Sky Dragons
    • Smoke Dragons
    • Sovereign Dragons
    • Underworld Dragons
    • Vile Dragons
    • Void Dragons


    Oops! All Dragons (Level Up: Advanced Fifth Edition) Foundry ModulePrice: $11.99 Read more »
  • The Ronin's Guide to the Sprawl, vol1. Street Cred
    Publisher: Gun Metal Games

    The Ronin’s Guide to the Sprawl, volume 1: Street Cred

     

    Gun Metal Games is pleased to announce the release  of Street Cred, the first in a new line of supplements for the Ronin’s Guide to the Sprawl series!

    For characters rep (or Street Cred) is  the most important resource they have. As their influence rises, characters meet more people, get better gigs, and access higher-quality gear. Doors which were previously closed open up for them, leading to greater challenges and bigger paydays. But the streets are unforgiving, omae. Characters can lose Influence just as quickly as  they gained it.

     Suddenly all the toys, the Influencers, the most exclusive Night Clubs; They’re gone like a fast‑fading dream. But tomorrow’s another day. The next job might get them back on track, back in the good graces of those who shunned them. It’s a constant tug of war as they try to do their jobs without sacrificing their code.

     Many fail, but if the characters can succeed without losing their soul, they’ll become legends.

     There are many elements that make up the cyberpunk genre, and no single sourcebook can cover them all.  For this reason, we introduce a series of smaller game supplements collectively known as The Ronin’s Guide to the Sprawl. This series takes a look at various aspects of both Interface Zero, and  the cyberpunk genre as a whole.

     

    The first supplement in this series deals with Street Cred. It is designed to help you make the most of your character’s reputation by introducing new ways they can use it during the course of the game.

     In this book you’ll find:

     A revamped reputation system fueled by a simple point-based system that focuses on Role-Play rather than dice rolls.

    • Influence Paths that help you fine tune your character’s personal philosophy, their motivations, their code of conduct, and the kinds of people they are likely to work with.
    • A template system you can use to develop memorable contacts with their own motivations and codes of conduct.
    • Finaly a simple tier based system you can use to track your character’s rise (or fall) in the unforgiving eyes of the streets.
    The Ronin's Guide to the Sprawl, vol1. Street CredPrice: $9.99 Read more »
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    Gnome Stew

  • Dune: Fall of the Imperium Review

    The title of the page reads Dune: Adventures in the Imperium at the top, and Fall of the Imperium Sourcebook at the bottom. In the background is the appearance of a swirling galaxy, and a single planet. In front of that is the face of a bearded man looking to the right, a woman to the left in robes, two figures in armor, and another figure in robes. At the bottom of the page is a legion of people waving green and gold flags with a House symbol on them.

    Licensed games usually take the approach of presenting material that can happen far away from the canon events of the setting. This works especially well in settings like Star Trek or Star Wars, where there is a literal galaxy of locations available for storytelling. Player characters may hear about canon events, and there may be a butterfly effect on some of their options, but the assumption of the game is that the player characters aren’t going to be directly confronting and potentially contradicting the fictitious history of the setting.

    Despite this, there are some fans who want exactly that. If they are playing in a game about a given setting, they want to be present for the events they have read about or seen on screen. They may or may not want to step into the shoes of an existing character, either by playing that character, or by playing a character that replaces the canon character in the game table’s narrative. If you want to play through a campaign where it’s possible for Luke Skywalker to miss the shot that destroys the Death Star because a PC failed to keep a TIE Fighter off his tail, that’s largely on the game facilitator to navigate.

    Modiphius has taken an interesting approach to this with their Dune: Adventures in the Imperium RPG. While it largely assumes that player characters will be engaging in house politics in other corners of the galaxy or touching upon Arrakis in moments between galaxy shaking events, it has also introduced products that directly engage the canon narrative. The primary example of this has been the Agents of Dune boxed set, which places the player characters and their house in the place of House Atreides, inheriting Dune from the Harkonnens by decree of the emperor.

    The adventure we’re looking at today also places player characters directly in the path of galactic history, presenting a campaign that takes place just before, during, and in the aftermath of Paul Atreides’ takeover of the imperial throne.

     Dune: Fall of the Imperium

    Creative Lead Andrew Peregrine
    Line Editor/Canon Editor
    Rachel J. Wilkinson
    Writing
    Richard August, Simon Berman, Jason Brick, Jason Durall, Keith Garrett, Jack Norris, Andrew Peregrine, Dave Semark, Hilary Sklar, Devinder Thiara, Mari Tokuda, Rachel J. Wilkinson
    Graphic Design Chris Webb, Leigh Woosey, Jen Mccleary
    Art Direction
    Rocío Martín Pérez
    Cover Artist
    David Benzal
    Interior Artwork Artists
    Amir Zand, Joel Chaim Holtzman, János Tokity, Simone Rizzo, Jakub Kozlowski, Carmen Cornet, Eren Arik, Hans Park, Mikhail Palamarchuk, Mihail Spil-Haufter, Lixin Yin, Susanah Grace, Alexander Guillen Brox, Imad Awan, Louie Maryon, Justin Usher, Jonny Sun, Olivier Hennart, Pat Fix, Avishek Banerjee, Bastien Lecouffe-Deharme, Simone Rizzo
    Proofreading
    Stuart Gorman
    Project Management
    Daniel Lade
    Brand Management
    Joe Lefavi for Genuine Entertainment

    Disclaimer

    I am not working from a review copy of this product and did not receive a review copy to work from. I have received review copies from Modiphius Entertainment in the past. I have not had the opportunity to play or run this adventure. I do have a familiarity with the 2d20 system, having run and played multiple iterations of the rules.

    Layout and Design

    I am working from a PDF of the adventure. The adventure is available as a PDF or a physical book. Additionally, there is a Roll20 version of the adventure for sale. The PDF is 146 pages long. The content of those pages breaks down to this:

    • Covers–2 pages
    • Inside Front Cover Art–1 page
    • Company Title Page–1 page
    • Product Title Page–1 page
    • Credits Page–1 page
    • Table of Contents–1 page
    • Shuttle Map–1 page
    • Map of Arrakeen–1 page
    • Modiphius Product Ads–3 pages

    There is some glorious artwork in this book, and the design of most of the outfits, vehicles, architecture, etc. match the recent movies. While this book assumes the continuity of the original novels, the licensing is all bound together, meaning they don’t have to reinvent the wheel when it comes to producing artwork. The pages are in a light parchment color, with geometric flourishes under the text. There is artwork throughout, especially depicting notable characters. Each of the chapters starts with a two-page spread of full color art.

    The layout varies depending on the purpose of the text. Most of the adventure is in a two-column layout, but background material and overviews are formatted in centered text boxes or single columns that run down the middle of the page. Sidebars are often in the lower right- or left-hand side of the page.

    The Judge of the Change

    This adventure is the framework for an entire campaign, if you couldn’t glean that from the introduction. The book itself is broken into the following sections:

    • Introduction
    • Act I: The Gathering Storm
    • Act II: Muad’Dib
    • Act III: Fall of the Imperium
    • Act IV: War Across a Million Worlds
    • Adventures in the Era of Muad’Dib

    Adventures in the Era of Muad’Dib is a section that details the kind of setting assumptions that should be considered for playing the RPG during the establishment of Paul’s reign. This includes the differences between the chaos and violence of that era, contrasted against the political maneuvering and quick betrayals of the previous era.

    Each act of the campaign has its own set of acts, which are the primary adventures that characters will engage with as that leg of the campaign progresses. This means that within all four acts, there are three adventures, each with their own three acts.

    While I mentioned the Agents of Dune campaign boxed set above, unlike that product, these adventures assume that the events of the novels happen when and how they are detailed in the source material. There are a few notes on what might happen if the GM and the players want to deviate from the story, but most sections assume that the path of history rolls forward unabated.

    A figure sits in a booth. To their right is a hooded figure in a robe, and to their right is a lightly armored bodyguard with a long knife. Standing and facing them on the opposite side of the room is a figure wearing a jacket, with another hooded figure next to them.Who Are You?

    The PCs are playing agents of their own house, managing their interests in light of emerging events. For several parts of the campaign, this means you’ll be dealing with the cascading effects of galactic history, rather than being right next to it. However, there are several places where the adventure narrows back down to canon events so the PCs can be present as witnesses.

    There is an interesting sidebar at the beginning of the adventure which I both agree with and think oversimplifies the situation, especially when it’s applied to the players and the decisions they are making. The sidebar mentions that both Paul and the Harkonnens are nobles whose people toil for the profit of their rulers, and that while the Harkonnens are vicious and violent in their tactics, Paul starts a war that kills billions of people. All on board with “Paul isn’t the Good Guy.” But it also frames this as “there are no villains,” which, no, that’s harder to take. Paul isn’t the good guy because of the repercussions of his actions, but it is hard to say that the Harkonnens aren’t villains. I think it’s pretty easy to conceive of a story where there are no heroes, only villains, rather than saying there are no heroes or villains.

    Part of why this sidebar exists, however, is to reinforce the concept that making decisions for a House in the Landsraad often means choosing between multiple bad options. If the PCs ally with the Harkonnens for a time, they aren’t suddenly the villains of the story, they may just be doing something very distasteful for them in order to help their house survive. There are several places in the narrative where characters have the option of throwing in with different houses against other houses, which means being allied doesn’t always mean being long term friends or business partners.

    As agents of a Landsraad House, there are a combination of missions you can undertake for the betterment of your house, which also happens to give you insight into the greater events unfolding. For example, trying to secure a hidden smuggler’s cache of spice after the Atreides take over Arrakis lets you stumble upon some Harkonnen records that may lead you to the hidden base of operations of a Sardukar agent, and so on.

    While the adventure has several places where events unfold at a distance from the events of the novels, there are a few key places where the PCs are funneled back into the main narrative. These include:

    • The night House Atreides falls
    • The Death of Rabban
    • The Death of Leto II
    • The sequence of Paul’s ascension to the throne and all the events surrounding it

    If you read “The Death of Leto II,” and thought, wait, I don’t want to be there for that, I completely understand. That particular aspect of the adventure kind of underscores some of the problems the adventure has whenever it funnels the PCs back to major canon events. It’s very clear you are pushed into those events to witness them. If you play the adventure as written, you are sent with the Sardukar on their raid of the sietch, and you arrive at the scene just after Leto II has been killed.

    In many of the “up close to history” scenes, your characters are rolling to avoid getting in anyone’s way and hoping to pick up some things beneficial to your house on the periphery of bigger events. One exception to this is the death of Rabban. The PCs have several paths to this point, but almost all of them involve someone wanting them to kill Rabban in the lead up to the most tumultuous events preceding Paul’s ascension.

    This would be a really neat, “that was your characters!” moment, except there are still some heavy handed sections where his location is a bait and switch, so you must encounter Feyd, and you can’t kill Rabban all by yourselves, Gurney Halleck will show up and either try to do it before you, or help you out.

    A figure sits at the top of a set of stairs, on a large, ornate throne. There are two guards flanking the figure on either side. At the bottom of the stairs, two cloaked figures stand on either side of a figure that is kneeling, with their hands bound behind their back.The Wide-Open Galaxy

    Act II is especially open compared to the rest of the adventure. Your characters are negotiating for spice as Harkonnen production slows. You chase spies on a ski resort planet. You skulk around backwaters looking for blackmail information and encrypted documents. In one of my favorite moments in the adventure, your characters navigate a night of betrayal that is both thematically calling back to the attack on House Atreides, but both more subtle and distinct. It’s one of those places where it really feels like the adventure delivers you a very “Dune” experience without just using canon Dune events.

    Act IV is strange. While it deals with events we know happened, broadly, i.e. Paul’s crusade ravaging worlds that failed to show their loyalty, the places where these adventures take place generally don’t have a lot of canon surrounding them, meaning that the PCs actions can have greater effect. The downside is that in many cases, the reason they are in the path of these events is very thin. In several cases, Paul issues an imperial decree for the PCs to go to a place, where they may work against his agents, and the next time they see Paul, “he sees something in their future that keeps him from acting against them,” and then they can go somewhere else and either discreetly or overtly defy him.

    The culmination of the entire adventure/campaign is that a House that has long been associated with the PCs’ House is accused of treason. The PCs can find out what is going on, disassociate themselves from their allies or exonerate them, and determine who to screw over and who to align themselves with to keep one of Paul’s lieutenants from declaring their House as an enemy of the throne.

    Mechanical Resolution

    An aspect of the adventure that I really enjoy is that it leans into the 2d20 concept of creating traits. If you aren’t familiar with traits in a 2d20 game (which have slightly different names depending on the 2d20 game in question), they function in a manner similar to Fate aspects. They are a broad description of something that is true. Depending on the narrative, traits either grant narrative permission to do something that wouldn’t be possible if the trait weren’t active, or it adds or subtracts from the difficulty of a task if it is relevant to that task.

    Depending on how the PCs resolve different scenes in the adventure, they may acquire different traits, which will be available for use either by the PCs or the GM if they are still active. For example, in many cases, PCs that ally with a house will gain a trait that denotes that they are “Ally of House X,” and any time that’s relevant, it might make a check either more or less difficult. They may also gain traits that reflect their reputation; for example, if they resolve a scene by hiding, they may get a “Cowardice” trait, which might come into play whenever dealing with characters that are proud of their martial accomplishments.

    There are also events that remove traits. For example, early in the adventure, it’s a lot easier for the PCs to pick up the “Ally to House Harkonnen” trait, which they may end up shedding if, later in the adventure, they advocate for the emperor to strip them of their rights to Arrakis.

    Like Star Trek Adventures, Dune: Adventures in the Imperium makes provisions for a player running characters other than their primary character, usually in circumstances where the PCs wouldn’t want to personally be involved in the activities they are directing. This is separate from, but adjacent to, Architect play, where PCs can say they are using resources from a distance to manipulate events, making checks for broad actions they are taking, to influence events.

    A figure stands in front of a window that has an intricate windowpane pattern throughout. They are looking out, with their back facing the room. There is a wall at the far side of the room, and behind the wall is a figure in a hood, with their face covered, holding a knife in one hand, peeking around the corner at the figure looking out the window.For example, if a character has troops as one of their resources, and there have been smugglers raiding their holdings, they could use Architect mode to send troops to take care of the smugglers without ever going to that location, rolling to see how well their orders are carried out versus the difficulty of the outcome they want. The downside to Architect play being that it’s hard to get specific granular results. In the example above, you might be able to get rid of the smugglers, but the GM may tell you that unless you show up yourself, you can’t expect your troops to capture a smuggler alive for interrogation.

    There are a few places in the adventure where broader goals are mentioned as something the PCs might attempt with Architect mode, usually in the periphery of events that surround the political maneuvering in Act II. There are also a few brief mentions of using supporting characters during certain events, especially if the player character in question isn’t a particularly martial specimen, and they tackle a mission like killing Rabban.

    Because these are excellent tools, I wish the adventure had spent more time expanding how they could be used to greater effect in various scenes. While I don’t think any scene where the PCs have most of their agency removed is going to be fun to sit through, I could see several of the “you must go this direction” encounters being easier to swallow if those scenes were expressly meant to be carried out by secondary character operatives. I suspect that this wasn’t done in part because the adventure wants your primary PCs to be present at these major events, not just a character you are playing.

    Having a few lines referencing, “they could get X, likely through Architect play,” isn’t nearly as satisfying as a more detailed list of resources or events that the PCs could undertake that had a direct effect on the narrative and the position of their house in each act.

    Aftermath

    When I first saw there was a section on Adventures in the Era of Muad’Dib, I was thinking something along the lines of the one-page mission briefs from Star Trek Adventures. This is, more precisely, tools and mechanics available to reflect the differences in the galaxy after Paul’s ascension to the throne and the spread of his religion. It introduces the faction template for the Qizarate, as well as six new talents that are either tied to that faction or involve interaction with Paul directly.

    While there aren’t “mission brief” style adventures, there are sections on what resistance to the throne looks like in this era, some of the espionage that might be going on, and a few adventure seeds surrounding interacting with Paul, the adherents of his faith, and the changing allegiances in the Imperium. These are generally short, one paragraph long descriptions.

     I feel like you’re either going to have some frustrating moments as written, or you’re going to be reworking some key scenes so that the PCs have actual agency in those moments 

    The Mystery of Life Isn’t a Problem to Solve, But A Reality to Experience

    I really appreciate the ambition of this adventure. It really shines in Act II, and a bit in Act IV, where the PCs have lots of options available to them, and the main thing that is determined by canon are the stakes they are navigating. I absolutely love the Night of Slow blades section of the adventure, because it hits that sweet spot of “this is tailored for your PCs” and “this feels like exactly what would happen in the novels.” There are also some other scenes across various acts that shine. While not everyone may take the road that leads to this, I really liked the details of negotiating with Baron Harkonnen, as well as the scenes where the PCs can debate with other agents of the Landsraad houses in court with the emperor.

    An Animal Caught in A Trap Will Gnaw Off Its Own Leg to Escape. What Will You Do?

    I wish that when the adventure pushes the PCs into “witness” mode, there was more for them to do than observe and make a few checks to see if they pick up a new trait or asset for themselves or their house. There are some brushes with canon events early on that feel especially frustrating. You may get into a fight with Rabban the night of the Atreides attack, but he’s got plot armor. You might see Jessica and Paul being herded onto an ornithopter in the distance, but you’re too far away to do anything about it. The absolute worse example of this is being present for Leto II’s death. I don’t expect the adventure to give you the opportunity to stop this from happening–it’s a pretty pivotal story beat. But I don’t know that my desire to witness the noteworthy events of Dune included helplessly traveling with the people that murder Paul’s infant son.

    Tenuous Recommendation–The product has positive aspects, but buyers may want to make sure the positive aspects align with their tastes before moving this up their list of what to purchase next.

    I don’t want to be too brutal. I think that if you are a fan of Dune (and I’m not sure why you would be buying Dune RPG material if you weren’t) you will find some use for this adventure. On the other hand, I feel like you’re either going to have some frustrating moments as written, or you’re going to be reworking some key scenes so that the PCs have actual agency in those moments. That’s a shame, because there are some wonderful moments in the adventure that tie the PCs and their house to events with a little more room to breathe, that would be great to see attached to an adventure that didn’t funnel you back into your front row seats for a show you can’t really affect.

    Read more »
  • mp3VideoGnomecast 186 – Mixing Genres

    Ang, Chris and Josh chat about mixing up genres in our RPGs and as a result touch on what genre is, and why we can and should mash it all up together!

    Links:

    D&D Lego!

    The Nebula Awards

    Daggerheart Playtest

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    Sly Flourish

  • VideoRunning Combat-Focused Adventures

    This article is one in a series where we look at types of adventures and examine

    • how we prepare them.
    • how we run them.
    • what pitfalls we might run into.
    • how we avoid these pitfalls.

    These articles include:

    Your own adventure types and how you run them may differ from mine. That's totally fine. There are many right ways to enjoy this game.

    Robin Laws's book Adventure Crucible – Building Stronger Scenarios for any RPG inspired my thoughts on this topic.

    For a far more in-depth look at running monsters in combat encounters, please check out Forge of Foes, our book on building and running fantastic monsters for your 5e games.

    Understanding Combat Adventures

    Good fantasy RPG sessions most often include mixtures of exploration, roleplay, and combat. Adventures or sessions focusing on only one pillar of play may bypass players' preferences for the other elements.

    But, on occasion, we find ourselves with a session focused almost exclusively on combat.

    Completely combat-focused sessions may occur when characters face a big battle at the beginning of the session and we know this battle is going to take up most of the session. Other combat-focused sessions might happen when the characters face a gauntlet of battles, one right after the other, whether they're exploring a dangerous dungeon, defending a location, or otherwise find themselves with a series of battles staged in sequence.

    Combat-focused sessions should be rare. The best sessions include scenes and situations with opportunities for roleplaying, exploration, and combat. We want situations where the characters make meaningful decisions to move the story forward.

    But combat-focused sessions do happen and thus are worth examining.

    Preparing Combat Sessions

    During prep, GMs can prepare combat sessions by

    • understanding how these combat encounters begin and where they occur.
    • deciding on a style for combat. Are you going to run it in the theater of the mind, on a combat battle mat, or run abstract combat?
    • choosing a goal for the combat encounter. Sometimes the battle isn't all about killing the monsters but achieving another outcome.
    • selecting monsters for each combat encounter. Rich combat encounters often include two or more different monster types with some synergies between them – big brutes up front and nasty ranged attackers in the back for example.
    • choosing the environment surrounding the encounter. What larger environmental effects might be in play in the combat arena?
    • selecting interesting terrain features the characters and monsters might use (see Anatomy of an Environmental Effect – Chernobog's Well)
    • planning potential shifts in the encounter. What events might change the course of the battle?
    • outlining the transitions between each combat encounter. What takes the characters from battle A to battle B to battle C?
    • building out, drawing, or preparing your battle map – either digital or physical.
    • gathering miniatures, tokens, or digital assets if you're playing online.

    Running Combat Sessions

    For 5e games and other fantasy d20 games, combat tends to be the most well-articulated and refined style of gameplay. For combat-focused sessions, GMs need only start the session and get into the first battle. Between combat encounters ensure the sinew is there to connect one battle to the next. The rest falls on the rules of combat for our chosen system.

    Depending on the complexity of the encounters, the number of characters, and their level, combat encounters may be easy or difficult to run. The higher level the characters – the more power and capability they bring to the battlefield – the trickier it can be to maintain a consistent challenge. The dials of monster difficulty can help balance such a challenge.

    When running combat, continue to draw the players into the fiction of the world. Describe the situation from the point of view of the characters. Describe what attacks and hits look like. Ask players to do the same. Reveal secrets and clues when appropriate. Include opportunities for roleplaying with NPCs and enemies before, during, and after the battle. Avoid getting lost in the mechanics of combat and remember the story going on in the world.

    Pitfalls of Combat Sessions

    Here are several potential pitfalls when running combat-focused adventures and sessions:

    • Too many hard combat encounters becomes repetitive and tiresome.
    • Combat goals aren't clear. Players don't know why they're fighting.
    • Combat focuses exclusively on the mechanics with little focus on the story or fiction.
    • Combat encounters are tactically boring.
    • Players resent encounters built to contradict their characters' capabilities.
    • Battles take too long. Players who enjoy roleplaying and exploration miss out.
    • It's easy to forget important monster mechanical details when running lots of monsters, more complicated monsters, or both.

    Mitigating Pitfalls

    GMs can help mitigate these pitfalls by

    • mixing up easy and hard encounters or waves within a single encounter. Let the characters shine while fighting weaker foes as stronger ones come on later.
    • clarifying encounter goals. Tell players how things work in the encounter so they know what they need to do.
    • continually describe what's happening in the fiction of the game. Ask players to describe their actions including attacks and killing blows.
    • include different monster types and terrain features to keep encounter tactics interesting.
    • include lightning rods – monsters intended to show off the powerful capabilities of the characters.
    • include elements of roleplaying and exploration during combat. What do the villains say? What do the characters discover about the world and situation as they fight for their lives?
    • read over monster stat blocks before play and run simpler monsters for those who don't really matter, saving mechanically crunchy monsters for bosses and lieutenants.

    An Uncommon Adventure Type

    Combat-focused sessions are best held for big battles against boss monsters. Other session types in this series of articles offer a better balance of exploration, roleplaying, and combat. Combat-focused sessions are prevalent enough, however, for us to internalize what makes them fun and what we can do to avoid common pitfalls.

    Build fantastic and intricate combat encounters and let the characters shine.

    More Sly Flourish Stuff

    Last week I posted a couple of YouTube videos including Build Your Own 5e and Add Black Flag's Luck to your 5e Games.

    RPG Tips

    Each week I think about what I learned in my last RPG session and write them up as RPG tips. Here are this week's tips:

    • Offer opportunities for roleplaying even in the depths of the darkest dungeons.
    • Mix up battles with several smaller foes and fewer large foes.
    • Build encounters first from the fiction. What makes sense?
    • Add motivation and distance rolls to random encounters for unique experiences.
    • Include interactive monuments in bigger battles.
    • Write down connections between the characters and the next session you’re running.
    • Single monsters are at a significant disadvantage against a group of characters. This disadvantage gets worse the higher level the characters are.

    Related Articles

    Get More from Sly Flourish

    Buy Sly Flourish's Books

    Have a question or want to contact me? Check out Sly Flourish's Frequently Asked Questions.

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  • VideoRunning Roleplay and Intrigue Adventures

    This article is one in a series where we look at types of adventures and examine

    • how we prepare them.
    • how we run them.
    • what pitfalls we might run into.
    • how we avoid these pitfalls.

    These articles include:

    Your own adventure types and how you run them may differ from mine. That's totally fine. There are many right ways to enjoy this game.

    Robin Laws's book Adventure Crucible – Building Stronger Scenarios for any RPG inspired my thoughts on this topic.

    Understanding Roleplay and Intrigue Adventures

    In adventures focused on roleplaying and intrigue, the characters primarily talk to NPCs to accomplish goals or learn information. Intrigue adventures often overlap with Investigations and Mysteries with less of a focus on location-based clues and expanding the goals beyond uncovering mysteries.

    Example goals in roleplay and intrigue adventures might include

    • convincing royalty to commit military forces in a war.
    • exposing treachery in a royal court.
    • saving the life of a condemned prisoner.
    • pitting two enemies against one another.
    • learning the location of a secret treasure vault.
    • getting permission to enter a closed city.
    • asking priests to hand over a powerful artifact.

    Roleplay and intrigue adventures are often built around a set of linear or networked scenes. In these scenes, the characters talk to one or more NPCs learning something or attaining a goal that leads them to the next scene.

    Preparing Roleplay and Intrigue Adventures

    During preparation for roleplay and intrigue adventures, GMs can focus on

    • clarifying the goal of the adventure.
    • fleshing out the backgrounds of notable NPCs.
    • finding artwork they can show to players for each notable NPC.
    • writing down what NPCs know and what they want.
    • defining secrets and clues the characters might uncover when talking to NPCs.
    • adding other adventure elements as needed from the eight steps.

    Running Roleplay and Intrigue Adventures

    Roleplay and intrigue adventures can begin with a strong start to bring the players into the game, clarify the goals of the adventure, set the stage, and let the players begin interacting with NPCs.

    During play, the GM thinks as the NPCs would think given their backgrounds and goals as they interact with the players. As the conversation goes on, the GM may decide how NPCs react based on what the players say or they may have players roll ability checks if there's a meaningful chance for failure that doesn't end the adventure in a brick wall.

    GMs can use ability checks to determine how easily or how difficult it is to acquire information from an NPC or shift the NPCs attitude without shutting off entire paths if the adventure on a single bad check.

    Other elements from typical adventures may come up in these sessions including exploring locations or getting into a fight, even if the overall focus is on talking to NPCs.

    Pitfalls of Roleplay and Intrigue Adventures

    Roleplay and intrigue adventures might suffer from the following pitfalls:

    • Players don't understand what they're doing or why.
    • Too many roleplay scenes in a row can bore action-focused players.
    • The characters blow important rolls or engage in the wrong approach and shut off critical paths for the story.
    • Players don't understand how best to engage the NPCs.
    • Characters have better social skills than their players have or vice versa.

    Avoiding Pitfalls

    GMs can avoid or mitigate these pitfalls by

    • Clarifying the characters' goals regularly.
    • Including other action-focused scenes in the adventure such as combat encounters or location exploration.
    • Ensuring the whole story doesn't get shut down on bad rolls or poor approaches and instead leads the story down a different, potentially harder, but still interesting path.
    • Use the result of a roll as a scale of how well or poorly something went instead of a hard success or failure. See 1d20 Shades of Gray.
    • Offer suggestions to players who have a hard time understanding how to engage with characters. Don't let them make foolish mistakes their characters would know better than to make. Show them opportunities their characters would recognize.
    • Use a high-charisma character's charisma as a baseline, recognizing that their character might be better at negotiating than the player is.
    • Use a charismatic player's approach as a baseline even if their character has a lousy charisma. Don't always call for a roll.

    A Common Sub-Adventure Type

    Roleplay and intrigue adventures might often slide into or be shuffled into other larger adventures. As one of the core pillars of roleplaying games, roleplay and intrigue scenes appear often throughout campaigns and can drive the story forward as much, or more so, than other adventure types.

    Clarifying the goal, building rich reactive NPCs, creating interesting paths forward regardless of the outcome, and delivering the other elements of gameplay can make roleplay and intrigue adventures as exciting as the most explosive combat encounters.

    More Sly Flourish Stuff

    Last week I posted a couple of YouTube videos on Running Evil Cities and 175 Free Tokens for Owlbear Rodeo.

    Last Week's Lazy RPG Talk Show Topics

    Each week I record an episode of the Lazy RPG Talk Show (also available as a podcast) in which I talk about all things in tabletop RPGs. Here are last week's topics with time stamped links to the YouTube video:

    Patreon Questions and Answers

    Also on the Talk Show, I answer questions from Sly Flourish Patrons. Here are last week's questions and answers:

    RPG Tips

    Each week I think about what I learned in my last RPG session and write them up as RPG tips. Here are this week's tips:

    • Challenge high level characters by attacking several points — AC, saves, death saves, exhaustion, hit points, cumulative -1 penalties, and so on.
    • Build big arenas for big boss battles with interesting terrain and layers of monsters.
    • Offer weapon enchantment gemstones any character can affix to a weapon or armor to make it magical.
    • Let the characters glimpse their final villains. Make villains and boss monsters ever present.
    • With six regular players and two on-call players, five people have to cancel before you can’t get four to the table for a game.
    • Print maps, pen in one- or two-word room descriptions, and make a list of potential inhabitants.
    • Roll up treasure horde parcels and jot them down in your notes. Distribute them when it makes sense.

    Related Articles

    Get More from Sly Flourish

    Buy Sly Flourish's Books

    Have a question or want to contact me? Check out Sly Flourish's Frequently Asked Questions.

    Read more »

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