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    BoardGameGeek News | BoardGameGeek

  • Construct the City of Chandigarh, and Perform Rituals in Pagan: Fate of Roanoke

    by W. Eric Martin

    • U.S. publisher Capstone Games will release Pagan: Fate of Roanoke at Gen Con 2024 in August, marking the North American debut of this two-player asymmetric game from Kasper Kjær Christiansen and Kåre Storgaard that German publisher Wyrmgold released in 2022 following a crowdfunding campaign in 2021.


    Here's an overview of this design:
    The essence of this game is a witch's struggle against a witch hunter. As the witch strives to complete a ritual of renaturation, the hunter tries to discover her true identity among nine villagers. Each turn, the two players use their action pawns on active villagers to draw cards, play cards, and gain influence. Each player has their own variable card deck of fifty cards; with these cards, the witch can brew powerful potions, improve their familiar, and cast enchantments and charms, while the witch hunter enlists allies, claim strategic locations, and ruthlessly investigates the villagers.

    As the witch, your objective is to collect enough secrets to perform a ritual so potent that the entire region will fall under your spell and Mother Nature will reclaim the island. As the hunter, you gather all the allies and support you can muster to bring the witch to justice before her fatal ritual comes to fruition.

    Wyrmgold has released a handful of expansions for Pagan: Fate of Roanoke that introduce new scenarios, introduce new villagers, and allow for deck customization, and Capstone notes that it will release Pagan expansions in the second half of 2024.

    • Capstone Games has partnered with German publisher Spiolworxx to release new releases from that German publisher in North America, with the first three titles to appear being Raising Chicago by Matt Wolfe, EPOS: A Gentes Game by Stefan Risthaus, and Dolcissima Vita by Giansimone Migoni.


    • What's more, Capstone Games will release Uwe Rosenberg's Tangram City in North America in April 2024, with Pirates of Maracaibo from Ralph Bienert, Ryan Hendrickson, and Alexander Pfister debuting at Gen Con 2024 ahead of a Q3 2024 retail release.

    • U.S. publisher Barrel Aged Games debuted in 2017 with the golf-style card game Stool Pigeon that it's now licensed in five countries, and at Gen Con 2024, it will debut two games in the U.S. that it has licensed: the trick-taking game Fruitoplay from Romaric Galonnier, Luc Rémond, and Explor8 (covered here in September 2023), and the tableau-building, card-comboing game Plantopia from Daryl Chow of Origame.


    • In January 2024, I covered two upcoming titles from Spanish publisher LudonovaFlatiron, a SPIEL Essen 24 release from designers Isra C. and Shei S., and a new edition of Junk Art from Jay Cormier and Sen-Foong Lim — but Ludonova has another game hitting the market earlier than those two: Toni López' Chandigarh, which was released in Spain in early April 2024 and which Asmodee will release in North America on May 24, 2024. Here's an overview of this 2-4 player game:
    In 1951, the Indian government commissioned the renowned architect Le Corbusier to design a new capital for the state of Punjab. Thus, Chandigarh was born.


    In the game Chandigarh, players in the role of urban planners are in charge of building this modern city from scratch. They will construct buildings, try to take advantage of buildings constructed by others, use the abilities of the different municipal employees, and try to position themselves in the key locations of the city, all with the aim of achieving the patterns of the plans they have chosen. Whoever scores the most prestige points wins.

    In more detail, the city of Chandigarh is represented by a 4x4 grid of sector tiles, with each sector having multiple plots. These sectors intersect at junctions, with the edges of these tiles creating streets between the sectors. You each start with a project card that shows an arrangement of buildings, along with two different colored buildings from the four colors available; your architect starts on a junction in the city.

    On a turn, you can move your architect up to the total numbers of footprints on your active project cards, stopping at each junction (if you wish) to place a building from your reserve on an empty plot next to a street that's adjacent to the junction you occupy. If you occupy the final plot of a sector, place one of your supervisors on this tile. Alternatively, on a turn you can choose a new project card from the display, placing it on the left or right side of your row of active project cards and taking buildings from the reserve based on the card you just placed and the card adjacent to it. If you now have four cards in a row, you immediately score the card at the opposite end of the row from the card you just placed. Score the points listed on this card each time the pattern on it occurs in the city.


    Four specialist tokens start in the corners of the city, and if you construct a building of the specialist's color in the sector where they are located, you gain the power of that specialist for the remainder of the game and move them to a different sector. Each specialist has six different abilities, some that score you bonus points and others that give you special powers during play.
    Read more »
  • Trek Into The Unknown, Reload Bolt Action, and Revive Rackham

    by W. Eric Martin

    • U.S. publisher WizKids is bringing Star Trek to game tables once again, but instead of a design that focuses solely on combat, as with Star Trek: Attack Wing, the game attempts to cover more aspects of the Star Trek universe.

    Here's an overview of the 2-6 player game Star Trek: Into The Unknown – Federation vs. Dominion Core Set, which is designed by Max Brooke and Michael Gernes and due out in July 2024:
    Teleport to the bridge of the most legendary starships from Star Trek as you launch an epic adventure across the galaxy!

    Star Trek: Into the Unknown features the most detailed Star Trek ship models in tabletop gaming, all designed to scale. Large ships like the U.S.S. Enterprise or the Jem'Hadar Battle Cruiser will tower over the smaller ships, and all come pre-painted to an incredible amount of detail.

    Miniature on display at GAMA Expo 2024
    Traverse headlong into the unknown where you'll negotiate and fight alongside iconic characters using your quick wit and tactical maneuvering to overcome complications and challenges. True to Star Trek, research and diplomatic actions and not just combat have lasting impacts on the game, causing missions to evolve in surprising ways.

    Choose your officer, deploy your crew, explore the galaxy, navigate anomalies, position your ships to strike, or negotiate terms with the enemy. Players will instantly immerse themselves as the egalitarian Starfleet or as the oppressive Vorta and Jem'Hadar as they decide how to handle tense mission objectives and unexpected complications.

    Preview kit on the table at GAMA Expo 2024
    Embark on a journey to remember through an extensive campaign narrative. Your decisions matter, and they affect the outcomes of your unique story. With upcoming expansion featuring new missions and new ships to command, Star Trek: Into the Unknown is dedicated to delivering an expansive universe to your doorstep.

    Warlord Games and Osprey Games have announced a third edition of Bolt Action from designers Alessio Cavatore and Rick Priestley for release in September 2024. Here's an overview of this miniature game system, which has more than three dozen expansions to date:
    Bring the great battles of World War II to your tabletop with Bolt Action. Strike out from the beaches of Normandy towards Germany. Sweep across the deserts of North Africa in lightning raids. Battle the enemy and the sweltering heat in the jungles of Asia and on the islands of the Pacific. Fight doggedly from street to street in Arnhem, Stalingrad, and Berlin.


    Whatever your preferred style of play or your historical interests, the diverse army and scenario options will allow you to build a force that fits. Field everything from standard rifle platoons to heavily armored tank forces, fast-moving reconnaissance patrols, and even artillery units.


    This third edition features refined and updated rules and starter army lists to get new players straight into the action. Seasoned veterans, meanwhile, will find new tactical depth in the detailed force composition mechanics and a wide variety of fresh challenges in the scenario generation system. Rally your forces, study the terrain, and prepare for battle — the fight continues!

    • French publisher Monolith Board Games — which has released several miniature-heavy games since its founding in 2016, such as Conan, Mythic Battles: Pantheon, and Batman: Gotham City Chronicles — has acquired all of defunct publisher Rackham's assets, announcing this development as follows:
    2024 is a year of rebirth for many universes, from the forces of Light, Fate and Darkness readying their forces anew in the seething kingdom of Arklash, to the struggles at the galactic fringes of another universe, warring in Ava and Damocles.

    We are absolutely delighted to announce that we have acquired all the universes developed by the late Rackham. These universes have been by our sides for a long time — and will now be with us for many years to come, complete with new adventures!

    Read more »
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    DriveThruRPG.com Newest Items

  • Metamorphosis BX
    Publisher: Tragos Games

    Metamorphosis BX is a post-apocalyptic MiniBX hack in which you'll roleplay a hybrid survivor in an ever-changing world in which a cataclysm fragmented time and space. It is light both in mechanics and tone, aiming to be fun above all.

    With the release of version 1.0, the game is complete with many character origins (like alien-insect, primal-animal, nano-machine, etc.), mutations (benign and malign), powers (hacking and psychic), artifacts (ancient, alien, and planar), creatures (from Alien Artificial Intelligences to Radioactive Zombies), and a setting, called Atropicalypse (inspired by Brazil), with its regions and factions.

    Metamorphosis BXPrice: $10.00 Read more »
  • Cefen'adiel Citadel Entrance Battlemap
    Publisher: Tellest

    The great elven citadel of Cefen'adiel sits high in the trees in the northeast of the great forest. This map shows the great lifts employed to bring visitors and supplies into the area.  There are also landing pads for flightworthy travel, such as griffins or sky skiffs.  A journey higher into the trees brings visitors face to face with a statue of an old elvish hero, and a tremendous tree behind them.

    The items that you will receive in this package will help you elevate your TTRPG experience, and bring your world to life.  Here is what you can expect from this set:

    • The base level of the map in high-res gridded and gridless versions.
      • The map is tiled at 40x20 dimensions (40 tiles wide by 20 high).
    • A beautiful day variant of the map in high-res gridded and gridless versions which sees the area looking brighter and more saturated.
    • A variant of the map in high-res gridded and gridless versions which blurs the area below somewhat more.
    • A variant of the map in high-res gridded and gridless versions which adds additional tree shadowing in the area below.
    • A variant of the map in high-res gridded and gridless versions which sets the map during a darkened night.
    • A point-of-interest document that will help you determine places in the map that you could structure your adventure around in order to make it more dynamic.
    • No watermark.

    License information: You may use these maps for personal use.  These maps are not currently available for commercial use.  If you are interested in licensing it for commercial use, please reach out to the author.

    DTRPG_Cefenadiel_Citadel_Entrance_Sample

    Cefen'adiel Citadel Entrance BattlemapPrice: $2.99 Read more »
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    Gnome Stew

  • mp3Gnomecast 187 – Learning About the OSR

    Ang gets JT and Walt on the mics to learn more about what the OSR (Old School… Renaissance? Revival? Retro? The R varies) actually is. Join us and learn more about this style of roleplaying game.

     

    Links:

    JT’s Amazon Book Page

    Origins Game Fair

    Renegade Game Studios

    Read more »
  • The Genre Mash

    One of my gaming groups plays a mashed up game with three genres: Highschool, Swashbuckling, and Urban Fantasy. We call it Children of the Shroud. In the game we play high school kids in a hidden magic world. As part of our magical learning we are part of the Junior Guardians club. It’s a club for magical students at our high school in Buffalo NY. Due to reasons, we got ourselves involved in trying to stop a magic prosperity cult who are using the in-game currency of a video game called Call of Violence to try and manifest a new primal elemental of prosperity. This in-game currency can be bought with real world money. Prosperity magic is outlawed by the magic cops because it can destroy the magical veil which helps hide the magical world from the normals out there. If those normals found out about the magical world they’d get really torch and pitchforky on the magic folks. 

    Our characters are…interesting. My character, Silas, had his girlfriend’s essence bound to his soul when the campaign started and has been trying to make her whole again. Ti is a medusa in a really nice middle class family of medusas. Gunny just figured out he was a wind elemental and his dad isn’t dead, but some big bad criminal, or spy, or both. On top of that we can all manifest magical weapons that let us cast stronger and stronger spells the longer we fight, and two of us are also on the academic decathlon team at school, or the Knowledge Bowl team, as our friend Ti likes to say.

    It’s a mashup. So let’s talk about how you can do something similar.

    Pick Genres

    First, pick three genres. Need a list? You can try TV tropes or here’s a bunch of genre’s to pick from: 

    Action, Adventure, Comedy, Crime, Espionage, Fairy Tale, Hard SciFi, High Fantasy, High School, Historical, Horror, Low Fantasy, Martial Arts or Wuxia (It’s Woo-Shhaaa, say it with me, Woo. Shhaaa.) Mecha, Medical, Medieval, Modern, Mystery, Politics, Post-Apocalypse, Prehistoric (who doesn’t love a big old dinosaur), Psionics, your favorite version of the punk genre, Pulp, Science Fantasy, Soft SciFi, Space Opera, Sports (we need more sports RPGs), Suburbia, Super Heroes, Sword & Sorcery, Urban Fantasy, Western, Zombies AKA Hordes of shambling dead people where the shambling dead are the least dangerous thing.

    Understand Your Genres

    Second, understand what your genres are about. Let’s look at the Children of the Shroud game I mentioned. I’ll be quoting the Cortex Prime rule book for their take on the first two genres:

    High School: Teenagers are complicated, and so are the adults that share their worlds, especially when the drama is dialed all the way up because of exams, proms, drugs, and bullies.

    Swashbuckler: Icons of this genre are pirates, musketeers, and scoundrels, but it really extends to anything where the characters engage in flashy exploits, daring escapes, over the top swordfights, and perilous relationships.

    There isn’t an Urban Fantasy genre in the Cortex book but here’s my best take on it.

    Urban Fantasy: often deals with a world of magic in a modern setting. Most Urban Fantasy has a mystery at the center of these stories, leaning on its roots in noir fiction, but the genre is primarily about mixing the magical with a mundane world and seeing how they interact. The PCs should also have one foot in both the magical and mundane worlds.

    Fit Those Genres Together – Largest Step

    Third, try and look at how the genres can fit together. This examination also lets you take a genre to a different sub genre or lets you add a sub genre. Once again, here’s how we did it with Children of the Shroud.

    In our Children of the Shroud game we decided everyone would have a magical weapon of some sort that they manifested, and the weapon would generate mana as it was wielded through different forms for combat magic. That was the intersection of Swashbuckling and Urban Fantasy. It also let me push a bit of the high school magic animes I enjoy into the game.

    We decided we wanted ritual magic that took longer to use but was more flexible than combat magic and could produce a variety of effects. This strictly fits the Urban Fantasy genre.

    Our GM, and fellow Gnome, Phil, created something called the Shroud, which hid the magical world from the mundane world but it could be strained if magic was used too blatantly. This also meant there was a governing body over magic in the world (the Veil), who helped maintain the Shroud and investigated and prosecuted those who sought to expose the Shroud or use magic in a way that would harm it. This pushed us to a hidden magical world as part of our urban fantasy genre. 

    To help make this hidden world, urban fantasy, and high school genre even more poignant and overlapped, we placed the parents of our characters as part of this magical society in some way. On top of that, Gunny’s player decided his mother doesn’t know anything about the magical world, creating some hidden world genre tension.

    Next we crafted mechanics that pulled in school cliques to highlight the high school school side of play. We called them Roles. This is a feature of Cortex Prime. Our Roles trait set includes Emo, Geek, Jock, Popular, and Performer. They provided attributes, but also our social standing in different school cliques. This is predominantly a highschool thing, but the mechanics also played into the action parts of our swashbuckling since Jock and Geek were used in our dueling rules.

    We also decided our high school would be mostly mundane, but there would be a special club called the Junior Guardians that was a cover for the magical teens attending the school. This club would be where they got their magical education. This hits the high school and urban fantasy genres along with that hidden world sub genre.

    Lastly, we have our important relationships. We started with two in the magical world and two in the mundane world to keep up the idea of being in both worlds from Urban Fantasy. Also, because one of the genres is Swashbuckling our GM decided to also do their best to make some of those relationships dangerous in a variety of ways.

    There’s actually more to it than that, I just threw a bunch of examples of what we did at you. If you break it down there’s really just three things the group needs to consider and one extra the GM should keep in mind. Time for a sub list.

    Setting

    Your setting should do its best to find these overlaps. As human beings we’re pretty good at finding the patterns and intersections where these different genres and their setting elements can intersect. Just ask yourself a few questions such as:

    • Where are the predominant locations the game will take place?
    • Who are the important NPCs and how do they fit into the setting?
    • Why are people or organizations doing what they’re doing? What’s their motivation?
    • Where is the tension and conflict in the setting and how can it be related to the genres being used?

    That’s just off the top of my head. Add questions that work best for your group and creative style.

    Situation

    An addendum to the setting would be situation. What is the initial situation the characters find themselves in or what is the overall situation the game assumes the characters will be involved in? Some folks think of this as a scenario or plot but it’s a little higher level than that. It’s more of a guideline for the players so they more easily craft characters inside the campaign. It also gives starting tensions, problems, and ways for the GM to provide meaningful hooks for the PCs.

    In our Children of the Shroud game we were all a part of the Junior Guardians, which meant we had Junior Guardian missions we had to take part in. On top of that we had personal goals the GM ok’ed as part of the initial situation. Silas had his girlfriend Meseme’s essence bound to his soul and was dealing with the fallout from that. Gunny had just discovered he was magical, and that his dead father wasn’t dead and was also magical.

    Mechanics

    Your mechanics need to find ways to fit the overlaps. Cortex Prime made this easier because we built a game using the Cortex Legos. It was a little more upfront work but made for a very fun experience.The relationships, the roles, our dueling rules, how magic affected the Shroud, and our magic ritual rules all touched on the genres we chose in some way.

    You can look around for a game that just does what you’re looking for. If you want a pulpy weird west with a dash of horror game, you can play Deadlands. But if you’re trying something where it’s not quite as obvious, or there’s not a game that fits what you’re looking for, it’s time to break out some house rules, hacks, and drifts. It’s a whole discussion on it’s own, but here’s a couple ideas for how to go about it:

    • Utilize the core mechanisms of the game to build the things you believe you need to make the game fit the genre.
    • Adapt mechanics and ideas from other games to the game you prefer.
    • Combine the above two ideas.

    What I would advise against is excluding rules for things that would be important to the genre and just leaving it up to interactions at the table. Of course, if your table is ok with GM fiat as a final arbiter for important decisions and moments in the game, then you should do that. Every table is different in what they enjoy.

    Characters

    Your characters should be crafted with the genres in mind, along with the above mentioned situation. Genres have character tropes that fit inside of them and story tropes which help drive character action. Here’s a solid way to come up with an interesting character for a genre mash game. Let’s do an original from Children of the Shroud:

    • Start with a character archetype from one of the genres or pick two and mash them together
      • Manic Pixie Girl with sleep magic (High School / Urban Fantasy) She’s very pro Veil (Hidden World)
    • Put a spin on it
      • She’s really pretty anxious about talking to people about things that matter unless it’s in her dream space. (High School / Urban Fantasy)
    • Pick some kind of story arc you’d like your character to go on
      • Will she still see the Veil as the bastion of order, law, and good she believes it to be after working inside of it? (Swashbuckling / Urban Fantasy)
    • Then play to the motivations of the character, the ideas of the trope, the idea of the story arc, and the spin.

    The above example isn’t really an original, it’s a character named Bo who’s a much more prominent NPC in our game these days. She’s part of the Junior Guardians which is how our PCs know her, and she went to the Prom with Ti. This is just the story I would envision for her if I was playing her.

    Together these steps will give a way to make a character that fits into the game you’ve mashed together.

    Scenarios

    Lastly, let’s talk about Scenarios. It’s actually the easiest part because you just look at the plots and tropes those kinds of genre stories have and build scenarios utilizing them as foundations. Then you can add some interesting bits from your characters, setting, and situation, utilizing your genre tropes where appropriate, and you have yourself a genre mashed scenario.

    Phil did this quite expertly in our 3rd Children of the Shroud story, Smarty Pants. We started with an academic decathlon against a rival school (High School). Silas spied a student on the opposing team, Lowell Thornton, using a magical Altoid to give himself a temporary intellect boost during their one-on-one trivia battle. Thing is, Lowell isn’t magical (Urban Fantasy). On top of that, before we started the story Phil asked us about how we knew our friend Morris who died at a party at Lowell’s house this past summer, drowning in Lowell’s pool (Swashbuckling – Perilous Relationship). I told Phil my character was really tight with Morris, who was the one who introduced Silas to Meseme, my girlfriend whose soul is cohabiting my body (Highschool / Urban Fantasy). We come to find out that the Altoids were imbued with the essence of Morris, who had his soul sucked out of him in a magical ritual (Urban Fantasy). So now our characters are running down who sold the Altoids to Lowell which leads to who tried to kill Meseme in the same way (Swashbuckling / Urban Fantasy). During the entire story Silas is having emotional anger issues. His friends are doing what they can to deal with it, but tensions are high (High School). There’s a running battle in the park with one of the essence dealers, but she gets away (Swashbuckling). Hard conversations are had but eventually Silas’s friends, Ti and Gunny, help Silas commune with Meseme within his soul, which helps calm him down, and three are able to track down and bring some of the people involved with taking people’s essence to justice(High School / Urban Fantasy). This was, of course, in a huge sword fight in an abandoned asylum for the mentally ill in the city of Buffalo, NY (Swashbuckling). Yes, we have one of those here. It’s real.

    Now that you have the list, here’s the most important thing to keep in mind. These items aren’t necessarily done in order. You’ll most likely need to bounce around to each of them, getting little bits of information, making choices, asking questions, and filling things out until you have a clear enough picture to proceed with whatever might be the next logical step in your genre mashup.

    Session 0 or Session -1

    To help this process you might want to gather your game group for this genre mash. Session 0’s are great for this, or even session -1 where you’re just hashing out the above items. There’s a lot to talk about, but here’s a starting list of things to think about when having this discussion.

    Genre

    • Which genres are we going to use?
    • What do the genres mean to each person? 
    • Where do the genres overlap?

    Setting

    • What do the genre overlaps mean for the setting? 
    • Is the setting original or something created whole cloth? 
    • Who’s building or deciding on the setting? Is it a group effort? Is the GM going to take point and get input from the rest of the group, or will you use some other methodology? 
    • What’s the initial situation for the characters going to look like?

    Mechanics

    • What mechanics are you going to use? 
    • How do they fit your genre mashup? 
    • How don’t they fit your genre mashup? 
    • Are you planning on hacking them to make them fit better? 

    It can feel like a lot, but I find this kind of effort to be a fun creative exercise, regardless of whether you’re doing most of it alone or with your group. In my experience, if you just follow the flow of answers and questions as they come up, and refer to the above questions as you find yourself getting stuck, you’ll have a pretty easy time with this.

    I will provide one more bit of advice. If you’re the GM and are doing this exercise with your group, I would suggest facilitating this part just like you run the game. Ask a question, get some answers, take some notes. Always do your best to provide and get clarifications on things that are said. Also, don’t be afraid to say no to things that don’t fit together, or ask the group how those pieces that don’t look like they fit together actually do fit together. You should do your best to control the pace and when things bog down, utilize the people in your group to get unstuck.

    I just want to say thanks if you’ve read this far. Let me recap the steps I think about when putting together a genre mash game.

    Recap

    First, pick three genres.

    Second, understand what your genres are about.

    Third, try and look at how the genre’s can fit together and if you need to take a genre to a slightly different sub genre. When doing this you should think about these things:

    • Setting. The people, places, important history, and current events of the game. These should all reinforce one or more of the genres.
    • Situation. This is the initial set of circumstances the characters will find themselves in.
    • Characters. Player characters that fit inside the genre and can be protagonists in the game.
    • Mechanics. Mechanisms and procedures that make sense with and enhance the genres of the game you’re playing.
    • Scenario. Build scenarios using the aforementioned elements along with the plots and story beats used in the genres you’re mashing up.

    Once you’ve done that you have yourself a genre mashed game.

    Now let me ask you. What kind of Genre Mashups have you put together? How did you do it? How would you enhance what I’ve presented?

    Read more »
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    RPGWatch Newsfeed

  • Songs of Conquest - Release Date: May 20
    Couchpotato spotted the Strategy RPG Songs of Conquest will launch on May 20: 1.0 goes live on May 20th! The game will be released in less than a month! Greetings Wielders, We're thrilled to share some exciting news with you all: The official release date for Songs of Conquest, along with the fourth and final campaign, is set for May 20th! Get ready to step into the shoes of Bhigli, a Wielder with grand ambitions.... Read more »
  • 7 Days to Die - Leaving Early Access
    7 Days to Die will leave Early Access in June: 7 Days is leaving Early Access The Fun Pimps are happy to announce 7 Days is leaving Early Access! Join us with TFP Co-Founder Richard Huenink in this Video with details on ‘7 Days to Die’ plans to leave early access, the launch dates for PC and Console Alpha 22 (Now 1.... Read more »
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    Sly Flourish

  • VideoRunning Adventures – Mashups and the Undefined

    Over the past couple of months I've written articles defining adventure types – how we prep them, how we run them, what pitfalls we might run into, and how to mitigate those pitfalls. These articles include:

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

    Know the Rules then Break the Rules

    Now that we've defined adventure types, it's time to throw them away.

    You see, these adventure types often don't line up with the actual adventures we run at our table. Our adventures might span across multiple types, or they might not be defined by any adventure type at all.

    Our romp through Ironfang Keep might feel like a dungeon crawl, a heist, or an investigation. Our traversal across the ghoul city of Vandekhul might feel like travel or intrigue. Our battle against Camazotz might start as a major combat session but turn into roleplaying.

    Adventures just don't fit cleanly into any given adventure type.

    So why did you bother to read all those articles? Why did I bother to write them?

    Because understanding adventure types can still help us run awesome games.

    Actual adventures and sessions might not fit perfectly into one specific adventure type, but when we break down the elements of these adventure types, they give us a possible framework to build off of. They help us identify pitfalls and mitigation strategies for the elements of our game that do fit.

    Which Adventure Type Best Fits?

    When preparing or running our game, try to identify which adventure type or types best fit our game and use the preparation, execution framework, and tips for pitfall mitigations that make sense for the adventure you're running. Dungeon crawls, heists, defense, roleplaying, and combat situations can all come up during our campaigns or even in the middle of a session. The type tell us how we might switch modes and run that style of game.

    If we're not sure what we need when prepping our game, we can ask ourselves which adventure type best fits what we're looking at and aim our prep around that type. Sometimes finding a suitable adventure type means taking a fuzzy concept and defining it within the bounds of the adventure type. "This situation at the castle feels like both defense and intrigue – let me look at those adventure types."

    Absorb Adventure Types, Then Let Them Go

    The more proficient we are running adventures, the more we can absorb the concepts for these adventure types and then set them aside when we're running adventures outside the bounds of any one adventure type.

    Adventure types help identify different modes of play in our fantasy tabletop roleplaying games. Like many generalities, they often break down when you apply them to the actual games we run at our table.

    Yet we don't have to throw away the underlying adventure type concepts in how we prep, how we run, the pitfalls we might face, and how to mitigate those pitfalls. Those concepts hold up even if the defined shapes of an adventure type doesn't perfectly fit the adventure we run.

    Build Your Own Frameworks

    These articles offer one perspective on adventure types. Through your own experiences you might find other adventure types or choose to redefine them yourself. Your own steps for preparing, running, identifying pitfalls, and mitigating pitfalls might be far more useful to you than the advice in this series of articles. That's fine. That's awesome. Define your own adventure types. Ask yourself what you need to prep, what you need to run them, what pitfalls you often run into, and how you can mitigate those pitfalls.

    Find the adventure types that best fit your actual adventures and use the tools within to run awesome games.

    More Sly Flourish Stuff

    Last week I posted a couple of YouTube videos on Using the 8 Lazy DM Steps at the Table and Swamp King Fronk – Lazy RPG Prep.

    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:

    • Give characters and players a warning when they’re facing a foe beyond their capabilities.
    • Use rolls for distance and motivation to change up random encounters.
    • Improvise connections between random encounters and the larger story through secrets and clues.
    • Build your own 5e from the sources that bring you the coolest options for your game.
    • Clarify options and choices.
    • Print maps and write down one- or two-word descriptions right on the map.
    • Build encounters, secrets, NPCs, monsters, and treasure from the characters outward.

    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 »
  • 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.

    Read more »

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