A reptilian sorcerer commands the last outpost of a vanished empire, torn between madness and continuing the task set him by his silent masters: destroying the world piece by piece.
The desert swarms with willing guides, but are they more trouble than they're worth? The desert has ways of taking its toll from everyone who dares enter.
The Oracle's Decree features exterior and cutaway views of Pelaago, a cliff-side fort on the outskirts of a desert wasteland, the scaly Heelan
This adventure is set up a bit like a pointcrawl; you can either randomize the desert encounters as suggested, or arrange them on the landscape when you situate the adventure on your campaign map.
If you're using the Big Map, Pelaago is located on the eastern outskirts of the Blightlands, and the cliff marks the edge of the Firevault plateau.
A big thank-you to my patrons who make this project possible. If you enjoy this adventure or any of my others, consider dropping some coin in my Patreon tip jar!
Thanks to their generosity, this adventure and all of the art are released for non-commercial reuse under CC-BY-NC 3.0.
Full-resolution TIFF art: Pelaago Exterior - Pelaago Interior - Heelan Eye - Water Shade
Saturday, 31 October 2015
Friday, 9 October 2015
Making a 3D Map, Part 3
It's finally done! This has probably been the largest, most complicated traditionally-drawn map I've done so far.
As explained in previous posts, I don't have a scanner large enough for me to draw this at the size I wanted to work, so I decided to work piecemeal, scanning each section as I completed it, then reprinting it in cyan on card stock.
The cyan could all be all removed in Photoshop, leaving me with a mosaic of pieces to assemble.
As explained in previous posts, I don't have a scanner large enough for me to draw this at the size I wanted to work, so I decided to work piecemeal, scanning each section as I completed it, then reprinting it in cyan on card stock.
The cyan could all be all removed in Photoshop, leaving me with a mosaic of pieces to assemble.
"The old wizard hands you a map in four sections, apologizing about the size of his scanner." |
I'm pretty psyched about how it turned out. Here's the final, assembled map:
click to embiggen |
To get it at proper viewing size, you'll need to check out Bedrock Games' upcoming Wuxia RPG, Wandering Heroes of Ogre Gate!
Wednesday, 7 October 2015
PC Knowledge and the Bandwidth Problem
In my last post, I wrote about how vigilance is an experience that's very hard to simulate in role-playing games. This is one symptom of a very general issue: talking is slow.
This comes up a lot for lore-heavy games. There just isn't enough time, in-band, to communicate anything but short tidbits of information about the game world.
I've occasionally tried (and nearly always failed) to create a form of suspense where the players know a bunch of lore, and then in-game events relate to it. In my imagination, players notice discrepancy I've planted, and react with appropriate alarm.
"Wait, what? A Sigornian Templar without a cassock? He's an imposter!"
In real life, they never notice.
I've seen many posts by GMs, frustrated that they've got all this canon, but the players aren't interested in doing homework to absorb it all - so they don't understand the subtleties the GM is trying to convey at the table.
Not only is talking slow, but few players have any interest in listening to a gargantuan info-dump that I stayed up all night writing. You could write a big setting book, but then the problem is finding players that want to read it.
I do know some players who lap this sort of thing up, (history buffs and whatnot) that love rolling around in canon and try to use it at the table, but in my travels they're a small percentage. Many people I've gamed with can barely remember the single major clue they found last session.
Nevertheless, the problem endures because playing knowledgeable characters is awesome.
So, how do we get players to feel like their characters aren't idiots, bumbling around in an unfamiliar world?
a) Write down all your lore, and find a bunch of players that enjoys reading it and make your group out of them. (Be prepared for this to be almost none of your original group.)
This seems to work best with popular culture settings like Middle Earth and Star Wars, mostly because the 'lessons' aren't an info dump, but emotionally interesting stories with setting information as a byproduct.
b) GM tells you what your character knows, when it's relevant; either when the PC asks for information or when a situation arises that a knowledgeable PC would recognize as significant.
Sometimes this requires a test of knowledge skills. I see this sort of thing in the context of GM-initiated knowledge challenges (like, you need to know something about elven portals to open this portal.) GUMSHOE has a particular take on this, where the skills in questions are just pools that can be dipped into a number of times.
This works well for some groups, but it has a few implications:
c) Ditch the lore. Scorched earth - focus on what happens at the table, filling in with a sentence or two for context when necessary, but never hanging any developments on whether the players have memorized some in-game lore.
d) Let PCs propose reasonable facts. I see this a lot in the context of player-initiated plans: while the party is figuring out how to infiltrate an elven community, the bard player wonders aloud whether elven patrols could be temporarily deceived by an impression of elven music the bard just happens to know.
The GM hasn't invented any elven songs, but clearly there would be some, and it's plausible the bard might have heard one somehow - success and he performs it well enough to fool the elves. Fail the roll, and by gum he mixes it up with a Sigornian dirge and arouses the curiosity of every elven patrol within two miles.
Burning Wheel uses this to good effect, making it the explicit method for using knowledge skills. (BW has another stat, 'Circles', that lets players propose plausible NPCs the same way, one of the killer apps of the game).
Many play groups do this informally without thinking about it much, with players asking leading questions, "Well, does the Bishop use some kind of washer woman I might know?" or observer-players lobbing in suggestions from the peanut gallery that the GM uses as inspiration (sometimes covertly, sometimes openly).
e) As seen at some Dungeon World tables, one option is to let players propose anything. Even things relating to NPC factions that have just been discovered by the party.
f) Create the lore together, perhaps using a structured procedure like a game of Microscope or The Quiet Year. This will create a group who is super-familiar with the material and deeply invested in it (because they invented most of it), at the cost that you control very little of it. (You could ask that they stick to certain parameters.)
What have I missed?
Role-playing is very low bandwidth.
This comes up a lot for lore-heavy games. There just isn't enough time, in-band, to communicate anything but short tidbits of information about the game world.
I've occasionally tried (and nearly always failed) to create a form of suspense where the players know a bunch of lore, and then in-game events relate to it. In my imagination, players notice discrepancy I've planted, and react with appropriate alarm.
"Wait, what? A Sigornian Templar without a cassock? He's an imposter!"
In real life, they never notice.
I've seen many posts by GMs, frustrated that they've got all this canon, but the players aren't interested in doing homework to absorb it all - so they don't understand the subtleties the GM is trying to convey at the table.
"Now, over here is where the empire invaded in 485 NE, or 982 ZE by the Orgothan calendar.." |
Talk Faster?
Not only is talking slow, but few players have any interest in listening to a gargantuan info-dump that I stayed up all night writing. You could write a big setting book, but then the problem is finding players that want to read it.
I do know some players who lap this sort of thing up, (history buffs and whatnot) that love rolling around in canon and try to use it at the table, but in my travels they're a small percentage. Many people I've gamed with can barely remember the single major clue they found last session.
Nevertheless, the problem endures because playing knowledgeable characters is awesome.
So, how do we get players to feel like their characters aren't idiots, bumbling around in an unfamiliar world?
The Solutions I've Seen
a) Write down all your lore, and find a bunch of players that enjoys reading it and make your group out of them. (Be prepared for this to be almost none of your original group.)
This seems to work best with popular culture settings like Middle Earth and Star Wars, mostly because the 'lessons' aren't an info dump, but emotionally interesting stories with setting information as a byproduct.
b) GM tells you what your character knows, when it's relevant; either when the PC asks for information or when a situation arises that a knowledgeable PC would recognize as significant.
Sometimes this requires a test of knowledge skills. I see this sort of thing in the context of GM-initiated knowledge challenges (like, you need to know something about elven portals to open this portal.) GUMSHOE has a particular take on this, where the skills in questions are just pools that can be dipped into a number of times.
This works well for some groups, but it has a few implications:
- it creates a subtle mismatch between playing a knowledgeable character and feeling like one
- it reinforces the 'star' pattern in the group, where the most meaningful interactions occur between one PC and the GM
c) Ditch the lore. Scorched earth - focus on what happens at the table, filling in with a sentence or two for context when necessary, but never hanging any developments on whether the players have memorized some in-game lore.
d) Let PCs propose reasonable facts. I see this a lot in the context of player-initiated plans: while the party is figuring out how to infiltrate an elven community, the bard player wonders aloud whether elven patrols could be temporarily deceived by an impression of elven music the bard just happens to know.
The GM hasn't invented any elven songs, but clearly there would be some, and it's plausible the bard might have heard one somehow - success and he performs it well enough to fool the elves. Fail the roll, and by gum he mixes it up with a Sigornian dirge and arouses the curiosity of every elven patrol within two miles.
"Orcs shamans would totally have their own private latrines!" |
Many play groups do this informally without thinking about it much, with players asking leading questions, "Well, does the Bishop use some kind of washer woman I might know?" or observer-players lobbing in suggestions from the peanut gallery that the GM uses as inspiration (sometimes covertly, sometimes openly).
e) As seen at some Dungeon World tables, one option is to let players propose anything. Even things relating to NPC factions that have just been discovered by the party.
f) Create the lore together, perhaps using a structured procedure like a game of Microscope or The Quiet Year. This will create a group who is super-familiar with the material and deeply invested in it (because they invented most of it), at the cost that you control very little of it. (You could ask that they stick to certain parameters.)
What have I missed?
Update
Some neat suggestions to enrich these options.
1. +Jeremy Strandberg has a tweak to option b), that runs like this. The GM has set up a situation where one of the templars is an imposter, and calls for a roll. If the PC passes the knowledge check, the GM says, "You notice that one of the templars is an imposter in disguise. What gives it away?" The player then gets to narrate what they notice.
This is delightful, as it makes the player the person at the table who gets to narrate being knowledgeable, while preserving traditional responsibilities for the structurally-relevant details. (Not to say the player's contribution is trivial or cosmetic, in an ideal world, the player-created detail takes on a life of its own in later play.)
He further points out this is most appropriate for 'Sherlock Holmes' or 'Cadfael' type games, where the players are creating the world while showing how smart their characters are, rather than high lethality dungeon crawls that rely on players interpreting what they see around them.
2. +Christopher Meid also tweaks option b), suggesting that the GM (or possibly the player) can narrate a flashback that explains how the PC came to know the crucial information.
Saturday, 3 October 2015
Making Knowledge Valuable
This is a half-formed idea with potential.
Nearly a year ago I wrote about red herrings in dungeon dressing, and how room/area descriptions can instead be useful if they give players knowledge about what's going on in the dungeon.
They don't know what's there, but rather than go kick in the door and go toe to toe with whatever it is, they equip themselves for a long journey, to tour all the little marshlands villages to see what can be learned about the Shrine.
They then plan out a second and third missions to do recon - one approaching the Shrine from the west, another from the east, to scout out the lands around that place before planning a fourth and final journey to assault the Shrine directly.
In a linear campaign, making this happen is easy: you just structure the chapters of the pre-planned adventure accordingly, but I've never seen this happen organically in a campaign.
If you have, I'd love to hear your tale!
Until then, here's my ideas for ways to bring this about.
They need to make specific preparations, and if they're wrong they'll be out of their depth quickly.
If it's easy for the part to prepare for any eventuality, there's no need for recon. Recon missions are about going in quietly, learning what needs to be learned, and getting out again - so a subsequent foray can be planned that makes different trade-offs.
If the party is full of plate-armored spell-mages carrying their repertoire of magic and two hundred pounds of useful gear with them in a bag of holding.. they're not going to need to make multiple forays.
Instead, imagine expedition prep is all about trade-offs:
Nearly a year ago I wrote about red herrings in dungeon dressing, and how room/area descriptions can instead be useful if they give players knowledge about what's going on in the dungeon.
Reconnoitering the Shrine of Woe
Let's say that the party has committed to taking down the Shrine of Woe - it's a blight on the landscape, disgorging troublesome beasties almost monthly, etc. etc.They don't know what's there, but rather than go kick in the door and go toe to toe with whatever it is, they equip themselves for a long journey, to tour all the little marshlands villages to see what can be learned about the Shrine.
They then plan out a second and third missions to do recon - one approaching the Shrine from the west, another from the east, to scout out the lands around that place before planning a fourth and final journey to assault the Shrine directly.
In a linear campaign, making this happen is easy: you just structure the chapters of the pre-planned adventure accordingly, but I've never seen this happen organically in a campaign.
If you have, I'd love to hear your tale!
Until then, here's my ideas for ways to bring this about.
Some Principles of Valuable Knowledge
- Danger is distributed unevenly
- There are hidden exploits
- Rewards are distributed unevenly
- There are clues that explain the layout
- Preparation involves trade-offs
Uneven, Hidden Dangers
Danger varies wildly - some areas are safe, while other areas nearby are downright lethal. Much of this isn't obvious. Monsters have horrible, non-obvious powers - infection, curses, leap attacks.
- They are warded off by certain preparations or weapons
- They are dangerous unless unusual preparations are made
- They inflict harm that requires unusual treatment
Consequences might spring, trap-like, from innocuous sources. You ambush a small pack of goblins, but reinforcements boil out of every hole in the ground for miles. Deadly things are sleeping in caves, but awaken with determination to punish any who have disturbed them.
Potential allies are easily offended, and have unadvertised cravings and needs.
There Might be a Way..
On the other hand, there are exploits. Monsters have hidden weaknesses. Sites have solid defenses, but hidden access.
There's a long, winding canyon through Jutland that keeps off the worst of the sun and stops the orc ridge-scouts from ever spotting you. Morton villagers know a dry path through the Gormarl. Water shades can't stand the taste of vinegar, so sprinkle some in your footprints.
The Spawn of Ubratna will turn you inside out with a look, but powdered limestone sends them scrambling for the dark places.
The Gomarl is dangerous, sure - especially if you get lost, but in the summer (and only the summer), it's full of blackfruit, which will keep you alive for days. If you know the ways in and out, it can be worth diverting through. Anders' Rock is hollow, and conceals a spring of good clear water.
A Bowlful of Nothing
Even so, not all pain is gain, because rewards are distributed unevenly. You might know how to placate the Devil of Folly's Basin, but the only things there are sand and broken glass. Avoid it!
On the other hand, the wasteland giants are weak and divided, and their emperor rules in name only. The outer clans will benefit from his downfall so won't come to his aid, making his vault is ripe for the picking. Better yet, Queen Malian's tomb is completely unguarded, all you have to do is find it.
The Skirts of Athena
This is all well and good, but if players don't have a way to find out, they'll be blundering randomly into fame and fortune, or a gruesome, profitless death.
As I wrote in Interesting and Useful Dungeon Descriptions, I like to build descriptions from a short list of emitters - core facts about the adventure location that are constantly throwing off evidence.
A halo of clues, sightings and rumors, that spreads out through the dungeon, rewarding investigation. Sometimes, the edge of the 'hem' makes it as far as nearby communities.
Players come to expect that by looking for facts, they can steadily build a picture of the situation around them, a picture they desperately need.
- What sort of place is this? (What can we expect of the layout of the rest of it?)
- What's been happening here? (What might happen again, soon?)
- What's in here with us? (Where is it? How do we prepare for it?)
- What does it want? (Should we avoid it?)
- How bad is it? (Is it a militaristic, vengeful gestalt? How brutal is it with prisoners?)
Trade-Offs in Preparation
The party can't balance itself against all possible threats and obstacles. They can be as prepared as possible, but a general state of being well prepared is inadequate for the variety of challenges out there.They need to make specific preparations, and if they're wrong they'll be out of their depth quickly.
If it's easy for the part to prepare for any eventuality, there's no need for recon. Recon missions are about going in quietly, learning what needs to be learned, and getting out again - so a subsequent foray can be planned that makes different trade-offs.
If the party is full of plate-armored spell-mages carrying their repertoire of magic and two hundred pounds of useful gear with them in a bag of holding.. they're not going to need to make multiple forays.
Instead, imagine expedition prep is all about trade-offs:
- Specialist gear is heavy, or has other side effects (e.g. warm clothing makes you hot)
- Magic must be chosen well in advance (perhaps components or spellbooks are heavy, expensive and/or easily lost)
- Special preparations are expensive and have a shelf life (e.g. potions, ointments, poultices)
- Hirelings provide strength in numbers and can carry everything, but they eat a lot of food and leave a trail that can't be missed
- Certain foes require large, specialist armament (pikes for giants, crossbows for water shades, the wheeled scorpio for wyverns and harpies)
If this all works, I suppose it's players going out and creating their own hard-won assets and options, top-quality gameable campaign capital.
The Water Shade
We'd been travelling in the parch for days, making good progress. If luck held out, we'd be at Arijan by month's end.
But then the signs started - first with Elwon, draining his wineskin before noon day after day, at the barrel again before supper. He'd always been a greedy shit, but even after the captain had a stiff word with him, he wouldn't stop drinking.
Come that third morning, he was in bad shape. Skin drawn, cracking, raving about water.. always water. Then Nedlo spotted it, clear as day.
A water shade.
Head cocked, bold as brass it stood, looking at us one minute, licking at the sand the next. Nedlo said he could feel it in his guts, stealing his water right outta him, but the chaplain told him to shut it. That sorta talk was for drunks and bannets, not proper Kingsmen.
But I felt it too.
The captain started after it, waving his arms to scare it off, but I reckon it was as thirsty as us, and not likely put off the trail by a bit of noise. Without horses, what chance of catching it? It moved off, came back, moved off, came back.
For days it followed. After a while, we didn't have the strength to shoo it, and maybe it didn't matter.
Nedlo said every where you go you leave a bit of yourself behind, in your footprints like. Everyone's is different, and the shade can smell it. We always knew in these parts not to say our names to folk, chaplain was always saying, less we knew we could trust 'em. It gives a power over you, to the wrong hands anyways, But how's a man to keep his footprints to himself?
Chaplain didn't have an answer for that one. Fact is, I don't think he ever spoke again.
That's about all I have to say about the water shade. The rest of the story's not fit for your green ears noways, less you're heading into the parch.
You are? That case, I'll tell it, for your insistence - but you'll need a drink for this one. Be a righty and buy me one too.
But then the signs started - first with Elwon, draining his wineskin before noon day after day, at the barrel again before supper. He'd always been a greedy shit, but even after the captain had a stiff word with him, he wouldn't stop drinking.
Come that third morning, he was in bad shape. Skin drawn, cracking, raving about water.. always water. Then Nedlo spotted it, clear as day.
A water shade.
Head cocked, bold as brass it stood, looking at us one minute, licking at the sand the next. Nedlo said he could feel it in his guts, stealing his water right outta him, but the chaplain told him to shut it. That sorta talk was for drunks and bannets, not proper Kingsmen.
But I felt it too.
The captain started after it, waving his arms to scare it off, but I reckon it was as thirsty as us, and not likely put off the trail by a bit of noise. Without horses, what chance of catching it? It moved off, came back, moved off, came back.
* * *
For days it followed. After a while, we didn't have the strength to shoo it, and maybe it didn't matter.
Nedlo said every where you go you leave a bit of yourself behind, in your footprints like. Everyone's is different, and the shade can smell it. We always knew in these parts not to say our names to folk, chaplain was always saying, less we knew we could trust 'em. It gives a power over you, to the wrong hands anyways, But how's a man to keep his footprints to himself?
Chaplain didn't have an answer for that one. Fact is, I don't think he ever spoke again.
You are? That case, I'll tell it, for your insistence - but you'll need a drink for this one. Be a righty and buy me one too.
Thursday, 1 October 2015
Making a 3D Map, Part 2
With my trusty cyan maquette and my PITT pens, I've been slowly adding ink to the Tomb of the Timeless Master. There are quite a few rooms, so I've annotated my SketchUp drawing with notes cribbed from the module.
At this point I'm grateful for the copious perspective-reference lines I sprinkled all over the maquette. For irregular structures like rocky cliff faces (which are really just scraggly lines), it's really easy to destroy the sense of perspective without constant reminders of the 3D space they're filling.
Once I've filled the page, I scan it into Photoshop to use its magic to pull out the blue lines, and clean off any crud.
To add more to the illustration, however, I add a blue gradient map, so that I can use what I've completed so far as a structure to attach the rest to.
Time to stock up on cyan printer cartridges!