Monday, April 8, 2013

As The Wheel Burns

Since last September we've been playing Paizo's Kingmaker adventure path using Strands of Fate rules.  It had its highs and lows, survived the Christmas/New Year season and all that.  What really stuck us, though, was flu season.  Between my daughter being sick, my wife being sick, and our GM being sick, as we approached our fourth Sunday with no Kingmaker (we did take some of those sessions to get some much-needed board game time in) it was decided that the campaign was going back on the shelf for a while.  The GM, belonging to a theater company, was about to start a show anyhow and that was going to take much of his time.

We hadn't really made firm plans going forward as far as roleplaying was concerned.  One of the players that used to GM and I discussed an anthology campaign where we all had the same characters but we'd rotate GMs for short story arcs.  But we never really nailed anything down.

Then I had an idea.  I texted it out to the group to see what they thought of it. 

"I had an idea for a Burning Wheel game. Make it close to late medieval/early renaissance in tech. Strip the fantasy races, maybe a little magic, but use the corruption rules. Maybe some faith magic too, or maybe not. The game would be set in a huge port city on a Mediterranean-like sea that acts as the trade hub between the different cultures that have developed on this sea.

There was a guy in the city that had managed to bring all of the city's underworld guilds, gangs, and pirates under his control. This ended decades of lawless chaos, but made crime nearly impossible to combat.

Yesterday was that man's funeral."


I learned about Burning Wheel about five years ago from a mention on the Dragon's Landing Inn podcast.  It was the first game I learned about from a podcast that really grabbed my attention.  Keep in mind that although I have the five core Revised Edition books and the Gold edition of Burning Wheel, I've still never had the chance to play it. 

As we got together this week we played some boardgames as well as Microscope.  Microscope is RPG-ish, it's really a set of cooperative world-building rules.  You establish the premise, set up a beginning and and ending to the era of time you're creating, set up some of the world's dos and don'ts, and then take turns establishing themes, periods of time, and events to that era.  It's fun.  We ran my short, little text through the Microscope machine to help define the setting that we'll soon be playing in.

Below are the results of our Microscope session.  There's some jargon involved, if curious feel free to ask what it means.

Premise
A port city thrives through corruption and crime.

Add:
-Criminal Guilds
-Tall ships
-Early gunpowder
-Fantastic races
-Slavery
-Social castes
-External political pressure
-Zealots

Ban:
-Non-corrupting magic
-Fantastic creatures
-Monotheism

Legacies
The Plentiful Catch; The Corruption Goes Unnoticed; Marriage Between Social Castes

Period 1: Traders establish settlement at natural harbor. (Good)
   Event 1.1: Arrival of the "Dark Swords" crime syndicate. (Bad)
   Event 1.2: The traders arm select men with newly imported blunderbusses to protect the citizens. (Good)

Period 2: Era of the Plentiful Catch. (Good)
   Event 2.1: The early seers point toward the richest and most plentiful fishing waters. (Good)
      Scene 2.1.1: Who convinced the fishers' guild to haul in the fish despite them knowing they had been corrupted?   A traveller from the distant lands, doubted  due to his mysterious nature.  But the results of his methods speak for themselves. (Good)
   Event 2.2: The boom in the fishing trade creates wealthy families from fishers and merchants.  (Good)
   Event 2.3: "The Plentiful Catch" was the groundwork for the power structure in the city. (Good)
   Event 2.4: The Waterman's marry their daughter to the Lancaster's son. (Good)
      Scene 2.4.1: Why did the Waterman's refuse to marry their daughter to the son of Ohmid?  Ohmid's son, Corva, is a "renowned" thief in the minds of the populace. (Bad)
   Event 2.5: The first great storm.  Many blame it on the fishermen seeking dark methods to increase  their catch.  (Bad)

Period 3: War Amongst the Guilds. (Bad)
   Event 3.1: As the waters become overfished, the fishermans' guild turns its eyes to maintaining  control of the city. (Bad)
   Event 3.2: Young Ewan learns bookkeeping from his father, a clerk for the fishermans' guild.  (Good)
   Event 3.3: A fire burns most of the city to the ground. (Bad)
   Event 3.4: Using what he learned from his late father, Ewan founds the Tradesmens' Guild to unite assorted tradesmen against the aristocracy. (Good)
   Event 3.5: Ewan befriends a man named Ajan, known in his homeland as Ajan the Dark, the man that helps him further his control into the darker guilds. (Good)

Period 4: Death of "Lord" Ewan. (Bad)
   Event 4.1: Seeking allies in the struggle against the workers, the nobles turn to the dark magic of the old gods. (Bad)
      Scene 4.1.1: Why would nobles embrace old magic?  The influence of an overseas cult recently arrived.  The nobles did not see the havoc caused by the cult in their homeland.  (Bad)
   Event 4.2: The renegade arm of the "Dark Swords" are defeated by the assasination of their leader, Relath IV. (Good)
   Event 4.3: The people riot when inter-caste marriages are declared annulled. (Bad)

And that's where we left.  It was a relatively short session of Microscope, we each only took one pass as the Lens.  There's so much left to be explored in the back story and we haven't even established a scale for the timeline.  And if we decide to come back to it with Microscope, we'll be adding events and periods in between the ones we have now, changing the context of what we have.  But for now I'm going to begin piecing this together for our campaign.  It will be a challenge because Burning Wheel is very outside of the box for what I'm used to.  But it should be fun.

Burning Wheel's website
Microscope's website

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

WorldMaker: Settling on Setting and Merging Ideas

Hey everyone!  I hope your 2013 has started off with great games, or at least the anticipation of them.

In my last WorldMaker post I talked about having two world ideas that were competing for my immediate attention. One being my take on an all-comers D&Desque world, and the second being a more intimate setting focused on intrigue. I decided to begin developing the second world. I'm calling it Drann. Oh, and Drann is on Aedora (my D&D world, a-yeh-dora). THAT'S MADNESS!!! Probably, but there's actually a solid reason for it. Drann fits perfectly into Aedora's prehistory.

A bit on Aedora's creation: it was formed by an overdeity. This overdeity was a PC of mine long, long ago that gained omnipotence. Once that happened he ceased being a PC or even an NPC in that GM's cosmology. No record of him ever existing because he never did as far as the current fiction of those realities are concerned (though our gaming stories certainly say otherwise). He became the overdeity of my cosmology. He has complete agency and omnipotence in my world, though he lacks omniscience. His name is Tsalmaveth (sal-muh-veth).

As he created the universe in which Aedora exists, he created for himself a companion named Naldrea (nal-dray-uh). He creates a celestial plane for her to live in, gives her the essence of Creation, and then leaves “for a short while” (eons and eons, but what's that to an eternal agent). Naldrea, feeling the instinct of motherhood, creates a race of beings called the oestaua (oh-es-ta-wa). After millions of years the oestaua plan a conspiracy to claim Naldrea's godhood for themselves. Upon Tsalmaveth's return...well, let's just say bad things happen to them. It's the fallout from this that creates the New World, elves, man, dwarves, gods, planes, dragons, magic; all that good stuff that we already know and love.

While this will still technically be the same planet, the two “worlds” will be very far apart in time and tone that each one could be ran for a number of years in real time and would never intrude on one another. The biggest mechanical change will be in character options which right now are ideas that have not yet been given form by way of mechanics.

Now I've settled the wheres and the whens. Next time I'll start lining up the things that I'm looking to do in building the race and giving the different bloodlines some thematic and mechanical distinctions.