Monday, 31 August 2020

A Tale of Two Sessions

Due to the complexity of scheduling, I now find myself with both my games being scheduled for Thursdays, meaning that most days I have no gaming at all and then two sessions in a day. Which isn't ideal, but it's better than most of the alternatives.

Last Thursday was an odd day, then, in that the two sessions were radically different in outcome and character.

The work game was deeply underwhelming. The major reason for this was that I was woefully under-prepared for the session, largely due to just not having the time required. The other problem was that the PCs decided to conduct their infiltration under cover of daylight, meaning that pretty much all of the material that I had prepared was rendered useless. As a consequence, the session started late, ended early, and contained almost nothing of any value. And given that this is one of the centre-piece adventures of the campaign as a whole, that's pretty disastrous. A real shame.

By contrast, the game in the evening went much better, despite also being under-prepared. At least in this case the material that I had in place did apply, and the game was generally fun for all concerned. Which is a win.

It's also worth noting that the evening campaign has established (I think) that it works best as a very 'classic' campaign style - what is needed is a succession of well-designed short quests and dungeons, rather than anything more nebulous. So keeping the runway going there shouldn't be too tough.

But "The Lists of Lamordia" is a challenge. I clearly need to put in some more work on that centre-piece adventure, which really needs to pull together from the mess that is currently in place.


Monday, 24 August 2020

Return to the Egg

For some time I have had a small issue with one aspect of Terafa's lore - way back in the day I decided it would be cool to allow bugbears as a playable race, an option that one player in particular took advantage of for two notable PCs. Unfortunately, I have since rethought the role that I want bugbears to play in the setting, which meant that they didn't really fit in the desired role.

In the interim, WotC provided me with another small headache, but fortunately each of these problems can provide the answer to the other. Specifically, I have decided to recast those two PCs I mentioned above as dragonborn, and allow them to fill the slot now vacated by bugbears. Which is nice.

Anyway, moving on...

In addition to the legend of "The Curse of the Dragon's Gold" (which is told more about dragonborn than by them), the dragonborn have another significant legend that they tell: The Return to the Egg.

The dragonborn call themselves "The Last People", and maintain that they have existed on Terafa for some twelve thousand years. This places the origin of that people long before the Arrival of Man, before the genesis of the Elves... and indeed before the supposed creation of the world, which is reckoned to have occurred nearly six thousand years ago. (More specifically, 5780 years ago.)

In that time before time, the dragonborn established a great empire, Talkalasa, the Empire of the Seven Sins. Founded in the honour of the seven great progenitor dragons, Talkalasa was a proud, powerful, and utterly degenerate empire. All of Terafa fell under its sway.

But, as with all things that have a beginning, Talkalasa had an end. As Cavcari's Last Invocation began to unfold upon the empire, the greatest seers and sages of the dragonborn developed a plan, a way for their people to evade their end. And so, the boldest and best of the dragonborn were selected. The paragons of the dragonborn people would return to the egg, entering a strange kind of stasis, to rest for an age and half an age, and to emerge once the threat had passed. Their destiny was to reestablish the lost empire of Talkalasa.

Alas for the dragonborn, things did not work out as their sages had foreseen. Whether because the calculations were incorrect or because the eggs were disturbed, the dragonborn paragons slept too long, and emerged into a world utterly changed. No sign of the ancient borders of Talkalasa remain, and precious few other signs.

Worst of all, the dragonborn paragons were themselves diminished by their long sleep, their skills regressed to the most basic level. And they find themselves scattered across time, with some few emerging in the distant past, some a millennium ago, but more and more of them over the past century. Now, almost all dragonborn have emerged from their sleep, but they find themselves lost in a world changed. The dragonborn of this age, descendants of the earliest paragons to emerge, are a poor shadow of the old people, bereft of the great racial memory that made Talkalasa what it was.

And thus is born the great tragedy of the dragonborn, the last people of Terafa.

Sunday, 9 August 2020

To Humbly Go...

 While I'm recommending things, I really should point out that Humble Bundle currently have a bundle for the Star Trek Adventures RPG. For £12 you can get PDFs of about two-thirds of the game line, plus a voucher for 50% off the print version of the Core Rulebook.


It's definitely worth checking out if you're at all interested in the game: find it here.

My New D&D Soundtrack

Like many people, I enjoy listening to music while I work. My personal favourite, at least for that purpose, is anything that doesn't have lyrics, which means that soundtracks are always good. Naturally, the Star Wars soundtracks are a favourite. The only problem being that the Star Wars soundtracks are so well known that it's a bit easy just to tune them out, and for that reason I always find myself on the lookout for new Star Wars music and/or twists on the same.


This week I found a new soundtrack that is pretty much ideal for listening to when thinking about D&D, and when working on my campaign: Star Wars in a Medieval style.


Here's the playlist.

Monday, 3 August 2020

Five Things You Know... one of which is wrong...

For the new campaign "The Quest for Memory", I have taken to composing and sending out a "5 things you know about..." message for each session. I've found this to be a very useful way to reveal small chunks of setting lore, and also to provide clues, hints, and other details to the players. All of which is to the good.

Unfortunately, in the most recent update I provided some key information about Terafa, including such things as there being two suns, a ring system called The Fastness of the Divine... and two moons.

The only problem with that is that that fact was from an old version of the setting. In the "Ultimates" version (and, indeed, for several versions prior to that), Terafa had one moon called Melira. (What's more, that moon has since been associated with the named archmage Melira within the setting. There is no such name for the second moon.)

Still, never mind. I've now established that there are two moons, so for the duration of this campaign, two moons there are. I shall call the second one Kalas, and associate it with the dragonborn.