Saturday, 20 June 2020

Red orc, wizard and D&D




Our lockdown D&D campaign must be about 90 sessions long by now. We've been playing every day with only a handful of skipped sessions over the past three months. 

In that time, the players have ransacked the Caves of Chaos, explored Quasqueton, hunted demon-worshippers, saved the Keep on the Borderlands from a titanic and long-buried giant, played off merchant-prince factions against each other in the city of Kalbarad, explored the sewers of said city to break up an illegal orc-fighting ring, stolen a ship, sailed to the Fire Isles and the Far Isles, destroyed the threat of sea devils to shipping, rid the roads of Rothia of non-human bandits, fought off Red Hand assassins, killed the wizard Imrin Sark and - today - toppled his black tower. The wizard destroyed their ship with blue fire, however, thwarting their plan to get rich from trading Rothian wine. 

But soon a ship will sail from Rothia to a far, far land and a fabled city called ... Jakalla. One player has found a Tsolyani grammar, and others are intrigued by the prospect of powerful magical items said to be found in the underworld of this city - like the Eye of Advancing Through Portals, which they found on a foe's body. We'll see what they choose to do next ...

The late Imrin Sark

Anyway, one side-effect of the campaign's breakneck speed is that I'm now always dredging up half-painted miniatures to finish them off and get fresh foes on the table. I got two red orcs finished in time for yesterday's session and this wizard done in time for today's.

8 comments:

  1. This sounds like an extremely fun campaign! I can't imagine playing every day. How do you do it and how many players are there?

    And how will you reconcile the weird aliens of EPT with your D&D world? Will Jakalla be situated beneath a starless sky? Are they sailing through a Gate?

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  2. Yes, it's been lots of fun - and It's proven surprisingly easy. The weekday sessions are short (80 or 90 minutes), and I have 40 minutes or so after work to prep. That usually involves drafting a quick rumour table for wherever they are, statting up some potential foes and sketching or pinching a map. The PCs' own desires tend to drive a lot of the action - as through finding someone to make armour out of dragon hide or disguising themselves as a noble and her followers who might potentially be the rightful owners of a ship.

    We've got seven regular players - my two kids here, three more players in another household and two others dialling in individually. A couple of other players have come and gone; one of those makes occasional cameos.

    As for the reconciliation of EPT with the generic D&D world, I'm taking a 'never apologise, never explain' approach! I've mentioned a sea route that passes through the Crimson Gates. And beyond that, the skies will be starless but double-mooned. I doubt any real rationalisation will be required.

    The big challenge is going to be the miniatures. I've procured some 'close-enough' Hlyss proxies on the way, and I have some viable Shen-alikes, but I suspect I'll have to make and convert most of the rest myself. I think the effort will be worth it, though, as the sheer weirdness of the beasties should elicit plenty of shrieks and bafflement when they shamble on screen ...

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    1. From the sound of it, you're taking your players on a trip through gaming modules and settings of the '70s. Wonderful. But what will you do when the restrictions on contact are over? Perhaps it's a moot point. It could be many months.

      As for EPT miniatures, are you familiar with M.A.R. Barker's EPT miniatures painting guide? See pp. 8-11 of this file:
      http://pied.nu/dragon/files/Drmg006.pdf

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    2. Check out The Tekumel Project blog here: https://thetekumelproject.blogspot.com/

      Howard is the authorized seller of the curren trange of Tekumel figures, including Shen.

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    3. You can also find info about Tekumel figures at http://tekumelcollecting.com/

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  3. Thanks! Oddly enough, I came across the transcription of that article here: http://www.deartonyblair.co.uk/2013/05/empire-of-petal-throne-1977-painting.html. Nice to see it in context, though!

    When (if!) lockdown ends, I think we'll continue with the online gaming, though it will probably fall to once a week. We can probably find an evening that suits everyone - and I'm fairly sure there will be a lot more space in schedules, especially as contact sports will probably be the last thing to start up again.

    Zoom-based gaming is actually much more convenient; you can have short, sharp sessions, there's much less time-wasting involved and there's no need to make the house presentable!

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  4. I love them. The orcs, the wizard - all of them!

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    1. Thanks, Skully! The party proved far less fond!

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