Posts Tagged ‘dieselpunk’

CoRCoD at 1KM1KT

Friday, August 28th, 2009

What the hell is CoRCoD, you ask?  And why the hell is it at some place called 1KM1KT?  Well, I’ll tell you!

CoRCoD is the short version of the free, Creative Commons-licensed dieselpunk/pulp/noir City of Rain, City of Darkness setting that I posted here recently.  And 1KM1KT stands for 1 Million Monkeys 1 Million Typewriters, a place where free RPGs are hosted (with any luck, in perpetuity).  I added CoRCoD to the community to ensure that it will continue to be available to anyone who wants it, regardless of the status of this site.  I strongly encourage all to check out what they host, since there are some real gems there.  And it’s all free, so trying out something new is fast and easy.  Heck, so is adding something!  The more people who join up the better, so go ahead and submit your RPG/setting.

City of Rain, City of Darkness may be found here at 1KM1KT.

City of Rain, City of Darkness: A Setting

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Update: I have already edited and fleshed out the document several times since it was first posted.  You may find the most recent version here: City of Rain City of Darkness v2

Raindrops in a puddleA while back I wanted to develop a pulp dieselpunk setting for a roleplaying game.  My initial impulse was to do a Savage Setting, and it may yet turn out that way.  Over the past few months I’ve added bits and pieces here and there to an Evernote file, and while it is not large I believe it is complete enough to be a basic RPG setting.  The overriding reason for brevity in this setting is that I’ve worked very hard from the beginning to set and maintain a consistent tone.  As such, I’ve chosen my words carefully and added items only when I felt they were essential.

This setting is heavily influenced by pulp, dieselpunk, and noir.  Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon guided my thinking throughout much of the conceptualization and design, as did Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen and many black-and-white films.  While I have never had the fortune to see Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, the idea and trailer also helped to spark my imagination.

And so, it is my pleasure to present to you my very first roleplaying game setting – City of Rain, City of Darkness.  It has rained on the city for longer than anyone can remember.  The city has always built upwards, searching for a way to escape the incessant downpour.  The wealthy rule this city, and the less fortunate are tossed aside to slip through the cracks.  Life is hard here, and each citizen must do whatever he or she can to survive.  And through it all, the rain pours endlessly down…

City of Rain, City of Darkness PDF

City of Rain, City of Darkness .doc

City of Rain, City of Darkness at Scribd

Savage Worlds Update

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

I have now had time to peruse the Savage Worlds core book, and I have to express my sincere gratitude to the creators for such a phenomenal game system.  As I sit here listening to the soundtrack for Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog I am reminded of the vast opportunities that Savage Worlds provides.  Like GURPS, it is a system designed to handle any setting or concept thrown at it.  Unlike GURPS, it succeeds without bogging down in bloat.  The core book is small and inexpensive, and it’s really all that you need to get things rolling with a Savage Worlds game.  In fact, the most important thing for any game is really a creative imagination, and that is certainly true for Savage Worlds.  Dieselpunk?  If you can imagine it you can play it.  Future apocalypse plus elves on crack?  If you can imagine it you can play it.

Today I picked up both Zombie Run and The Savage World of Solomon Kane.  Zombie Run is a great PDF from the Pinnacle Entertainment Group, and it’s not too expensive.  If you like zombie games like Left 4 Dead, or pretty much anything with zombies, really, then Zombie Run will appeal.  Without getting into spoilers, the characters are some of the few survivors of the zombie apocalypse.  On their cross-country journey they will encounter zombies, crazy people, and more zombies and crazy people.  I can’t wait to run it.

The Savage World of Solomon Kane is based on the works of Robert E. Howard, a fantasy author in the 1920s.  The book is quite large (and much more expensive than a PDF), but it is well worth the cost.  The characters are wanderers in the tradition of Solomon Kane, landless Puritan and all-around badass dude.  Kane’s legacy is that of a devoted do-gooder armed with a gun, a pistol, and a crucifix, and the characters follow in his footsteps as they continue to do his good works.  The world is quite developed, and very compelling.  Also highly recommended.

I’m also already working up my own dieselpunk campaign setting for Savage Worlds – airplanes, ray guns, and post-war politics lead to hilarious hijink and maybe, just maybe, thermonuclear war.  I hope to post it in bits and pieces here as it comes together, as well as in PDF format.  Long story short, Savage Worlds rocks my world.  Let it rock yours.