Posts Tagged ‘pathfinder’

Two Random Ideas

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Idea the First: I was considering crossbows and their mechanics while in seminar today, and it occurred to me that what a range increment represents is your ability to hit a given target with different levels of accuracy.  So, your range increment should increase if you can find a way to reduce the noise in your aiming mechanism.  The long and short of it is that a crossbow bipod makes a lot of sense.  No reason you can’t use it to stabilize your crossbow and add 10′ to your range increment.  The caveat, of course, is that you must have something to rest it on, so you must be prone or near a steady object of appropriate height.  All of my future D&D/Pathfinder games will include bipods, since I’ve always felt that crossbows don’t get enough love.

Idea the Second: Psi Phi will be hosting our semesterly Cookies ‘N’ Characters on Sunday, and I’ll be running either a Pathfinder adventure or a Shambles one-shot.  Can’t decide which, so I’ll bring both to the event and let the players decide which they want.  I’m going to have a lot of fun working up a Shambles adventure I think I’m going to call “Stacy’s Mom.”  Yeah, that’s right.  It’s gonna be crazy.

World Premise Twist: Education

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

The typical fantasy world assumes a low level of general education.  Many (or most) can’t read or do basic math.  Scholars are rare or derided, and universities and higher learning are not considered to be worth the expenditure in gold and real estate.  Learning is generally not a priority for most people, because most fantasy worlds assume a medieval level of development and resources.  For the average peasant, there is little time for reading when crops must be gathered.  Adventurers focus on staying alive or the practical knowledge they need to loot more efficiently.  Generally, this makes sense given the medieval baseline.

That is not to say that education does not exist in fantasy gaming or literature.  It quite often does, but it is at best a sideline.  Eberron introduced institutionalized education into D&D in a way that hadn’t been done in a major production before (again, to the best of my knowledge – please feel free to correct the record).  I think it’s safe to say that education very rarely drives much of any fantasy world, and that it is very rare for education to be anyone’s priority (in the fantasy world at large, at any rate).  Within the scope of my gaming experience, there has been little in the way of an educated populace.

I’ve been looking for a real twist to the Pathfinder campaign I’m in the process of planning.  While reading David Weber’s By Schism Rent Asunder, I had a brainstorm.  What if education was common in my game world?  What if the Empire, the largest unified nation in the world, sponsors public education at all levels?  What if the Fellowship of Light, the largest organized religion in the world, encourages its faithful to better themselves and others through intellectual endeavors?  What if most of the population can read, do math, and owns at least a few books?  I don’t think this is necessarily a revolutionary approach to gaming, but it certainly revolutionizes my approach.

The first step towards solidifying this idea is to determine the level of education in science, mathematics, literature, philosophy, linguistics, and religion that has been reached.  In other words, how advanced is their education in real-world terms?  I’ve decided to go with an Italian Renaissance-era feel.  So, the sciences (especially their practical applications to engineering) are on the rise, and intellectualism is prized.  Successful rulers must also be well-versed in all aspects of learning in order to be able to converse intelligently with one another and in order to manage their realms.

Keeping with the Renaissance influence, organized religion is also a sponsor of education, though mostly so that they might tempt the people to join the ranks of the priesthood.  Architects and artists are commonly commissioned to create great works that venerate the pantheons.  Clerics and acolytes also educate their flocks as part of their ministerial duties.  Most mid-size cities on up have a college or university of some kind, and some have more than one.  The Imperial capital, of course, has the biggest and most awe-inspiring of them all – Imperial Collegium.  There are half a dozen competitors in the city, but none with quite the same resources or prestige.

The next consideration is magic.  How does it fit into education in my world?  Is it part of universities, or do spellcasters maintain their own schools?  Either choice presents more options, but I’ll stick with magic included in universities.  Spellcasters have their own guilds, of course, but magical education may be found at most temples of learning.  In fact, artificers and archivists are quite common in universities around the world, melding the magical with the mundane.  I’ve always loved Eberron’s blending of magic and technology, and I’d like to carry the same tone into my game world.  A little bit Renaissance to it, perhaps, but it’s a good starting point.

Similar to Eberron, I’d also like to make museums part of the educational scene.  Many colleges have them, and they help the adventuring economy thrive.  Such collections provide ample opportunities for buying and selling, as well as cloak-and-dagger affairs.  Universities compete over having the best museums, just as cities and kingdoms compete over having the best universities.  Skilled faculty are always in demand, as are items (or people)  for study.  This way, adventurers are an integral part of the educational system and the economy.  Adventurers also exist in their usual capacity as troubleshooters, mercenaries, and just plain treasure hunters, but I like having a solid reason for so many antiquities and artifacts to be moving through the economy.

Class-wise, scholars and teachers may be of any class.  Artificers and archivists are going to be common scholar classes in my world, with a fair number of bards, clerics, and wizards for flavor.  There will also be a very sizable proportion of NPC classes represented, since not everyone is an adventurer.  It will vary a bit by institution, of course, but at most places the majority of faculty members will be from NPC classes.  The most common heroic class is most likely the bard, followed by the wizard and archivist.  Clerics and artificers have the smallest noticeable presence, but there are still plenty of them.

And there you have it…

Review: Secrets of Pact Magic

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Secrets of Pact Magic is a very interesting set of alternative rules for any OGL game.  I’ve often enjoyed fantasy worlds where magic is performed by binding spirits, or at least where such rituals are fairly common (say, more frequent than castings of planar ally spells, which have never been used in any game I have played in for the last seven years).  So, at first blush, pact magic looks like a good way to incorporate that feeling into D&D with both crunch and roleplaying.

Over the last several days, I’ve had the chance to read through Secrets of Pact Magic and have absolutely fallen in love with the way pact magic is presented.  A word of warning – I haven’t had time to do a playlets, so I cannot speak definitively about balance or the way the crunch plays out.  I’ll offer my opinion (since when has anything stopped me from doing that?), but take it with a grain of salt.

First, production values.  Secrets of Pact Magic is about what I’d expect from a third party publisher.*  The pages of the PDF have a nice background and border that add some flavor without being too distracting.   The art is not quite as good as, say, something from Paizo or Wizards, but its style fits with the rest of the production choices in the PDF and that’s really my highest requirement.  The typographic and other layout choices are mostly good, but the headers on some sidebars can be distracting.

The book begins with an introduction to pact magic, which is a good primer for the flavor of the pact magic system.  Reading it for the first time, I was immediately drawn in and wanted to give it a spin or work it into my own campaigns.  I love the idea of small bargains or deals that aren’t quite on the Faustian level (at first) in order to gain a measure of personal power.   It’s a delicious approach to magic ripe for roleplaying opportunities.

The way pact magic is presented in Secrets gives GMs a chance to use it either as a full-blown change to D&D’s magic system, or as an addition to the game as it stands.  I think the best way to use pact magic is by making it an option, but not necessarily by making it the primary source of magic in the world.  Part of my reasoning is that the pact magic system doesn’t seem meant to be a replacement for arcane/divine magic.

The classes offered in Secrets have a few holes.  Not big ones, mind you, but for the kind of game that I like to play the pact magic classes aren’t quite adequate.  I like having a cleric class, for one.  Pact magic offers the Occult Priest, but it doesn’t have quite the flavor I’m looking for.  So, pact magic can’t replace magic in D&D for me, but the beauty of Secrets is that it works just as well as a complement to the stock classes.

The way I played with my friends in high school was that all the standard classes in the Player’s Handbook were available, and then the GM picked from the dozens of supplements we collectively owned which other classes would be permissible.  There were usually at least two dozen.   I like having options, and pact magic adds some good ones.

I’m a particular fan of the Foe Hunter, a ranger-like class that lets the Hunter vary his/her abilities based on the currently-bound spirit.   I can see using the Foe Hunter as a holy warrior who calls upon spirits to hunt the enemies of his/her faith.  Alternatively, the Foe Hunter sells little bits of his/her soul at a time (sorta like a time share, but in hell) to gain the skills needed to off the next contract.

Note to GMs: want to make the supernatural a very important part of your campaign that is fundamentally tied to at least one character in the game?  This will do it.

In short, I love Secrets of Pact Magic.  The designers put some serious thought and effort into writing this supplement, and I think it makes a great addition to any D&D game.  I’m looking forward to working it into a game soon, possibly using the Pathfinder conversion.  I would have loved to review that as well, but this review ended up being way longer than I expected so I’ll save that for another day.

Disclaimer: I received a review copy of Secrets of Pact Magic, Villains of Pact Magic, and the conversion guide from Ed Healey at Atomic Array so that I could write this review.

* That is, a company with less in the way of resources than a one of the few major hitters in the field.  I love small presses, and this one is no different, so please don’t take this as a negative.

Want to learn more about Pact Magic? Read on…

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