Showing posts with label Rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rules. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

First Aid & Healing System but with Resident Evil Herbs instead

So while recently running a campaign for newer players; I came onto a problem my own First Aid Rules caused. Truthfully, it's been something I've thought about for a while. I really like the healing system; allowing players to do plenty of out-of-combat healing allows you to keep individual combats dangerous (since you can balance them around being vs a full strength party instead of an HP tax), gives scholarly/smart characters something beneficial to do during downtime besides magic stuff, adds risk-reward to the time management minigame (you can heal during an exploration turn, but you will get a wandering monster roll- if you get a random encounter, you may lose more health/resources then you'd gain from the break, so it's always a balancing act), and finally improve the resource-management depth of the game. 

I've used the healing system in multiple dungeon crawls and it hasn't really upset the balance as much as I once thought; PCs can still die, and making a tactical retreat out of the dungeon once you get enough treasure is still a priority given the strict time pressure I like to add to the game. But the different types of healing items I was never quite satisfied with. I never found the players actually debating what kinds of items to bring with, no make the strategic decision to prioritize certain items over others. The idea of bandages being the best and most useful (as well as most "realistic") stuck out constantly. To simplify this system somewhat for a group of newer players, and as an experiment, I changed it so simple bandages were the primary healing item. This felt like it fit the fiction and was simple and easy to understand. Almost immediately, the players began trying to abuse it a bit. While I like the idea of player skill being used to stock up on supplies or improvise useful items in a dungeon was appealing and something I approved it, it completely killed the careful planning aspect and the limited starting gold the players were given to buy equipment, torches, healing items, and so forth.

Side note; I had more thoughts on this basic system, which I decided to outline in this small post.

After just one session of them tearing up every single piece of clothing to make an endless supply of improvised bandages, I already had enough. Then it hit me, just make it healing herbs instead.

Healing Herbs (from Resident Evil)
Healing herbs fulfill the function of bandages (as being a "general purpose" healing item), but with the exclusivity of being something you can't easily scavenge from anywhere. You could still have them found out on an adventure, such as in a dungeon or in the wilderness, but these would be more rare and selective. Maybe even something your Druid or Ranger types can get a bonus to search for. That's a fun mechanic to come out of the concept. It also doesn't deny you to use a more case-sensitive uses for things like improvised healing items or "puzzles" for the players to solve; using bandages for any context specific deep wounds that drain your Hit-Points over time. Plus it also solves a very small issue I had in both games where it came up; explaining to players that you treating the wound may not in fiction actually magically "heal" it, but for the purposes of the game, the wound is cleaned and bandaged and "healed" for purposes of hit points. It's a small issue, but enough that I feel healing herbs would solve, since magical herbs that make wounds less severe is very simple to understand, and could be easily explained as actual accelerated natural healing, making these small breaks in verisimilitude less important.

And on top of all that, it also solves the minor issue of healing items (potions specifically, but bandages fall under this too) of being something that doesn't expire or can be stockpiled. Something complained about before, with other solutions too; but in this case, herbs eventually dry up and go bad! Everyone knows this inherently, especially once you pluck them from the ground and carry them around, so it puts a time pressure on their use. You wanna be the guy carrying around a bunch of potted plant healing herbs with you so they stay healthy until you need them? Bam, instant character concept. Another added benefit? They aren't too mystical or magical like a limited use healing wand or whatever for players to wonder why they can buy them in preparation for an adventure. In the same way you head to the general store to buy rope, the bowyer to buy arrows, and the herbalist for healing herbs.

Another reason why I like the idea? You can make different herbs do different thing; you can just straight up steal it from Resident Evil.

Healing Herbs Rules
Require an exploration turn (10 minutes) to prepare and apply an herb. Herbs are applied to wounds, or eaten. You can combine multiple herbs in a single application to a maximum of 3.

Green Herbs heal 1d6 hit points per Green Herb.
Yellow Herbs restores 1 point of any damaged attribute. (Or +1 Max HP if your attributes are all ok)
Blue Herbs remove poisons you are suffering from, or grants you an one extra save against the effect. If it's not the type of poison cured by "mortal" means, it delays its onset by one hour. (Or alternatively; ignores the healing negative from Aggravated Wounds?)
Red Herbs double the numerical value of any other herb used with it, but does nothing on its own. Burning Red Herb might scare away ghosts. Trying to use two Red Herbs at once will probably make you have a seizure (or grant +1 AC temporarily or something, up to you)

Note: Normally red herbs make a green herb into a full heal, but making it so you can pick and choose what effects you want to boost, from making poison take longer to harm you or restoring attributes, might be more interesting. If you want to make Red Herbs an actual full heal, then be my guest, appropriately priced it isn't that much different then just stacking a bunch of Green Herbs anyway. At least this way you can maximize the value of different curative effects.

I like to imagine different healers (and adventurers) have their own methods of using healing herbs. Primitives throw them into a campfire and just rawdog the smoke into their lungs. If you're healing yourself, chew it up and spit it on the wound. Wizards smoke them in a big hookah. Motherly types add them into a pot with her stew. Horsemen put them in a feed bag and chew on them while watching down a hallway for the telltale yellow eyes of a goblin sneaking up on the party while they take a short rest. If you play a goblin, he probably smokes it in a little crack pipe; fun stuff like that? That's free roleplaying.

Friday, July 25, 2025

Dirt Simple First Aid

Whenever you are in a dungeon, out in the wilderness, or in an adventure location, you can take a short rest (exploration turn) to perform various actions. One of these is healing.

In order to heal another party member, you must expend bandages (or healing herbs) to heal them. You heal them 1d6 + your Intelligence modifier and the healing item is consumed. Your character can also be trained in the arts of healing, either as a class feature or as training that can be purchased in downtime (similar to weapon training, or studying for new spells). Every time you train your healing, you can increase the amount you heal by +1.

Certain hazards, rusted blade-traps, the undead, and complex injuries become aggravated. This means that the injury deals its normal Hit-Points effect of damage, but any healing roll made to heal that character is now made at a minus, and subtracts the amount you heal with your healing action by that amount. For example, a triangular bayonet is very difficult to stitch up, and has a aggravated wound value of -3, the touch of a Wight would be -7. This means that attempting to heal it while unskilled can actually make it worse. (This acts as an incentive to have dedicated healing-focused characters to be able to safely restore health, and reduce healing effectiveness overall).

Additionally, certain items like healing potions and food heal when consumed, which do not trigger aggravated wounds. Regular rations consumed on a short rest restore +1 Hit-Points. This means that even if you're cursed and burned with acids and all other sorts of shit, you can still recover a little bit of HP in a safe if time-inefficient way.

This system is the trimmed down version of this.

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Deadlock Character Design is neat + Tabletop Class Specializations via Abilities


So I've been playing Deadlock recently. Played it a bunch last year and playing it a bit more now that more characters have been added and it's been getting some decent updates. While the game at its core is a hyper-competitive MOBA mixed with MOVEMENT SHOOTER elements, and is as such even more repellent to the casual gaming audience who only sometimes plays only competitive games like me, I DO quite appreciate the design of many of its heroes.

Deadlock's heroes all have their own gimmicks and niche, but one thing I appreciate is that many heroes have a "balanced" kit.

Teamwork Focused TTRPG Classes
The idea here is to steal a MOBA or Deadlock style active abilities and shift them for TTRPG classes. So each class would have three abilities in this simple example, one focused on offense, survival or escape, and healing/support of teammates. This would be in addition to attack, move, using items, etc.

Whenever you level up, in addition to your hit points and to-hit bonuses, you get to increase the Y value of one ability, forcing you to specialize in your niche of support rogue, or offensive fighter, etc.

Fighter
Power Strike- The classic. You swing your sword, but harder. You must declare this move before you make your attack roll; which is modified by Y-3 (this means you actually get a higher chance to hit with enough investment, what of it?) and on hit you deal damage +Y. Each time you use this, reduce your Y by -1 until you take a short rest to recoup your strength.

Second Wind- Instead of attacking, you can spend your round breathing in deep and restoring some of your endurance and strength. You restore 1d6+Y Hit Points, usable once per day.

Defender- Whenever adjacent to an attacked ally, you can step in the way of the attack and have the enemy try to hit you thru your AC instead of your ally. Whenever you do this, you can increase your AC by +(1/2)Y.

Rogue
Cheap Shot- If you attack a target upon whom you have some advantage; such as the target being blinded, you being behind them, the target is tripped, etc. You automatically deal maximum damage on a hit and add an additional +Yx2 damage.

Evasion- Instead of attacking, you can spend your round dodging enemy attacks. You ran tumble (move-thru) and force enemies to use their prepared attacks or attacks of opportunity on you. You can do this a number of times or squares equal to Y, but enemies still get a chance to hit you using your normal AC or saving throw chance. You can increase your AC when performing this action by +(1/2)Y.

Distract- Whenever you are adjacent to an enemy, you may choose to distract them instead of attacking. Each adjacent enemy gets a negative of Y to their To-Hit modifier. Whenever you move-thru or tumble past an enemy, they also receive this negative for the round.
Note- Instead of directly healing allies, the Rogue distracts enemies. This could be like a bard issuing taunts and making fun of the enemies, a thief-acrobat tumbling past them and tying their shoes together, maybe a monk hitting pressure points, etc.

Mage
Empower Spell- By taking an extra round to incant a magic word, you can increase the Spell-Level of a Spell you cast by one, up to a maximum of Y.

Jinx- Select an enemy within view and gesture at them, hitting them with a minor curse. If they perform a specific action you dictate on the next round (such as "attack me"), they take Y damage automatically. This manifests as bad luck, something breaking, random sparks jumping at them from a nearby fire, etc. All enemies hit with a Jinx always know what action they are forbidden from taking and can choose to do something else to avoid triggering the Jinx. You can also only forbid one specific action with a Jinx, so "advancing towards me" could be a Jinx, but "moving at all" can't be.

Power Ward- Blocks (Y-1) Spell-Levels worth of spells targeted at you or any party member. Once you activate the ward, it requires constant concentration to maintain and you cannot perform any other action then keeping the ward up. Once the ward is broken thru, or your concentration is broken, you must prepare to cast the ward again by studying your spellbook as per any Spell. 

Cleric
Burning Light- Creates a light source equal in luminosity/radius to Yx5 in ft or squares. Deals one damage per round to all undead or evil beings illuminated by it. Lasts Y rounds.

Desperate Plea- Instantly heals one person by (1/2)Y Hit-Points. Instant as in instant. Can be done even if the Cleric is stunned, immobilized, turned away, blinded, etc. They just have to pray and believe, and it happens. Usable once per day.

Blessing of Protection- Gives a party member +1 to AC and Saves for Y rounds. Takes a round to bless them, but otherwise no limit. Blessing someone again with this just refreshes the duration.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Hits as Perils (Hit-Points Rework System)

But aren't they though? Hit Points are kind of unnecessary beancounting that gets in the way of fun.

Note; This blogpost is partially a shitpost based on the above comment, which is in itself a bit pretentious and shitposty. I don't seriously have a problem with hit points, nor any disconnects they may cause with the verisimilitude of the game world- such as high level characters being not threatened by lesser weapons. This can be explained away easily. Plus in terms of it being beancounting- I've personally never experienced any annoyance at keeping track of HP. If anything, players seem to enjoy having a rolling HP total to keep track of, the one figure on their character sheet that is the most pressing and important of them all. After all, if that number reaches zero, you'll die- it's more important and interesting to keep track of then say weight or rations. Plus, Hit-Points are probably one of the strongest metrics of risk-vs-reward gameplay and the most obvious "resource" of the resource management common in roleplaying but especially in OSR play. You have a clear and obvious sign of how much danger you are likely in at any given time simply by knowing how damaged you are- knowing roughly how much damage a failed roll or an enemy monster will do gives you more tactical decision making then if, say, a game simply had every hazard have a small chance to kill you.

However, especially in progression-based games with growing health pools, combat encounters with multiple damage and healing events in any given combat- monster attacks and spells, healing potions or allied spells, inspirations and temporary HP, etc- these can be a bit distracting and take away from the immediately interesting part of simulating a game world; the threat in front of you. This concept made me think of how to streamline or move the Hit-Points and damage system of a generic roleplaying game into being something simple and easy to understand, quick to adjudicate, while also being able to plug in to as many existing systems as possible to avoid friction.

One system that has a non Hit-Points systems is Into the Odd. Now technically it does have Hit-Points, but these are more like a shield before you take damage to your Body stat, which also reduces your ability to fight or take further damage. (At least, that's how I remember it working- I could be totally wrong. Been a long time.) I actually like this system for a lot of reasons over a traditional Hit-Point system, since taking damage also impacts your ability to deal or sustain further damage- a more realistic take on injury that, while it can result in a death spiral, makes taking damage more meaningful. Traditionally; a character with full HP and one Hit-Point remaining have the same ability scores, same movement speed, same power of spells or attacks, and so on. It doesn't have to be realistic by any means but I think it gamifies the concept of taking damage or injury TOO much, making it harder to simulate and create situations that feel at home in the game world itself. As such, these combined factors lead to this very rough concept; The Peril System.

The Peril System
Whenever you are hit by an enemy attack, struck by an offensive spell, caught in a trap, encounter a natural hazard, or otherwise take any form of damage or risk- you encounter Peril. There are two types of Perils- Peril and Mortal Peril. Standard Perils essentially make your situation worse, requiring valuable time, resources, or inflicting nasty status effects or weaknesses that will harm your ability to continue fighting or exploring. Mortal Perils work differently. When you are struck with a Mortal Peril, your character is essentially toast- the same as a monster with a very powerful attack or instant-death spell. So for example, a dragon's Fire Breath would deal enough damage to kill most characters, so it would be considered a Mortal Peril, as failure against it would be deadly. 

I also feel like I should mention here; all of this applies to the Players' Hit-Points, not monsters or NPCs. They still use normal systems. The idea is to get rid of player bean counting, but GM counting is par for the course.

This may make Mortal Perils sound extremely dangerous- but remember that the Peril is always done after your other form of mitigation or chance to avoid the danger. ie; Perils are the replacement for hit-point damage. So if a monster hits you on an attack roll vs your AC, then you are hit with a Peril. If you fail a saving throw, you might get hit with a Mortal Peril, and so on.

So if a monster hits you, instead of dealing damage, what negative thing happens to your character? It depends on the monster and situation. The general idea is that instead of standard damage, each infliction of an attack or spell does something negative and harms your character's abilities in some way. Some of this could be more mechanical (ie; dealing damage to stat points or causing morale checks), but the intention is that these are more flavorful, essentially roleplaying or game-world-simulating problems that crop up to make your adventure more difficult.

For example- a Goblin stabs you with a punji stick. Instead of dealing 1d4 damage; the wound washed clean or else you will get very sick and need to amputate the limb or die of infection. In mechanics terms, that means the party must have access to clean water in order to wash out your wound. They can expend a ration or a spell to use some water, or in some dungeons it would be trivial to find a clean stream to use instead. Note how despite not being a mortal peril, regular perils can still be very serious, it is still putting you in peril, just not immediate. It still represents a loss of either resources or weakens your party in some way, which is the point of HP loss, simply abstracted from numbers.

Instead of saying "my character's down twenty five Hit Points" in this system, you'd say something like "I'm sick, my shoes are melted to the floor, I'm blinded, and my damn hair is on fire". Both characters have taken the same amount of punishment and aren't looking too good.

Mortal Perils
Mortal Perils are a bit of a strange one. The idea behind Mortal Perils is to replace attacks that are dangerous enough to kill characters anyway; so attacks or spells that deal enough hit point damage to kill outright and that don't have another mechanic (like Save v Death) would feel about the same, but it may feel bad for a high level character to get instantly murdered by one bad hit against an otherwise regular enemy if it was strong enough to be considered "mortal". One simple concept would be that if the player characters are equal or higher level to the threat, then the 'Mortal Peril' becomes a regular Peril instead. ie; if you get bonked over the head by a troll's club as a staring character, your head gets smashed and you die, but if you're a high level character, the injury just stuns you for a round, dents your helmet, and makes you lose 1d4 points of Intelligence permanently. If you get hit in the head with a dented helmet, then it would be treated as a Mortal Peril instead, and so on. Simple way to incorporate player level into your survivability without using hit points.

The second Mortal Peril concept is to either use a simple lives system, or bennies, as an exchange to prevent instant character death. For instance, if you would take a Mortal Peril, you can give up one of your characters life tokens to just barely avoid death. You only have a limited amount of these and they do not come back per rest or even session- probably just per character. I really like the idea of starting with none of these actually, getting one per level up, and maybe healing or magic spells (such as Healing Potions) essentially restore these instead of healing hit points. So in-universe the healing potion is knitting together your wounds and restoring your vitality but in rules it's giving you back the one bit of protection you get from a one hit death. This is still basically a hit point system, just a much simpler and easier to track, so it doesn't 100% follow our guideline at the top, but I think it's a concession that makes the game more fun. I also think certain mechanics, monsters, or character classes could really add to a system as simple as this. Imagine if Paladins using Lay On Hands doesn't heal hit points, but instead just lets them give you their own life tokens as a way to protect their party members while sacrificing their own safety. Imagine if undead creatures that use drain life don't take away or restore their own hit points by suck away your "soul" temporarily, which means they basically steal a life token. But if you slay that undead, you can get it back, meaning you might be stuck in a dungeon in a lose-lose situation; do you go chasing after the ghost holding your last life token or do you take a risk on your return to the surface; with one lucky crossbow trap could kill you?

Final Mortal Peril concept- the DM picks a stat most fitting based on the Peril you are in and you can choose to half that stat permanently or die. Fail a save vs acid breath? Charisma halved. Yes, half, and the reason why it is a choice is because some people would rather just kill off their own character then continue on like that. I don't blame them. This could be its whole own post but for as much as the OSR/New-Weird/blogosphere loves their death and dismemberment tables, mutation tables, spell cataclysm rolls, their "scar" and "trauma" systems- people don't want to go on playing gimped characters, so just give them a choice to accept it and move on with a fresh character to roll. At least, that's what I would do with something this nasty.

Perils in Combat
The idea behind perils is to replicate the effects of HP. How do we do this in a fight? If you can take an unlimited number of perils, then characters can just fight forever without going down, right? Not necessarily. The idea is that perils put you in enough danger that you could be killed, but typically you'd need to get hit by a few or expend other resources (armor, one-time use abilities, lucky rolls, etc.) that eventually you could get worn down. As with the above example, higher level characters can downgrade certain Mortal Perils into regular ones- you could extend this concept to lesser Perils of a certain type. So in the above example Peril of getting stabbed by a nasty, shit-covered spear- a Paladin of a certain level may become immune to all earthly diseases. This means that for them? They can just ignore that Peril entirely. Would that make him totally immune to a goblin encounter? As per RAW, yes, which I think is fine. It's the equivalent of a high level character with tons of healing and action surges and the like all going into a fight against much lesser opponents; they realistically can't die from it so it's the same as not needing HP at all. But for most combat encounters, Perils work as a time, turn, and resource pressure as an HP replacement.

Regular Perils are also dynamic and can lead to character death and real danger. For example, a common peril of man eating monsters like Giants or Dragons may be a grab move. That Peril ties you up, meaning you can't attack and need to struggle to break free OR have a teammate come free you. But on the dragon's next turn, if you're still grabbed, it will attempt to bite your head off and kill you. The regular Peril has progressed to a Mortal Peril. The idea is the same as if you had been hit by a strong attack, and the same tension of being down to 1 HP and the next attack will kill you is the same here.

Status effects not specific to spells or abilities are also somewhat uncommon, but could be employed here. The difficulty is in keeping track. One example for a common catch-all sort of mechanic is whenever your character is bleeding. Since it doesn't have HP damage, whenever you bleed at all; the effect of the blood loss doesn't matter unless it's lethal amounts of blood loss or isn't bandaged (Mortal Peril?) so in this case, I would say that anyone who is suffering from a bleeding wound now enrages bloodsucking creatures; making them more likely to be targeted by them or having higher To-Hit rolls, stacking on more Perils, or potentially having the chance to upgrade a regular Peril into a Mortal Peril. Once again, we're starting to get into simulating the exact same thing as an HP system, so this still needs more ironing out, but I feel like there is a creative space here where this works. 

Next; Weapons. Weapons are interesting here because player weapon choices tend to be more impactful, where as NPC weapon choices are less important since it's typically just the numbers that matter. Some games or systems may include alternate rules as weapons vs AC To-Hit tables, but the idea of players switching up what armor they wear or protection they bring along vs specific weapons (if they even know what they're going against) seems extremely niche and silly. In this regard, the Peril system actually offers more interesting gameplay, because Perils could be unique to weapon types or even individual enemy weapons. Normally you don't care if an Orc is smacking you with a d8 Axe or a d8 Longsword unless you have some special feature that gives you an AC bonus against that weapon type or some extremely niche scenario like that. Having Perils fixes that and could make fights more interesting. An example being the triangular wounds of a bayonet being less immediately deadly then say a sword or axe, but being much harder to stitch up makes them an interesting peril on their own. Once again, this is an NPC thing- players will still have all the fun of normal weapons since they're still rolling damage dice and all that.

Finally; Armor. The removal of HP means that Fighters or tank-type characters are going to be less effective in this system, being as vulnerable to standard Perils as other characters are MINUS the normal effectiveness of their AC, their saves, etc. since Perils happen AFTER normal mitigation. With that being said, I still think making Fighters more durable even when they fail their rolls or protections is fine and fits the theme of the game. Maybe it's a class feature, maybe it's just inbuilt in the system. As mentioned above, common Perils will often do things like "dent your armor" or "give you a scratch", which are not dangerous in an of themselves, but a second Peril of the same type will likely have a much worse effect. This means that the strongest armor (worn by Fighters) still grants additional protection as would having a higher HP pool, keeping the class roles and feeling of gameplay similar.

The Big Peril Table
Finally, to round out this blogpost, here's a big list of Perils. These Perils are listed alphabetically based on the type of damage or spell, with possible monsters that use these attacks listed in the parenthesis. Use the search function to find a relevant list of Perils. 

To keep it interesting, each one has also been split into a d6 table, which you could randomly pick (whichever is most interesting) or roll on to keep encounters fresh. Higher numbers are also associated with more dangerous or costly Perils, so you could apply a simple modifier of +1 or -1, or have all enemies of a lower HD then the player character hit roll a 1d4 for the Peril instead of a 1d6, with higher HD enemies rolling a 2d6 and taking the better of the two rolls, etc. You get the idea.

Editing Note; about 80% through writing this table I realized I was just writing death & dismemberment instead of the idea of Perils that I had originally thought of. However, I think in the end it works, because perilous situations are too specific and situational to the fiction of the game world to be written in table format like this. In such a case, use the Peril concept as a method to weaken and add challenge to the game, and then this could be an additive version for more ideas, or an alternative De&Dis table for funsies. In any case, I hope you find some use out of it!

Acid (Slime, Ooze, Traps, Spells, Black Dragon)
If you're covered in oil OR can splash water on yourself immediately (takes a combat round if you have a bucket or can jump into a stream, etc.) you can lower the roll result by -2, but with a minimum of always 1.

[1] Your skin is red and blistered. You get -1 to Finesse/Lockpicking/Dexterity rolls until it has time to heal. If you roll this result while already blistered, reroll and take the new result.

[2] You jump away from the acid, narrowly avoiding it splashing on you, but you bump into the nearest large and fragile precarious object (like a giant urn) causing it to fall, shatter, and make a tremendous noise. If no large precarious objects are nearby, you bump into an ally instead causing them to get accidentally splashed with some acid and blistered (roll result one for them).

[3] You get a bit of acid on you. Each round you don't wash it, it burns through another layer. First round, puts a hole in armor and lowers your AC by -1. Second round, burns through your clothes and ruins your whole outfit. Third round you lose -1 Constitution as it burns your skin and flesh. You can also avoid this peril by spending a combat round throwing your armor off, but it will corrode away and be lost by the time you can recover it safely.

[4] Pool of acid forms around your feet as you jump onto an elevated surface like a table or large paving stone. The object is slowly sinking into the now weakened ground. You cannot move around to dodge or attack in melee. You can jump off yourself if you have Dexterity modifier of +1 or better, otherwise you need someone to rescue you. Requires a round from each of you to pull them to safety. 

[5] Nasty burn in an obvious place; hands or face. It heals but not right, -1 Charisma modifier the first time it happens. Every time after, simply causes immense pain and makes unable to do anything but roll around in agony until cool water or ointment is applied.

[6] Some gets in an eye. You go blind in one eye. If it happens again, it's the other one.

Arrows / Crossbow Bolts (Bandits, Elves, Demihumans, Archers, Traps)
Whenever you encounter an Arrow/Bolt Peril, your shield can block it if you're aware of the danger. Lower the roll result by -1 per AC bonus of your shield. If you get to 0, the arrow is stuck in the shield and has no other effect. Getting shot at by one archer is a regular peril, getting hit with a volley or an ambush by a group of highly trained archers is a mortal peril.

[1] The arrow misses you, but causes another problem. Flame arrow hits something explosive, giving you a round to run and jump or be exploded. Regular arrow hits your lantern you are holding, causing you to drop it and start a small fire. If you have a nearby animal or retainer that is not from a class feature (ie; not animal companion), the arrow hits them instead causing immediate serious but non-fatal wounds.

[2] The arrow narrowly misses and lodged itself in the hem of your robe, the soft part of your cap, or the end of your cloak and pinned you to the ground or wall. You can only move away if you pull the arrow out (takes a round) or by pulling yourself free, which rips the article of clothing.

[3] The arrow grazes your arm or leg. You are now suffering a minor bleed. The wound can be tracked by hounds, sharks, and intelligent humanoids if it is not bandaged up.

[4] The arrow hits flesh on an extremity. To remove it, you must push the arrowhead through the flesh and bandage up the wound. The cries of pain will be enough to alert nearby patrols of your presence or attract predatory animals unless you can succeed a save.

[5] The arrow lodges itself in your achillies tendon. You are temporarily unable to run or walk. After removing the arrow, your overland travel speed is halved for the next few weeks until it is fully healed- either taking longer to travel or rolling for two encounters per hex unless you have someone to carry you or you're riding a horse.

[6] The arrow has pierced a body cavity or was glued on the shaft with honey and now cannot be safely removed. Once the shaft is pulled free, the arrowhead will remain inside the body for the rest of the person's natural life, causing them a small amount of pain when moving that area. (If you want a more mechanical impact: -1 Dexterity permanently.)

Blunt Damage (Ogres, clubs, living tree branches, falling rocks)
You can receive the same perils in this category multiples times each with stacking effects.

[1] Bruises to the arms and legs. -1 Strength until you get a good's night sleep.

[2] Bruises to the chest and torso. -1 Strength AND Constitution. Heals after a few days. Alternatively? You can't hold your breath for the rest of the day. Doesn't sound that bad until you have to run across the poison gas pits, or hide from the scary revenant black riders, or swim down the one-way-water tunnel of death.

[3] Knocks one object you're holding out of your hand. The object is as damaged as it would be if you threw it against the floor as hard as you can; since that's what basically happened. You get to pick the object.

[4] Dents your armor or chestplate. You can't breathe right until you take it off, giving disadvantage on all rolls until you do and losing protection once you do. Requires a noisy bit of hammering over a day (or a turn with a Dwarf) to buff the dent out. If you aren't wearing chest armor, it just breaks a rib instead, making you lose -1 Constitution permanently.

[5] Crunches one of your hands. You have to bandage it and wait for it to heal up for a season before you can use it effectively again.  You get to pick the hand.

[6] Hits you in the head. You lose -1 Intelligence permanently and forget your name, how to get home, and favorite magic spell. If you're wearing a helmet, pick one of those three things and you'll remember it a few weeks later. If you're wearing padding underneath the helmet, you get to pick a second one, but you always lose the third.

Cold Damage (Ice magic, frozen enemies, ice fairies, abominable snowmen)
Every Cold Peril you are suffering from causes the next one to get worse, increasing the result by +1. If you get duplicates, just take the one above the one you rolled.

[1] You shiver, causing you to shake around anything you're carrying or holding. Only a real problem with a lit bomb. If you have a source of heat (torch) or are wearing heavy winter clothing, this only lasts one round, otherwise, one turn.

[2] Your teeth chatter from the cold, causing stealth to become almost impossible unless you can put something in your mouth to stop the noise. If you have a source of heat (torch) or are wearing heavy winter clothing, this only lasts one round, otherwise, one turn.

[3] Any liquids you are carrying (potions) freeze inside their bottles. This doesn't damage or waste them, but you do need to make a fire and spend a turn warming them up by it to thaw them out.

[4] One object you are wearing or carrying becomes brittle. Your warhammer is only good for one more attack, or it will shatter apart. Your breastplate cracks and deforms the next time you are hit, and so on. The object becomes dusted in ice and frost; if you can avoid using or damaging it will regain its normal toughness after it warms up in one turn.

[5] You develop hypothermia, losing -1 Dexterity per turn before you get warmed up. This requires at least a long rest to fully recover from.

[6] You are frozen solid. One solid attack by a blunt weapon or strong creature will shatter you into pieces (Mortal Peril). Until then, your party has to carry you around as a very heavy piece of "treasure" or encumbrance until they can find a place to thaw you out safely or use some sort of magic to restore you back to normal.

Curse Damage (ghost touch, cursed items, dark spells, ominous fog, witches, hags)
Most of the time, the effects of a curse or touch are already spelled out. This is more for getting his with dark magic or generic "damage" from occult sources. Armor offers no protection, but a protective talisman or holy symbol lets you roll twice and pick the least-worst result.

[1] Bad Aura. Everyone around you thinks you feel off and there is a feeling of unease. You make horses nervous and flighty, cats hiss, and babies cry. It goes away the next time you go to church.

[2] Three laughing skulls, bats, little devils, or inky black crow spirits start flying around your head. You get disadvantage to aim or spells and you can't look up as they are going for your eyes until you manage to shoo them away. 

[3] Supernatural Fear. Make a morale check or flee. Even if you succeed the check, you are still scared or nervous and get disadvantage on the next one until you calm down.

[4] Depression. Like a Dementor's kiss. Everything feels gray and meaningless. Character cannot do any kind of performance checks and will automatically fail any magic item or effect that requires a "will to live" or "force of personality" to be used. Chocolate helps, but can only be cured by the next time you or your party achieves a major victory.

[5] Your life-force was drained, causing you to look older and your hair to turn white. Whatever hit you with this peril has an object imbued with a glowing light, and you can restore your life-force by retrieving that object. If you're more hardcore, this can just cause premature aging that you can't really do anything about; this only becomes a mortal peril if you age up enough times that it could theoretically kill you from old age.

[6] Voodoo Doll. The next time it makes sense; you find a voodoo doll that looks exactly like you. You're stuck taking care of it; as any damage it receives is reflected on you. Any Peril that damages or messes up your inventory will effect the voodoo doll. If you drop your pack into the river, you will start drowning on land as the doll sinks, and so on. This one needs a curse-breaker to get rid of it.

Fall Damage (Birds, dragons, rickety bridges, air magic, shot out of a catapult)
I imagine most fall damage would count as a Mortal Peril, since there are few outcomes depending on the height and few ways to save yourself. However, if you want a more Perils-As-Hit-Points way to simulate fall damage, here are some ideas.

[1] Collapse into a heap of dust. When you get up, you need to dust yourself off, else leave a small smoke trail or cough and mess up your next spell incantation from the dirt on you.

[2] You fall onto your side and feel something crack. It's not you; but it is a fragile item on your person. Usually, just a single healing potion or a wand if you're magically inclined; but a more specific or important item can be broken instead if you don't have anything that could realistically break on impact.

[3] Crash through an awning, top of a wagon, or bundle of trees and carefully curated glassware. Besides being stunned for one round so you can't run away, the owner of the store or traveling merchant you just got flung into is going to be very angry and wants to implement a "you break it, you buy it" policy. If you're traveling or in a dungeon, just have yourself fall on your own camp or something idk.

[4] Breaks a leg. Requires an actual skilled healer to bind it up, and takes a season to heal. You can't flee combat and travel at half speed without a horse or wagon.

[5] As [3], but instead of into an allied or neutral force, you get thrown into a nest of vipers, a river of crocodiles, or dropping into the nest of a giant bird to be fed to her babies. You're still stunned for a round.

[6] You manage to catch yourself from a greater fall (mortal peril) but on an object that is slowly breaking or can't handle your weight; like a tree at the edge of a ravine or the last rope from the rope-bridge. Somebody needs to pull you up within the next turn or else it will give and you will plunge to your death.

Fire Damage (Flamethrowers, elementals, burning oil, dragon breath)
Fire hazards are the most chaotic. If you gain one of these perils while adjacent to an ally, they gain one too unless if they are fighting defensively or have some fire resistance. While this peril could be any that fit, I'd just make it a result of [1] to make it less harsh.

[1] Your hat, hair, or headdress is on fire! It will go out on its own in one combat round or in a few seconds unless if you jump, run, tumble (make a saving throw), etc. If you do this, then the fire spreads and get worse. Easiest way to fix it is to throw your hat on the ground and stomp on it. If it's not a hat you can easily remove, you'd better get our your knife and cut it off then instead.

[2] Singed. Eyebrows burnt off, black soot, cartoonishly blown back hair. You're coughing a lot and it stings; you cannot cast spells until you can wash it off in a cool clean stream or expending a water ration.

[3] Your whole body is tender and turned red from the flash-fire, meaning you cannot wear any clothes without extreme discomfort. Remove your armor and lose all magic properties and bonus AC until you cool off in a day.

[4] Crispy! Your outer clothes and skin are charred black or heavily burnt and singed. You leave a black trail of soot wherever you go and have a permanent black mark on anything you touch for the next 1d4 days. Any clothes you wear or objects you touch are permanently ruined and stained.

[5] You are engulfed in flame from head to toe. Stop whatever you are doing and run to the nearest source of water, fine sand, or something else to put out the fire. If you perform any other action the flame engulfs you and kills you. No, stop drop and roll doesn't work in medieval times, it wasn't invented until way later or something.

[6] One piece of metal touching you closely like a ring, helmet, or piece of armor is heated up so much it turns red hot. Your skin is burnt and fuses to the metal, meaning it cannot be removed without a skilled surgeon; akin to a cursed item. This is probably the most gross and unrealistic Peril on this list, but I think it's a cool way to do fire damage that isn't just "more burnt". 

Fists (Unarmed strikes, monks, martial arts, punching traps)
If you got your own fists up and are in a fighting stance, you can reroll a roll of [6] on this table. That's only if you get hit with a suckerpunch.

[1] Arms, wrist, or body blows of little impact. You are folding back from the assault, but otherwise unharmed. You have -1 AC against this attacker but only for the next combat round.

[2] Hits you right in the side. You get -1 Constitution until you sleep it off.

[3] Take it on the chin- your footwork is wobbly. -1 AC from all attacks for the rest of this combat and you can't make any complex maneuvers like tumbles or dodge rolls.

[4] Stunning strike! Karate chop to the sternum! You can step back and be stunned for one round OR you get hit in the head and see double; you have a 50% chance to miss your intended target. You also can't read any spellbooks or count up treasure for at least a day.

[5] Your attacker can disarm you and either take your weapon, throw it away in the most inconvenient place, or redirect your strike into the nearest ally; whichever is worse for you.

[6] Out cold. Takes a few hours or smelling salts to wake you up. You're totally helpless if you're in combat, and your party members will have to drag you around until you can be helped.

Lightning Damage (shocking grasp, lightning bolt, thunder magic, storm giants, static discharge, Diablo 2 beetles)
Lightning damage can only effect you if you're grounded (have at least one foot on the ground), if you are hit with a lightning peril while flying it doesn't do anything until you become grounded or the next time you are struck with a metal item (in which case it hits whoever hit you instead).

[1] Your hair goes spiky and you get a little singed. Doesn't do much but makes you look ridiculous, -1 Charisma until you can groom yourself.

[2] Uncomfortable buzz. Anyone who touches you gets a mean static shock and disrupts any healing or blessing spells used on you. Lasts for a day or until you touch water.

[3] If you're holding a metal object like a sword or lantern, you have to drop it as it sparks wildly. If you're not holding a metal item, then you just get a nasty shock and your armor gets a little magnetic; lowers your AC by -1 against metal weapons.

[4] Temporarily electrified; you shake and are stunned for one round. If you've gotten hit by another Lightning Peril this combat encounter, it bounces to your nearest ally and stuns them too. If they were hit by another Lightning peril before, then it chains off of them and so on.

[5] Knocked off your feet backwards from the source of the Peril in an arcing electrical explosion; 20 to 30 feet. Anyone you are directly next to or anything you were riding also gets blasted back but only half as far in a different direction.

[6] You get zapped really bad. Knocked prone, your heart stops beating. You'll die if someone doesn't do chest compressions for a turn (can't revive you during combat). Even if revived, you'll have seizures for the rest of your life unless restored by a powerful healing spell. (Once per session, the GM/DM can make you roll a save or you shake uncontrollably for two combat rounds. This is bad enough to make you fall off your horse.)

Magic Damage (Magic Missile, Arcane elements, Wizards, Familiars, Runic Traps, Spellbooks)
This Peril type is specific to flashy, arcane, wizard-y style attacks and spells; like magic missile or generic glowing energy beam wand/staff attacks. If you are hit by a spell that is elemental, then that element should be used first. If it's a telekinesis shove, use Blunt or Fist damage, If it's dark magic or from an evil witch, use the curse damage table instead and so on.)

[1] Blinding colorful lights flash before your eyes, causing you to make your next attack roll at disadvantage.

[2] Your skin is burned with arcane sigils and runes that glow in the dark. You can cover them with clothing. They seem really mystical and spooky but it's honestly just swearwords. Take multiple months to go away or if you know the trick you can just rub a crystal over them to scratch them off. You get -1 to saving throws vs spells while these runes are on your body.

[3] Random magic item that can be activated you are carrying goes off. To prevent this from being an easy TPK; the person holding the item can make a check to direct the magic spell towards enemies or in a direction where nobody can get hurt as long as they aren't distracted by another effect.

[4] Summons a 1 HD creature from another dimension either from your belongings, next to you, or jumping out of a portal to attack you. Its temperament and relationship to you is determined by a reaction check; it's permanently stuck on this plane until its killed or hit with another spell to send it back.

[5] One spell you know or have prepared at random has its effect reversed. The DM makes a secret note of this, but tells you that one of your spells HAS flipped,  just not which one. If you study your notes and spellbook you can remember the spell the right way to do it and the trap is no longer set.

[6] You are turned into an animal! Roll a d20 vs your Charisma. If you roll under, you get to pick something small, harmless, and maybe useful like a rat or a bat. If you roll over, the DM gets to pick instead. While in this form you can't talk or attack but have full control and memory over your old self, but are vulnerable to being stepped on or eaten. You also drop all your items and otherwise become mostly useless. Your party members can keep you in their backpack to keep you safe. The next time you sleep and wake up, you're back to normal.

Piercing Damage (Spears, dagger points, rapiers, Monster teeth, spike traps)
If you're carrying a shield, you can have that pierced through or shredded to avoid any one of these effects.

[1] Grazes you, leaving a scratch. Next time you roll for any Peril result add +1 to the roll just to make it a little worse.

[2] Presses hard into you, stopped by a small trinket that takes the brunt of the force instead. Minor damage to a spellbook, bed roll, or medical bag you are carrying.

[3] You get bitten or poked in the neck. The force was only enough to break the skin, but you still have trouble breathing and make all rolls at disadvantage and you cannot cast spells. You must spend a round to catch your breath to end the effect. If you're in a dusty tomb, a smokey tavern, or breathing in foul miasma or ash it takes three combat rounds instead.

[4] With a sharp point coming at you, you drop what you're holding and grab it with both hands in a life-or-death struggle. You get stuck holding a spear (or the jaws if it's a big monster) by the shaft with your hands and can hold it for one round until it overcomes you and pierces your chest (Mortal Peril). Somebody else must succeed an attack roll to force the enemy off of you. You can hold the spear for an extra round per positive Strength modifier you have.

[5] The tip pushes into your flesh, causing you immense pain. If you're getting bitten instead, the creature latches on. You're stuck in a lose-lose situation; prevents you from moving. If you do pull yourself off the spear, suffer bleeding and make all rolls at disadvantage until you can be bandaged up.

[6] You get stabbed or bitten right in the torso, causing you to go into shock and require immediate medical care or your condition will worsen. You will recover after one season but only with a warm bed, good food, and a dedicated healer. If you're missing one of those things, lose -2 Constitution permanently. If you're missing two of things, you suffer complications and die.

Poison Damage (Snakes, Poison Darts, Dart Frogs, Assassins)
If the poison is bad enough that simply touching it can hurt you, probably go with the Acid table instead. If an arrow or other similar threat is poisoned, you only have to deal with the poison peril instead of the arrow peril; not both.

[1] You just start throwing up everywhere. If you ate today, you lose that ration and will need another later once you can stomach food again.

[2] You start turning green and lose -1 points of Wisdom or Strength, whichever is most fitting to the poison. If someone sucks on the wound and spits it out, you'll recover in a turn, otherwise, 1d3 days.

[3] Your veins turn black and travel up to your face and eyes. You become unable to speak for a day, which means no spells.

[4] You become extremely feeble and sickly the next time you have downtime, losing -3 Constitution which you slowly recovery over a season. If you don't drink an antidote or chew medicinal herbs in the next three days, then you lose -1 point of Constitution permanently.

[5] You feel a looming sensation of dread, but no other ill effects thinking maybe it missed. If you don't do a folk remedy, drink an antidote potion, or have a healer watch over you constantly; you'll die in your sleep from the insidious, slow-acting poison.

[6] Immediately putrefies the extremity that was bitten. Every round, it spreads to the next part of the body towards the heart (finger to hand to elbow to shoulder to chest). Somebody has to cut it off before it spreads too far.

Psychic Damage (Aboleths, Mind Flayers, Horrorterrors, Magic mirrors, some magic items & traps)
"Psychic damage" in this case could mean actual psychic spells or enemies, or it more means emotional or brain/mental assaults as simplified and flavored through a fantasy lens. While the idea behind this Peril system is to avoid hit points, I think having points of sanity or whatever is fine as a way to soak the character-changing effects listed here. Maybe something like the roll result on this Peril table is absorbed with minor, curable effects equal to your Wisdom score, but once you exceed that, then the effects happen as written. Since these effects are purely mental and mostly roleplayed, they are more severe then the physical effects written on other tables.

[1] Your character becomes terrified for 1d4 rounds, being forced to run away or cower each round they fail a moral check or saving throw. If you're not in combat, save or scream and attract a wandering monster roll.

[2] You gain a minor phobia for whatever is causing the psychic damage or the last Peril category you rolled on. The phobia just makes your character intensely dislike and avoid it, but causes no other rolls or effects. If you get this a second time for the same peril, object, or creature the phobia gets so bad you run away screaming every time you encounter it.

[3] Your character becomes an amnesiac and forgets who they are or what they are doing for 1d6 exploration turns. During this time, their class abilities are removed and they can only do actions as an untrained commoner. They cannot cast any spells beyond first level/cantrips.

[4] You gain an imaginary friend. You must share half your treasure with the friend.

[5] Character's face is frozen in fear, rage, despair, or rapturous joy. This causes no loss of charisma, but they always act like this chosen face and cannot order or express things that go against this emotion until a remove curse is used on them. 

[6] Your mind is swapped with the nearest living thing, an ally, or the creature that caused this effect. You gain the abilities of that creature and vice versa, but are distinctly not them. If one of you dies, the other will be stuck in the original body. The two creatures must be kept in each others presence for about a year before they swap back to normal, and both must be present if cured with a remove curse spell or mindswapping power.

Sharp Damage (Swords, claws, cutting winds, blade traps)
Probably one of the most common types of damage in a game, so it's going to be the most common peril. All of them except a roll of one require a bandage item or strip of cloth to bind up in addition to their usual effects.

[1] Merely a scratch! Has no effect on its own, but the next time you roll for any Peril result add +1 to the roll just to make it a little worse.

[2] You dodge out of the way at the last second, but the cutting edge finds the nearest and least convenient bit of rope or fabric to sever. Could be the hood hiding your identity, the rope to the chandelier that now comes falling down towards your head, the leather strap keeping your quiver attached to you, or the jungle vine dropping a nest of killer hornets. Whatever it is, it's probably as inconvenient for the cutter as it is for you.

[3] Bleeding Cut. Persistent wound that drips a trail of blood that can be tracked by blood-seeking creatures. Adding an extra bandage can stop this effect for one turn, but it resumes afterwards until it fully heals.

[4] Deeper Cut. Lose a bunch of blood in a big pool, making you feel woozy. You roll for disadvantage to climb, cross a balance beam, jump a gap, etc. for the next day or so.

[5] Deepest Cut. You must use one arm to press down on the wound else you will faint from rapid blood loss. You can still fight or run or whatever but one of your arms is disabled the whole time.

[6] Pick your nose, ear, tail, or boob. Whichever one you pick has been cut off almost completely, and is barely hanging on by a thread. It can be saved, but only if you don't get hit by another peril before you can stitch it back on. If you do take another peril, replace it with that body part falling off and being permanently lost.

Tentacle Damage (Kraken, Giant Octopus, Mind Flayers, Lovecraftian monsters, animate rope,  giant snakes, animate jungle vines, giant prehensile tail, rubber blob monster, etc.)
Most damage here could be used as bashing or fist; but this is specifically for flexible tentacles, worms, or other such creatures that could grab you, constrict you, etc. Anyone with a Strength modifier of +1 or better can resist some of the worst effects of this and gets to lower the result of their roll by -1

[1] Wraps loosely around a single arm, preventing you from using it or moving away unless you thrash it away with a successful attack against the creature with your other arm or pull away, taking a combat round and forcing you to move.

[2] Slaps the floor next to you or brushes against a leg. If you're in any way slippery, wet, on uneven flooring or not wearing good shoes you fall to the ground. Otherwise, your movement is halved for this round.

[3] Constricts around both lower legs. Arms and mouth are freed, but you must be cut free to be loosed. If the creature is stunned in any way, you can also slip free.

[4] Constricts the neck or head. You can move and attack, but cannot see or cast spells. If you attack, you attack a random target, which can include your allies or the creature grabbing you. All ranged attacks miss while grabbed this way.

[5] Grabs and flings you or bats you aside as a giant fleshy whip. You get thrown back in a random direction against a wall (stunning you one round and denting your armor) or flings you into 1d2 other party members (all are knocked prone for a round and must untangle themselves to do anything)

[6] Full constriction. Arms bound at the sides and legs dangling uselessly; you begin to get squeezed. Each round you lose 1d4 Constitution until you drop to zero, in which case your spine is snapped and you die. No mortal peril for this, you just have to get saved quickly enough.

Toxic Gas Damage (Toxic gas traps, Dragon farts, fat undead, demons, mushroom spores)
If you have a bandana covering your mouth or a free hand to reach up to cover your mouth you only roll a 1d4 on this table, though you can't use that hand for anything else for 1d4 rounds as you cough around the gas. This table is also specifically for toxic gases that could kill or seriously damage people in them; corrosive acid clouds or poison gases from evil swamps are more for the Acid and Poison table respectively.

[1] Cough a lot, not much else. You can't cast spells for the next 1d4 rounds.

[2] Blisters form all over your face, nose, and lips; but you thankfully avoided the worst of it. You lose -1d4 Charisma temporarily until it heals in a few days.

[3] The gas itself makes you cough, but it's also extremely flammable. Any spark from a spell, parrying a weapon, or an open torch flame could cause it to explode (Mortal Peril). Get out of the room or let it air out to avoid this hazard.

[4] Edema. After exposure, your hands and feet swell up and double in size. You can't wear gloves or boots until the body parts are drained, can't pick locks, and can't sneak. You can still fight in melee, but you can't use "fancy" weapons like rapiers or whips with your meaty flesh mitts.

[5] You inhale sharply, eyes going wide, and fall to the floor. You need your mouth forced open and a breath of fresh air in order to recover; which is easier said then done in a dungeon. Spells or a "beak" of perfumed air can help you; otherwise you will eventually open your mouth and breath again but lose -2 Strength permanently from the clenching. Your skin also permanently has a greenish tint.

[6] Cancerous cysts and growth explode all over your arms, legs, and chest. You will need a clean knife, someone with a steady hand, and a way to manage the pain to cut it off before it saps you of your strength and kills you. This process takes a whole night and if you're missing any of those elements you will die before morning either from the toxins or a botched removal surgery.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Tonics

How do we deal with players hoarding healing potions? I came up with a solution a few years back, but only barely touched on since it's inception- limited shelf life Tonics. Originally written up in the Dirt Simple Alchemy post, I wanted to revisit the concept after reading the Goblin Punch post here.

Tonics
You ever like how fantasy games have magic potions made out of like three mushroom caps, a handful of clay dirt, and a bat wing and yet they have this perfect bright red color and usually don't taste like absolute shit? That's part of the magic, actually.

When specific ingredients are mixed together in a cauldron and boiled, stirred with a wand, and readied by a skilled hedge mage or witch: a Tonic is created. The chunks of whatever is within the brew smooth out and disappear into a consistent glowing fluid, which can then be poured into an appropriate flask. It's like fantasy Gatorade. This is also the reason that healing potions (tonics) are all consistent despite being made with different batch sizes and with different qualities of ingredients and the like, it doesn't actually matter how big your cauldron is or the size of your vial, the magic is one "dose" no matter how you slice it. Once you fill a single vial with the brew, the rest of the cauldron turns back into gross dirty soup-water. This also gives a nice and easy way of knowing when the tonic has gone bad- just look at it. If it looks like a bunch of gross shit floating in a beaker, then you know it's gone off and isn't good anymore.

Once a tonic has been created, it has a shelf life of approximately one day, one week for traveling campaigns, or one season for more time-abstracted games. The time setting here is abstracted, but is in essence supposed to be for one session. At the end of the session, any tonics not used go bad and lose their magic. You can't hoard them.

Characters can make tonics if they want to and they have the skills and ingredients. This makes time very valuable when exploring, but spending a bunch of time gathering ingredients and brewing tonics always comes at a cost; random encounters and torchlight dwindling away must be considered against the value of brewing some more useful tonics for future encounters. The dry ingredients used to make tonics are also almost always cheaper and more light-weight then the tonics themselves (but you need a source of water, fire, and something to cook them in- if you lost your cauldron to the rust monster you might have to improvise with the shell of the massive turtle you killed earlier in the dungeon), giving an incentive to pack up tonic ingredients for longer exploration trips- because while you can make as many tonics as you want with time allowing, they will all go away at the end of the session.

You can also buy tonics from shop keepers and herbalists in villages. Because tonics only take about a turn (10 minutes) to make, you could also abstract this and let players buy as many tonics as they want from the local healer before going off into the dungeon. This is part of your preparation phase, without the inherent problem of players being able to hoard healing potions, just buy as many as you think you need. You can also get specific here, tonics don't just heal, they can do any effect really. Tonics can be antidotes, strength potions, "fire" potions that can cast light or make your weapons go inflamed for a damage boost, invisibility, freezing liquid, acid- whatever you want really. The idea here is to provide a use it or lose it tool that isn't as reliable and permanent as a spell or recharging magic item- because they have space and material limitations. You can only carry so many tonics, and they go away after your exploration.

Potions vs Tonics
Tonics are magic potions. The reason I'm calling them Tonics and not Potions is so people don't feel ripped off when they go bad and to separate them from capital P Potions that could act like magic items or treasures with a one time use. You could still call these potions if you really want, I just figured potions as something to hoard was so ingrained in the popular consciousness that a different name would help with this. This way, finding a Potion as a magic treasure can be considered a great find, same as a magic sword or spellbook. I'm imagining a Potion of Healing to be much like a Potion of Youth or a Potion of Gold or something similar- it probably fully heals you, restores all your limbs, removes your trauma and ability score damage, etc. etc.

Tonics in Gameplay
The main idea behind Tonics is to manipulate player psychology and provide an in-universe mechanic for more interesting healing and preparation for tabletop dungeon crawling. No longer is healing a class specific feature, anyone can order a village alchemist to make them some tonics to act as the mistake allowance and shared HP pool for the whole party. Not only this, tonics also discourage certain behaviors (overly risk averse), while encouraging other ones (experimentation and preparation). For example, the players know their special tonics will run out at the end of the session anyway, so why not experiment and see if healing potion is like acid for the undead? Why not pour some fire potion on a mushroom to see if it mutates into an exploding shroom? It also creates a certain amount of time pressure and scarcity inherent to the mechanics. 

Why doesn't everyone have access to magic healing in the fantasy world? That's simple- the resources and knowledge used to make tonics isn't unlimited, and the tonics themselves can't be hoarded. You can't assume every knight or soldier will be able to carry healing potions with them, or that the king has a supply of cure poison under his throne's pillow- you still need healers, magicians, or old wise men to actually work their craft. It creates a less gamified fantasy world and one that feels more believable and lived in, with the conveniences and mechanics that allow the dungeon crawling adventure fantasy to still work.

Of course, this doesn't actually solve some of the problems listed with Arnold's original post. How do you stop people from just bringing in unlimited healing? Well I'd do it by saying that potions are really heavy, being liquid, and also being something you can't really sneak around with since they, you know, glow in the dark and are carried in glass bottles. Plus the expense of buying them. Technically nothing stops you from having hirelings carry them, but nothing stops you from hiring a private army to do your dungeon delving for you- if you have enough resources. Personally, I think most players will be satisfied with just mentally calculating how much healing they think they may need, how many antidotes or resist fire potions or paralysis cures or sleeping draughts or whatever else they think they'll need, invest the gold at the start of a delve, and enjoy using the resources they have prepared for. Of course your players may be a bit too clever for that, in which case, you'll you have to come up with something better. I just wanted to share my version of potion-based-magic that I think works pretty well.

Thursday, June 30, 2022

Stories for a Bed

You are traveling in the farther reaches of the realm, the backroads, the quiet country. Perhaps you are on your way to an ancient ruin in a far off place, or this is a simple leg of a longer journey. As night falls, you pull into a tiny village. The hamlet is tiny; only a few hundred people live here at most- the largest building is the old stone church on the hill with an adjoining graveyard. You go to a farmer pulling an empty wagon and ask where is the local inn for you to stay that night. All you get back is a stare, and an offer.

Not every town or village is going to have an inn or tavern where you can spend the night. It's too small of a town, not enough travelers- there would be no business! You could just try camping out on the side of the road, but that's a good way to draw even more of the villager's distrust. Instead; more then likely, you'll want to be spending the night with the locals. You probably have more then enough coin for them; but these people are humble, and probably view guests as sacred. You offer them something more valuable then a simple monetary exchange for their service- a look into the wider world.

Hospitality
Hospitality is a very serious thing. It is a sacred pact between host and guest. Groups of adventurers are very likely to be offered a place to stay if they spend any time in the village or if they appear in need in any way. If you think it's unrealistic that a random villager would offer to open their doors to armed and dangerous looking vagabonds and freaks; consider that these armed vagabonds could probably just force their way inside if they wanted- and the villagers know that. Invoking the rights of hospitality solves the problem for everyone.

If your setting is more mythological; then consider the rules of hospitality to be actually magic and the pact actually supernatural. To violate the rules of hospitality is to evoke the wrath of the Gods, the Home's Protector-Spirit, or some other force.

The rules are simple; the Guest must not harm the host, and the Host must not harm the guests. The host offers any accommodations they can provide without too much hardship- usually food and lodging- while the guest must provide a story.

These stories do not have to be true.


The Story Circles
Take out a piece of paper and draw a Venn Diagram with three circles. Draw big. Label one circle Fantastic, one Grim, and one True. Then, use any six sided die.

Your players will be telling a story. Tell them to get creative; recap their adventure to this point, go over what happened the last day, how the fighter lost an eye, whatever.

In most cases, you will be telling a story as a party. In this case, begin the die on the section of the chart that makes the most sense, and keep it on a one. Whenever any player/character adds something to the story- move the die one section towards whichever direction they are veering the story towards. For example; if you begin the story about how you defeated a powerful dragon; start it on Fantastic. If the quarter-master goes into a anal-retentive rant about how they got the wrong kind of goat to feed this specific subspecies of dragon, move it a step towards True, putting it into the Fantastic/True zone, and then move the die's value up to two. 

You can also use this as a rough estimate of time; each value on the die is one turn unit or ten minute interval of time used to tell the story. 

To determine exactly where the die should move each turn, consider the subject matter and how the player tells it. Each "subject" of the story is what moves the die- not details. If you tell about how you smashed a bunch of spider eggs, which attracted the spider queen, who then poisoned and killed a friend of yours- that's all one 'subject' of the story. If you then say you traded these spider eggs to the nearby goblins for safe passage through their territory- that can be a second subject. 

Each circle on the diagram sort of represents a genre of story or overall vibe as opposed to specific elements. Grim stories are anything related to survival, brutality, meanness, revenge, injury, etc. Fantastic are more for anything that is related to the wonderful and mystic- tale of far off lands and true love's first kiss are as relevant as a fight with a dragon. Finally, True stories are are for anything that is both mostly true, grounded, and relevant to the villagers or people you are telling the story to. Talking about intrigue at the divine court of Gods won't count as "True" even if it is, but if you say you slain a local monster- that is relevant. You could also rename this category to "Local" or "Believable", which might work better now that I think about it.

At the end of the story- either when the events of the story are concluded or the players have nothing more to add, check the value of the die. 

How the Story Lands
Check the value on the die first-
One or Two: The story was too short- boring. What about news of the outside world? Where's the adventure, the intrigue?! What a bunch of graceless guests you are. (Nothing)
Three or more: Good story! (Check Gracious Host table below)
Maximum Value on the Die: Too long. The children are falling asleep and the wife excused herself to do some cleaning. (Nothing)

Also; you can use a bigger die (meaning longer, more impactful stories) under these conditions;

  • You have a Bard in the party (+1 die size)
  • Somebody telling the story has a Charisma modifier of +1 or better (+1 die size)
  • You have a physical piece of proof of the story- like a monster's head, wicked scar, or magical treasure (+1 die size)

(Die sizes go d6 > d8 > d10 > d12 for maximum story power) 

Then, check the location of the die on the chart-

If the die is on the Grim portion, then the Host(s) will think you need help. They will supply you with a number of cheap items or low-cost services equal to the die number. If your story had a value of 3, then they will supply you with three rations of food, or the local hunter supplies you with three quivers of arrows, or the old woman will supply you with three pairs of gloves- after all, you did say those frost wolves nearly froze you to death. What a dreadful story! Dress warmly dear.

If the die is on the Fantastic portion, you have brought more wonder and a little bit of magic into the world. You are inspiring people with your stories, and further spreading your own fame just a little bit by telling them. You gain bonus XP. The amount of bonus XP will vary depending on your game- but I'd say something like each character in the party gets (5 x their level) x value of the Fantastic die.

If the die is on the True portion, your stories are the most morally correct and useful to the villagers; not just because you aren't lying but because you are fulfilling the sacred duty of the guest. Essentially, it's a good deed. You could think of this literally, like the winds of fate or the direct intervention by the Gods to reward your kindness, or more abstractly, as a sort of meta-game currency to reward players for staying in character and immersing themselves in the game world. The number of points on the die is written down and the next die roll used by or against the party will be manipulated by that number in their favor. The first arrow shot by an orcish ambush has its To-Hit roll reduced by three points- miraculously turning a hit into a miss.

If your die is on the portions between any of the three categories- divide the die's value evenly among the categories- if the value is two or less, it is ignored. So if you have a story that ends on a Fantastic/Grim note, but only has a value of four, then you get no reward for the story (you can round up for odd numbers at least). You can also see that getting in the center of the wheel makes it impossible to get a reward with a six sided die- it may sound unfair, but remember, you're the one telling an unfocused jumbled mess of a story.

You can also totally use this graph/Venn diagram as a story generator table. Just roll + drop a die over the piece of paper and wherever it lands and its number is the mood and length of the story. So when you ask your hireling where he is been since he creeped out of camp a fortnight ago and he goes off on an epic ballad of saving a princess, you can be sure it's 100% bullshit, but at least it makes a nice story.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Resupply in Dungeon = Player Skill

At the core of dungeon crawlers, once the fantasy veneer is stripped away, is resource management. While overly obvious and reductive statements like this aren't really interesting, I think it's important to underline some concepts here. Let's talk about resources.


Light
Light is probably the most common "resource" that is associated with dungeon crawlers, and also very critical. It is easy to imagine that loss of light and all light-granting resources would just mean a TPK situation. Light is also very hard to reduce. You could imagine going on half rations for food to let them last a bit longer, but you can't really burn half a torch for less light- many games don't even have partial or low-light rules beyond other "you can see" or "you can't see". Light is also a very off or on resource in the fact that many fantasy races don't need light to see in darkness- comparatively few mechanics have in-universe methods of granting permanent, unlimited access to it. Comparatively few fantasy races have the ability of things like; don't need food or don't need arrows to shoot a bow or don't need to conserve hit points, etc.

The concept of light as a resource is often broken down into what the players can bring- namely Torches, Oil, and spells. Stranger forms of light resources- such as a racial ability to create light once p. day or a friendly torchbug companion that can glow to light up a room for you and so on go beyond the scope of this list.

Torches could be thought of as anything burnable. Potentially anything long and straight could be made as a torch or primitive torch. Real torches (as real candles) have specific methods of production; you can't just burn the end of a branch to make an effective torch. But this is fantasyland and it will work in a pinch.

Oil is more complex. Is it whale oil, plant oil, or magical fantasy oil? The concept to restore oil out of the bodies of slain monsters is a good one. Also; burning oil could make different smells- so a tribe of hobgoblins wouldn't notice your whale-oil-lamp but when they smell their chieftan burning to light your lantern then they'll get pissed. Oil is also in my opinion one of the most likely things you'll actually find in a traditional dungeon; any mineshaft or deep underground cave could have an oil drum or barrel left by the excavators or previous adventuring groups.

Light making spells is magic, and as such little rules of reality apply. Anything that can restore magic, or power from a patron of light/holy magic, or connection to the surface world for a druid, etc. could be used to restore light from a light spell. Another idea; a magical/holy light spell that gets dimmer the longer it goes on, but can be refreshed by brutal blood sacrifice of sentient beings. Imagine sacrificing bat people to Quetzalcoatl so you can search for more of that Aztec gold.

Rations & Feed
Food is the easiest thing to resupply in the dungeon; just eat monsters. Mushrooms are also around. Dungeon Meshi ran with this entire concept; it's good.

Feeding animals, especially herbivores (cave donkey?) is a bit harder and would require some supernatural elements. I like the Dwarf Fortress method of cave moss being good enough for surface dwelling herbivores to consume and survive on. In some parts of subterranian caverns it grows like a thick blanket. In smooth stone dungeon and generic mining tunnels? Not a lot of food or water here.

Of course- this only applies to traditional dungeons. Hex or city-crawls are brimming with opportunities for food- from foraging to hunting. Personal take- high towers or "vertical" dungeons like mountains have water being common, but food is more scarce. Then again, dungeons or deep caves should have more water, just less clean water, so unsure on this one.

Ammunition
Obviously spells and ammunition (either for actual guns or arrows and bolts) are a big part of the resource management. You typically have to have more risk to use a sword up close, but swords don't run out. (Equipment is also a resource too though- that's later).

Resupplying ammunition in dungeons requires some creativity. Personally, I'd allow skilled characters (dwarves) to identify nitrates in caves or soils to be used to make shitty black powder, and probably even stuff a gun barrel with little gravel flakes as an improvised form of ranged attack. Arrows are more complex, but you can probably imagine making arrows out of mushroom wood + underground birds for plummage, with arrow heads being easily reused. Ammunition made in dungeons is probably of pretty poor quality- the main cost here is time. Realistically speaking, unless you're spending multiple days or weeks in a dungeon, it wouldn't be worth the effort to try and hunt down all the materials you'd need to make arrows.

Ammunition is very easily recouped from intelligent enemies however; both their camps and patrols (goblins have shitty arrows, orcs have crossbows, drow have good arrows, bug people have bombs, and so on). It is probably one of the easier resources to recover if you aren't in a naturalist dungeon (cave) or an undead dungeon where everything is old and rotting away. If there are no intelligent monsters in the cave that use humanoid weapons, then you're screwed.

I'm also a big fan of magic rods as a type of "ranged magic weapon" to replace infinite use cantrips. They shoot magic blasts and are essentially a reskinned bow or sling for magic users. If you go with the lore of them being topped with a gem to be used as a power source, then this is a really easy method of resupply- just put a gem you got as treasure on the rod and each shot drains a certain amount of its value as the gem loses luster and eventually turns into a pebble if its all expended.

Spells
Spells are a tricky one. With such a massive part of the game balance being based on resource management, and Magic-Users being so reliant on spells- which are essentially their methods to solve problems at the cost of being very limited.

In some games, spells can be regained through studying your spellbook after either eight hours of rest (possible but difficult in most adventure situations / dungeons), or by studying your spellbook again after casting your magic dice/spell points, or what not. Further games have secondary mechanics- risk reward of casting extra spells past your "safe" limit but at the chance of screwing everything up. However, these methods of gaining extra spells do not count from resupplying in a dungeon itself.

The power gained by spells (instant problem solutions) can be "resupplied" in dungeons through finding scrolls, magic wands, or other magical loot in a dungeon itself. Chopping off a fetish from a defeated kobold shaman and being able to use his remaining spell he had prepared before you killed him is a fun concept- as is having yet unknown and unidentified spells scribbled on walls or stored in little glass balls. The only clue on what it does is a few random words- is it safe or will it blow you up?

Side note: "Spells" in the form of instant use solutions, not necessarily related to combat, are also somewhat "resupplied" by needing less of them over time. For example, you don't need to use Levitate to reach a high platform once you tie a rope around it and can now climb it easily.

Health & Cures
Health is one of the most important aspects to resource management. It is the primary "resource" of martial/fighter-type classes, and important to every character. Dungeons can't give back too easily, or else one of the biggest pressures for getting in and out is removed. Many rulesets allow for short or long rests to recover some amount of health, or using limited use spells or abilities like lay on hands to recover HP.

Other ideas; friendly NPCs in the dungeon that will heal you in exchange for something else. Healing potions are an easy one. Healing fountains stuck in the dungeon make a nice static location where healing can be done; but there has to be a good reason why you can't just bottle the water or swim in it- maybe mutations if you use it more and more. If a dungeon is built or famous for a famous treasure, you restore +1d8 HP or "Grit" just for touching it like a pure morale boost. This helps since it will almost always be guarded by the most dangerous monster.

As for first aid and medicine- I've already written a whole post about it.

Also; the concept of certain stats or your level being damaged (level drain) could be tied under health. Typically, these aren't easily cured in a dungeon and are instead related to the overall campaign and bed rest. An extra rule, like laying a ghost's physical remains to rest cures you of its level drain, might be a nice way to allow players to resupply in exchange for doing something difficult and karmic in universe. Curses get an extra bit- Arnold likes curses that you can cure by doing shit- make the dungeon harder for yourself to remove a penalty.

Equipment
Dungeons contain traps and situations that consume equipment- prybars break eventually, wooden doorwedges are thrown away, and your swords are eaten by rust monsters. Recovering equipment in a dungeon is simple; stealing it from the monsters and corpses here- perhaps even your own fallen party members. More recent corpses probably have better equipment, and anything you steal from monsters will be of poor quality, trapped/cursed, or both.

Creating new equipment or doing advanced repairs to serious damage is probably out of the scope of the timeframe and skill of the characters in a dungeon; but characters of a specific race or class might be able to do so. I like dwarves or gnomes, or those of magical artificer classes, being able to repair anything related to their professions in one exploration turn of downtime. Metal plates may also be stolen from various environmental pieces to patch yourself up; the classic wooden barrel lid as a shield. Why does nobody just use the armor that the animated suits of armor puppet around after you break them apart? That shit is expensive. Snailpeople can just put themselves into a new shell if they manage to find one- that's a good reason for adventuring.

Manpower / Numbers
People will die or become lost/run away as you explore the dungeon. This applies to player characters to a lesser extent, but is mostly related to your hirelings and followers. Link and lantern boys, porters, thralls, whatever- all of them perform useful labor that isn't realistic for a small party of individuals to do; like tear down barricades or haul giant gold bricks out of a dungeon. Some treasure may become totally unable to be recovered if you don't have enough people to carry it, but group size is self mitigating; too many hands means not enough coins, and larger groups tend to use up more resources and attract more wandering monsters.

Groups of people also have other advantages; taking turns on watch, being able to carry each other, etc. It's similar to Kenshi; if enough people get downed in that game and you can't carry them away is when situations quickly spiral out of control- as long as you have enough healthy and strong people to support the knocked out ones, you can remain as mobile as possible.

Manpower is hard to recover in a dungeon on purpose; fresh meat is found back in town, at the tavern, but there are some methods. The classic of finding an imprisoned or lost person in a dungeon to act as a replacement PC could just as easily work for a retainer. I also like the idea of pressing a random goblin or other mook to join your party and do dangerous or demeaning tasks- though this comes with the explicit cost of knowing they will betray you at the first opportunity. More honorable creatures, like orcs, may offer to aid you as a group in exchange for performing a task for them first.

Of course, all of the examples above are for replacing dead or lost party members with new ones, not bringing back old ones. Health is already covered above and resurrection magic tends to be too high of power and scope for being "resupplied" in a dungeon. However I could see very dangerous dungeons having "soul fountains" where the last dying breath of a person (trapped in a bottle of course) can be brought and they will be reborn within a time limit. Or a really haunted place having the ghost of the dead PC being able to be brought back- but they'll need a new, living body. Have them possess a random animal or monster for funsies.

Time
The one thing you can't get back. Time is a "resource" that (probably) can't be recovered in a dungeon at all, but thankfully isn't a problem in every dungeon. In this case, it's less "time" and moreso a time constraint mechanic. Toxic spores that get more dangerous the longer you inhale them, a dungeon slowly sinking into the mud that will soon be submerged in 1d4+2 days, or needing to get someone or something out of the dungeon very soon, else a catastrophic event will happen.

However, "time" as a resource could be returned either with super high level magics (timewarping? Rope trick?) and relating it to the fiction. I could see a campaign where killing high level cultists slows (but does not stop) the return of an elder deity, so taking a detour to search every cultist hideout becomes a valuable way to recover your "time".

Surprise
While only a vaguely resource in a quantifiable sense, the element of surprise could be a significant resource to a party when first exploring a location. If a location is heavily guarded or has at least one intelligent faction there; every time the party fights or is spotted it will be more and more clear that adventurers are coming to plunder or mess up their plans. In that regard surprise becomes like a resource; traded in when you fail stealth rolls, and making future encounters more difficult as enemies prepare for you.

Surprise cannot be recovered once directly lost, but it can be mitigated. Killing guards who spot you before they raise the alarm, covering your tracks with branches in the mud, or waiting a long time before returning to the dungeon to let their guard back down are all valid ways of regaining or preventing loss of surprise.

Confidence
This resource is totally meta- player attitude. Confidence is something that is a direct resource that is expended while a dungeon is explored, but isn't on your character sheet. In a way, the desire to take risks and explore is a resource that is slowly used up as other resources are lost- optimal and safe become more important and socially enforced as the party's position becomes more precarious.

Confidence and time (real life time) is highest when you begin a session- which usually includes a return to the dungeon. From here, the knowledge, mapping, and accumulated player power from progression acts as a sort of boost for confidence, until new areas are explored. People can only go so far before a cautious retreat is in order; especially if loaded with treasure. Winning battles and finding more treasure regains confidence, but also increases risk. If your dungeon is properly large, players may not even explore the whole thing once the cost to risk ratio of remaining treasure and acquired treasure becomes too costly to keep exploring!

This isn't a bad thing though; players not exploring an entire dungeon leads to a mystery and a more "realistic" mindset that treasure hunters would really have; once they've got the hoard, it isn't worth the time and effort to go scrabble for the last few gold coins. The unique values of OSR play make resources especially important and lead to gameplay that isn't just a set up and resolve using the most optimal combat methods your players know; it means the ability to be further invested in the fantasy space- any way players can use their own intelligence and skill to let them stay in the dungeon longer is a direct continuation of that idea.