Dark Sun Preview from Free RPG Day – Material and Play Session Overview

I picked up the Dark Sun Bloodsand Arena adventure Wizard’s of the Coast put out for Free RPG Day this year. There are spoilers, so if you plan to be a player in these adventures, read with caution.

Setting and Materials

It’s for 1st level and comes with six characters ready made. The sheets are on nice coated paper, but are hard to write on without a dry erase marker. Also, one had a typo saying a power did 2d17 + 7 damage.
Even if your players really like to make their own characters, the fact that at this time there is nothing about Dark Sun in the character builder required they use these characters unless they want to miss out on the new Dark Sun powers. Plus magic works entirely differently in Dark Sun, so a traditional magic user wont work in Dark Sun.

The setting of Dark Sun is a post-apocalyptic setting in a fantasy world. In Dark Sun, the easy magic takes energy from everything around it. For example if a wizard cast a big spell, the plants around might wilt. One power the character has will actually damage team mates if you make it stronger. Despite there being ways to use magic without causing harm (but it’s harder to do), everyone just kept casting spells until the world came to ruin. Now all magic and those who use it are shunned. The world is a wasteland.

Metal is scarce in the desolate world, so most weapons are ceramic. On a roll of a 1, you can reroll but risk breaking your weapons, or take the automatic miss.

The maps provided are large and very nicely drawn. You can use them for any kind if arena combat in any setting.

Gameplay

I ran with 4 players, so I just picked one of the two provided back stories for all the characters. The characters are divided into two groups of three, so I picked the story that matched the majority of the characters.

After convincing the players that they should escort the caravan instead of trying to rob it (Players are a necessary evil), we got underway for the first section of adventures. There are two groups included, we only played the first. I game them five days worth of food each. I did this because failing some skill challenges had penalties for running out of food. I figured 5 would be enough if they did well, but not too many to avoid trouble if it camie.

The first part is a set of skill challenges. They are of an easy difficulty. If the players pass, they get a bonus to the next challenge or avoid misfortune. I didn’t tell the players they were running skill challenges. I just asked for some skill rolls to start, then presented situations based on what the skill challenges provided. This worked really well. They even got more food for hunting and catching some animals. I did make a ‘mistake’ on one. They should have avoided the first combat, but instead I didn’t read the whole thing and gave them a surprise round against the attackers. I think this worked out better, as the combat was fun. Due to having two less players, I removed two minions and one of the three bigger baddies. This worked out perfectly. One of the characters almost died, but not quite. That’s about right if you ask me. One of the bad guys had a poorly worded power:

Barbed Spear

Requirement: The raider must not have a creature grabbed
Attack: Melee 1 (One creature); +7 vs AC. While the raider has a creature grabbed, it can use Barbed Spear against the grabbed creature only.

This seemed to contradict itself, so I just didn’t use it.

Once they were done with the skill challenges I revealed that they had passed all the skill challenges. Everyone agreed that in this case not telling them they were participating in a skill challenge was a good choice.

The next section is where the PCs discover the caravan intends to capture them and sell them as slaves. I set up the map with all 7 bag guys (reduced from 10 due to having less players) and put the PCs on the board. This took a few minutes. Two of the snipers had shots, then the first PC went and in one attack bloodied the main traitor which triggered the city guards to show up and end the combat. All that setup time essentially wasted. Perhaps part of this was my fault, I think the enemy was supposed to be in the tent, not in the doorway, but on the other hand, the character could have made it there anyways, so maybe not.

Next was a skill challenge to see who the city guard believes. The result was the guards believed that the PCs were in the right, but wanted to put them all into the arena to give the caravan slavers some comeuppance. This is where things started to go terribly wrong.

A rule of the arena was no direct attacking of the opponents. Instead the goal was to have the most coins (large ceramic ones) in your teams coffer at the end of five rounds. The first mistake was I rolled initiative normally, where each player has their own, and each group of enemies has a single initiative. (two groups in this case.) What happened was the PCs got higher than all baddies, rushed for the coins and to block the enemy coffer … and aside from a couple good moments, the rest of the ‘battle’ was essentially boring. Had I given each PC and enemy their own initiative (which I recommend you do,) things might have been better, but I am not sure. It lasted way to long. Also, had the players just focused on the five rounds, it would have gone faster. It’s hard to focus on something boring though. Even adding the trapjaw monsters didn’t make it more interesting.

Overall, the skill challenge and first combat were great, the second combat took longer to set up than complete, and the final fight didn’t work at all for the group. I thought it would spark lots of roleplaying, but aside from the thri-kreen having four arms and taking two coins, nothing special happened.

I haven’t looked at the next adventure in the pack, so it might be better.

Still, if you get a chance to get a copy of this, the maps are super nice, and the skill challenge section is a fine example of how I think they should work in game.

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My Experience on Free RPG Day 2010

I heard word about Free RPG Day a while back when Paul of Cthulhu mentioned that Goodman Games was offering a free Call of Cthulhu adventure. I intended on going to my regular game store Hobbytown, but they were not participating this year. My friend Stewart has a game store local to him called Rainy Day Games, but he ended up being unable to attend, so I decided to find a store nearby to go and get free stuff. The nearest was Ancient Wonders. I’d been there once before and didn’t have a high opinion of it. It was dim, kind of a hole in the wall place, etc. I decided to go there anyways because it was close.

I walked it and it seemed brighter than I remember, so that was good, and the guy there asked how he could help us. I asked where the goodies were and there were two tables and he said the stuff on the first one was up for grabs. The thing I wanted was on the second, and he was worried that if people grabbed it all they wouldn’t have enough for their events later. I said the main thing I wanted was the Call of Cthulhu item and thankfully he didn’t object to me taking one. I snagged some stuff for the Warhammer 40k RPG, a DnD adventure for Stewart, since he couldn’t attend, and a Legend of Five Rings book that looked interesting.

I continued to look around the store to see if there was something inexpensive to buy. I didn’t want to just get free stuff and run. The problem was while I was browsing, I was essentially ignored while the store guy complained to his friends/coworkers about not having read a book because his annoying customers kept bugging him. While I don’t want to be smothered in a store, I don’t mind, and prefer, being asked if I can be helped in finding something, and I certainly don’t want to hear the shopkeeper complain about having customers. While I didn’t get ‘bad’ service personally, I didn’t find the experience enjoyable at all. I did end up buying Zombie Dice from Steve Jackson Games, but when I left I felt like I had given my money to the wrong place. I wont be returning there. While I wanted Zombie Dice, I think I would rather have bought it from a place that wont complain about customers and has better service, like the Hobbytown I normally go to. Also the Free RPG Day site mentioned some Q-Workshop and Chessex dice and they said they didn’t have any dice, (or they were on the more ‘hand’s off’ table,) so I didn’t get any of those, which would have been nice.

I did get the one thing I most wanted, and a few other interesting things, so overall I my adventure was a success. I’ve looked at the Call of Cthulhu adventure a bit and what I read looks good.

Links:
Free RPG Day – http://www.freerpgday.com/
Paul of Cthulhu – http://www.yog-sothoth.com Twitter: @ysdc
Goodman Games - http://www.goodman-games.com/ Twitter: @GoodmanGames
Stewart – Twitter: @LeStew
Rainy Day Games – http://www.rainy-day-games.com/store.html
Ancient Wonders – http://www.ancientwonders.net
Steve Jackson Games – http://www.sjgames.com/ http://www.sjgames.com/dice/zombiedice/

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