thefutilist
Adventurer
I was talking to @pemerton about some tests I was doing comparing systems. I’m not great at combat/thriller set pieces that require a lot of granular orchestration. So I’m running the same situation in different systems with the aim of figuring out what I want and what I should be on the lookout for.
My aim is to start at very low granularity and then begin working my way up. The situation I’m using is as follow.
Oh add three Ahasi warriors, skeleton summons under Ansillias' control.
Various outcomes
Going in I know that I wanted a variety of different outcomes to be on the table. That’s what I designed the scenario for. I had a list of a few of the more obvious ones.
Ansilla dies or Halden and Drenem die or any combination.
The Obsidian Lotus ends up with one or the other side.
I was thinking of the type of choices Halden would have to make depending on how the combat was going and what the status of the participants was. Also how the system chosen made some of these more likely, how it took some off the table entirely, how it narrowed down the space in general.
My aim is to start at very low granularity and then begin working my way up. The situation I’m using is as follow.
The cult of the hidden god is a criminal order that works within the Esperi and Nihasi Empires. Some say they’re righteous rebels, Robin Hood figures, some say ruthless slavers and exploiters, some say decadent miscreants. The truth is a mix.
The Esperi empire is driven by conquest, the Nihasi empire is ruled by corrupt nobles. The religion of the hidden god is outlawed in both of them. Initiates of the hidden god study forbidden texts, engage in immoral celebration, the fencing of stolen goods, assassinations, and at times they aid those who revolt and rebel.
One of the things that stops them from being uprooted and destroyed is their access to the forgotten soldiers. Powerful wraiths of long dead assassins. When a noble or judge looks to be fomenting action against the order. An assassin is unleashed and they end up dead. The aristocracy of both Empires soon learnt to look the other way.
To summon these wraith assassins though, requires the Obsidian Lotus. An artefact of great power. One that had been recently stolen by the necromancer Ansillia. If the order does not retrieve it, it is only a matter of time before the aristocracy learns the order is not as dangerous as it once was.
A party of warriors and mages was sent after Ansillia but now only two survive. Finally in the ruined and snow covered town of Balkspear, they have tracked Ansillia down and plot their attack.
CAST
Drenem: An initiate of the order of the Hidden God. In his youth a revolutionary. Now a cynic who wants only to carve out a space in the world for him and his.
Halden: An outcast and mercenary. Halden was an ex-lover of Assilia before she left him. Drenem recruited him to find her, with the offer of a large reward. Large enough to let Halden finally retire in luxury. Beyond all that, the two men have adventured together for half a year now and have become close
Ansillia: A necromancer of Ahasi. Wants to gift the Obsidian Lotus to the Esperi empire. Become an aristocrat and see the Nihasi Kingdoms brought to ruin.
Oh add three Ahasi warriors, skeleton summons under Ansillias' control.
Various outcomes
Going in I know that I wanted a variety of different outcomes to be on the table. That’s what I designed the scenario for. I had a list of a few of the more obvious ones.
Ansilla dies or Halden and Drenem die or any combination.
The Obsidian Lotus ends up with one or the other side.
I was thinking of the type of choices Halden would have to make depending on how the combat was going and what the status of the participants was. Also how the system chosen made some of these more likely, how it took some off the table entirely, how it narrowed down the space in general.

