Is The Orc and The Pie a well-designed adventure module?

Is The Orc and The Pie a well-designed adventure module?

  • Yes

    Votes: 136 76.4%
  • No

    Votes: 32 18.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 10 5.6%

Wystan said:
How to describe Orc and Pie....This is an adventure that causes the players to have existential questions...How did the orc get here, why does he hav a pie, who made the pie, can I have some pie...etc.

So I feel that this is a good thing as it makes the players look at things in a very different light, sort of like Adventures in Dungeonland did. So I would have to say....

Other

But it doesn't give the DM anything to work with when determining the answers to those questions. You can't give all story and no substance, but this goes too far in the other direction. It is a very clear and solid mechanically, but it doesn't add any of the fluff. When a DM buys a module, he wants to buy an entire module, not just half of one. That is unfortunately what will always mar "The Orc and The Pie".
 

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It's not so much an adventure as a metaphor for the human condition. Ultimately we can all be found clinging to what is precious to us, alone, in a stark and simple environment.
 

Olgar Shiverstone said:
- Perform an obscene ritual to corrupt the pie, thus leading to the downfall of the orc tribe, after which the party steals the receipe and bakes their own pie
Is this why orcs are evil now?




The only issue I had with this module was my character didn't eat pie. He was strictly a carnivore. I can't believe my DM (or the writer) didn't take this into account. How hard would it have been to replace the pie with a chicken leg?

I haven't spoken to the DM since then.
 

ssampier said:
Blueberry blackberry.

Blackberry boysenberry.

Boysenberry huckleberry.

Huckleberry raspberry.

Raspberry strawberry.

Strawberry cranberry.

Peach.
For some reason, now I want a black and white cookie . . .
 






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