Shadowdark RPG: An Interview with Kelsey Dionne

Old-school gaming. New-school mechanics. Danger. Speed. Simplicity. Shadowdark RPG, currently on kickstarter and with a free quickstart, distills fifty years of D&D design into two pages of core rules supported by 239 monsters, 85 spells , 97 magic items, and dozens of random roll tables. Kelsey Dionne was kind enough to talk to me about her RPG. Addendum: since the interview, Kelsey has...

Old-school gaming. New-school mechanics. Danger. Speed. Simplicity. Shadowdark RPG, currently on kickstarter and with a free quickstart, distills fifty years of D&D design into two pages of core rules supported by 239 monsters, 85 spells , 97 magic items, and dozens of random roll tables. Kelsey Dionne was kind enough to talk to me about her RPG. Addendum: since the interview, Kelsey has posted Monday Monster #2 - Crabstrosity! and Monster Monday #1 - Brain Eaters!

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Charles Dunwoody (Charlie): Thanks for talking with me, Kelsey. What is the setting implied by the rules for Shadowdark RPG? In other words, what is the Shadowdark for those who don’t know.
Kelsey Dionne (Kelsey):
Thanks for talking to me, too, Charlie! Shadowdark RPG has a very lightly implied setting pulled from my actual game world. You see hints of it in my 5E adventures (things like deities and place names), but it's all very subtle, and meant to be easily turned generic. The main goal of the book was to leave setting very open so the Game Master can pick up and run with whatever setting they prefer.

Charlie: What I like about Shadowdark RPG is that D&D rules that take a lot of explanation get distilled into fast core rules. So old-school saving throws get replaced with ability score checks while modern rules like skills and feats are replaced with ability checks and class talents. Was this distillation of rules into fast core rules one of the driving factors behind your creation of Shadowdark RPG or did those fast core rules grow out of some other rule design you were working on?
Kelsey:
I think a lot of this design grew out of my dive into systems that seek to reduce complexity. Index Card RPG is a huge one, as well as more lightweight games like Knave. Both of those games in particular demonstrated that you could hit the same "feeling" on a rule without using the same execution. I also have been playing D&D for all my life, and I still remember the things that I found very hard to understand as a new player. Spell slots, saves vs. checks, spell levels not coordinating with character levels -- all things I think we've each grappled with as we learned the rules. Since Shadowdark RPG wasn't going to be a retro-clone, I knew I'd have the wiggle room to reshape some of those sticking points with new terminology and streamlining.

Charlie: A unique, defining rule of Shadowdark RPG is that PCs can’t see in the dark and that torches last for one hour of real time. How did you come up with this rule that fits the aesthetics of the Shadowdark so well?
Kelsey:
Ah, I have to give credit to the creators of D&D for the "can't see in the dark" element! That was a rule from Original D&D. However, the real-time torch timer came to me while I was chomping on corn-on-the cob one Wisconsin evening and thinking about the problem of time pressure. I used to be an English as a Second Language teacher, and one technique we used for getting students to answer quickly and not overthink their responses during verbal fluency practice was to set the exercise up like a game and use a real-life timer. It dawned on me that we could apply real-world time in the same way during D&D to discourage overthinking and encourage action, and lo and behold! That was when the idea of the torch timer was born.

Charlie: What kind of characters can players run in Shadowdark RPG?
Kelsey:
Players can run characters that fall into the four "pillar" camps: fighter, priest (cleric), thief, and wizard. There are so many permutations within these classes that make each character unique. That said, if people want to branch outside the four core classes, the official Shadowark RPG zine, Cursed Scroll, has three issues coming out alongside the book that each have a few new and thematic classes.

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Charlie: What kind of advice and support can GMs look forward to receiving in Shadowdark RPG?
Kelsey:
The Arcane Library community has a wonderful Discord Server where we talk about all sorts of gameplay and design elements for Shadowdark RPG (and other games, too). I'm really active in there, and we have such a fantastic group of people who are very fun and engaged. It's truly my favorite place on the internet! I'm also working up lots of new supporting material for Shadowdark RPG in the form of videos on my YouTube channel, blog posts on my website, and community spotlights. One of my favorite ways to support third-party Shadowdark publishers is to use the avenues I have to share out their work.

Charlie: What items are you offering through this kickstarter?
Kelsey:
In addition to the standard and premium version of the core rules, there are three themed zines (68 pages each), three mini-adventures, eight pre-made 1st-level character cards, and a GM screen. I wanted to give folks a complete package to just sit down and start playing!

Charlie: Do you have any future plans for Shadowdark RPG after this successful kickstarter wraps up that you can share?
Kelsey:
Absolutely! I'm excited to start writing more adventures and supporting material right away. There will definitely be more Cursed Scroll zines, and I have an idea for a megadungeon I've always wanted to write that would have a bit of an unusual presentation style. I think there's a fun way to make a megadungeon a bit modular, and really "ready to use" out of the box in ways I haven't seen before. I think I'll have to give it a try!

Charlie: Where can readers go to find your work?
Kelsey:
The best place is on The Arcane Library! I post all my products, blog articles, and otherwise on that website. It's my catch-all internet home.

Charlie: Any final comments you’d like to share with the readers of EN World?
Kelsey:
I just want to sincerely thank anyone who jumps in on supporting Shadowdark RPG. The response has been something I never could have imagined, and it's so galvanizing to know folks are excited for the game. It's definitely set the course for my next stage of publishing. As long as gamers out there keep wanting Shadowdark RPG material, I'll happily keep making it! Thanks, Charlie! I appreciate the time you took with me!
 

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Charles Dunwoody

Charles Dunwoody


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Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
Cursed Scroll #2 which was/is? available for free via Gizmodo had Cavalry Rider, Pit Fighter, and Ras-Godai .
This is a heck of an interesting read. I really like the included pit fighting system, which is another downtime activity like carousing in the main book. I have a player who would love both the pit fighter class and pit fighting as a mini-game.

I had planned to just get the core book, but now the Cursed Scrolls are looking pretty good, too, assuming they're all comparable, which is a good bet.

I did notice a typo in the separate mini-adventure download, so hopefully that will get caught in this process.
 

ngenius

Adventurer
Looks like an awesome rules light role playing game. I am really interested now. But what makes this game receive so much funding when it looks more like a wonderful hack of D&D instead of something fresh?
 




Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
what makes this game receive so much funding when it looks more like a wonderful hack of D&D instead of something fresh?
In the OSR space, 99% of dungeon crawler games are building off of a platform resembling OD&D (most famously Swords & Wizardry) or BX (most famously Old School Essentials). Almost no games are stripping down a 5E platform other than Shadowdark and 5 Torches Deep, which also adds new systems, which Shadowdark doesn't really do.

And, as @darjr said, Dionne has a reputation among a lot of DMs for writing great adventures, which famously can be run cold, without even reading the adventure first ahead of time (obviously, it's better if you do) and still have a solid experience. I've run either three or four of her adventures and every one of them was a success, something I don't think I can say about any other designer in my experience.

She's also got a YouTube presence, and is a known quantity in that space, so after a few reviews she requested to have done (most notably with Questing Beast, the big dog of OSR YouTubers), a bunch of the other D&D YouTubers, who tend to run in packs after whatever the new shiny subject of the day is, all jumped on board and began reviewing the very robust quickstart rules she released as part of the campaign.

TLDR:
  1. If she's not doing something new, it's still uncommon, and familiar to the mass of 5E fans, rather than most directly appealing to the smaller crowd of old school fans;
  2. She has put in the work and has an established reputation as an excellent designer;
  3. The YouTube community is helping elevate what even she thought would be kind of a niche product.
 
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Looks like an awesome rules light role playing game. I am really interested now. But what makes this game receive so much funding when it looks more like a wonderful hack of D&D instead of something fresh?

Like some other kickstarters that hit a million or more (this one most likely will) she has previous well received design experience, she has a YouTube presence along with a website with blog and Discord, she is a known gamemaster (online and at conventions), and this offers something D&D fans want but don't see a lot of (OSR math and game play with some 5E innovations thrown in).

I also think that it helps that the game is written to be played. It isn't just an idea and then mechanics were developed. She played this game and expects others to run it as well. And make up their own rules and adventures and even publish if they want to

Wizards fumbling the OGL ball was likely a third factor. Kelsey just happened to be ready to pick up the fantasy D20 ball and run with it before any other publisher was ready. Paizo capitalized on this as well and even Chaosium benefited but Kelsey has a brand new game ready to go right now.
 
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Scribe

Legend
Wizards fumbling the OGL ball was likely a third factor. Kelsey just happened to be ready to pick up the fantasy D20 ball and run with it before any other publisher was ready. Paizo capitalized on this as well and even Chaosium benefited but Kelsey has a brand new game ready to go right now.

A bit of scrolling shows she was also quite vocal on the OGL stuff, so I'm even more happy to hand over some gold.
 

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