Wednesday, September 22, 2010
The "Appendix N" of Episodic Play
There are five "textbooks", if you will, that I consider to be required reading for referees and players interested in Episodic Campaigns:
The Dying Earth - Jack Vance
Really the most important, in my opinion, on the list here, The Dying Earth is the "bible" of science-fantasy, episodic gaming. Consisting of three books composed of a number of picaresque tales featuring a changing cast of eclectic persons, the world is the real character. The setting takes on depth and life and continuity, as tale after tale unwinds. As each tale unwinds, the human elements may come and go, but the setting continues to become more compelling, more saturating. This is something you want to replicate in the episodic campaign - characters can drop in and out, stories and adventures may begin and end, but the players always have a constant, cohesive sense of the world they're adventuring in, making it easier to return, or maintain involvement when events take unexpected turns.
The Complete Chronicles of Conan - Robert E Howard
Besides being one of the most iconic and engrossing bodies of hardcore Swords & Sorcery literature you can read, it is also, almost by accident, an amazing example of how Episodic Play can allow you to jump around in time. Conan's fate to become king was known from the beginning - the tales of Conan's past were not told in sequential order. Again, you have a body of work told in very separate and distinct pieces that nonetheless form a cohesive whole.
Imagine running a campaign where players roll up not 1st level characters but 10th level - beginning in the endgame. From time to time, though, a session looks back in time, and the players play out the adventurers that led them to their current lofty states.
Thieves' World - Various
A great set of books, wherein the cohesive whole is made up not just of different stories and characters but written by different authors! The stories, perhaps, would have been more appropriately gathered under the heading "City of Thieves", as the action seldom leaves the mean streets and shadowed back alleys of Haven. Which is why you want this as an Episodic Play resource - there is a metric ton of inspiration here for city-based campaigns. Grab your copy of City State of the Invincible Overlord, read a couple of these stories the night before each session, and you be good to go!
Necronomicon: Best Tales of HP Lovecraft
Lovecraft manages to build not so much a campaign setting through his loosely-connected tales of Old Ones, Madness, and Mysteries Best Left Undisturbed, but a campaign feeling. You know, when you open the first page of a Lovecraft tale, that the protagonist is likely doomed. The only mystery of the tale is the exact nature of that doom: a horrific death? Subversion to some lost ritually initiated mutation? Complete loss of sanity?
This is a good guide for running an episodic play wherein the players are rolling up characters each session that are essentially doomed from the very beginning. No one expects to run the same character again next session - but perhaps they may encounter one as an NPC in the local asylum!
Lankhmar: Fritz Leiber
I include Leiber's tales by necessity - the breadth and scope of Lankhmar's universe is dazzling, and worked so subtly into the adventures of Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser you almost don't realize it until you look back on the stories later on. Without a doubt, an achievement to strive for for any referee or world-building engineer. The great variety of types of adventures here makes these tales a vital reference - sorcery, romance, war, mystery, every genre abounds here, waiting to inspire your next session.
Spot on -- this is my exact list if I were to begin an "Appendix N".
ReplyDeleteMmm, I'd have to say I'd recommend only the earliest of the Thieves' World books (the first two and a half books, really). The ones after that I find much less good.
ReplyDeleteI have to agree with PrinceHerb. I liked the later Thieves World books but they were much closer to "big fantasy" than S&S
ReplyDeleteIf new school books are kosher, Simon Greene's Hawk and Fisher fantasy police procedurals are episodic and pretty good too.
Heck a GM could do a lot worse than riffing from Law and Order or any TV show for an urban or structured campaign.
Pretty much my list, but I would swap out Thieves World for one of the weirder Clark Ashton Smith story cycles - probably Hyperborea or Xothique - purely for issues of personal taste.
ReplyDeleteNo vote for The Martian Chronicles? Not fantasy enough? Or sciency enough?
ReplyDeleteFrom EGG's introduction to the LBB . . .
ReplyDelete"These rules are strictly fantasy. Those wargamers who lack imagination, those who don’t care for Burroughs’ Martian adventures where John Carter is groping through black pits, who feel no thrill upon reading Howard’s Conan saga, who do not enjoy the de Camp and Pratt fantasies or Fritz Leiber’s Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser pitting their swords against evil sorceries will not be likely to find Dungeons and Dragons to
their taste."
A lot of Vance stories also have a fascinating structure to them: they are reminiscent of loose game scenarios in that you have a self-contained game space (or "board"), local rules (often but not always cultural quirks or customs) and defined initial resources. The resourceful protagonist of the story then has to use all of this to his advantage in an attempt to reach some arbitrary preset objective.
ReplyDeleteAll of this is a wonderful recipe for gaming where there are "scenarios" with a distinct beginning and end but the approaches to solve them are up to the players.