Saturday, March 12, 2011
AD&D DMG Appendix A: Random Dungeon Generation in acutal play.
Last month when I was "rediscovering" AD&D, I convinced a couple of friends to let me try out the Random Dungeon Generator found in Appendix A of the DMG*. I had used this Appendix a couple of times in the distant past to help come up with a dungeon before a game session, but never actually just opened the book and run a session right out of it. I warned the guys that this would be a completely random dungeon, so anything was possible, and that I was going to Let The Dice Fall Where They May.
First up was rolling character, which I wanted to do "by the book"AD&D style, having not done so in a while (Method 1, p11). This was going to be "original 3 books" only - no UA, Best of Dragon, etc. I rolled up an NPC along with them. I should pause here to recommend Mad Irishman's awesome 1E Character Sheet replicas. Having one of those in front of you is like riding a Time Machine. Character generation took all of 10-15 minutes, and we soon had a Fighter (with an 18/73% Strength!), a Magic User, and a Cleric. Oh yeah, their names were "De Gausser"(?), and "The Norseman"**.
I named the NPC Cleric "Bad Rick"***.
De Gausser and The Norseman arrived in the shanty town of "Dregs", somewhere on the edge of the "Forbidden Lands". There, they were approached by Rick, who told them he had been sent by his church to investigate an underground temple complex abandoned by a lost cult for more than a century. Rick assured them there would be treasure aplenty, and they could split it evenly, with any religious artifacts being considered Rick's share. De Guasser and The Norseman decided that would likely be the only interesting thing to do in Dregs, and so, after purchasing some dungeon crawling goods, a mule, and hiring to 0 level redshirts, "Luke" and "Barry", they set off into the Forbidden Lands until they came to a hill topped with some crumbling pillars and covered in razor sharp broken shards of slate.
For the curious (and because I have it written down on my scratch paper), the equipment purchased was: 10 Leather Sacks, 2 Dozen Arrows, 4 Spears, 2 Suits of Leather Armor, 2 Backpacks, 2 Tinderboxes, 5 Waterskins, a 10' Pole (hah!), 20 Torches, 50' of Rope, and 14 days of food, which came to a total of 31gp, 6sp, and 3cp. Apprentice "The Norseman", as rich as most 1st lvl Magic Users, footed the bill, reluctantly.
A wide stair at the top of the hill led down into darkness, torches were lit, and the dungeon crawl began. I rolled a d6, and came up with Start Areas for Random Dungeons number 4 (enlarge the map above for a better look). Bored with stereotypical dungeon decor, I told the players everything down here was gleaming white marble, pristine, glossy, and bright as is if it was cleaned 5 times a day. The walls and floors were segmented into 3' squares, like the walls of a mausoleum.
The players chose the first door on the left, which brought me to my first challenge, I couldn't immediately find anything in the Appendix about doors. Plenty about what's behind the doors, but not the doors themselves, so I scribbled this little table on the map (d12):
1. Locked & Trapped
2. Locked
3. Trapped
4-6. Stuck
7-12. Open
The first door was open.
Roll, roll, roll, off they went down a long hall, exploring carefully everything along the way. This hall took like 30 minutes, and nothing happened, but the guys seemed to enjoy it immensely, tapping on the walls, trying to pull the mausoleum-style squares of marble off the wall, poking at the ceiling with the 10' pole, and so on. Eventually, they moved on, turned a corner south, and came to a chamber where they encountered their first monster (roll, roll, roll): NPCs! (Roll, roll, roll), these turned out to be 2 1st level Fighters and their retinue of followers (4 men-at-arms, and 3 porters/torchbearers). A sort of standoff ensued while both parties sized each other up, exchanged insults, and glared a lot. Eventually both sides deemed they were sort of evenly matched, and went their separate ways, though the promise of future aggression was definitely implied. This encounter actually took a bit of time up, and was fun to roleplay. Sort of "Westerny" in feel actually.
Continuing on (roll, roll, roll), the party found a large room, which was completely empty, except for some more doors (roll, roll, roll) all of which were open (you can see on the map here in the lower left hand corner, randomization leads to some oddly close quarters sometimes). Past a door was another hallway, and the players barreled down it (they had by now provided me with a "marching order", and a "fighting formation", which are the little letters on the bottom of the map), and completely forgot to check for traps anymore. (Roll, roll, roll) a pit! With spears at the bottom! Luke fell in and died. Then they immediately encountered 2 skeletons, which Bad Rick was completely incapable of Turning for some reason (ie crappy rolls!), but were dispatched fairly easily otherwise. Then another pit, which Barry fell into and died. This dungeon apparently eats hirelings, so the players swore they'd bring more last time.
On down the hall, they were ambushed by 2 Piercers (which I made look like marble plates so as not to appear too incongruous) which both missed, and were pretty easy to kill after that. Moving on, they found a secret room (empty), and some more hallways.
Then came the stirges! Nine of them, and tough little buggers. Totally overpowered for three measly 1st level characters, right? No. While they were pretty banged up, the party managed to defeat them by the skin of their teeth. I rolled that their lair was nearby, and ruled that it was in a tomb behind an open marble plate. Then I started rolling on the random treasure table for the Stirge's treasure type. I came up with:
6000ep
5000gp
8 gems
2 Potions (Treasure Finding, Clairaudience)
Sword +1, +4 vs. Reptiles
Now, normally I would scale that back a whole lot for a 1st level party, but I was letting the Dice Fall Where They May, so there you go. The challenge was getting 1100 lbs of treasure out of the dungeon. The party made a few trips out of it, carefully avoiding the NPC fighters that were still lurking around the dungeon, and buried the treasure outside. They went to down, bought some more mules and redshirts, and came back out to get it.
Everyone made 2nd level!
It was actually fun, and I enjoyed being as surprised as the players were with every twist and turn. Try it sometime. But bring beer.
*It should be noted that this is much easier to do after several pints of Guinness.
**It should be noted that naming characters is not particularly helped by the liberal consumption of Guinness.
***See?
You know, I have been thinking recently about doing this exact thing. Probably without the Guinness though, I rarely drink and game.
ReplyDeleteThis looks like TONS of fun!! I should definitely try it one day or another – especially with Guinness :D
ReplyDeleteThat sounds awesome!
ReplyDeleteCool!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant! Sounds like a lot of fun - I'll have to try this sometime. :D
ReplyDeleteThis is totally relevant to my interests.
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome! I'm having a very similar experience with the 1st Edition AD&D game I'm running, too. We're using S3: Expedition to the Barrier Peaks. You can read the first three recaps here: http://daddyrolleda1.blogspot.com/search/label/recaps
ReplyDeleteWe also consume copious amounts of beer as well as some single malt Scotch, so you can just imagine the bad puns and jokes. It also helps the player of the blowhard paladin, whom we force to speak in a thick Scottish brogue.
This was a very enjoyable read, Al, and a great addition to your AD&D posts. The session sounds like it was a lot of fun, and I'm inspired to give it a try myself.
ReplyDeleteIts nice to see you re-embracing the Dark Side, err, ummm... AD&D.
ReplyDeleteIf only you knew the power of the Dark Side!
Too bad you're 3 hours from me, I'd be trying to get in on that game.
Lovely to see a pertinent reminder, Al, that this is a GAME, something we might do (well, at least occasionally) for a bit of goofy fun with our chums. Avid, serious-minded fans can tend to take things a tad TOO seriously when it comes to DM preparation.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I always loved about that section of the DMG was the impression it always left me with of Gary's relaxed sense of authority as a DM. I had a heated argument with a room-mate's girlfriend about creativity back in the day based on those tables, wherein I had commented on how they offered a creative goad for the DM, and she went on to lambast me, the tables and role-playing games in general as in NO WAY creative. At the time I was very offended- she was, I had felt, a close friend- but her arty pretensions did this insecure nerd some harm back then...
The creativity emerges from the individual's expression of those arbitrary random results (as per your stark white walls). Nice reminder of the magic bound up in those wonderful volumes. Thank you, Al.
I admire your ability to navigate those tables in any condition, let alone after multiple pints of Guinness. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI ran into a Shambling Mound at first level doing this once. Needless to say, it took a lot less time to get out than it had to get in.
ReplyDelete