Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Elric - End Game


There's been a lot of discussion on the old-school blogs about D&D's implied "End Game", or what high level characters do when they're too big and powerful and important to go sneaking around robbing graves anymore. Typically this "retirement" means building a castle, clearing the wilderness around it - rendering it monster-free, and slowly entering the political power games of the region.

If you're using the Melnibonean books as campaign inspiration, however, they offer a drastically different End Game.


(I suppose I should warn you away from ***SPOILERS!!!*** if you haven't read the books yet and are planning to do so)


Moorcock's anti-hero was, of course, doomed from the beginning. We know early on that he is quite literally damned, his soul bargained away (as with most Melnibonean royalty) to the lords of Chaos, specifically Arioch in this case, in exchange for power. Adding to this doom is Elric's dependence on the dark sword Stormbringer, self-described as "a thousand times more evil" than Elric. As the series winds ever closer to its finale, Elric finds himself, often against his own will, acting as both an agent for and a foil against Chaos. Over and over, he saves his friends and loved ones from danger, only to watch helplessly as his own dark sword eats their souls. The conflict between Law and Chaos eventually heightens to the point where the entire world is consumed by their conflict.

Against all the odds, Elric proves to be a greater servant of Fate than of Chaos, and he manages to plant the seeds of the recreation of his world. There is no living happily ever after - Stormbringer inevitably claims its last and greatest victim, Elric himself.


(***SPOILERS ENDOS****)


What this all offers to the inspiration-seeking GM is a completely different set of possibilities for the big "End Game". Why not start planning the PC's demise from the very beginning - foreshadow it here and there, drop hints, insert tragedies, play up every curse and omen of doom.

Another possibility is the end of the campaign world itself. Plenty of adventure stories and games feature heroes attempting to avert the end of all things - how about making that end inevitable, but letting the player's have a hand in what comes after?

Food for thought.

5 comments:

  1. Retirement is what you do in real life. In a game the end needs to be epic.

    For my Dragon Slayers game we have been planning the end game for a while now.

    Endings and end games should be glorious.

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  2. An Elric style "retirement" is perfect if the DM wants to hit the reset button on his campaign world.

    We'd usually just retire, advance the campaign calendar about 20 years and roll new characters who were children or descendants of the retired characters, (or of their retainers/henchmen, or NPCs they'd had notable interactions with)

    The DM would pretty much take over the retired characters and do a write up of what they'd been up to, incorporate them into his world, kill them off, or whatever sounded good.

    On special occasions, like when an original player from the group who'd moved was in town for a visit, we'd pull the old farts out of retirement for a one shot type thing.

    1st & 2nd ED, it seemed like the "sweet spot" was levels 5-10 or so. We never really went much beyond that. If I remember right, the highest level Character I had was a 14th level fighter - but I'd retired him at 10 or 11, the rest came from various "one shots".

    ReplyDelete
  3. If you like this ending I'd recommend reading the Sorcerer Supplement Charnel Gods ( the Sorcerer website).

    In it, every character has Stormbringer or the equivalent and the world (and the PCs) are doomed from the beginning.

    I'm sure you could pick up a lot of ideas.

    ReplyDelete
  4. While I'm not much of a fan of this type of campaign ending, I have really been enjoying these Elric posts! It pushed me to pick up the first of the series and try reading it... so far I'm pretty happy. I for some reason always steered clear of Moorcock and his EMO looking Melnibonian. It just didn't stand out to me, but I'm ~100 pages in and I'm pretty happy.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Poul Anderson's "The Broken Sword" - which is mentioned in "Appendix N" contains these elements and pre-dates Elric.

    ReplyDelete

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