Photos courtesy of Toronto Area Gamers |
As
previously mentioned, I was scheduled to run three games at Fan Expo 2014,
having been asked to volunteer by the wonderful folks in the Toronto Area Gamers.
On Friday, I
was scheduled to run The Imperishable Sorceress, which
had been published as a Free RPG Day adventure by Goodman Games in 2013. On Saturday, I was scheduled to run The
Arwich Grinder, which appeared in Crawl #9. On Sunday, I was scheduled
to run The Thing in the Chimney, which was initially available as a
free adventure for Christmas 2012, and then made a part of Perils of the Cinder Claws,
along with a sequel adventure, by Purple
Duck Games for the 2013 holidays.
Friday went
well, with a TPK occurring in the cold halls of Ivrian the Unkind. The players
failed to listen to Ivrian’s instructions, and the cleric attempted to invoke
divine power to deal with the first demon. And failed. They also failed to
obtain almost all of the treasures that could have helped them with the
adventure – being initially afraid even to touch the magic sword. With very
little oomph left to the group, the
survivors perished when they met the waspmires on the face of the Cleft
Mountain. Still, it was fun.
Saturday, I
started with five players, but one was taking care of a baby. One should not
take care of a baby and play in The Arwich Grinder. He bowed out
when they reached the attic. Of the remaining 16 0-level PCs entering the
funnel, 14 were still alive when we were warned that the room was going to
close about 45 minutes before the game was scheduled to end. They had just
begun to examine “Hell on Earth”, so they might not have done as well if we had
continued. Still, it was amazingly impressive, as the dice showed the game’s
Judge no love, and player caution prevented them from doing anything truly
stupid. And it was a lot of fun. Letting the dice fall where they may, if
nothing else, ensured that the players knew how exceptionally lucky their
0-level PCs really were.
Sunday, I
didn’t have enough sign-ups to run through The Thing in the Chimney, but
last-minute players allowed me to run for a foursome. They burned through the
adventure, avoiding most of the potential combats, but all dropped when a pair
of hands came from the chimney. “You are drawn up into the chimney, one by one.
There are some crunching sounds. Then your boots fall into the ashes.” Lovely.
Especially in contrast to the humorous tone of the rest of the scenario.
Because
there was so much time left, I ruled that the fruitcake helped them (because
the halfling ate it all), giving each 2d6 hit points back, and allowed them to
face the Cinder Claws himself. Yes, this was a fudge – but it was also a fudge
in a one-shot game, where everyone knew it was a fudge (no lying about it!) and
agreed to turn the clock back. They also knew what the “real” events had been.
In the
ensuing battle, two PCs dropped again before the Cinder Claws was defeated.
When rolled over, after being dragged through the portal, they were discovered
to be dead. A fruitcake can only do so much.
But the
players had burned through the adventure so quickly that I still had half the
time left. And they were asking if I had another scenario on me. Having the
core rules, I had them generate three 0-level PCs each and ran them through Joseph Goodman’s The Portal Under the Stars.
It was well received. In the end, two new “heroes” emerged from the adventure
site, and they were the two who ran.
One of the
players then asked if he could join my weekly game. This was a young gentleman
who had never played DCC before, but
who really liked the pace of the game. A lot of things can happen, and you don’t
always know what they are going to be!
NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS
I was
recognized from having run other DCC
promo events in the past, which was nice.
You can,
apparently, be voted MVP by the other players if you do a good job role-playing
being cursed with a desire to eat human flesh.
The big draw
this year seemed to be 5E, but Pathfinder retains a strong hold on the
Toronto crowd. I didn’t see anyone playing older edition games, which was a bit
sad.
The Goodman Games swag program continues to
surprise players. I was repeatedly forced to tell people that, really, they
could have that mechanical pencil, that button, those bookmarks, that graph
paper, etc., because the publisher provided it to me to give away to players.
It was very
kind of the Toronto Area Gamers
group to invite me to run games this year, and I would certainly be willing to
do so in the future. Next time, though, I will be running all-new
never-before-seen material, and players willing to chance their PCs’ fates on
the dice and my gentle adventure designs may be able to gain playtest credits
as a result!
Fun summary! My two favorite bits are:
ReplyDelete1. "One should not take care of a baby and play the Arwich Grinder."
2. "A fruitcake can only do so much."
Awesome!