Gaming Thursday: Broken Lands

My gaming group and I are getting ready to return to the Broken Lands, a campaign some of us had started many years ago that unfortunately ended soon thereafter as the main GM and another player had drop out.  Back then we ran the campaign in FATE, but this time I’m shifting us to using Cortex Prime with some hacks to bring a few more FATE-like elements into the game.

Also back then I, no surprise, made a character sheet for our game.  This time around we’ll likely be keeping most of our records in our shared OneNote instead, especially since we’ll be mostly remotely gaming… But, do you think THAT would keep my completely non-obsessive and totally healthy character sheet design mania at bay?

Of course not!  What fun would that be?  And so:

I’d probably tweak it some more, but given the uncertainty as to how much use it would actually get, this is probably a good place to leave it for the moment.

(As an aside, I am a bit enamoured with Cortex Prime right now, there’s a bunch of nifty aspects to it, and it is one heck of a wide and extensive toolbox.   I’m looking forward to seeing how it plays out at the table.)

Gaming Thursday: D&D Character Stand-Ups

For our new 5E D&D campaign, I made some character stand-ups for our party:

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As I mentioned when introducing my FATE stand-ups, having the character portraits in front of each players is a great way to keep the character fresh in our minds.  Each time we interact with each other, the image coupled with the graphic design — with all the information, personality, and world feel they convey — is front and centre to lend it’s evocative assistance.

They’re a lot of fun.  If you’d like them for your gaming table, I’ve placed a generic InDesign template for downloading here, and two PDFs to use as backgrounds in other programs are available here.

Game on!

Gaming Thursday: Character Stand-Ups

Along with character sheets, another “feelies” thing that I’ve tried recently is creating little character stand-ups* for our new FATE campaign:

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As the age-old saying says, images are wickedly powerful at conveying lots of information and world feel in a very quick and immediate manner. Many a character by many a player has been inspired by (or based on) an image, and it is not uncommon for players to commission a portrait (or draw one themselves!) of their character. There’s just something evocative about seeing another person, even if it is only a drawing.

These stand-ups are mainly a simple way of keeping that image/portrait front and centre. With each player placing their character’s stand-up in front of them at the gaming table, whenever we interact with each other the image is right there to lend it’s evocative assistance. Personality, flavour, history, attitude, aptitude, and even world atmosphere is readily made present so that our actions and interactions more easily come from within that space.

As this is a FATE game, I also inscribed our aspects, and that too has been useful as a reminder for all of us of not only the character but also what to invoke/compel.

We’ve used these for a couple of sessions and so far I’ve been pleased with how they turned out and how they work at the table. For the next iteration I’m going to be sure to put the same info on all sides (depending where you sit at the table you may not see the image). They were simple to make, and like the character sheets, there’s an opportunity to use the graphic design to evoke more atmospherics.

Game on…

* – Yeah, the name’s not that great…

Gaming Thursday: FATE Character Sheet

My group and I just recently started up a new FATE-based campaign. Following the core book, we spent our first session creating the setting, and came up with a very interesting and layered concept in which to play in.

We call it: Broken Lands

Which meant, of course, that I had to create a character sheet for the campaign.*

So here it is!  Enjoy…

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(As I get more familiar with the FATE system, I’m liking it more and more.  The relative simplicity of the characters (and thus the character sheets) is something that still amuses me as it’s rather different from the character sheets I’ve designed in the past.)

* – I’ve written before about my somewhat potentially-unhealthy obsession with making character sheets…

Gaming Thursday: Feelies

Back in the early, early days of computer gaming, there was excitement when you brought that hard-earned game home and opened the box. Besides the disk(s) there was a chance that inside there’d be something extra – a cloth map, a ring, an in-character or in-universe letter (Mechwarrior 1 came with an excellent affidavit that told the whole backstory for the game), or something else interesting related to the game. While sometimes they were a form of copy protection, mostly they served to aid to set the scene and to bring the atmosphere of the game to your fingertips, priming you to enjoy the fiction even more. They were tangible entry points into the world. (And they were cool!) These extras gained the name of “Feelies.”

And with that, I’m going to jump to the tabletop to talk about character sheets.

Truthfully, this is not just about character sheets, for there are many Feelies that can be put on the table to similarly bring out the atmosphere of the game world. Character sheets, however, are something you interact with very often and, when you sit down at the game every week and pull them out, they’re pretty much one of the first things you see. They’re the interface between you and the character written upon them. There’s an opportunity for them to set and reinforce the fiction of the world.

I love designing character sheets. (I might even enjoy it just a bit toooooo much to be healthy at times…) For our new Dresden Files campaign, where we are part of a paranormal investigation/handling non-profit organization, I created a character dossier:

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This is just the front; it’s printed on an 11×17 page and folded, so that it has all the appearance of a full dossier folder. Inside is listed the character’s characteristics and other in-game pertinent info (such as when we joined the organization) plus the main FATE-rules conceit of the character’s aspects.

There’s a great quote from Viggo Mortensen about filming the LotR movies when they were at Edoras. Weta workshop built the buildings of Edoras on a real rock in a real landscape (which they had to remove and Leave No Trace when they were done). Viggo’s quote went something like: “When you stepped out of the building, and stood there in the vast valley, with the flags fluttering nearby, you didn’t have to act as though you were in Edoras, because you **ing were in Edoras!”

My gaming room… doesn’t look like Edoras (unless we’re playing Papers and Paycheques, it wouldn’t do well to match any of our game settings), but when we start our games, and pull out that dossier, it sets our mind in gear. We have a tangible part of that world in front of us. It reminds us who we are: agents dealing with entities and events that few other even know exist. It builds an atmosphere.

RP springs from the creative muses within us all, and can exist quite well without any costumes or props or even feelies. But a little support never hurts. Whenever I look at one of my designed character sheets it is a subliminal reminder, a nudge back to the fictional realms I am engaging in. If you’re designing a game it pays to give attention to the character sheet so that it is not only legible and usable, but supports the feel and theme of the game. If you’re playing, I invite you to spend a few minutes and find a sheet online, doll up the one that comes with the game, or personalize it in a way so that it too can support the RP of your character and of the game.

Get your feelies on. Pull out that dossier, and dive into character.

(Other feelie ideas include props (cigars, hats, swords, candles), appropriate food, tent cards to set in front of each player depicting an image of their character and the character’s name, maps/posters/etc on the walls of the game world and game imagery, ambient light music or sounds in the background, goblets or other dishware, miniatures…)