Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Lost Mine of Phandelver, part 3

SPOILER WARNING: I will describe the adventures of my PCs as they sought to discover the mysteries of The Lost Mine of Phandelver. Reading this will give away some of the secrets and surprises found in this module. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
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Some explanation and character creation can be found in my previous post, here.
Part 1 describes how the PCs discovered there was something sinister going on near Phandalin and what they did about it. In Part 2, they gain an animal companion and have a bath.
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Having discovered the goblin lair, delivered their cart of goods to Barthen, made a wolf friend, and had a bath twice, the party found a goblin living chamber at the top of a steep climb. Unfortunately, there were still goblins in the living chamber and battle immediately commenced.

Olva and Inigo were the only ones at the top of the slope when the battle started. Five goblins rushed the adventurers while another ran over to a figure chained up in a loft-type area. Olva took out one attacker with a well placed arrow shot before they could close with her. Nissa, Keno, and Carlita hurried to climb up the hill and untie the wolf's harness so that they could join the battle. Inigo danced in and put major damage on a couple before everybody piled in to finish them off.

With only two of his underlings left alive, the goblin in the loft dragged the figure over to the edge and threatened to drop him off if the group wouldn't agree to parley. The heroes could see that the figure was actually Sildar Hallwinter, the bodyguard that was captured with Gundren. Everybody, including the goblins, backed off for a bit and began to talk.

The leader goblin, Yeemik, wanted the adventurers to take out his boss, Klarg, so that he could be the boss goblin. Unfortunately, his accent must have been a little too strong as my players decided their characters couldn't understand him because they don't speak goblin except for Carlita. Though Carlita could understand what Yeemik was saying, she decided to cast sacred flame on him, setting him alight and causing him to drop Sildar over the edge. Sildar fell to the floor of the cavern, cracked his head, and began to slowly bleed to death. Meanwhile, Yeemik was flapping about trying to put himself out. Nissa sent Keno to savage him, and after a brief tussle Yeemik fled toward the back of the cave. Inigo, observing Yeemik's flight, pulled out his dagger and tossed it strait into Yeemik's kneck, killing him.

Seeing the rapid fall of their boss, the two underling goblins cringed in a corner, pleading for their lives. Unfortunately, Nissa didn't understand goblin and decided to blast one with a fire bolt. Seeing that no quarter would be given, the remaining goblin took a wild shot at the nearest enemy, Keno, before he, too, was taken out. However, the goblin's desperate shot of desperation found a home and Keno was knocked out before anyone could help. Luckily, Carlita remembered that she could cast spare the dying, and rushed to stabilize Keno and Sildar before they succumbed to their wounds.

Having cleared out the goblin sleeping quarters, the party decided this might be a good place to take a short break before continuing their assault on the goblins in search of Gundren.
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This was probably my favorite scene so far. There everybody is, trying to parley with Yeemik, trying to decide if they should do what he wants, when suddenly Carlita decides she doesn't want to listen anymore and blasts him. Everyone has one of those "What just happened?" moments as they see Yeemik go up in flames and Sildar fall over the edge of the precipice. And then, just when Inigo has got everybody calmed down again, Nissa, not knowing what to do, decides to blast one of the last two remaining goblins, whereupon the final goblin, knowing he is dead meat walking, makes a shot at the wolf and manages to land a killing blow. The final stab by Inigo must have been almost a mercy killing. "You poor schmuck. Let me put you out of your misery before the crazy ones get you." Priceless.


I wasn't sure what the rules were for long and short rests, so this was a good place to stop. The holiday was over and it will be Christmas before we can get back together, but I know that all my players are eager to see what happens next with this crazy group.

Lost Mine of Phandelver, part 2

SPOILER WARNING: I will describe the adventures of my PCs as they sought to discover the mysteries of The Lost Mine of Phandelver. Reading this will give away some of the secrets and surprises found in this module. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
----------------
Some explanation and character creation can be found in my previous post, here.
Part 1 describes how the PCs discovered there was something sinister going on near Phandalin and what they did about it.
----------------
While Olva, Carlita, and Inigo were following the goblin's trail, Nissa was conscientiously watching the cart. After a short time, a rider appeared, introducing himself as Barthen of Barthen's Provisions. He had been worried when Gundren didn't show up as expected and had set out to look for him on the trail to Phandalin. He offered to take the cart and urged Nissa to follow her companions in rescuing Gundren, giving her a map of Phandalin so that she could find her way to Barthen's Provisions afterward. Nissa, however, refused to leave Barthen in the dangerous woods and rode with him all the way to Phandalin before borrowing a horse and setting off after her friends.

Meanwhile, Olva, Carlita, and Inigo had followed the goblin's trail to the mouth of a cave. Olva quietly proceeded to scout out the cave entrance. Inigo stealthily crossed the stream issuing from the cave and began checking out the bushes on the other side. Carlita decided to noisily follow Inigo, completely negating his stealth, and was rewarded with two arrows suddenly flying at her from over the hedge followed shortly by the appearance of two goblins from around the end near the cave mouth. Inigo and Olva, rushing back to the group, made short work of them, and everyone proceeded together into the cave. Carlita cast light on her shield, but then persisted in hanging back, so no one could really use it to see ahead. Olva, with her darkvision though, perceived a chamber leading off to the east in which she found three ravenous wolves barking and howling.

Olva pulled out some rations and tossed them to the wolves (or perhaps big dogs) who gobbled them up and calmed down. Whereupon, she unchained them. They jumped on Olva, knocking her down, and began to tear her pack apart looking for more food. Inigo and Carlita were at a bit of a loss as to how to help. Inigo tried distracting the wolves by throwing some food down the tunnel for them to chase, but forgot to get the wolves attention first, so his action went largely unseen. Luckily, Nissa arrived at this time and, with a bit more skill than the others, was able to calm one of the wolves down enough to lead it away from Olva which allowed her to get up off the floor. With a bit more food, Olva was able to get two of the wolves back onto their chains, while the third wolf had taken a liking to Nissa due to her kindness and chose to calmly follow her further into the caverns.

Choosing not to further investigate the steep fissure at the back of the wolves' chamber, the party went back into the entrance tunnel and continued deeper into the caves. A short distance further, they found a steep slope that Olva tried to climb. However her weight caused part of the slope to collapse and tumbled her back to the bottom. Having learned her lesson, she decided to lasso a stalagmite at the top of the slope and prepared to try the climb again.

In the mean time, Inigo scouted further ahead and spied a bridge 20 ft. up in the air. As he and the others were debating what to do next, a rushing was heard and a wall of water came rushing down the cavern tunnel. Olva and the wolf, now named Keno, quickly scrambled up the incline, but Nissa, Carlita, and Inigo were less fortunate. The water tumbled and battered them along, back to the entrance of the caves. Bruised and battered, but not seriously injured, the three picked themselves up and trudged back to the bottom of the incline where they again began discussing what they should do next. They decided to climb the incline, with a rope harness being made for Keno, and everyone had lined up for the ascent, when another wall of water came rushing down the tunnel. Everyone quickly scrambled up the rope that Olva had prepared, though Carlita waited until the last moment, having gone to see if she could coax another wolf to join them. Though nearly swept away by the flood, Carlita barely managed to hang on to the rope and pull herself to safety.

At the top of the rope, the party discovered a stinking cavern filled with blankets and cooking fires and six startled goblins. Battle immediately commenced.
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This session presented several humorous moments. Among them were Foghorn rolling a 2 on a stealth check when she tried to follow Gamer in investigating the bushes. We could all imagine Carlita happily jingling along behind the slinking rogue, completely frustrating all his efforts to move quietly. Another incident was when Goldfish unexpectedly had her character release the wolves from their chains after calming them down. I didn't want them to outright attack her, but I thought that having them smother her as they tried to get more food would be appropriate. She and the others spent ten minutes trying to get those dogs off of Olva, which gave me plenty of time to get Nissa onto the scene to help. She rolled high on her animal handling check and so was allowed to lead one away and "tame" it, as it were. This gave Reader another player character which I ruled could understand basic commands like "stay," "attack," etc.

It took a lot of shoehorning to get Reader to have her character go back and join the others. She was very determined to make sure that Nissa fulfilled her contract completely before she went to find Gundren. No matter what outs i presented nor how much the NPC plead with her to go rescue Gundren, Nissa was determine to see this cart delivered. I fudged distances and retconned some times so that I could eventually have Nissa join up with her party after a decently short interval. 

There were a lot of unexpected developments, but they were all fun. The ramifications will have to be worked out later. I don't think I want the party to easily tame the other two. I'll have to figure out a good way of avoiding this.

Lost Mine of Phandelver, part 1

SPOILER WARNING: I will describe the adventures of my PCs as they sought to discover the mysteries of The Lost Mine of Phandelver. Reading this will give away some of the secrets and surprises found in this module. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
----------------
Some explanation and character creation can be found in my previous post, here.
----------------
Inigo Tabor (played by Gamer), Nissa Olem (played by Reader), Olva Moonsdotter (played by Goldfish), and Carlita Runeheim (played by Foghorn) were hired by a dwarf named Gundren Rockseeker in the city of Neverwinter to transport some goods to the frontier town of Phandalin, about 75 miles south. Gundren and his bodyguard, a human named Sildar Hallwinter, had set off a couple of days before so that Gundren could take care of some business before his supplies arrived. The party was to deliver the supplies to Barthen's Provisions in Phandelin where the owner would pay them 10 gp  each.

The trip was uneventful until the group was about an hour's ride east from Phandalin. There, in the middle of the trail, they saw some dead horses and a turned over cart. Carlita approached the cart to find out more and recognized that these horses belonged to Gundren and Sildar. At that moment, four goblins ambushed the party from the bushes on either side of the trail. Inigo, Olva, and Nissa (disgused as a soldier) made short work of the goblins, though not without taking some damage. Humorously, Carlita wandered aimlessly off into the trees after first blocking some goblin arrows and healing Inigo.

With the goblin menace dispatched in the immediate area, Olva looked for and found the trail down which the goblins had carried Gundren and Sildar. Olva noted that Gundren and Sildar had clearly been alive when the goblins had dragged them away, and she and Carlita decided to go to rescue them. Nissa conscientiously chose to stay with the cart. After some moments of internal debate, Inigo decided to follow the other two, just in time to prevent Olva from falling into the cleverly disguised pit trap the goblins had left to discourage pursuers. After some time, the three came upon a cavern mouth, clearly the entrance to the goblins hideout.
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This first session was good for teaching everyone, including me, the basics of playing D&D. The unexpected decision of Nissa to stay behind left me in a difficult situation as she absolutely refused to abandon the cart to go with the others. I was able to get around this in the next session, but I was definitely not prepared, as a new DM, to run a game that had party members in two different locations at the same time.


Also, Carlita's actions were often a headscratcher that left everybody laughing. And it only got funnier as the game progressed.


Lost Mine of Phandelver, setting up

This past Thanksgiving weekend, I had my first experience with playing Dungeons & Dragons in the classic role of the Dungeon Master. My D&D experience is not much, just a few games with some friend at college during 3rd edition. Recently I became interested in playing as a way of spending time with my kids and encouraging their creativity. I looked into it and heard good things about the new 5th edition that made it sound like a good fit for me, so I picked up the starter set as a good introduction and, importantly, having a prepared module ready to run. Being with family during the holiday got the numbers up to four players plus me as DM so that we could run the adventure without having to modify things. With that we were set for our first adventure.

None of my players really have any previous experience with D&D. One (Gamer) has extensive experience playing digital RPGs and so has the best grasp of how things should generally proceed. Another (Reader) has read a lot of fantasy novels and knows something of how stories go. The last two (Goldfish and Foghorn) are under the age of ten and have only a minimal grasp of the world, so I knew adventuring with them would be unpredictable.

Rather than getting bogged down in character creation, I made out all the character sheets, worrying about the nitty gritty of stat value assignment and spell selection, and let players got to choose the more important role-playing aspects of their characters, like race, class, and background. I was limited to the four classes and races outlined in the free PDF available online, so nothing strange was allowed, but I did make adjustment for Reader who wanted her human wizard to have cat ears and tail, and to wield a sword. She gained keen smell and shortsword proficiency, which I felt wouldn't be too unbalanced.

We ended up with pretty standard archetypes: a human rogue Inigo Tabor (Gamer), a human/cat wizard Nissa Olem (Reader), a wood elf fighter/archer Olva Moonsdotter (Goldfish), and a hill dwarf cleric/healer Carlita Runeheim (Foghorn). There was no real tank character, though Carlita did an OK job in that role. We also had some interesting role-play elements to flesh out the environment. Reader came late to the game and so didn't have her own character setup before the first session, so I gave her a human fighter to play until I could make up her character. It worked out well as it meant her character could "hide her power" until she needed to reveal it later in the game (after we had decided what that power was). Carlita and Olva had known each other for a long time before this adventure and were good friends. Olva worked as an explorer and cartographer and wanted to make a map of her travels round Phandalin, which gave Goldfish a job to do during gameplay and a reason for being on the adventure. Inigo was a smuggler who had seen too much and was on the run from his last employer. I'm looking for ways to work that into future episodes.

As a first-time DM, I played the rules pretty loose and adhered to the first golden rule: "story and fun trump rules as written." This made for some memorable, but unplanned, occurrences that will have unexpected repercussions as the story progresses. With that understood, we began playing . . .

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Lessons in Commander Etiquette

After picking back up in Magic the Gathering last fall, I've really enjoyed the Commander format. Unlike some of the other constructed formats, Commander is a casual singleton format so you only need one copy of a given card (instead of 4) and most people are interested in big plays and fun for everyone with less emphasis on outright winning.

This atmosphere is heavily dependent on who you are playing with and in the ~7 games of Commander I've played so far, I've had 4 good games. The 3 not so good games were warped by one player who completely dominated the game at the expense of every other player.  I know which player I want to be, but sometimes it is hard to tell which actions fall in each camp.

Yesterday, I got to play two games, one good, one bad, and I actually won the second game. That is the first time I have ever won a game of Commander that wasn't with one of my family members.  I played Marath, Will of the Wild as my commander and my deck exploded with lots token generation and machine gunning from Marath.  I played against Zedru with lots of thieving and not-so-nice giving; Zenagos, God of Revels with big monsters; and Marchesa, whose counter filled goodness could never be removed from the board. My first game of the night had shown me how quickly Marchesa can build the damage, so when someone played a spell that forced all that lethality to point at me, I took the opportunity to remove Marchesa in the only fashion I could see that would be effective and I tucked her into her players deck.

The problem is that this really crippled the other person's deck and mostly removed them from the game. Not much fun for them.  After the game I realized that I had had a different way of getting Marchesa off the board without ruining the game for that one player, a major component of the strategy of the deck that I had completely forgotten about.  I also realized that majorly problematic spells should be saved for special situations. Some lessons I learned from last night's game:

  • Don't use "fun crushing" mechanics like commander tucking, universal permanent bouncing, etc. when you are in a dominant position unless you can win that turn, and within five minutes, by doing so. No one like a sore winner any more than a sore loser.
  • Even when you are behind, reserve "fun crushing" mechanics for those players whose violate the casual nature of the game, not simply for those players who are winning.
  • Preemptive strikes carry lots of bad political credit and should be kept to a minimum. Wait until the big bad is pointed at you before you make your move, or turn your intervention into a political maneuver that at least one other player will benefit from, and make sure that they know it.
  • People don't like theft of their commanders. People don't like tucking their commanders. Use both sparingly.
Last nights second game had a lot of good going. I think the Marchesa player will forgive me and I tried to be kind once I had eliminated the obvious threat. I was the new guy, however, and I hope that my actions didn't come across as the "fun at everyone else's expense" kind of player that I don't like playing with.

Friday, August 22, 2014

Hearthstone

(Note: This entry is about the online CCG "Hearthstone" from Blizzard, and not the city management game "Stonehearth" from Radiant Entertainment.)

I recently had the chance to check out the online collectible card game "Hearthstone" being produced by Blizzard. It is in open beta right now (though that term is getting more ambiguous in game development). I set up a free account and spent some illicit hours testing the game when I should have been doing other, more productive activities. Here is a quick summary of my thoughts on the game.

The Positive: Hearthstone has the production quality you would expect form a game from Blizzard, especially as it uses intellectual property from Blizzard's flagship World of Warcraft. The artwork and voice acting (what there is of it) are top notch and the overall feel of the game is coherent and charming. In regards to gameplay, the different characters felt pretty unique with each one having distinct strengths and weaknesses.

The Negative: It is early in Hearthstone's development, so I may have to keep and open mind and check back again later, but at the moment the game lacks strategic depth. Some abilities were extremely powerful (e.g. "charge", "taunt") while others seemed underpowered by comparison (e.g. "divine shield", "stealth"). Perhaps this view comes from only using the starter cards and the balance is more evident on cards you get from packs. Packs, however, were not that simple to obtain short of shelling out several dollars. The game felt like I would have to grind a lot and pour hours into it to obtain cards. Also the different character abilities felt unbalanced with direct damage, protection, and healing being extremely versatile while other abilities were rather lackluster. Gameplay overall was repetitive with really only one best strategy. Again this may be because I only was using starter cards, though this lack of strategic diversity in your entry level product is poor game design and poor business.

Hearthstone seems like a well produced little game that requires too much time investment at the moment to get much diverse gameplay. Since it is early in the life of the game, I will have to try back some other time to see if things improve.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Nekusar: Wheel of Pain

This is another Magic: the Gathering deck I've put together for the Commander/EDH format based around the commander Nekusar, the Mindrazer.  This is the first deck that I've put serious effort into acquiring cards for and the deck I've put together has a decent power level while hopefully not being oppressive to the rest of the table.  Thanks to some playtesting with Ben, I was able to determine some weaknesses in my original build (not enough creatures, not enough discard) and have modified it to include more of the spectre creatures to prevent opponents from getting much benefit out of all the extra cards Nekusar gives.  I can't wait to take it for a spin during the next Commander night at my local game store.

Commander
1Nekusar, the Mindrazer
Creatures
1Avatar of Woe
1Charmbreaker Devils
1Consuming Aberration
1Doomsday Specter
1Duskmantle Guildmage
1Entropic Specter
1Fate Unraveler
1Fiend of the Shadows
1Hypnotic Specter
1Jace's Archivist
1Kederekt Parasite
1Liliana's Reaver
1Meletis Charlatan
1Nightscape Familiar
1Nightveil Specter
1Niv-Mizzet, the Firemind
1Psychosis Crawler
1Scythe Specter
1Shimian Specter
1Thoughtrender Lamia
1Viseling
Spells
1Anger of the Gods
1Arcane Melee
1Blue Sun's Zenith
1Crawlspace
1Curse of the Swine
1Darksteel Ingot
1Decree of Pain
1Dimir Keyrune
1Fanning the Flames
1Fireball
1Incendiary Command
1Killing Wave
1Library of Leng
1Liliana's Caress
1Megrim
1Mizzium Mortars
1Molten Psyche
1Obelisk of Grixis
1Otherworld Atlas
1Pestilence
1Price of Knowledge
1Propaganda
1Prosperity
1Red Sun's Zenith
1Reforge the Soul
1Skyscribing
1Sol Ring
1Spiteful Visions
1Starstorm
1Street Spasm
1Sudden Spoiling
1Talisman of Dominance
1Talisman of Indulgence
1Teferi's Puzzle Box
1Temple Bell
1Underworld Dreams
1Whispering Madness
1Windfall
1Words of Waste
Lands
1Ancient Tomb
1Barren Moor
1Bojuka Bog
1Command Tower
1Dimir Aqueduct
1Dread Statuary
1Evolving Wilds
1Forgotten Cave
1Grixis Panorama
6Island
1Izzet Boilerworks
1Lonely Sandbar
6Mountain
1Opal Palace
1Polluted Mire
1Rakdos Carnarium
1Remote Isle
1Smoldering Crater
9Swamp
1Temple of the False God
1Terramorphic Expanse

Monday, May 26, 2014

Gabriel Santiago: Double Run

This deck was originally built with Andromeda, but has mostly burst economy and since it uses Doppelgänger to double runs I thought Gabriel might give you more threat options while providing a little extra economy.


Gabriel Santiago: Double Run (45 cards)


Gabriel Santiago: Consummate Professional
Event (21)
2 Account Siphon
3 Dirty Laundry
3 Emergency Shutdown
3 Forged Activation Orders
3 Inside Job
2 Lawyer Up
2 Special Order
3 Sure Gamble

Hardware (5)
2 Doppelganger
3 Prepaid VoicePAD

Resource (6)
1 Aesop's Pawnshop ••
3 Armitage Codebusting
2 Bank Job

Icebreaker (8)
2 Corroder ••••
2 Faerie
2 Femme Fatale
2 Gordian Blade ••••• •

Program (5)
3 Crescentus
2 Datasucker ••

Monday, March 24, 2014

Mayael: Mistress of Beasts

Here is my first version of making a commander deck using Mayael the Anima.  It is rather pricey, so will probably only ever get played digitally, where I have access to all the cards.  I am working on making a more budget version for my daughter to play.  She build a commander deck using Mayael, but it needs a bit more punch than it currently has.  I hope to give it that before too long.


//Commander
1Mayael the Anima
//Creatures
1Archetype of Aggression
1Archetype of Endurance
1Avenger of Zendikar
1Balefire Dragon
1Blazing Archon
1Bogardan Hellkite
1Changeling Berserker
1Drumhunter
1Elvish Piper
1Garruk's Horde
1Gisela, Blade of Goldnight
1Godsire
1Hamletback Goliath
1Inferno Titan
1Malignus
1Molten Primordial
1Mycoid Shepherd
1Oracle of Mul Daya
1Paleoloth
1Rampaging Baloths
1Sakura-Tribe Elder
1Seedborn Muse
1Solemn Simulacrum
1Soul of the Harvest
1Spearbreaker Behemoth
1Spellbreaker Behemoth
1Stalking Vengeance
1Steel Hellkite
1Sun Titan
1Utvara Hellkite
1Vagrant Plowbeasts
1Vigor
1Yavimaya Elder
//Spells
1Asceticism
1Aura Shards
1Chromatic Lantern
1Coalition Relic
1Condemn
1Cream of the Crop
1Crystal Ball
1Darksteel Ingot
1Defense of the Heart
1Eladamri's Call
1Expedition Map
1Fires of Yavimaya
1Hallowed Burial
1Hammer of Purphoros
1Land Tax
1Lurking Predators
1Mana Reflection
1Mayael's Aria
1Mirari's Wake
1Path to Exile
1Quicksilver Amulet
1Return to Dust
1Rings of Brighthearth
1Scroll Rack
1Sol Ring
1Swords to Plowshares
1Thousand-Year Elixir
1Warstorm Surge
1Where Ancients Tread
1Worldly Tutor
1Wrath of God
//Lands
1Ancient Tomb
1Clifftop Retreat
1Command Tower
8Forest
1Homeward Path
1Jungle Shrine
1Kessig Wolf Run
1Mosswort Bridge
2Mountain
1Naya Panorama
2Plains
1Rogue's Passage
1Rootbound Crag
1Sacred Foundry
1Spinerock Knoll
1Stomping Ground
1Strip Mine
1Sunhome, Fortress of the Legion
1Sunpetal Grove
1Temple Garden
1Temple of Abandon
1Temple of Plenty
1Temple of the False God
1Temple of Triumph
1Winding Canyons
1Yavimaya Hollow