Showing posts with label campaign. Show all posts
Showing posts with label campaign. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Lost World Island Life, Part 1 - Running (Some of) X1 The Isle of Dread in OSE

I asked our group what D&D adventure module they wanted after B4 The Lost City. D&D module X1 The Isle of Dread was the strongest contender. We're about a quarter of the way through it. Seeing a long series of sessions between where we are and any possible end point, I put a pin in it. We'll be taking a break from the fantasy tropics for awhile and come back fresh later in the year.

My working folder, some notes, a previously owned copy of X1, and my copy of the OSE Referee's Tome. Note the price tag on the module. Remember when Half Price Books had TTRPG stuff for dirt cheap?

Conversion from D&D to OSE

The stats for most of what's in X1 The Isle of Dread are already in Old School Essentials. And converting between the two systems is as straightforward as it gets. I'm not sure it will continue to be this easy when I start adapting AD&D adventure modules.

My conversion was incomplete when I starting running the module. I concentrated on getting everything in the waters around the island done first. Next came everything in the southern half of the island. I left the northern areas, including the plateau, for later. This turned out to be a good thing, since I'll be adding a few things to the north and central areas in response to what the players are engaging with. More on that down below.


Preparing to Depart

I linked the two adventure modules together with the party's need for an active volcano. The party killed Zargon, B4 The Lost City's big bad boss monster, but needed to destroy his horn to keep him from regenerating a new form. Immersion in lava was the only known method, but I ruled that no sources were available in the area of The Lost City. (There is the option of placing an active volcano in B4 The Lost City as written. I choose not to for this campaign.) Fortunately, the party learned from their trusty Gnome contact Wigglewort that a newly discovered island to the south might have exactly what they needed. And he just happened to be organizing an expedition there, but sure could use the aid of an adventuring party to map the place and look for trading opportunities...


Sea Cruise

Roped in by Wigglewort's offer to help solve their problems in exchange for going on a hex crawl, the party boarded his ship for a more than three hour tour. The few small islands sighted along the way were ignored in favor making steady progress towards the mysterious isle. The couple of random encounters provided little challenge for the party of dungeon-hardened adventurers. The ship did sustain light damage from the weather, but nothing that the crew couldn't repair once they found a place a source of wood and a place to beach the hull.

The party choose to circle the isle rather than immediately making landfall. Wigglewort suggested making contact with the villages marked on his map. The indigenous people might make good trade partners and their villages would be a useful base to explore the isle. The party agreed and the ship sailed down the eastern side of the isle. This was uneventful, as the party cautiously avoided all the tempting opportunities to leave the ship and get into trouble.


Pirate Bay

The ship and party were welcomed by the indigenous people of the southern peninsula. Wigglewort found that they were already prepared for trade with the wider world. Bargains were struck between the Gnomes and villagers as the party collected rumors to guide their next moves.

The indigenous people told of pirates raiding their villages. The raiders came in canoes, wielded weapons of steel, and carried off many villagers to a fate unknown. "Sure would be nice," they didn't quite say, "if some adventurers would come along to track the pirates down to their island base, crush them, and save our fellow villagers."

Not being the types to ignore an obvious hook, the players began planning the operation. The villagers were able to supply the rough location of the pirate encampment. The plan was to have Wigglewort drop them off away from the pirate camp and scout the place out. The adventurers would then determine if a siege, infiltration, or assault would make the most sense.

The party was able to slip on the island, avoid pirate patrols, and approach the camp from the landward side. The first attempt to infiltrate the camp at night was successful in giving the adventurers a good idea of the layout and defenses. It also quickly escalated into full blown battle after they were discovered. The party gave much better than they got and pulled out before taking too much damage. They spent the next day resting, healing, and laying low from pirate attempts to locate them.

The next night saw the party launching a determined assault on the camp. The pirates, having failed to find the party during the day, were clearly making preparations to leave with their prisoners. The party wiped out the pirates and rescued the prisoners.

The party used a pre-arranged signal to summon Wigglewort and his ship. The rescued villagers and everything of value were packed up. A giant squid attack interrupted the trip back to the villages. The beast was driven off, but more damage was done to Wigglewort's ship. It would definitely need repairs before sailing back to the mainland.


In the Jungle (and Other Terrain)


It was at this point that we finally got to the meat of the adventure - a hex crawl. The Isle of Dread is one of the first hex crawl adventure modules. This makes it notable, but it suffers from not incorporating lessons from later decades of TTRPG development.

The party would have plenty of time to explore the isle while Wigglewort and his Gnomes repaired the ship. The indigenous villagers took the party as far as the tar pits they used as a resource. The players decided to focus on the south. It was closest to their effective base of operations. They'd also sighted some active volcanoes in the area while on their way back from dealing with the pirates. Just the thing for dealing with Zargon's horn!

I'm not going to offer a blow by blow account of the party's explorations of southern isle. The highlights included chucking Zargon's horn in an active volcano after the cleric had a nightmare about his followers heading to the isle in pursuit of it. They also encountered a Living Iron Statue guarding some ruins, a patrol of Lizard Men, and some Phanaton gathering fruit. Things were capped off when the party ran into some Rakasta. Things were amiable enough for the cat warriors to take them back to their camp and begin laying down the groundwork for a trade deal with Wigglewort.

The Isle of Dread relies on random encounter tables. There are relatively few keyed encounters on the overland map. This does insure that every group's experience with the module is unique. However, results from the random encounter tables require some finesse. Since the tables cover huge areas of the isle, many creatures will end up in the wrong biome. It doesn't make sense to me for Lizard Men to be wandering around an open plain, for example. This could be addressed with more fixed encounters or tables for each biome, but either would add page count to what is a slim product by modern standards.

Sometimes the dice are cooperative and the results are underwhelming. I don't assume that any random encounter will automatically be hostile. I use the reaction tables to set the mood of whoever is encountered. Since our group doesn't simply charge everything they run across, this makes some encounters non-events.

Example #1:
"You see some animals in the distance."
"We avoid them."
"Cool. Next hex."

Example #2:
"You encounter somebody capable of talking."
"We talk to them."
*Rolls neutral or friendly reaction.* "They engage in conversation."
*Have a role playing encounter.*

There aren't necessarily bad results, but might not be what the module designers intended.

Worse, from the players' perspectives, non-event encounters don't really earn gold. Which means little XP from such encounters in Old School Essentials. I do give out some XP for RP, but the gold value of treasure is the main source of XP income in the game.


Putting a Pin In It

At this point, we were roughly a quarter of the way through the module. Things seemed to be running long and we decided to take a break. I wonder how many groups have made it all the way though this module? Is it a campaign killer? Do groups get part way through the isle and lose interest?

The lack of keyed encounters make the isle feel sparsely populated in a way that random encounters don't address. The place could easily support two or three times the number that are in the module. I'm using our break to add some fixed encounters to fill in some details that seem lacking.

The first are signs of the civilizations previously inhabiting the isle. There are hints in the module as written. Who built the stone wall separating the indigenous villages in the southern peninsula from the rest of the island? The Kopru are stated to have ruled a kingdom in the past, but the only remanent of it is on the "Taboo Island" at the end of the module. Adding ruins of defunct human and Kopru civilizations would add a sense of history to the place. Some of them could be mini-dungeons suitable for a single session.

Second are clues to foreshadow the final encounter with the Kopru. As written, they are just kind of hanging out in their lair at the bottom of the dungeon they are in. Without more context, players may not realize that they are more than random monsters. A few statues - defaced so the Kopru's appearance comes as a surprise - and some inscriptions telling their tale would build up suspense. These would be found to the north of the isle, closest to the Kopru encounter.

Finally, indications of prior visitors. Not all of the current inhabitants appear to be indigenous to the isle. The populations of Aranea and Phanaton seem too small to be self-sustaining. And the Rakasta camp is explicitly stated to be temporary. These folks and others had to come from elsewhere. Over the seas is the most plausible explanation, but a more fantastic one is suggested in the Manual of the Planes (2008, 4E). I'm still playing with the idea.

Sunday, March 3, 2024

Nostalgia Tour - Planning an OSE Campaign

The good news is that my idea of using Old School Essentials to revisit classic D&D and AD&D adventure modules is lurching forward. The bad news is I actually have to execute the idea. That all starts with a plan. I'm an experienced enough gamemaster to know that any plan I come up with is unlikely to survive contact with my players. Still, whatever bits of it I can salvage from the burning wreckage may provide a handy guideline.

Lost the originals in a move, but POD from DTRPG will do the job.

Narrowing Down the Options

Using classic modules greatly simplifies planning. I just have to pick out the ones I want to run. The criteria I'm using are: my group's interest in a particular module, compatibility with OSE, and the level of effort involved with running it.

My group includes veteran players who made it clear that they have no interest in another go at B2 The Keep on the Borderlands. I completely understand not wanting to return to it after playing or running it half a dozen times. The goal of the campaign is to indulge in nostalgia, not endure tedium. Tt is the only module vetoed outright by the group.

Old School Essentials is designed to be compatible with the Basic/Expert D&D rules. This makes B- and X-series modules ideal. AD&D modules require some conversion depending on content. The stats of certain monsters are similar, but not identical. Other monsters - like demons and devils - are not presented in OSE Advanced Fantasy at the time of this posting.

Running a module rarely means just giving it a skim and winging it from there. I've posted about this before - I found that studying a module and running it from my notes is best practice. It's even worse if I feel the need to rewrite aspects of a module to better fit my style or the tone of a campaign. This suggests that Jaquays-style dungeons and open world hexcrawls would work better than something relying on a baked in plot.


The List

B4 The Lost City
A classic Moldvay dungeon crawl that I never actually got to play or run back in the day. There's a strong swords and sorcery vibe that my group should appreciate. Also, it avoids an issue with early B-series modules - large areas being left blank. A key point of this campaign is me avoiding work.

X1 The Isle of Dread
Another Moldvay classic. This one is a hexcrawl inspired by the kind of "lost world" stories featuring dinosaurs and steamy jungles. It may or may not turn into fantasy 'Nam for our group due to those dinosaurs and jungles. The only issue that I have with it is the paradox of the black pearl that supposed to kick off the adventure.

G1-3 Against the Giants
D1-2 Descent into the Depths of the Earth
D3 Vault of the Drow
Q1 Queen of the Demonweb Pits
This is the ironic series of adventures that starts with dungeon crawling through the centers of evil giant power, drops into what would later be called the Underdark, passes through the wretched hive of scum and villainy that is a Drow city, and ends up in the extraplanar lair of a demon goddess. Nevermind all the set up about the Elder Elemental God, the real bad guy is Lolth and the real treasures are the literal treasures that the party loots along the way.


Alternates

X2 Castle Amber
The Moldvay classic dungeon crawl that I'll be running if the Moldvay classic hexcrawl that is The Isle of Dread doesn't appeal for whatever reason. Otherwise, I'll save this personal favorite for a later OSE campaign I have in mind.

C1 The Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan
The recommended levels between The Isle of Dread and Against the Giants leaves a gap. I have a few modules that I could slot in to cover it. This one is the front runner due to fond memories I have of running it in grade school. I am hopeful that my older and mature current group makes it through encounter #13 much better than my group back then.

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Back In the Saddle - Star Trek Adventures

Let me tell you about the RPG campaign I'm running!

It's been awhile since I've run any kind of tabletop game for a group. The last one was canceled in 2020 and starting a new one didn't happen for a variety of reasons. Remote gaming didn't appeal to my group, but we did keep in touch over Discord. A number of folks in our group were holding down medical or public-facing service jobs, so in person gaming kept getting pushed back.

That all changed recently when we decided to get the band back together.

Last minute cramming before Session Zero!

Early Discussion

The idea of returning to in person gaming came up over Discord and shifted over to picking out a game. The field got narrowed down to Star Trek Adventures, 13th Age, and Conan: Adventures in an Age Undreamed Of. The majority of the players are involved with an ongoing Dungeons & Dragons 5e campaign, so any form of F20 seemed redundant to them. Conan was ruled out since I didn't have a firm idea for a campaign other that a series of "throw stuff at the players and see what they like" adventures. With everybody being a Star Trek fan, the emergence of a variety of new content for that franchise coming out over the past few years, and my ability to come up with adventure ideas, Star Trek Adventures seemed like the best bet.

Now, I know what you might be thinking: "Star Trek Adventures? That's Undiscovered Country for the Over the Hill Gaming Blog!" That's a fair point. After all, I've only written about a couple of dozen posts concerning the game. I'm clearly not primed to run the game, but I'll just have to do my best and muddle through it somehow.


Session Zero (And Change)

The next step was getting together - in person - for Session Zero. The actual Session Zero got cut short due to scheduling issues. So we actually had Session Zero and Session Zero and Change. I usually run Session Zeroes with two major topics in mind - campaign discussion and character generation. Star Trek Adventures adds a third - starship generation.


Campaign Discussion

The first Star Trek Adventures campaign I ran for this group was strongly influenced by DS9. It was placed along the Cardassian border. The Bajorans, Cardassians, Maquis, and Dominion all featured regularly. The themes revolved around the kinds of conflicts and dilemmas depicted on DS9. It all worked well overall, but the darker tone and untangling complex issues fatigued the players. A change was in order.

The next one was a soft reboot of the first. Certain plotlines and characters carried over, but the campaign was set on another starship with a mostly newly introduced crew. The location was moved away from the Cardassian border. The themes and tone was shifted over to exploration and frontier diplomacy. Unfortunately, that campaign was canceled shortly after it started due to the situation in 2020.

We briefly talked about alternatives to the standard Star Trek Adventures set up of the player characters being a Starfleet bridge crew. Star Trek Adventures does support other campaign concepts such as running a stationary installation. The Klingon Empire Core Book presents the nuts and bolts of running a Klingon campaign. However, this would be our first time back out in awhile, so we decided on the well-worn path of flying Federation colors.

This campaign is a fresh start - a hard reboot with no connections to our earlier Star Trek Adventures campaigns. We're starting over in the default year of 2371, a period with plenty of opportunities. Things are kicking off in the Beta Quadrant - the familiar realms of Klingons, Romulans, and Orions. The initial themes are exploration and diplomacy, but things are expected to change as the timeline moves forward.


Character Generation

Most of both Session Zeroes were spent on discussing character ideas, making choices along the lifepath system, and filling out the details of each player character's background. I prefer to have all of players handling character generation as a group activity. It's handy to have a group to bounce ideas off of and brainstorm with when a player gets stuck when coming up with a character concept or element of their back story. It also helps to insure that everybody - gamemaster included - is on the same page.

In Star Trek Adventures, I start things off by listing the senior officer positions on a whiteboard. The players divide them off however they want. I also reminded them that Supporting Characters exist as an option to cover any gaps or for a player to use when their character isn't in a scene. Once things got rolling, I took a backseat - answering questions and helping when requested, but otherwise letting the players work at their own pace.


The NPC Captain

None of the players really wanted the role of the captain. I'd rather not force a role on somebody - myself included - and diminish their enjoyment of the game. I had a couple of issues with the idea of a NPC captain, but agreed after ways around the issues were found.

Making the authority figure a NPC potentially takes decision making away from the players. With a NPC calling the shots, they may end up dragging the player characters through the story as spectators. The most direct way of avoiding this is a passive captain, but that doesn't make much sense for an experienced professional in a leadership position. Our solution involves stopping the game during key decision points to allow the players to discuss what direction to take things. When play resumes, the NPC captain then proceeds as if they made a decision that matches what the players decided on.

Most iterations of Star Trek have the commanding officer as the series lead. Authority figures tend to pull focus. It's one thing to have various NPCs pop up and depart as we move through an adventure. Even NPCs who show up regularly don't present a problem. It's another matter entirely to have a NPC with authority over the player characters show up in almost every scene. It's just too easy for such a NPC to overshadow the player characters in the context of Star Trek. If aliens call the ship, they're going to want to talk to the captain. That can easily cut the players out of participating in the conversation, making them passive observers. Most players show up to play the game, not watch it unfold. Fortunately, Star Trek canon provides a partial solution - the captain doesn't go on Away Missions. I'll be designing the adventures to take place off the ship as much as possible.


The Cool Starship

We turned to one of the few canon starships that's a blank slate outside of its only on screen appearance - USS Phoenix (NCC-65420). The ship disappears from canon after showing up in "The Wounded" (TNG 4x12). Not even the comics, novels, video games, and other beta canon revisits the ship. This is unusual since Star Trek writers regularly reuse ship names to tie the story they are telling to earlier episodes. For example, USS Cairo is introduced in "Chain of Command, Part I" (TNG 6x10). It is stated to still be in the area and responding to the current crisis in the following episode "Chain of Command, Part II" (TNG 6x11). Much later, USS Cairo is believed to be destroyed in "The Pale Moonlight" (DS9 6x19).

USS Phoenix played a part in both of the previous campaigns. One of the player characters in the former campaign was an officer aboard USS Phoenix during the events of "The Wounded" and had a black mark of their record as a result. The ship was to be featured in the latter one, but didn't get far due to that campaign's cancellation.

For the purposes of this campaign, USS Phoenix was moved away from the Cardassian border after the arrest of Captain Benjamin Maxwell. The ship was repaired while the senior officers were investigated for their roles in the incident. USS Phoenix was eventually reassigned to the Beta Quadrant and served under a different captain for a couple of years and was pulled in for a refit. The newly refitted starship is now ready for duty under a new captain and crew.


With Session Zero (and a half) done, we're ready to get started. I'm in the process of putting together my ideas into something halfway coherent. The first adventure will likely start in a couple of weeks. In the meantime, I hope that this post has been entertaining and offered some handy ideas and insights.

Friday, February 11, 2022

The Last Call - Turn #2 Pre-Battle - Finding More Work from the Local Government

The first decision to make is to stay put or put some light years on The Last Call and go somewhere else. There's no assurance that the grass would actually be greener on another world. With the Local Government as a Patron, there's a reasonable chance of making money by sticking around the Pandora Innovation Zone. It looks like The Last Call will be occupying a hangar for another turn.

Crew Pay
This works out to a single credit per campaign turn. Credit Total: 11 credits.

Ship Debt
The accounts are looking thinner than at the start of Turn #1. I spent only a single credit on this item. Since Ship Debt increases by one credit per campaign turn, this is essentially the same as only paying the interest. Ship Debt: 11 credits. Credit Total: 10 credits.

Medical Care
The Med-Patches acquired on Turn #1 give me a way to get the crew roster back up to full. Removing a campaign turn from Bill's recovery time set me back 4 credits. Then the Med-Patches get slapped on Bill and Rocky. This reduces their recovery times to zero and allows them to act normally on this campaign turn. This also leaves The Last Call with a single Med-Patch in inventory. Credit Total: 6 credits.

The Last Call crew ain't broke, but they ain't exactly rich either.

Crew Tasks
With the crew needing a way to keep the credits flowing in, Mina and Freyja go to see if anybody has a job on offer. +3 bonus to the die roll with both of them looking and a Patron on the contact list.
Patron Roll (1D6): "2" modified to "5" - Mina and Freyja get word that the Local Government has work available.

Bill and Yelena go looking for opportunities to barter for new gear or score a few credits to keep the lights on.
Trade Table Roll - Bill (%): "100" - With a grin and an "ask me no questions and I'll tell you no lies" attitude, Bill rolls back to The Last Call with a collection of Starship Repair Parts. This counts as 1D6 credits for repairing Hull Point damage to the ship. Single use.
Trade Table Roll - Yelena (%): "40" - Yelena swaps some unneeded supplies for a pallet of Trade Goods. These are worth 1D6 credits when sold on another planet. A die roll of "1" means that they spoiled or were damaged in transit. I'll make the roll when The Last Call makes the trip to another port.

Rocky tinkers with the damaged Plasma Rifle Bill found on Turn #1. She gets a +1 bonus to the die roll from her Savvy score.
Repair Roll - Plasma Rifle (1D6): "6" modified to "7" - the Plasma Rifle comes to life with an ominous hum.

Lin tries fixing the Brutal Melee Weapon she busted on the carapace of a Large Bug. She gets a +2 bonus from her Savvy score.
Repair Roll - Brutal Melee Weapon (1D6): "2" modified to "4" - Lin's just going to have to do without her favorite attitude adjustment tool for awhile. She can try again on the next campaign turn.

Good thing I have a plastic Rosie (the miniature I use for Lin) holding a rifle.

The Job Offer
The Local Government is offering a paltry single credit in Danger Pay for this one. Worse, they are in a hurry. The job must be done this turn or the opportunity is lost. The Local Government doesn't offer any Benefits, but there are no Hazards or Conditions on this job either.

Assign Equipment
With the outcome of the battle on Turn #1 firmly in mind, the crew reaches for more firepower before going to work. The Shotguns purchased last turn would come in handy for that goal. The Plasma Rifle that Rocky got working would help even more. Unfortunately, the crew is fresh out of Frakk Grenades.
  • Mina - Shotgun, Glare Sword, Frag Vest, Boosted Leg (permanent, but noted here for completeness).
  • Bill - Shotgun, Hand Laser, Dazzle Grenade.
  • Rocky - Plasma Rifle, Machine Pistol.
  • Lin - Auto Rifle, Hand Laser.
  • Freyja - Shotgun, Machine Pistol.
  • Yelena - Shotgun, Beam Pistol.

Resolve Rumors
I had a pair of Rumors, but my roll of "5" was too high for anything to come up.

Choose Your Battle
The crew of The Last Call doesn't have to worry about Rivals trying to ambush them yet. An Opportunity mission seems like a bad idea with the Local Government getting anxious about whatever they need done. That leaves the Patron mission for the Local Government.

Readying For Battle
This is actually part of the Battle stage, but I'd rather do it now. It helps to know what miniatures and terrain I'll need.

Deployment Conditions Roll (%): "90" - "Caught Off Guard" - The crew all act in the Slow Actions phase of Round #1. Again.

Notable Sights Roll (%): "39" - "Priority Target" - A random enemy gets +1 to their Toughness. If that enemy is killed, the crew gains 1D3 credits.

Patron Mission Objective Roll (1D10): "6" - The Last Call crew must Secure the site.

Determine the Enemy: A series of die rolls reveals that the opposition takes the form of eight Psychos. Unsettled by long exposure to deep space, these folks are mostly armed with Scrap Pistols and Blades. Two are Specialists packing Rattle Guns instead. Fortunately, Psychos are also Bad Shots. The gang is led by a Lieutenant. As Criminal Elements, Psychos may have a bounty on them and tend to be vindictive, increasing the chance that they will become a Rival.

Where am I going to find miniatures suitable for use as a criminal gang? Dunno.

It looks like I'll have to paint up my alternate miniature for Lin. And I have some Psychos to prepare! The battle report for Turn #2 might be awhile.

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

The Last Call - Turn #1 Error Correction

This is a supplemental post to The Last Call Turn #1 Wrap Up. I made a rules error by having each crew member roll for a character event. The correct procedure is to randomly select a single crew member and roll on the character event table for that single crew member. Thanks to the folks on the Facebook Five Parsecs from Home Fan Group for pointing this out.

All still on the mend. At least I didn't mess that up!

I generally try to avoid rolling back events during play since the results aren't always worth the effort. The realization that I could have used Stim-Packs during the battle is a good example. Rolling that back would involve replaying the scenario - a significant investment in time and energy. Better to just live with results, learn from the experience, and use that time and energy to move on with the campaign. Here, I came up with a quick and simple fix, so why not learn the lesson and correct the mistake at the same time?

In this case, I determined which character event actually happened with a simple die roll. Updating the campaign records was straight forward. The character event description and revised end of turn totals are below.

Character Event

I rolled a D6 and went down the list published in the previous post.

"5" - Freyja overhears something at a local bar. It might be worth following up on. +1 Quest Rumor.

Story Point and Credit Totals are unchanged.

Corrected XP Totals at the End of Turn #1:
Mina 5 XP
Bill 3 XP
Rocky 3 XP
Yelena 4 XP
Freyja 5 XP
Lin 2 XP

In addition, the additional Patron that Bill came up with was removed. On the plus side, Rocky's negative effect was also negated.

Saturday, January 22, 2022

The Last Call - Turn #1 Wrap Up

On the bright side, the crew of The Last Call won their first battle. Unfortunately, that silver lining had a cloud - half the crew became casualties. Let's figure out what happens next as I finish off Turn #1 of my first Five Parsecs From Home campaign.

Resolve Rival Status
This step deals with the possibility of the enemy the crew just fought holding a grudge and becoming a Rival. As Roving Threats, Large Bugs are not eligible for this. Alien creepy crawlies aren't the types to get mad, track down the crew, and ambush them in town. They prefer to establish themselves as franchises like their screen idols.

Voracious, not petty: "Sure, we'll bite somebody's leg off, but we're not the sorts to hold a grudge!"

Resolve Patron Status
The crew achieved the mission from their Patron, the Local Government. They get added to The Last Call's list of contacts at the Pandora Innovation Zone. This makes them useful as a prospect for future jobs.

Get Paid
Pay Roll (1D6): "1" modified to "3" since the crew completed the objective. The Local Government's Danger Pay adds 2 for a total of 5 credits earned.

Battlefield Finds
Since the crew Held the Field, they had the opportunity to poke around for anything profitable before hauling off their casualties. Battlefield Finds Roll (%): "31" - Curious Data Stick. Worth +1 credit for a running total of 6 credits earned on this turn.

Gather the Loot
A series of rolls on the Loot Table and various Subtables turned up an Assault Blade. This is a Gun Mod that adds a melee option to a rifle or other long arm. Since Gun Mods cannot be removed after being attached to a given weapon, I'll have to give where to put this a little thought.

Determine Injuries and Recovery
Bill, Rocky, and Lin became casualties during the battle. Had I remembered at the time, I could have used Stim-Packs to keep a couple of them from going down. But what's done is done. Here's how they did.
  • Bill's Injury Roll (%): "40" - Crippling Wound. Bill's injuries required immediate surgery. He pulled through, but the surgery cost the crew 3 credits. Bill will be in Sickbay for 2 campaign turns.
  • Rocky's Injury Roll (%): "68" - Minor Injuries. Rocky just needs a little time to heal and recover. 1 campaign turn in Sickbay.
  • Lin's Injury Roll (%): "27" - Equipment Loss. Lin's biggest wrench (Brutal Melee Weapon) wasn't meant to be smashed repeatedly against the tough carapaces of Large Bugs. It's damaged and needs repair. Lin herself is fine and needs no time in Sickbay.
Rocky and Bill on the mend in sickbay. Lin on her way to fix her wrench after getting checked out.

Experience Points
  • Survived and Won - Mina, Yelena, and Freyja (+3 XP each).
  • Became a Casualty - Bill, Rocky, and Lin (+1 XP each).
  • First Character to Inflict a Casualty - Bill (+1 XP).
None of the crew had enough XP to raise an Ability or take Advanced Training.

Purchase Items
This is an opportunity to either spend credits for the chance to roll for new stuff or directly purchase common weapons. I felt that the crew was lacking in firepower. If they had weapons with a little more range and stopping power, they might have knocked down more of the Large Bug swarm before they got into melee. Given the visibility limitations of the Pandora Innovation Zone, stocking up on Shotguns seemed like the way to go. To offset the cost, I sold off a couple of surplus weapons.
  • Purchased 5 Shotguns at 1 credit each.
  • Sold a Handgun and a Scrap Pistol for 1 credit each.
Net cost: 3 credits.

Campaign Event
This is something that occurs in between turns that has an effect on the overall campaign. Die Roll (%): "66" - "Recent events made for a good learning opportunity". I guess that half the crew getting chewed on by Large Bugs counts. The crew gets +1 XP each.

Character Events
Each character, including those in Sickbay, rolls to see what happens to them individually in between turns.
  • Mina - Received a letter from her sister. +1 XP.
  • Bill - An old contact checks in after Bill's surgery. Add a Patron.
  • Rocky - Her poor showing during the Battle gets her down. Rocky will earn no XP during the next campaign turn.
  • Yelena - She and Lin meet some local folks and strike up a few friendships. +1 XP.
  • Freyja - She overhears something at a local bar. It might be worth following up on. +1 Quest Rumor.
  • Lin - She and Yelena meet some local folks and strike up a few friendships. +1 XP.

Story Point Total at the End of Turn #1:
6 Story Points

Credit Total at the End of Turn #1:
12 Credits

Not much, but at the least the crew's not broke.

XP Totals at the End of Turn #1 (including pre-battle training):
  • Mina 6 XP
  • Bill 3 XP
  • Rocky 3 XP
  • Yelena 5 XP
  • Freyja 5 XP
  • Lin 3 XP

Things could have gone better this turn, but I think that the positives outweigh the negatives here. The post in this series will get things started for Turn #2!

Saturday, January 15, 2022

The Last Call - Turn #1 Battle


Bug Busting at Toshi's

The Last Call's crew was tasked by the Local Government of the Pandora Innovation Zone to hunt down a Large Bug previously tagged by an exobiology survey. The monitor implant detected a spontaneous mutation in the animal that could prove problematic if it spreads to the general Large Bug population. The scientists running the survey preferred a living subject for analysis, but were overruled by the Pandora Innovation Zone Governing Council. The tagged Large Bug was targeted for destruction. The corpse will be retrieved by the survey team after the fighting has died down.

The monitor implant placed the Large Bug at Toshi's - a disused maintenance station at the outskirts of a minor settlement. A swarm of Large Bugs has been reported in the area. The tagged animal is likely part of that swarm.

Initial set up.

Special Rules

Smog
Visibility is reduced due to atmospheric pollution. I rolled a "3" on 1D6+8 for 11" visibility.

Caught Off Guard
All crew acts in the Slow Actions phase of Round 1.

Peculiar Item
An item worth 2 XP if a character stop on it and uses an action to pick it up. Placed during set up.

Dry Creek Bed
The dry creek bed modeled on the terrain tiles counts as Difficult terrain. Basically, all movement costs on the dry creek bed are doubled, so moving 1" requires 2" of movement.


Set Up

Five Parsecs From Home has guidelines for table sizes, what kinds of terrain to use, and how much terrain to put on the table. There are also rules for the initial placement of miniatures. Large Bugs are Rampaging enemies - they are placed within 1" of each other in a single group. I used a die roll to randomly determine which Large Bug to use as the objective and marked it with a token.

Large Bug initial placement.

Round Structure

Each Round is divided into Fast Actions, Enemy Actions, and Slow Actions phases. Characters assigned lucky Reaction Rolls might go during the Fast Actions phase. Otherwise, the enemies go before the crew. During each phase, a character or enemy can Move and then take an Action. Both are optional, but must take place in that order.

The Last Call crew initial placement. In retrospect, I could have spread them out a little more.

Round 1 - FIGHT!

I decided not to Seize the Initiative and the effects of "Caught Off Guard" made the Reaction Roll pointless for this round.

Large Bugs
Their movement boils down to "move as quickly as possible at the nearest enemy and engage in melee" due to their Rampaging enemies. Since melee wasn't a possibility during this round due to the distance involved, I had them Dash directly towards the crew. Dash grants more movement at the cost of giving up the ability to take an Action.

The Crew
I had the crew Dash forward. All of the Large Bugs were beyond the 11" of visibility generated by the Smog.

Summary
A quick round of movement. Having a straightforward opponent for my first battle made learning the game easier.

Here they come!

Round 2


Reaction Rolls - 1, 2, 2, 4, 4, 5.
I assigned the "1" to Mina and a "2" to Rocky. Nobody other than Rocky could use a "2" to get into the Fast Action phase. Both moved forward, but the Large Bugs would still be further than 11" until they moved. Both Mina and Rocky held their actions.

Large Bugs
They continued to Dash forward. This brought them into 11" of the crew.

Mina
I discovered that the closest Large Bug was just outside of Machine Pistol range. Disappointing. If I knew that, I would have used Dash to get her a couple of inches closer. Oh, well.

Rocky
Already in position, she opened fire at the objective Large Bug with her Auto Rifle. To Hit Rolls: "2" and "3" - both misses, even with the +1 bonus from Large Bugs having the Easy Target trait.

Bill
He moved up and fired his Hand Laser at the lead Large Bug. To Hit Roll: "5" - hit! Damage Roll: "4" - less than the Large Bug's Toughness of 5. Thus, the Large Bug was Stunned. I placed a marker on the Large Bug. Next round, it could either move or act, but not both. The marker would then be removed. Three Stunned markers on the same figure results in it becoming a causality and being removed from play.

Yelena
Moved up and found herself just out of range of her Machine Pistol.

Summary
More maneuvering punctuated with the first shots fired. I might have to look into longer ranged options for some of the crew.

Some inclusive results from the first shots fired.

Round 3

Reaction Rolls - 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 6.
The "1" was assigned to Bill and the "2" to Rocky, allowing them to go in the Fast Action phase.

Bill
Moved forward and tossed a Frakk Grenade at the nearest cluster of Large Bugs. Frakk Grenades use typical grenade rules - make an attack on a central target and follow up with attacks on surrounding targets within a certain range. To Hit Rolls: "1" and "5" - a hit on the initial target. Damage Roll: "4" - Stunned. To Hit Roll (second target): "5" - hit. Damage Roll (second target): "4" - Stunned. To Hit Roll (third target): "5" - hit. Damage Roll (third target): "2" - Stunned. To Hit Roll (fourth target): "6" - hit. Damage Roll (fourth target): "5" - removed from play! Bill's Frakk Grenade only generated one casualty, but bought The Last Call crew some time.

Rocky
Stayed in position and fired her Auto Rifle at the nearest Large Bug. To Hit Rolls: "1" and "1" - both misses.

Large Bugs
A Large Bug not in the cluster hit by Bill's Frakk Grenade moved into melee with him. The rest of the Large Bugs not under a Stunned effect used Dash to move forward. The Stunned Large Bugs moved forward, removing their Stunned markers. All of their movement was hampered by crossing the dry stream bed.

Large Bug v Bill (melee)
Both rolled a "3" - a tie before modifiers. Bill received a +2 modifier, +1 from his Combat skill and +1 from using a pistol in melee. The Large Bug received a +1 modifier from its Combat skill. Winning the melee, Bill's Damage Roll is "6" - the Large Bug is removed from play.

Mina
Moved forward slightly to get a better vantage point on top of the tower she started the round on. To Hit Rolls: "2" and "2" - both misses.

Yelena
Stayed in place and fired her Beam Pistol at the closest Large Bug. Since she didn't move, Yelena gets a +1 bonus to Aim. To Hit Roll - "4" - hit. Damage Roll: "3" - Stunned.

Freyja
Stayed in place and fired her Machine Pistol at a Large Bug. To Hit Rolls: "5" and "5" - hits. Damage Rolls: "5" and "4" - the Large Bug is removed from play.

Lin
Stayed in place and fired her Hand Laser at the closest Large Bug. To Hit Roll: "6" - hit. Damage Roll: "3" - Stunned.

Morale Check
Since the Large Bugs suffered losses, they check to see if any of their number chooses the better part of valor. Large Bugs have the "Stubborn" trait, meaning that they ignore the first casualty for this purpose. Morale Rolls: "2" and "4" - none of the Large Bugs choose to Bail.

Summary
Things heated up as the Large Bugs closed in. Bill earned his paycheck this round by taking down two Large Bugs and Stunning a few others. Still, I would have preferred to thin down the swarm a little more before they got into melee.

Bill's gonna have problems in Round 4.

Round 4

Reaction Rolls - 3, 5, 5, 5, 6, 6.
Well, crap. None of the crew got to go in the Fast Action phase.

Large Bugs
All pressed forward. However, many were Stunned at the start of the round. Only two Large Bugs could make attacks.

Large Bug v Bill (melee)
"5" v "2" - the Large Bug wins the melee. Damage Roll: "3" - Large Bugs get a +1 to damage with their Mandibles, bringing the total to "4" and Bill becomes The Last Call's first casualty of the campaign.

Large Bug v Rocky (melee)
"3" v "3" - a tie, so both roll for damage. Damage Rolls: "4" and "2" - Rocky becomes a casualty and is removed from play. The Large Bug moves closer to its next target.

Lin
Holsters her Hand Laser, hefts her biggest wrench, and moves into melee with the Large Bug marked as the objective. Her wrench is a Brutal Melee Weapon (+1 to damage), so it has the Clumsy trait (-1 penalty to hit against a faster target), but is still a melee weapon (+2 bonus to hit).

Lin v Large Bug (melee)
"3" v "2" - both miss. Not liking this result, I spent a Story Point. Reroll: "6" - Lin hits. Damage Roll: "4" modified to "5" - the objective Large Bug is removed from play. Lin moves back a bit.

Freyja
Fires her Machine Pistol at the Large Bug that took down Rocky. She benefits from staying in place, but doesn't have an unobstructed shot at the Large Bug. To Hit Rolls: "1" and "3" - both misses.

Yelena
Fires her Beam Pistol at the same Large Bug that Freyja just opened up on. To Hit Roll: "2" - miss.

Mina
Remains in position and tosses a Frakk Grenade at a nearby group of Large Bugs. To Hit Rolls: "3" and "3" - both hits due to the close range. Damage Rolls: "1" and "3" - I used another Story Point since I needed a kill. Reroll: "6" - the Large Bug is removed from play. To Hit Roll (second target): "2" - miss.

Morale Check
The Large Bugs suffered two casualties, forcing a check. (Crews never check Morale.) "1" and "3" - the Large Bug furthest from the action Bails and is removed from play.

Summary
Bill and Rocky become casualties as the Large Bugs get into melee. I had to burn a couple of Story Points to keep the crew's momentum going.

Just a couple more to go...

Round 5

Reactions Roll - 2, 3, 5, 6.
Again, none of the crew goes in the Fast Action phase.

Large Bugs
Both of the remaining Large Bugs closed into melee with the closest opponent - Lin.

Large Bug v Lin (melee)
"5" v "2" - the Large Bug bites Lin. Damage Roll: "5" - Lin becomes a casualty and is removed from play. The Large Bug moves closer to the nearest target. The other Large Bug stayed put.

Freyja
Fires her Machine Pistol at the closest Large Bug. To Hit Rolls: "2" and "3" - one hit due to the close range. Damage Roll: "2" - Stunned.

Mina
Jumps down, ignites to Glare Sword, and moves into melee with the closest Large Bug.

Mina v Large Bug (melee)
"6" v "6" - a tie before modifiers. Mina's Glare Sword gives her a +2 to hit. The Large Bug gets a +1 from its Combat skill. Mina wins the melee. Damage Roll: "5" - the Large Bug is removed from play.

Yelena
Shoots at the remaining Large Bug with her Beam Pistol. To Hit Roll: "6" - normally just a hit, but a Beam Pistol has the Critical trait. The natural "6" results in two hits to the target. Damage Rolls: "3" and "4" - a Beam Pistol grants +1 to damage, so the modified results of "4" and "5" cause the Large Bug to become a casualty and it is removed from play.

Summary
Lin becomes a casualty, but the crew pulls off a victory.

There's good news and there's bad news.

Overall Summary

The bad news is that half the crew became casualties. I wasn't able to recover the "Peculiar Item" since none of the crew could spare the action needed to pick it up. And I expended both Frakk Grenades and two Story Points. All to good effect, but they are still gone.

The good news is that the crew achieved the mission objective and Held the Field. Both will have benefits moving forward. Benefits like getting paid.


The next post in this series will wrap up Turn #1.

Monday, December 20, 2021

The Last Call - Campaign Start and Turn #1 Pre-Battle

In the previous post of this series, I described generating a crew and their stuff. Here I kick off the campaign and take all the steps just short of my crew's first battle. I get the feeling that a battle report will take up a post by itself.

I've settled on the following names and miniatures the crew of The Last Call. The Background, Motivation, and Class previously generated for each crew member are also listed.

Captain Wilhelmina "Mina" Derring
Bombshell Miniatures 36003 Wanda Whitestar
Industrial World, Adventure, Scoundrel

William "Bill" Baxter
Reaper Chronoscope 50028 Kirby McDowell, Space Privateer
Drifter, Glory, Scavenger

Roxanna "Rocky" Gaussi
Bombshell Miniatures Bug Spray
Wasteland Nomads, Discovery, Mercenary

Yelena Waverly
Bombshell Miniatures 36020 Science Officer Helen Salinger
Dystopian City, Technology, Trader

Freyja Niobe
Reaper Chronoscope 50132 Jessica Blaze, Smuggler
Mining Colony, Wealth, Negotiator

Rosalina "Lin" Johansen
Reaper Chronoscope 50016 Rosie, Chronotechnician
High-Tech Colony, Survival, Technician

The rulebook, miniatures, and dice. Now all I need is the time to set up a board and play.

Last Call Campaign Start

With a crew ready to go, I just had to decide on which options to take going in. These decisions would influence how things would be handled from here on.

Story Track - No. This would have introduced mechanics for an overall story arc to the campaign. I decided to keep things simple for my introductory campaign. There would still be narrative elements, but no overarching plot in the background.

Victory Condition - Play 50 campaign turns. There are a variety of Victory Conditions available in the rules. This seemed the most straightforward.

Difficulty Mode - Normal. This indicates no changes to the rules. There are more challenging modes in addition to an Easy mode.

Story Points - 8 total. Since this is my first campaign, the rules state that I roll two D6 and keep the better result to determine the number of story points I have at the start. A good thing, since my first die roll was a "1" and a "6" came up on the second die. This combined with the 2 story points from crew generation for a total of 8.

I noted the options available in "The Stars of the Story" section. These are rules that can be used to keep the campaign going in the event of a disastrous set of events. Each allows the game to be fudged a little to prevent an unrecoverable result. However, each option can only be used once during a campaign.


Turn 1 Start

Travel Steps

It is assumed that a campaign begins with the crew already on a planet. Thus, most of Travel and the first two steps of New World Arrival are skipped. These rules will come up should I choose to go elsewhere.

Licensing Requirements - I rolled a "2" on a D6. This world doesn't require a Freelancer License for my crew to operate.

World Traits - "01" on percentile dice. "Haze" - visibility is reduced to 1D6+8" during battle. Why a planet has a particular trait is left to the imagination of the player. I decided to make it the home of Mina - an industrial world. The haze is the result of smog from various pollutants in the atmosphere. I named the world the Pandora Innovation Zone.

A fist full of credits. A small fist.

World Steps

Upkeep - 1 credit. This represents the crew getting paid.

Ship Debt - With a fair amount of starting funds, I chose to knock the ship debt down by half by spending 11 credits. This put the new ship debt total at 11 credits and left 12 credits remaining in the war chest.

Normally, things like repairs to the ship and medical attention for the crew would come up at this stage. Fortunately, the ship and crew are in good shape - so far!

Crew Tasks - I already had a Patron for work and didn't a have Rival to worry about. The temptation to just have everyone Train to get some XP coming in was strong, but I wanted to try my luck rolling dice and checking tables.
  • Mina, Rocky, and Freyja hit the gun range and gym. Each received 1 XP.
  • Yelena and Lin wanted to see if they could Trade for a deal or two at the local markets. I rolled percentile dice for the results of their efforts. "94" indicated that Yelena obtained 2 Stim-Packs and 2 Med-Patches. "59" revealed that Lin turned up 3 grenades - 2 Frakk and 1 Dazzle.
  • Bill went out to Explore the town. Rolled "03" - he ran across a deal he couldn't pass up, represented by a roll on the Trade Table. That roll was "89" - a roll on the Loot Table, but the item received would need Repair. A series of rolls resulted in Bill striding back to The Last Call with a "gently used" Plasma Rifle.

Job Offers - It was time to determine the identity of the Patron and what kind of work they had in mind. A series of rolls revealed that the Patron was the Local Government, was offering 2 credits in Danger Pay, and was willing to wait for awhile - the job could be done in the current turn or in the following two campaign turns. Checking for Benefits, Hazards, and Conditions turned out some bad news - this was a Dangerous Job. The enemy force would be increased by +1.

Assign Equipment - I distributed what was available to the crew. I didn't have as much firepower or protective equipment as I would've liked, but the extra stuff that turned up during Crew Tasks would come in handy. Too bad the Plasma Rifle would need some time and attention before it could be used.
  • Mina - Machine Pistol, Glare Sword, Frag Vest, Boosted Leg
  • Bill - Hand Laser, Frakk Grenade
  • Rocky - Auto Rifle
  • Lin - Hand Laser, Brutal Melee Weapon (represented by the wrench on the miniature)
  • Freyja - Machine Pistol
  • Yelena - Beam Pistol, Frakk Grenade

Resolve Any Rumors - I had a single Rumor from crew generation, but my roll of "2" was a little too high for anything to come of it. The Rumor would remain and be added to any others that might come up.


Choose Your Battle

With no Rivals (yet) to get the jump on my crew, I had a free hand in deciding what to do. I could always do an Opportunity mission, representing whatever odd job that came my way. In the end, I decided to go ahead and carry out the job for the Local Government. Sure, there was still plenty of time to get it done, but I wanted to get it out of the way.


Readying For Battle

Technically, this is part of the Battle stage, but I got excited. Besides, this way I'll know ahead of time what I need to set up the table.

Deployment Conditions - "89" rolled on percentile dice. "Caught Off Guard" - the crew would all be acting in the Slow Actions phase of Round 1! Argh!

Notable Sights - "81" on percentile dice. "Peculiar Item" - the item is placed 2D6+2" in a random direction from table center. Acquiring it involves moving a crew miniature into contact and foregoing any other actions that round. Getting it would be worth +2 XP.

Patron Mission Objectives - "3" on a D10. The Last Call crew had been hired to Eliminate a target.

Determine the Enemy - A series of die rolls revealed that the crew would be fighting 8 Large Bugs. I'm not sure why the Local Government wanted one in particular knocked off, but this crew wasn't getting paid to ask questions. I'll come up with a narrative reason why by the time I get the chance to sit down and play it out. Any suggestions would be welcome!


Next time in this series - The Last Call crew guns down Large Bugs in the smog!

Monday, December 13, 2021

Five Parsecs From Home Turn 0

I finally have barely enough painted miniatures and terrain for my first Five Parsecs From Home campaign. More of both will be needed later, so I'm continuing to get more ready for the table. The biggest hurdle remaining is also the hardest - time. I got the work of generating the start of the campaign done this past weekend, so I'm sharing how that went in this post.

I'd like to say that this made a significant dent in my pile of shame, but...

As mentioned in a previous post, Five Parsecs From Home is a solo miniatures game built around campaign play. The player runs a spaceship crew for hire. They do jobs for employers who prefer to keep their dirty work at arms length. Violence happens, the interests of the employer is advanced, and the crew gets paid - in theory. Things have a way of going off the rails.

Preparing a new campaign involves generating a crew and the resources they have at their disposal. It mostly involves rolling dice, checking tables, and recording the results. Those results only offer the basics. Providing more narrative details is left to the player.


The Crew

The standard crew size is six characters. There are rules for starting with a smaller crew that I'm looking forward to trying out sometime. But this is my first Five Parsecs From Home campaign, so I decided to stick with a standard crew.

I used the "first timer" method. All six characters are Human. As with many rules systems, Humans have middle of the road statistics and minimal special rules. An all Human crew simplifies both character creation and running them during play. It also means that I don't have to find miniatures to represent an unusual character.

Below are the results from the Background, Motivation, and Class tables. The numbers are the die rolls using percentile dice. The names of each result are paraphrased to keep them relatively short. The rules effects of each result are also noted.

Background Table Results:
87 Industrial World - +1 Gear
33 Drifter - +1 Gear
96 Wasteland Nomads - +1 Reactions, +1 Low-tech Weapon
07 Dystopian City - +1 Speed
16 Mining Colony - +1 Toughness
02 Peaceful, High-Tech Colony - +1 Savvy, +1D6 credits

Motivation Table Results:
36 Adventure - +1D6 credits, +1 Low-tech Weapon
19 Glory - +1 Combat Skill, +1 Military Weapon
53 Discovery - +1 Savvy, +1 Gear
48 Technology - +1 Savvy, +1 Gadget
06 Wealth - +1D6 credits
24 Survival - +1 Toughness

Class Table Results:
66 Scoundrel - +1 Speed
98 Scavenger - 1 Rumor, +1 High-tech Weapon
25 Mercenary - +1 Combat Skill, +1 Military Weapon
48 Trader - +2D6 credits
44 Negotiator - Patron, +1 story point
09 Technician - +1 Savvy, +1 Gear

I put the results together and assigned miniatures as follows:
Industrial World, Adventure, Scoundrel - Wanda Whitestar
Drifter, Glory, Scavenger - Kirby McDowell
Wasteland Nomads, Discovery, Mercenary - Bug Spray
Dystopian City, Technology, Trader - Helen Salinger
Mining Colony, Wealth, Negotiator - Jessica Blaze
High-Tech Colony, Survival, Technician - Rosie

I'll come up with names later.


Their Stuff

Character generation provided the following starting equipment:
2 Military Weapons
1 High-Tech Weapon
2 Low-Tech Weapons
4 Gear
1 Gadget
4D6 credits

In addition, all crews start with the following:
3 Military Weapons
3 Low-Tech Weapons
1 Gear
1 Gadget
1 credit per crew member

Finally, the rules provide a benefit for characters who rolled a Savvy increase. Each time that occurs, the player can take a High-Tech Weapon instead of a Military Weapon. With three characters rolling Savvy increases, I opted to substitute three High-Tech Weapons for Military Weapons.

Below are the results from each equipment table. As before, the numbers are the percentile dice rolls.

Military Weapons
70 Auto Rifle - a heavy rifle with a drum magazine used for fire support.
76 Rattle Gun - a belt-fed machine gun of obsolete or dubious design.

High-Tech Weapons
17 Hand Laser - a directed energy weapon in the form of a pistol.
98 Glare Sword - a glowing energy blade projected from a shiny handle.
41 Beam Pistol - a military grade sidearm.
25 Hand Laser - more handheld pew-pew.

Low-Tech Weapons
36 Machine Pistol - a submachine gun or PDW.
99 Brutal Melee Weapon - an unsubtle approach to melee combat.
06 Handgun - a conventional pistol.
17 Scrap Pistol - a conventional pistol bashed together from the parts that happened to be around.
38 Machine Pistol - see above.

Gear
07 Beam Light - gun mod that improves visibility.
47 Frag Vest - armor for a single character.
90 Sector Permit - handy on planets that require a license to operate.
73 Med-patch - single-use item that reduces the recovery time for an injured character.
38 Fake ID - handy for acquiring legal documentation via less than legal methods.

Gadget
05 Analyzer - provides a bonus when looking for certain information.
18 Boosted Leg - cybernetic implant that improves movement for a single character.

Credits
Rolled 18 on 4D6 and added 6 for a total of 24 credits.

"You shorted me five credits." "Uh, taxes?" *Sounds of violence.*

The Ship

The crew's spaceship is handled abstractly. The rule book mentions that a player could have a model for the ship that might appear in a battle, but the ship isn't the focus of the game. The main thrust of the game is the crew and the trouble that they get into.

That said, the ship does have an effect on the game. The debt that the crew owes on the ship - a nod to games like Traveller - provides a motivation and complication. How the ship is fitted can provide benefits for the crew. Finally, an equipment that the crew isn't carrying is assumed to be stored aboard the ship.

I rolled a 38, resulting in a retired scout ship with 25 Hull and the fuel-efficient trait. A rolled a 2 for debt, resulting in 22 credits owed.


Flavor Details

These tables are optional and don't effect gameplay, but add a little extra inspiration for the narrative behind the campaign. Die rolls used percentile dice.

55 The crew met at a bar.

62 "Somewhat honorable bandits" - I choose to interpret this as a collection of lost souls with nowhere better to be and no better prospects that as independent troubleshooters for hire.


I've got some ideas to flesh out the bare bones generated by these results. Names for the crew and more details for their backgrounds. The fact that they all met at a bar has already inspired the name of the ship: The Last Call.