As I mentioned in one of my previous post, in my D&D game I have got a druid and a bard. Tercora, the servant of the nature, had really wanted to participate in the druidic annual holiday which takes place on the shores of Lake of Steam, during the Feast of the Moon. Since I, as a game master, do not let my players to just take the prestige classes and I require them to put some effort to get one, we had decided that it would also be the time of her change into the Shifter (info).
The main problem that occurred was what to do with Arvolethe the bard. I talked to my player who plays as Arvolethe and together we agreed to let her character stay and have some rest at the their house in Elbulder. I created another druid whose role was played by her and this way she could participate in everything what took place. This was perfect solution: There was no glitch in the story, everything stood as it is in the setting and I did not have to run two stories at the same time. There were no experience points to get from this story, even if there could have been, but when one of the characters had been absent, there would have been some sort of unfairness, so the only reward from this session was the prestige class for Tercora.
The inspiration for this scenario came from Umbra from World of Darkness RPG. I have not played in WoD for a really long time, but the idea seemed perfect. After Tercora's arrival, all druids started to meditate and with a little help of some mixed herbs they entered some sort of the inner world of nature. Tercora's task was to defeat monsters destroying nature in the woods where she was naked and her magic did not work. The only ability she had was to change herself into animals. Since I did not want them to get bored, I put few old friends who they had not seen for a long time. Those friends were NPCs to save from the same creatures. At the end of this adventure was a cove of Shifters. There the other druid disappeared. Some kind of ghost told Tercora that if she wanted to become a Shifter, she had to defeat the one who she loves the most.
The main boss of this story was Arvolethe - the regular character of the second player, however, this time Arvolethe was evil. In fact, that was just an avatar of real Arvolethe, but this version of her hated Tercora so badly that the only thing that mattered for her was to kill the druid. I have to admit that the Player who played Arvolethe did the best job I have ever seen. She acted like there was real hatred in the Arvolethe's heart and soon it appeared that Tercora has only two choices: to die or to kill her best friend.
When a GM wants to do this kind of trick, there are two things that matter: First of all, you have to know well your players and you have to trust them. You have to be one hundred per cent sure that a player can act it in the right way. Second one is performance: A player who is object of this trick has to be unaware of the fact that an opponent that he or she is fighting is not in fact is not who he or she appears to be. It is important because the whole point of the trick is to rouse strong emotions and force a player to make difficult decisions. If she had known that all of that was not real, she might have neglected the whole scene.
In the end, Tercora discovered the power of the place. In that cave she could change herself into any form and that was what she did. She changed herself into a big purple worm and she killed Arvolethe. In the world of nature the strongest survives and even if some creature is the most powerful, one can still loose if one hesitates to make the hardest decisions. Tercora was more powerful in this cave but she could still loose...
...but she did not. She chose nature over her best friend and became a Shifter.
The main problem that occurred was what to do with Arvolethe the bard. I talked to my player who plays as Arvolethe and together we agreed to let her character stay and have some rest at the their house in Elbulder. I created another druid whose role was played by her and this way she could participate in everything what took place. This was perfect solution: There was no glitch in the story, everything stood as it is in the setting and I did not have to run two stories at the same time. There were no experience points to get from this story, even if there could have been, but when one of the characters had been absent, there would have been some sort of unfairness, so the only reward from this session was the prestige class for Tercora.
The inspiration for this scenario came from Umbra from World of Darkness RPG. I have not played in WoD for a really long time, but the idea seemed perfect. After Tercora's arrival, all druids started to meditate and with a little help of some mixed herbs they entered some sort of the inner world of nature. Tercora's task was to defeat monsters destroying nature in the woods where she was naked and her magic did not work. The only ability she had was to change herself into animals. Since I did not want them to get bored, I put few old friends who they had not seen for a long time. Those friends were NPCs to save from the same creatures. At the end of this adventure was a cove of Shifters. There the other druid disappeared. Some kind of ghost told Tercora that if she wanted to become a Shifter, she had to defeat the one who she loves the most.
The main boss of this story was Arvolethe - the regular character of the second player, however, this time Arvolethe was evil. In fact, that was just an avatar of real Arvolethe, but this version of her hated Tercora so badly that the only thing that mattered for her was to kill the druid. I have to admit that the Player who played Arvolethe did the best job I have ever seen. She acted like there was real hatred in the Arvolethe's heart and soon it appeared that Tercora has only two choices: to die or to kill her best friend.
When a GM wants to do this kind of trick, there are two things that matter: First of all, you have to know well your players and you have to trust them. You have to be one hundred per cent sure that a player can act it in the right way. Second one is performance: A player who is object of this trick has to be unaware of the fact that an opponent that he or she is fighting is not in fact is not who he or she appears to be. It is important because the whole point of the trick is to rouse strong emotions and force a player to make difficult decisions. If she had known that all of that was not real, she might have neglected the whole scene.
In the end, Tercora discovered the power of the place. In that cave she could change herself into any form and that was what she did. She changed herself into a big purple worm and she killed Arvolethe. In the world of nature the strongest survives and even if some creature is the most powerful, one can still loose if one hesitates to make the hardest decisions. Tercora was more powerful in this cave but she could still loose...
...but she did not. She chose nature over her best friend and became a Shifter.
No comments:
Post a Comment