Roleplaying Tips Weekly E-Zine Issue #223 Mission-Style Roleplaying _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* SENT BY SUBSCRIPTION ONLY With Compliments From: Johnn Four, http://www.roleplayingtips.com johnn@roleplayingtips.com CONTENTS: --> A Brief Word From Johnn --> This Week's Tips: 1. Add Conflict 2. Adopt A Mission Style For Roleplaying 3. Make The Mission Objective Clear 4. Establish A Reward 5. Death Should Not Be A Route To Success 6. Mission: What's The Back-Up Plan? 7. Mission: The Promise 8. Mission: Change An Opinion 9. Mission: Lose Face 10. Mission: Improve Reputation --> Readers' Tips Of The Week: 1. Tricky Random Player Selection From: Dwight Durmon 2. NPC Parallels From: Bryan Davidson 3. Employ Gross Displays Of Power From: Bryan Davidson 4. Dealing With Loud Or Overbearing Players From: Keith L. 5. Use Flowcharts For Maps And Keep Things Free Form From: Leonard Wilson _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* A BRIEF WORD FROM JOHNN Thanks to Mythosa.net & Bruce Gulke ----------------------------------- Thanks to everyone who offered server space and bandwidth for Tips downloads! Bruce Gulke, of TableSmith fame, kindly offered me room at his site and I've got my first file up there already. Weeks ago I had to take down all the autoresponder files due to viruses and spam spoofing. So, this weekend I zipped them up and you can now download them here for free: Roleplaying Supplemental Issues #1 - #16 (268KB): http://www.roleplayingtips.mythosa.net/Supplemental_Issues.zip Thanks for the space Bruce! Cheers, Johnn Four johnn@roleplayingtips.com _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* CHECK OUT DWARVEN FORGE'S NEW WEBSITE * GREAT On-line GM Tools * Previews of New Sets! * Message Boards and Photo Galleries * News www.dwarvenforge.com _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* MISSION-STYLE ROLEPLAYING By Johnn Four Combat in RPGs is a physical, tangible, visceral thing. In many games, combat stuff takes up 75% or more of a character sheet. When the fighting breaks out, you have concrete numbers, specific skills, exciting attacks, and pages and pages of rules. Damage lets everyone know how much they've dished out and how much they can take. It's measurable, pleasurable, and definite. Roleplaying, on the other hand, is much more ephemeral and undefinable. It's harder to quantify, which puts many players off. It can require real-life acting and speaking skills, depending on group play style. There's often no clear winner or loser, and it's harder to know how well you're faring in the encounter. In fact, in many styles of gaming, roleplaying is mostly about being in the moment. Players want to put on their PC's shoes for awhile, escape reality, and _be_ someone else. For others, it's a chance to flex their acting skills, use their imaginations, or live out their favourite movie and book scenes. Because roleplaying lacks the physicality of combat and is a highly social activity it makes many gamers uncomfortable. Board gamers, wargamers, and "gamists" sometimes get quite dissatisfied with roleplaying encounters and they pine for some action. There is no right or wrong way to play. A dungeon crawl game format is just as valid as a roleplaying format where not a single die is cast. However, groups often consist of a mix of players and GMs who want one or the other style. Hopefully, the following tips can make both sides happy some of the time by focusing on adding conflict and a "mission" style to roleplaying encounters and plots. 1. Add Conflict =============== One thing you can do to bridge the gap between role-players and roll-players is to add conflict. It's not enough to just interact with each other in-character. For example, a tea party encounter with some influential nobles would make some players quite happy. Exchanging pleasantries and gossip, and using the words and body language that their characters, the game world, and the genre would use would be enough for a satisfying experience. Other players would start to yawn almost immediately though. A few players would even draw their weapons and start hacking! One solution is to add conflict. Make the encounter an "us vs. them" situation. This creates potential winners and losers and makes the encounter a bit more tangible for some gamers. This might also introduce some skill-based dice rolls, which will appease action-oriented players. Yet, the action will occur within a roleplaying context--conversation and in- character references--thus satisfying many roleplayers. In addition, players who focus on character advancement and characterization will enjoy employing the game mechanics. 2. Adopt A Mission Style For Roleplaying ======================================== A roleplaying encounter often lacks focus. The party encounters an NPC (or several) and a conversation ensues. The encounter might be premeditated (i.e. the party is conducting an investigation), coincidental (i.e. a random encounter or the GM just planted the NPC for flavour), or predestined (i.e. it's a planned GM encounter), but the roleplaying is unstructured and chaotic. The party isn't 100% sure of what it's doing or trying to accomplish. Several PCs are trying to talk to an NPC at once. The conditions of success, failure, and progress are unclear. This drives many players crazy. A fun solution is to adopt a mission style for roleplaying encounters some of the time. The players are given a "quest", or a reason, to approach and parley with one or more NPCs. For example, one mission might be to discover a wealthy merchant's greatest fear. This would require the party to roleplay discussions with those who know the merchant, the merchant's family, and/or the merchant herself. The PCs might pursue other forms of investigation, such as breaking into the merchant's house hoping to find a diary or other clue, but eventually they'll need to parley to get the information they seek (assuming you've designed things this way to encourage roleplaying, but perhaps there is a diary). With a roleplaying mission, the PCs have a unified purpose. Consequently, there is an implied condition of victory (mission success), and this style leaves plenty of room for "us vs. them" type missions as well as cooperative goals. The increased tangibility will make many action oriented players happy. The conditions of success help players grasp what they're supposed to do--reducing the chaos a bit--and whether they're getting closer or further away to accomplishing their task. At the GM level, roleplaying missions have numerous benefits: * Closure. There is a "mission accomplished" feeling once the PCs have achieved their objective. This not only increases player satisfaction but yours as well. * Pacing. Once the PCs have succeeded or failed, you have a solid cue for moving the game along. In encounters where the party is roleplaying just for the sake of it, it's sometimes difficult knowing when to end things to keep the story progressing. * Victory points. If your game rules use an experience or victory point system, having a tangible mission lets you evaluate difficulty level and, consequently, reward levels much easier. It also gives you something specific and discreet to evaluate. * NPC preparation. A mission makes a good seed or hook to prepare and design NPCs around. * Encounter design. A mission gives you a distinct purpose to design for. It creates boundaries and parameters to help you tweak things to be more entertaining. Examples of roleplaying missions follow in some of the tips below. 3. Make The Mission Objective Clear =================================== Make loud and clear what the players are supposed to accomplish. Feel free to experiment with different levels of subtlety, but you can never go wrong by explicitly informing the players what they're goal is. Note that you're only providing the goal, the purpose, the condition of victory. You do not have to tell the PCs how they're supposed to accomplish their mission. That's the fun part for them! So, you're not spoiling anything by providing a clear objective. Some ways to make a mission objective clear: * A NPC hires the PCs and describes exactly what he wants. * An NPC, perhaps a friend, makes a perceptive comment about what the PCs are doing. He summarizes the PCs' objective for them or describes them in a different way. "So, it sounds like all this boils down to finding out the merchant's greatest fear!" * Tell the group directly, player to GM. Though this might seem to be a clumsy method, but it sure beats GMing a confused or frustrated party. * Player handout. Give the PCs a prop, such as a letter, that describes their mission. By establishing exactly what the roleplaying mission is, you gain all the benefits of this style of quest. Hiding or blurring the party's goal tends to frustrate action oriented players while the others are blissfully chatting and acting away. 4. Establish A Reward ===================== Ensure the PCs know what's in it for them. Establish what the reward will be for a successful mission. A reward will sometimes drive hack 'n slashers to participate more in the roleplaying as well as give those players who crave action more patience during the encounter. Players who enjoy combat are used to immediate gratification. First, their PC survived--a small but important reward. Second, there's usually a body to loot. Next, there's often a lair to loot. Finally, there's experience points to tally. For this type of player to go along with a roleplaying mission, they need to understand what the reward(s) will be. What do the PCs get if they're successful? Now that you can actually say if the PCs were successful in their roleplaying encounter or not, you have an opportunity to provide a conditional reward. * Experience points. When handing out experience or victory points, make sure you identify which ones (or how much) came from the roleplaying mission. That will help you generate buy-in for future roleplaying encounters as the players will know there'll be a form of character advancement reward. * Payment. Someone is willing to pay the PCs to perform the mission. Alternately, what is gained from the mission, such as information, has value and can be sold for profit. * A link to treasure. If successful, the mission will bring the PCs closer to a valuable reward. * Action. Completing the mission will bring the party closer to a stage boss battle or some other cool potential for action. Combat junkies love to feed the beast and will even suffer through roleplaying encounters to get their fix. LOL. Seriously though, if a player is motivated by dice and combat, a good reward for roleplaying is to bring the party closer to a combat encounter. 5. Death Should Not Be A Route To Success ========================================= Design roleplaying missions so that death will not bring the PCs success. This will help keep the players focused on using roleplaying and imagination to accomplish their goal rather than steel. Don't hesitate to make this point clear to the group. Even though you might feel it's important for the PCs to make their own mistakes and choose their own actions, emphasizing the fact that combat won't solve things will prevent session frustration or poor player meta-gaming (i.e. even if we kill this guy the DM will rescue the plot somehow). In general, there are two situations you can design roleplaying missions around to ensure death won't be a valid choice: * The NPC(s) knows something. Unless the PCs have access to some form of speak with dead, pretty much the only way to get information out of somebody is to roleplay with them (persuasion, intimidation, trickery, coercion) while the NPC is alive. :) * The NPC is a key. The non-player character has some aspect or element that is only valid if he is alive. For example, social status, employment status, a critical relationship. 6. Mission: What's The Back-Up Plan? ==================================== The PCs need to find out an NPC's back-up plan. Someone or something wants to take action against an NPC and they need to ensure the NPC won't slip away or find an alternate means of victory. This is a cool mission because it has an air of subterfuge and subtlety. Whoever is sending the PCs on this mission will be perceived as cunning and subtle. "It's not enough to simply corner the villain, we have to ensure he has nothing up his sleeve as well." This type of mission is also good because it gives you more life out of your existing building blocks. By that I mean you'll be able to re-use NPCs, locations, plot threads, and various items, with the exception of what you need to invent for the back-up plan. You might want to ensure that the final plan for the PCs' side is not to actually kill the target NPC. Otherwise, if the opportunity presents itself, the party might just kill the NPC directly, negating the need for discovering a back- up plan and for planning a final confrontation altogether. For example, perhaps the long-term goal is to win an election, bring an NPC to justice, or to discover the final word of a soul trap spell. As an NPC could have several back-up plans, and back-up plans are often created in response to anticipated forms and configurations of attacks (which then change once back-up plans are discovered), this type of mission can be used over and over again. Mission examples: * What will the villain do when we attack him in his lair and defeat his traps and guards? * What will the ambassador do if we succeed in proving to the King he is a spy? * We are about to win the lucrative royal contract, but our rivals, the Street Cleaners Guild, who are also bidding on the job, don't seem very worried. Why? 7. Mission: The Promise ======================= The PCs' mission is to get a commitment or promise from an NPC. The party must roleplay things in such a way, though, that the NPC is sure to honour the commitment. Otherwise, the mission would ultimately end in failure as those who are depending on the commitment will not accomplish their own goals. Usually, there is some resistance in the NPC for making the promise. There might be risk, cost, or danger associated with either making the promise in the first place or in carrying through with what was agreed upon. The greater the possibility of loss, expense, or threat the more resistance the PCs will have to counter. While intimidation will often get an NPC to make a promise, it's no guarantee that the promise will be kept. Therefore, it's not always the best tactic, making this type of mission a lot of fun. Be sure to arm the PCs with the ability to convince the NPC to make and keep his promise. Ask yourself, what can the PCs do after the NPC initially refuses to make the promise? This mission might even spawn pre-missions to find the clues and information required to arm the PCs with their needed leverage. Even if the PCs are armed with a plan, offer, or leverage to make the NPC's promise the logical best choice for him, not all NPCs will listen to logic. They'll hesitate out of fear, greed, pride, or some other emotional reason, thus making the PCs roleplay a little harder for victory. Mission examples: * Get the senator's vote in the upcoming ballot. * For this caravan to make a profit we need to make sure Boris will give us good price on the wool we return with. Make sure he gives us that price in two months time when we return. * Last night the barmaid heard something she shouldn't have. If she tells the wrong person she's as good as dead. Please convince her to tell no one of what she knows, even though the information could be valuable! 8. Mission: Change An Opinion ============================= The PCs must convince an NPC to change their mind about an opinion they've formed about someone, someplace, or something. This is different and trickier than just making an NPC like you. The NPC might like you but that won't necessarily change their opinion about something. In general, this challenge has two axes: (x) Amount of proof and information the PCs can bring to bear to help their case. (y) Firmness of opinion - how likely is it the NPC will change his mind? The more firm an NPC's stance is, and the more insubstantial the PCs' leverage is, the harder it will be to change an NPC's opinion. Mission examples: * Convince the innkeeper that mages should be allowed to stay at the inn. * Persuade the moneylender that I'm not such a high risk for a loan. * How can I demonstrate to Loreille's father that I'd make a good son-in-law? 9. Mission: Lose Face ===================== The PCs are charged with making an NPC lose face in public. Name calling is usually the most direct, but least effective tactic. The PCs will have to come up with something creative to embarrass, humiliate, or socially injure the NPC. Watch out for the dueling option. Consider making dueling illegal, losing duels non-disgraceful, or the NPC an expert fighter. Mission examples: * Trick the priest into admitting his lies before the council. * Convince Boris to do something foolish at the dance so that Loreille will lose interest in him. * Make Boris refuse when I challenge him to a duel so that everyone thinks he's a coward. 10. Mission: Improve Reputation =============================== The PCs are charged with the task of improving opinions about a certain NPC. While the party might come up with action-oriented plans, such as faking an event or masquerading as the NPC and performing good deeds, this will still require some roleplaying support to ensure that reputation-increasing situations are perceived in the right way and to measure success. Enable the PCs to tap into a community grapevine so they can roleplay through this to achieve their goal. You can also fine-tune this mission to a target group whose opinions about the NPC's reputation must change. The more elite or remote this group is, the tougher the challenge. Mission examples: * The PCs' newest friend wants to be accepted into the "old boys' club", but they think he is too young and inexperienced. * After a few bad deals that "weren't his fault", a merchant wants the PCs to convince the guild he's an honest businessman. * A shy scribe wants people to think he's brave and courageous. * * * Not all players enjoy roleplaying, parleying, and acting. Some come to the table to kick some ass, roll the dice, and see some action. By adopting a mission style for some roleplaying encounters, you can create a middle ground between various playing styles to keep your players entertained and satisfied. _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* A POUND O' DICE They are BACK! New updated version of the Pound O' Dice from Chessex. Now contains one unique vampire die and one random complete set of 7 dice set along with the usual assortment of random dice. So, which weighs more: a pound of feathers or a pound of dice? http://roleplayingtips.rpgshop.com/product_info.php?products_id=15082 _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* READERS' TIPS OF THE WEEK 1. Tricky Random Player Selection From: Dwight Durmon ================================= If you (the GM) provide any type of liquid refreshments to the players, such as cans of soda, you could discreetly mark the bottom of the can or bottle and allow the player to choose his or her drink during the game. Then, at the crucial point, tell the players to look at the bottom of their drink to see if they've been poisoned (and roll a saving throw). Might create a little distrust in GM- provided refreshments, but it would encourage players to bring their own. :-) 2. NPC Parallels From: Bryan Davidson ======================= This is a tip taken from a friend of mine. When creating NPCs, I take a person that I know in real life, base the NPC on that person, and rearrange the letters in their name to create the name of the NPC. This makes NPC creation easy. It also creates a cool minigame to have the players try and figure out who the NPC is based on. It is also a nice twist to have the PCs interacting with an NPC that all the players know. 3. Employ Gross Displays Of Power From: Bryan Davidson ================================= To make any villain a bit more evil, simply have them show off their power. It is one thing to simply devise and execute an evil plan. It is quite another to do it with finesse. A villain can demonstrate his finesse for evilness by calling forth numerous huge monsters, having all the flunkies attack at once, or by causing some huge world changing event, such as removing the sun from the sky. Roleplayed well, these power displays will become favorite adventures. 4. Dealing With Loud Or Overbearing Players From: Keith L. =========================================== If you have a player who talks over everyone else (perhaps including the GM) while at the table, try whispering or passing notes to the other players while the loud player is carrying on. Make these transactions lucrative for the quiet and/or patient players by revealing little tidbits of knowledge, such as things they notice about the surroundings, so that they then have a bit of an advantage going into a current or future scene. This may even be elevated to monetary reward if the character type fits. I rewarded the rogue in my group by keeping my voice low as he searched the inside of a chest. Two other players bickering at the table made it so that only he heard me when I described the bit of treasure he found. If the other players hadn't been overbearing and bickering about something, perhaps their characters would have noticed the rogue pocketing the valuables. This happened to me by accident a few times, so I think I started incorporating the strategy into the game based on my experience. It has increased the level of attention the players give me significantly for fear they'll miss some valuable piece of information. 5. Use Flowcharts For Maps And Keep Things Free Form From: Leonard Wilson ==================================================== re: http://www.roleplayingtips.com/readissue.php?number=1 Referencing all the way back to issue #1, Mapping Dilemma: How To Stop Your Players From Yawning: Hard experience has taught me what in hindsight looks bloody obvious: the only time that players get any tangible good out of a slick, highly detailed map is when it's laid out in front of them – so all a GM's most detailed maps should be either hand-out props, or battle boards for tactical miniatures. And while tactical miniatures games can be a lot of fun, I personally find them too cumbersome to integrate into everyday roleplaying. My best games have always come from keeping things fast-paced and snappy, letting the action scenes flow and change direction on the proverbial dime in response to player decisions. Predictably, then – though I once reveled in drawing precise, convoluted, and painstakingly detailed maps – few of my maps any more consist of more than a few hastily sketched symbols. When I do take time to make a permanent map of some locale, I've thrown out all pretense of scale and precision. My players aren't going to care whether the distance between point A and point B is fifty miles or fifty-five. They're going to care how long the trip takes. They aren't going to care if a room is 30' x 40' rather than 30' x 50'. They're going to care whether it's the size of a closet or a vaulted cathedral. There is nothing inherently thrilling about numbers. Or did I blink at the point when accountants had to start hiring bodyguards to beat off all their groupies? Words, not numbers or images, are a GM's stock in trade. Words. Nouns. Adverbs. Adjectives. Numbers are just the glue that hold the game together, and images can't be produced quickly enough to ever be more to your players than eye candy. Very pretty, hardly filling. So the best map for roleplaying is one that lends itself to verbal use. For my money, that means using a flow-chart map – the kind pioneered by the word-based worlds of the old Infocom text adventure games, and used to this day by players of online text RPGs all over the internet. In a flow-chart map, one box (or circle or octagon or whatever) equals one "room" (i.e. a distinct area where action can take place, like "alcove", "study", "footpath", "clearing", "forest", "kingdom", or whatever you please). The boxes are then strung together with connecting entry/exit lines to indicate what rooms on the map are adjacent to each other, and what direction one must travel to get there. Few flowchart maps ever adhere to a tight grid formation, much less a reliable scale, so you can end up with a real tangle of room connection lines that twist and turn and wander about the map. For added detail, different icons and line-styles can be added to the entry/exit lines to show at a glance if the line represents a door, a footpath, a hallway, a gate, a bridge, etc. You can also tag the entry exit lines with numbers to indicate distance in whatever units would be meaningful (i.e. working with a map of "rooms" large enough to take hours to travel between, I slap a three on the entry/exit line between the Barony of Barstow and the Rollicking Ruins, so I'll know it takes about three hours to go from one to the other on horseback). To help keep some size consistency in my maps, I do assign a general scale to each based on the area I expect a typical room to represent. In my current campaign, for example, I use ten standard (but abstract) scales: room, building, village, manor, barony, shire, duchy, kingdom, continent, and world. A room-scale "room" may actually represent a section of hallway or a small forest clearing. A "village" scale room may actually represent a neighborhood in a city, or a good- sized pond. A kingdom scale "room" may actually represent a sea or a major mountain range instead of a kingdom. When the PCs embark on a major cross-country journey, I may choose to zoom out to my duchy-scale maps. Then when they arrive at their destination city, I can zoom in to let them explore the city one neighborhood at a time. When thugs jump them in the rough part of town, I can go to a "room-by- room" look at the alley and nearby buildings. In this way, I build a coherent, consistent world for players to explore, and in exactly as much detail as I need, without ever wallowing in irrelevant facts and figures no one will ever use or care about. _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* The Roleplaying Tips GM Encyclopedia THE ULTIMATE GMing REFERENCE TOOL Need advice fast? Inbox full? Hard Drive crashed? Missing valuable Roleplaying Tips issues? Fear not! 4 years, 200 issues, 2200+ tips, all sorted for you by Issue#, Tip Topic, Type Of Tip, and more. For information, screen shots, and ordering info click here: http://www.roleplayingtips.com/encyc/ _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* That's it for this week's issue. Have more fun at every game! Johnn Four _______________________________________________________ ******************************************************* MY PRIVACY POLICY & HOW TO SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE "Roleplaying Tips Weekly" is provided to you free of charge by RoleplayingTips.com. It is sent only to those who have specifically requested to receive it. My subscriber list has never been and never will be available to any third party. EVER! Your privacy is very important to me, therefore it receives the respect it deserves. SUBSCRIBE TO "ROLEPLAYING TIPS WEEKLY" RolePlayingTipsWeekly-On@lists.webvalence.com UNSUBSCRIBE FROM "ROLEPLAYING TIPS WEEKLY" RolePlayingTipsWeekly-Off@lists.webvalence.com Copyright (c) 2004, Johnn Four, RoleplayingTips.com. All Rights Reserved. email: johnn@roleplayingtips.com web site: http://www.roleplayingtips.com