Tuesday, June 7, 2011

My version of Chase Cards


For quite some time, as in 20+ years, I have been disappointed with how chases were handled in RPGs. When Pathfinder came out I was excited because they gave some chase rules that seemed to work and were close to ideas I had derived after using the Hot Chase rules.

Unfortunately I found the Pathfinder chase rules too linear. 10 cards, most with obstacles summed up into make one of 2 checks. There is no room for tactical thinking, no room for options, just pick which you are better at. This was the burr in my saddle with 4th ed D&D skill checks as well so I have finally sat down and tried to design my own cards to  work with the Pathfinder rules.

They aren't that different than the normal Pathfinder rules, rather I have tried to add a little bit of choice. Each card has obstacles broken into 3 categories by level - brown for street level, green for 2nd story, balconies, etc. and red for the roofs.


There will be two decks - street cards and alley cards. These cards are fairly preliminary - a few of you will see them in this week's playtest, but essentially the alley cards allow for more twists and turns as well as a better chance of ditching the opponent.

















Broadly speaking the cards will be divided into

Obstacles - a skill check or decision must be made to pass to the next card
Options - a choice is available - intersections, alleys, courtyards, etc. If pursuers are out of sight these cards may end the pursuit if the followers fail a track or random guess.
Encounters - People who may react to the chase or present the opportunity to recruit help.
Dead Ends - These block movement on one or more levels.
Corners - may have an obstacle as well, but they block line of sight. More common in alleys, they can shut down the long range snipers.

Essentially the deck then becomes a map that may either be preplotted by the GM or random. Each card will also be numbered to make pre planning easier.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Miscon follow up

While I had intended on running several miniature games this year, I ended up running just one, a Strange Aeons game. It went over well with the three players I had. Unfortunately I took no pics, but I will when I run it again at the August game day here in Missoula. I may even take it on the road for Spokane's upcoming game day as it is not too terrain heavy.

What did go over well was my Zombies Ate My Baby!  adaptation of Steve Jackson's Tribes (formerly Darwinopoly) game with eleven players. The play was relatively nonchalant until zombies broke through the defenses and ate half of the tribes children. Yep, half. Talk of annarcho syndicates and fundamentally capitalist systems went out the window as players turned to scavenging in hopes of finding better weapons which in turn led to a collapse of the food system and eventually a life on the edge.

The scavenge rules worked well, a couple of tweaks to the existing rules were made to streamline things, and the notes for next game are;
  • The scavenge deck needs to be balanced. The MRE cards were too plentiful, though they saved the tribe. Make most of them smaller in size and perishable (Food Cache?).
  • a better food counter needs to be made. Tokens slow down the play, but do keep people honest.
  • Removing the breakage die roll worked. To balance it out double 3,4,5, or 6s break an item for a proficient user ( hunter with spear, gatherer with basket) 2-6 for a non proficient user.
  • Pregnancy can be hard to remember - use a two sided token to mark the time.
  • Starvation rule - adults may pay 3 food instead of four but move from strong/average to average or weak.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Cossack Cav

As I get started on painting the next 17 I thought I'd post up the first seven of the Cossack cavalry. They've been painted for months and have even seen a couple of games, but bases have finally been done.



They are from Foundry's SYW line except for the leader, a random Das Aus Schwarz (or something) figure I had lying around. One thing about these is the size of the horses - they are tiny! Truly these fellows are riding steppe ponies. These I was easily able to mount on 3/4' washers, though I've gone to 1" with the next batch  and will probably have to retro these.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Not exactly Cleopatra Jones, but after painting the dozen cavalry and some Scots with claymores I wanted to do something different. I have plans to use her in an upcoming zombie game, but in all honesty this was like the elephant man - something to change up what I had been doing.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Reaper Elephant

I finally finished and based this guy. It's a Reaper figure that I picked up on a whim several years ago but have never really had a use for.

Someday he'll probably show up in my D&D campaign as a Rakshasa lord or something.


Of course I also picked up a cheap 1" brass elephant headed Hindu god from Import Market, so maybe I'll just start an elephant headed Indian themed fantasy army.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Spring Painting I'll celebrate with crappy photos

Tercio Sacristanes and the Maltese
Not really rooted in any historical unit, I used a throw away mention of a Spanish Tercio in a history of the Spanish Road, called the sacristanes for their dark attire, to put together one of the two musketeer wings of my Thirty Years War mercenaries.


They are all Renegade miniatures as is the leader who I added a cloak to simply so I could paint a Maltese Cross on the shoulder.


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Building a Big Man

Sharp's Practice focuses on leaders to inspire and control troops. It also goes beyond to make these leaders heroes in their own rights, worthy of their own novels.

As I finish the first ten figures in my Tercio Sacristanes inspired unit I am looking at a leader worthy of them. The black uniform has got my thinking of the Knights of St John aka the Knights Hospitaller and the Knights of Malta.

The color matches the all black I used for my Sacristanes as shown in this Caravagio painting from the early 17th century. The problem is that the uniform of the order's soldiers is mentioned in  several books as red with a white stripe. 

Oh well, I'm shooting for a Hollywood level history anyway so now to find the right figure.