Posts

Adventures in the Shadowdark: The Keep on the Borderlands

 For the last several months, I've had the pleasure of leading a group of players through Adventure Module B2: The Keep on the Borderlands, using Shadowdark RPG, and with some grimdark editing ala Professor Dungeon Master. I haven't been writing up campaign diaries for it, because I am lazy.  But I SHOULD do writeups for it, because my group is awesome and they're really getting into it now.  So here's a quick rundown of where we've come from so far: After having one of their companions accused of Witchcraft and Heresy (and burned at the stake for her trouble) in their introductory adventure, the party was charged by the Witch Hunter Sergeant Viktor Hess with transporting a sealed crate bearing the seal of the Emperor Himself to a location known as Winterhaven Keep, a small but critical component of the borderlands defense situated on the edge of the Chaos Wastes to the Northeast of the Barony of Backmarsh.  Along the way, they met up with some new companions (to re

Beneath the Abbey of Iron: Floor B2

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  B2 . The Entrance to the Ossuary So when we left off in the design of this new dungeon, I had detailed the first level, which was entirely newly added with no pre-existing info in my notes about the original work.   Today, we’re gonna start the actual work of redesigning (and expanding) the bits that I’ve already worked on. I think my overarching lesson (or at least the thing that I’m ruminating the most on) during this post is gonna be scope and theme.   When it comes to brainstorming, I usually have my best ideas either in the shower or while walking my dog.   This case is no different – while walking my dog, I decided that I want this adventure to have 5 levels of dungeon.   Why 5?   Well, because.    It’s an utterly arbitrary number.   But it gives me a discreet goal to work towards, and has a great side effect – I can theme each dungeon floor in a way that works for me and, ideally, reinforces the OVERALL theme of the entire adventure. That raises the question: what IS the

Play it your way: "Homebrew" rules for Shadowdark RPG

 I'm a member of several gaming communities online, most notably the  Shadowdark RPG Official Group  on Facebook.  And it seems like every few weeks (or days) a post pops up asking about homebrew rules that different GMs use at their tables.  Now, I'm particularly fond of mine, so I figured what the hell, I'll throw together a blog post talking about what my rules are and why I made the changes that I did. #1: Zoned Combat This one really isn't a house rule, but rather it's the way that I interpret the rules and implement them.  Shadowdark already simplifies distances into Close, Near, and Far, which establishes zones quite easily.  I apply this at the table by using Professor Dungeon Master's Ultimate Dungeon Terrain , rather than using a dry erase map or dungeon tiles. To really fully grok how UDT works, I recommend watching the linked video (and honestly, I just recommend that channel in general, he's GREAT), but here's a quick and dirty version: UDT

Beneath the Abbey of Iron: Designing my Dungeon

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  I've been in a bit of a creative rut lately. My home game is running through the Keep on the Borderlands, using Shadowdark RPG.  I'm adding to it based on some of my favorite supplemental content from the web, but it's not quite scratching my itch to make something cool and dark and fucked up. So, I opened up my various notebooks and found this: This was a small dungeon that I cribbed together over the course of a few hours to add some context to a Curse of Strahd game I was running a year or two ago.  The crux of it all was that in an ossuary behind a waterfall, the party found thousands of skulls and murals telling the bloody history of Barovia. I LOVED this dungeon.  It was probably my second favorite thing that came out of my reworking of Strahd (my favorite being the way that I ran the church encounter in the village of Barovia, but that's work for another day).   Anywho, I decided to take the basis of this dungeon and expand on it, Jacquays the map,

Shadowdark RPG Character Sheets

 Hi all! Like many of you, I've been insanely excited about the success of the Shadowdark Kickstarter, and I can't wait to get my grimy little hands on the printed products that I backed.  In the meantime, I've been running a campaign using the QuickStart rules, and transitioning to the full rules now that they're out. My personal preference is to use smaller character sheets whenever possible, so I took the assets that The Arcane Library gave us for the Shadowdark character sheets and rearranged them to create a few different options: One of the sheets, is formatted to print two sheets to a page, just to eliminate some empty space.  It also contains some background art from the phenomenal illustrator  Mac Teg  who I've used before for my projects and who I can't speak highly enough about. The next sheet is a PocketMod  character sheet (a small booklet created from a single sheet of printer paper), oriented to create pockets in the booklet for storing notes, han