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Preparation Advice Sought

Started by Eric.Brennan, December 14, 2001, 03:51:00 PM

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Eric.Brennan

Hi, long-time lurker, first time poster.

I'm starting a Vampire Revised game, with a small group of people (3) I normally don't play with.  My game-mastering experience in the last year has been limited to Fading Suns, D&D3e and Exalted, so Vampire is a change.  I've been impressed with Vampire's new books, but I've had problems rationalizing a lot of themes I want to touch on, mainly the quest for temporal survival/power vs. the disintegration into a predator.  

Long story-short, I've decided to set the game in the 1950s, in L.A., against the backdrop of studio moguls, glamour, gangsters, Communism, atomic power, and, most importantly, the kind of noir that James Ellroy is all about.  In the Ellroy-verse, the Vampires wouldn't be the only ones staving off deterioration; it would also include the cops, the criminals, and anybody who's trying to make something of themselves.  As somebody on another forum pointed out to me, Ellroy's world is the only place he can imagine people eagerly taking the plunge into Ghoul-dom.

I'm seeking advice on the way to prepare for this—if anybody can recommend techniques for this, I'll welcome them.  Part of my plan is to make the world very dark amidst all of the glitter and lights and Disneyland—I'm rereading "Hollywood Babylon," which spills all of the drug and sex secrets of the stars; I'm having my wife watch LA Confidential tonight, and hopefully other players will as well.  I just got finished reading some Easy Rawlins mysteries and have started the Black Dahlia, as far as getting myself into the mood. I'm toying with the idea of having the struggle between the Camarilla and the Anarchs play out amidst McCarthy and the Red Scare.

I'm a little uncomfortable playing out the racism of the period, but OTOH if I lose it I feel I'm losing something essential to the feel of the game—if anybody has any advice on this, I'd welcome it.

I'm also unsure, if the campaign continues long-term, about whether or not I should move the timeline ahead by years between stories—maybe have the Anarch Revolt play out in the late '60s amidst Watts, force the PCs to move to Vegas if they don't go over to the Anarchs.  Have the surface-perfect 50s twist into the 60s with Camelot, Manson, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Summer of Love, 'Nam-- LA Noir twisting into American Tabloid.  

Thanks,
--Eric

Marco

Hi Eric,

Sounds very cool: I like the setting a lot. I have two possibly relevant suggestions ... here they are.

1. Find out what the player's personal take on their probable, eventual, degeneration is--this could be done 'subtly' in game even (they meet an old friend whom they admired for his courage and virtue--but he has now become a blood drinking predator--against everything he stood for: how do they react?)

My idea would be to a) present the theme in some concrete manner early on (although not necessarily in a way that forces them to act on it) and then b) run scenarios that head in that direction as you see fit.

Alternatively you could just ask them to write three sentences about degeneration on their character sheets (give them a little more to go on--say ask them to write one sentence for their character about 'corruption', 'addiction,' etc ... the results could be used to get everyone in the right frame of mind.

2.If you want to try a gimmick, you can secretly pre-arrange with a player to have their character undergo tragic degeneration (possibly coming back later as a villain). In a game I ran long ago (it was a post-plague super-hero universe where the supers where hunted and killed by the governement) I had a player take a pre-made character into the first session ... and then killed the character off! (he had his real character ready to go after a dramatic death scene and pretending to be pissed off). It was quite a shock to the other players and established tone right away. I'm not saying it was the greatest idea ever--but it did set tone and mood right away.

Perhaps a player could be give a pre-vampire drug addict--someone already on a serious downward spiral ... and some dramatic notes to take the plunge as soon as possible. If its done properly dramatically it could be a lot of fun for everyone (especially the audience). The idea would be to do this quickly so that the player could get to their actual character--but the one time I tried it, it worked :smile:

-Marco
---------------------------------------------
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Just Released: JAGS Wonderland

Mike Holmes

Hi Eric,

Welcome. How long a lurker? If we started slinging around jargon, would you be comfortable with that? Or would you prefer we stick with generic phraseology?

Mike
Member of Indie Netgaming
-Get your indie game fix online.

erithromycin

It does sound very cool. One thing that might be nice though, is to show the rewards of inhumanity. One thing consistent about a lot of noir is that the really big figures are corrupt, evil, even, and nothing can touch them. Look at the mob, the government. Bad deeds are all around, and temptation is everywhere. (Think of the D*rk S*d*) THere are ways to reflect this, but if you're interested in this sort of concept what I'm going to suggest is that you come up with an idea and bring it back. I've seen it done, and done it, in a few ways now, but I'm intrigued to see how someone else would handle it.

That's if'n you wanted to.

One thing though. If you are going to be running WoD history [I'll avoid using the word metaplot], I strongly suggest that you either a) change enough that your players don't try to use it against you [the horror! the horror!] or b) keep an eagle eye peeled for abuse of knowledge. Unless, of course, either of these things appeals to you. It's your game, after all.

McCarthyism and vampires though. That would be neat.
my name is drew

"I wouldn't be satisfied with a roleplaying  session if I wasn't turned into a turkey or something" - A

Eric.Brennan

I'll respond to everything at once while I figure out the forums...

Marco wrote:
Alternatively you could just ask them to write three sentences about degeneration on their character sheets (give them a little more to go on--say ask them to write one sentence for their character about 'corruption', 'addiction,' etc ... the results could be used to get everyone in the right frame of mind.
--------------------------

I like this idea--I'm going to have them fill out a sheet before hand, and doing an exercise like this on it will guarantee that I know what /they/ think of disintegration.

                     
Mike Holmes wrote:

Welcome. How long a lurker? If we started slinging around jargon, would you be comfortable with that? Or would you prefer we stick with generic phraseology?
-------------------

I've surfed the forums about weekly for the last four months.  The Actual Play section has attracted most of my attention.  I'd love to have everything genericized and then linked with the local jargon, so I can learn what's what.  


erithromycin wrote:
It does sound very cool. One thing that might be nice though, is to show the rewards of inhumanity. One thing consistent about a lot of noir is that the really big figures are corrupt, evil, even, and nothing can touch them. Look at the mob, the government. Bad deeds are all around, and temptation is everywhere. (Think of the D*rk S*d*) THere are ways to reflect this, but if you're interested in this sort of concept what I'm going to suggest is that you come up with an idea and bring it back. I've seen it done, and done it, in a few ways now, but I'm intrigued to see how someone else would handle it.
--------------------------

I was thinking already about something along those lines.  My plan is to have a vampire-hunter in somebody's background--essentially someone who's a victim of one of the PCs.  I want him to be competent, obsessive--the kind of guy a PC would play.  Somebody the PCs almost root for.  

And then I want him to fail.  Not just fail, but fail miserably.  I don't want him to even get close to the PCs.  I want the PC's patrons (the whole L.A. machine that exists in the '50s that these Vampires are hidden within) to take care of him.  The hunter gets rousted by cops, he loses his job, he starts drinking, he loses his home, he gets framed for a crime.  If he goes to a PC's home he gets arrested for trespassing.  I want the Machine, as I've started referring to the crime-Hollywood-Government-Kindred connection, to shut this guy down until he's a pathetic, harmless wretch.  I want the PCs to see what they've done to him by allowing the Machine to protect them.  Heck, if this guy is to be redeemed, I want the PCs to do it in a grand act of self-destruction.  

I figure the real threat to the PCs won't be this hero, but maybe cops on the Special Unit who've been under the Prince's thumb.  I want to emphasize that in this kind of world, there's no real threat from good, just from your "allies."  


He also wrote:
One thing though. If you are going to be running WoD history [I'll avoid using the word metaplot], I strongly suggest that you either a) change enough that your players don't try to use it against you [the horror! the horror!] or b) keep an eagle eye peeled for abuse of knowledge. Unless, of course, either of these things appeals to you. It's your game, after all.
-----------------------------------
The other "groups," such as Lupines, Wraiths and Mages have all been changed to make the game more interesting and more of a surprise--my Werewolves are literal Skinwalkers who don the skin of a beast they've killed, while my mages are essentially the thaumaturgists and obsessives out of Unknown Armies, or insane cultists out of CoC.

Thanks for all of the comments!
--Eric

Paul Czege

Hey Eric,

I'd love to have everything genericized and then linked with the local jargon...

I'm going to have to run it past the Local Jargon Committee for a vote. It's not currently allowed. I think the rationale is that the resulting lucidity tends to undermine future jargon production, and we've really been struggling to meet our quotas. I'll let you know how it goes.

Paul
My Life with Master knows codependence.
And if you're doing anything with your Acts of Evil ashcan license, of course I'm curious and would love to hear about your plans

Mike Holmes

Quote
I've surfed the forums about weekly for the last four months.  The Actual Play section has attracted most of my attention.  I'd love to have everything genericized and then linked with the local jargon, so I can learn what's what.  

Oh, sure, have your cake and eat it too. :wink:

OK, the main question is, of course, what mode do you and your players prefer to play in. This refers to GNS and the three modes of play entailed therein. There is quite a bit of discussion as to what the three modes are exzctly, but they are sorta obvious when looked at from abroad.

Essentially it involves how players make decisions in play. Usually in regard to their characters.

Gamism is making decisions based on which will help their characters overcome the obstacles posed by the game.

Simulationism is making decisions based on which seems to be the most "realistic" given the game world, setting, etc. Note that realistic in a Kung Fu action film might mean doing tripple backflips over your foe. Very relative. True "realism" is a subset of Simulationism.

Narrativism is making decisions based on which is most likely to create good plot, and story overall.

I use a stupid little example all the time. Take a player who's character is a knight and deciding at the start of a game what weapon he will wield. The player who prefers Gamism will likely find the weapon that does the most damage, or otherwise makes their character most effective. The player who prefers Simulationism will consider what knights of the realm use regularly and use that because it makes game-world sense that he would. The player who prefers Narrativism will most likely select a weapon that has some significance like that of his father as that makes for good story.

Note that in all three cases the sword chosen might be essentially the same. This will be true occasionally and at other times impossible, but the question is why the player made the decision. To that extent certain system designs and campaign designs (what we're trying to help you with here) will be better suited to certain styles of play.

So, it's my opinion, and that of others here that if you can determine which of these routs you'd like to focus on(given your likes and those of your players) the better we can help. The reason for this is that it is also believed by many that you can't do all three things at once, most specifically that a design cannot cater well to all three.

For example, the first thing that we'd tell you is that you are using a fairly Simulationist system to run your game. If that corresponds to your goal, then great. If not, then there's a lot of work to be done there.

Make any sense? There are a number of good essays that are linked to around here that can explain a lot more of this theory in detail.

Mike
Member of Indie Netgaming
-Get your indie game fix online.

Ranko

Hi, here are some prep techniques I used, or wanted to use, for my vampire games. Mind you I might be discovering hot water here.

Geneology
(I think that this is simmiler to Ron's character map, but as I still have no idea how to pay the guy can't claim it is. My version is developed from geneology vulgaris and a thing known as a social atom)
Take a sheet of paper per clan. Decide how powerfull you want the clan to be and assign a higher generation for the stronger clan (not a must, I just found it more to my liking to sort them like this, it's a meta-gm thing I had). Now create a family tree starting with that person. For each vampire write generation (helps because you don't have to count down time, after time, after time...) year of embrace and of final death (if applicable); odd notes (embrace left him catatonic, was sold/given as tribute to an older vampire to feed upon, deserted to Sabbat/Camarilla/Other, nobody knows he even exists). Add 'random' clan members (I like having small families of vampires populate my towns with odd traveller who setteled).

You should also have an idea who knows who, who hangs with who, etc. Write cliques down.

By this time you will want to have the player character and can mesh them in the society. Give them names of people they know, have heard of, reputations etc.

Da town is a simple extrapolation of the previously created data (I got great ideas doing geneology). So just jolt down locations of interest and add the how and why to them. A general description for the Rack (also for LA you might wish to add a few Racks, with locals, vamps who tend to visit and those that get assaulted upon entery).

Add mortals and ghouls as seasoning on a salad – as you see fit, and only if needed.

Wear a suite and hat to the sessions, before a fight breaks out get up, take your jacket of and roll up your sleaves.

You might also try starting the game with characters as mortals drawn slowly into Kindred society and suck them one by one (thus choosing the clan and generation for them). This one works great if you have a reason for several embraces in a short time span (this or that inter-Kindred war, Sabbat attack...).

Make them create young characters.

Read the review of Vampire Revised onhttp://www.tasteslikephoenix.com"> Tastes Like Phoenix.

And as long as I am going on here is my house rule on disciplines – substitute the official rolling method for Atribute + Discipline level.

erithromycin

I like 'The Machine' a lot. Thing is, it's perhaps a mite unsubtle. Don't destroy the hunter. Don't, in fact, have a hunter. Instead, encourage the PCs to talk to their sires. Something I've done in my most recent game was to have a stock of older characters who were clan heads, who embraced characters who were still human. See who these people are, and who'd want them. Encourage them to sort out their problems by asking 'daddy'. Have some of them cut free from their surroundings link by link. Enmesh some in trouble and have their sire embrace them out. Play the game with them. Toy with them. Then?

Then let them start playing the game themselves...

Want revenge? Here's a guy we know. What does he do? Nothing. What? What does he know? What we tell him. What do we tell him? That X is a member of his communist cell. What'll that do? Nothing. So why do it? Because Y here's going to be arrested for murder tomorrow. Why? Because mommy feels like having some fun. Now run along dear.

Corrupt them enough for them to get a taste. THen watch.

And wear a suit. Track down a hat as well. Don't get to carried away though. A mate of mine pistolwhipped someone.
my name is drew

"I wouldn't be satisfied with a roleplaying  session if I wasn't turned into a turkey or something" - A

Ron Edwards

Hello, and welcome, Eric!

I agree with Ranko, most especially because he is bringing in personalities and relationships as the central "hook" for players' interest. There are some pretty high-payoff threads about that here and there on the Forge.

Best,
Ron

Eric.Brennan

Once again, responding to several replies at once:

Geneology
<>
By this time you will want to have the player character and can mesh them in the society. Give them names of people they know, have heard of, reputations etc.
_____________________________________________
Hmm, I'll try that.  For the longest time I've just written down names, notes, and drawn out flowcharts of connections, but this sounds interesting.

I'm going to wait to do it until after the PCs are finished, since I'm hoping that when they create Mentors, Allies, and the like they flesh a lot of that out for me.  



You might also try starting the game with characters as mortals drawn slowly into Kindred society and suck them one by one (thus choosing the clan and generation for them). This one works great if you have a reason for several embraces in a short time span (this or that inter-Kindred war, Sabbat attack...).
------------------------------
Unfortunately, the first story arc is going to be 3 nights worth of play, to make sure we're all in agreement the game should go on--it's a different group than we normally hang with and all of the people involved have other groups they usually play with.  I also don't want to plan a long campaign and have it cut short.  I once had a buddy who planned out 7 seasons of 22 adventure Star Trek games, and when I'd suggest something cool, he'd say--"I think I'll work that into season 5."  Needless to say, we never finished Season 1, so I was disappointed.


Make them create young characters.

Read the review of Vampire Revised on Tastes Like Phoenix.
-----------------------
Done and done.

And as long as I am going on here is my house rule on disciplines – substitute the official rolling method for Atribute + Discipline level.
--------------------------
Hmm, I might try that.  



I like 'The Machine' a lot. Thing is, it's perhaps a mite unsubtle. Don't destroy the hunter. Don't, in fact, have a hunter. Instead, encourage the PCs to talk to their sires. Something I've done in my most recent game was to have a stock of older characters who were clan heads, who embraced characters who were still human. See who these people are, and who'd want them. Encourage them to sort out their problems by asking 'daddy'. Have some of them cut free from their surroundings link by link. Enmesh some in trouble and have their sire embrace them out. Play the game with them. Toy with them. Then?
-----------------------------
That's a good idea, but outside of the Prince and whatever Sires the PCs want to buy as Mentors or write into their background, my vision of LA in the '50s is young Vampires.  LA is on the edge of the world--once you jump from there you head to Asia.  And until thirty years earlier, LA was just basically a small Western city...it's only the efforts of the Movie-Studio barons and such that really turns the city into this place of glamour and kine that attracts the Kindred, and then WWII hits and industry becomes a big deal and drags people from the South and elsewhere.  I figure that the great migration to LA for war industries is what brings a lot of the Kindred there.  

The idea is that the older Kindred don't have the speed or courage to just leap into a new affair like LA and Hollywood--they're secure in their own dens in the East and South.  Once LA becomes a real money-maker they'll show up, but until then they'll send Childer.

Or does that fail a reality check?


And wear a suit. Track down a hat as well. Don't get to carried away though. A mate of mine pistolwhipped someone.
---------------------------------
Whoa...

--Eric


Ben Morgan

QuoteI'm a little uncomfortable playing out the racism of the period, but OTOH if I lose it I feel I'm losing something essential to the feel of the game—if anybody has any advice on this, I'd welcome it.
For a game set in LA, you might not have to worry about this too much.

My father grew up in Boron, CA (just outside of Bakersfield), and when he was younger, went on a road trip with some friends to New Orleans. They were shocked to discover the concept of segregation (Someone yelled at them when one of them used "the wrong drinking fountain"), about which, apparently, California was relatively lax.

Of course, my father and his friends might have just been realy sheltered. Just a thought.

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[ This Message was edited by: Amazing Kreskin on 2001-12-16 21:30 ]
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Tor Erickson


QuoteI'm a little uncomfortable playing out the racism of the period, but OTOH if I lose it I feel I'm losing something essential to the feel of the game—if anybody has any advice on this, I'd welcome it.

Hi,

In the Sorcerer game that we just finished, race ended up playing a major role.  It was set in 1953 in Louisiana and two of the characters were from rich, white families, while the other was from a poor, black one.

The theme wasn't one that I directly introduced (though the setting certainly hinted at it), but rather one of the players chose to play a bi-racial character, and thus, via his backstory and Kicker really introduced a lot of racial issues into the game (which ended up adding a lot to the story).

But I think without the player's input I doubt  I know enough or have enough to say about race in the 1950s to have introduced the theme on my own.    In this case the game probably would have centered around the corruption and deceit in the rich, white families and race would have been a peripheral issue.

On the other hand, I think some would argue that you do a disservice to history by totally ignoring racial politics in a time like the 50s.   I suppose you have to decide for yourself.  I guess I'm of the opinion that it might be better to skirt the issue rather than maul it (I always gag at Raymond Chandler's approach to race  in California and find myself fervently wishing he had just left the Mexicans out of the stories rather than treat them as he did).

-Tor