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Little Fear in action

Started by GreatWolf, July 21, 2001, 10:10:00 AM

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GreatWolf

Last night I actually got to do some gaming!  Woo-hoo!  And it wasn't playtesting anything of my own.  Instead, I ran Little Fears for part of my group (the rest were out of town).

First, I need to state up front that I run horror differently than I would run other forms of RPGs.  I have really hooked into the discussion of Directorial power and giving freedom to the players, etc. etc. and I really like it but....

When people want me to run horror for them, it's because they want one thing.

They want me to scare them.  Not their characters, mind you.  The players.  (Hmm.  This would seem to tie into the growing consensus that players need to be hooked, not just characters.  But I disgress.)

When they come shuffling in, bleating like sheep to the slaughter, they are not expecting equal power.  They want to be entertained.  They want me to play the creepy music and mess with their minds.  (Read Tynes' article http://www.johntynes.com/rl_mofo.html">here for more details on what I mean.  :-] )Therefore I tend to reserve to myself much more power than I am opting to do these days.  I did throw open the option of the exercise of low-level Directorial power but the players did not make much use of it (if any) that I can recall.

I also did not pull out the stops like I could have done.  I fully recognize that Little Fears at its most serious is about issues like child abuse and the violation of Innocence.  However, to be perfectly blunt, my wife had a lot of that in her past, and roleplaying that kind of activity seemed neither enjoyable nor profitable.  Instead, to use the parlance of the game, we ran a Scary Story.  In a sense, the storyline would not have been out of place in Call of Cthulhu.  A group of campers wakes up in the woods to discover that their guide is dead and that the landscape is horribly, horribly changed.  Of course, in Little Fears, the "guide" is the father of one of the PCs and the campers are all 2nd graders.

And therein lies the joy of playing the game.  In Call of Cthulhu, the investigators spend much emotional energy on trying to rationalize the connection between the sane world that they know and the harsh irrational realities that they discover.  In Little Fears it is different.  Certainly the children are brought face to face with harsh realities, but the difference is that these discoveries are not shocking (in a sense).  Of course there are monsters throughout the world.  Everybody knows that.  The trick is to avoid being caught by them.  :smile:

One of the behaviors that I began to see what that my players (in character) would begin to try to justify what they were seeing.  Rather than the head-on collision between worldviews evident in CoC, the kids were allowing their worldview to morph to fit what they were seeing.

In addition, the inclusion of Belief Magic is just incredible.  In fact, it is fast becoming my favorite part of Little Fears.  For those who have not yet seen the book, the basic idea is that childish beliefs and imaginations can sometimes come true.  This is based on the Innocence of the character and fades as the child grows up and begins to realize that "the world doesn't work that way".  In the meantime, that magic walking stick really is a magic walking stick, and it really is possible for four children to hide from the monsters behind a single baseball cap ("because my Uncle Joe gave it to me").  The overall effect was fascinating.  For some reason, Belief Magic has had this effect (both in my sessions and the Origins demoes) of cutting loose the imaginations of the players.

All in all, it was an enjoyable session.  The players were scared (but not too scared) and they want to come back for more.  Can't be better than that.

Seth Ben-Ezra
Dark Omen Games
producing Legends of Alyria, Dirty Secrets, A Flower for Mara
coming soon: Showdown

joshua neff

Seth--

I haven't seen the game yet. How do the mechanics work? What were they like in play? How does Belief magic actually work (system-wise)? It sounds really cool.
--josh

"You can't ignore a rain of toads!"--Mike Holmes

GreatWolf

The system is quite simple.  As I mentioned, it's more of a "fade into the background" system, which is good for horror.

Characters are defined by five stats:  Muscle, Smarts, Hands, Feet, and Spirit.  These are on a scale of 1-5.  In addition, characters have three Virtues:  Soul, Fear, and Innocence.  These are rated on a scale of 0-10.  Soul is essentially the "hit points" of the Soul (although I know that Jason plans to develop this further in supplements).  Fear is the "sanity" meter of LF.  As your character gains Fear, he becomes unhinged.  Innocence is really the central Virtue of the game.  Its starting value is based on your age (although this can be adjusted during chargen).  You lose Innocence due to exposure to horrific situations (that violate Innocence) and by the constant failure of Belief Magic ("maybe this doesn't really work") and also every time you become a year older ("Sure, I used to believe in that stuff.  But then I grew up.")  In addition, characters have descriptors called Qualities (both positive and negative) that affect rolls.

A non-opposed roll (called a Quiz) is rolled on a single d6.  If the roll is less than or equal to the appropriate stat, it succeeds.  If a given Quality applies, an extra d6 is rolled.  If it is a positive quality, the better of the two rolls is used.  If it is negative, the worse of the two rolls is used.

An opposed roll (called a Test) is rolled against your opponent's stat.  In this case, higher is better.  Qualities still apply.

Belief magic is based on Innocence.  Basically divide Innocence by two (to get a number between 1-5) and roll a Quiz.  Every failure of Belief Magic results in (essentially) a loss of 1/10 of a point of Innocence.  Therefore, the Innocent are more able to use Belief Magic, but at the same time they are more likely to be the target of the monsters, since they seek Innocence.

Some rules are given for empowering protectors (teddy bears, etc.) with Belief Magic, but it is basically free-form, with the caveat that Belief Magic needs to have a childish referent.  It's not the magick of Mage but a child's innocent belief.

Of course, Belief Magic has a negative side as well.  The example given in the book is "Step on a crack, break your mother's back."  The GM is fully allowed to force Belief Magic rolls for characters doing such things to see if their belief in them has negative side effects.

Hmm.  That just about covers it.  Um...http://www.wizards-attic.com/Key20Publishing.html">buy this game right now?  :smile:  (Obligatory plug.)

Seth Ben-Ezra
Dark Omen Games
producing Legends of Alyria, Dirty Secrets, A Flower for Mara
coming soon: Showdown

Knight

How well would the rules adapt to being used for a South Park RPG?

GreatWolf

Quote
On 2001-07-22 19:04, Knight wrote:
How well would the rules adapt to being used for a South Park RPG?

I don't know.  Would you want to profane Little Fears like that?  :razz:

Seriously, I would imagine that, sans the Virtues, it would work fine for any kid-based game.

Seth Ben-Ezra
Dark Omen Games
producing Legends of Alyria, Dirty Secrets, A Flower for Mara
coming soon: Showdown

Knight

It's a universal question that should be asked about any RPG that focuses on children as PCs.  e.g.:

Cybergeneration - Can it handle South Park? No. Is it a good game? No.

Changeling - Can it handle South Park? No. Is it a good game. Hell no.

Coincidence? I think not.

[ This Message was edited by: Knight on 2001-08-02 17:25 ]

Laura Bishop

Knight Said:

It's a universal question that should be asked about any RPG that focuses on children as PCs. e.g.:

Cybergeneration - Can it handle South Park? No. Is it a good game? No.

Changeling - Can it handle South Park? No. Is it a good game. Hell no.

Coincidence? I think not.
---

Wait, I'm sort of confused.  Because Changeling and CyberGeneration can't "handle" South Park - they're bad games? o.O  Or were you being facetious here.

Personally, I'd /never/ want to roleplay South Park.  I can only handle so many Poo/Wanker/Kenny's Dead! jokes in one sitting, and if anyone RPs like we do, this can stretch into days.  I might have to commit homicide before the session was through. ; )

Part of LFs beauty is taking the deceptively simple genre "horror" and making it even more terrifying: laying it all out in front of the eyes of children.  'Monsters' scare adults, but they can rationalize at higher leaves.  True, trying to rationalize the tentacled Elder God drooling in your closet is going to be a challenge, but hey - where's the fun if it's simple. ; )

Children on the other hand, and especially young children, accept life at face value; they are naive realists.  Life is this way because that's the way I see it.  That monster came out from under my bed, so monsters must live under beds.  The world is filled with such "logic" like this for children.

But, to pull this back on topic: while scary in conception, I don't know if I could classify South Park as horror.  Trying to say LF, Changeling or CyberGeneration are bad games because they don't conform to an animated medium meant for the lowest of bathroom humor doesn't seem to make sense to me. : )

Oh, and - uh - hi.  This is my first post. : }

Ron Edwards

Hi Laura,

Welcome to the Forge!

I'm not sure that Knight's post was serious enough to dignify with debate, but he DID post it, so here goes.

First of all, I agree with you that South Park, horror, and Little Fears don't really play well together in the same sentence. I'm not sure where Knight is coming from in that regard. He may be attempting a joke, or I give the benefit of the doubt in that direction, anyway.

Second, though, I think you're reversing his causality. The games he mentions, if I'm reading him right, are not bad BECAUSE they cannot do South Park, but bad in their own ways for other reasons, and HAPPEN not to be able to do South Park. Correlation, not causation.

(And calling games "good" and "bad" without stated criteria isn't very Forge-like anyway. Causes trouble, doesn't lead to any insights, etc etc.)

I chimed in here because I sense the possibility of fandom about non-RPG stuff intruding its li'l head, and the last thing we need is a parade of posts to clarify exactly where each of us stands regarding South Park. It's clear that Little Fears is a different thing, and any aspects of its play are the topic at hand.

Best,
Ron

Knight

It's not entirely facetious.  An odd question, perhaps, but I think it could be taken at face value.  

South Park, whilst often nonsensical at best, occasionally manages to be funny and insightful about childhood. It is hit and miss, and I can understand why people don't look past that.

I was using it as a shorthand for a certain philosophy about childhood. And, yes, I was suggesting correlation rather than causation.

>>
And calling games "good" and "bad" without stated criteria isn't very Forge-like anyway.
>>

The criteria on which Cybergeneration and Changeling failed was: "does not make me want to curl up into a little ball and cry".





trelliz

Quote
On 2001-08-09 19:40, Knight wrote:
It's not entirely facetious.  An odd question, perhaps, but I think it could be taken at face value.  

South Park, whilst often nonsensical at best, occasionally manages to be funny and insightful about childhood. It is hit and miss, and I can understand why people don't look past that.

I was using it as a shorthand for a certain philosophy about childhood. And, yes, I was suggesting correlation rather than causation.

>>
And calling games "good" and "bad" without stated criteria isn't very Forge-like anyway.
>>

The criteria on which Cybergeneration and Changeling failed was: "does not make me want to curl up into a little ball and cry".





"This machine cannot turn lead into gold, but it can do the next best thing; it can turn gold into cottage cheese."

trelliz

I have never heard of/played Cybergeneration or Changeling, but a South Park rpg would be laughably poor anyway, so why bother? Now a Buffy RPG (LF monsters, but slightly more effective anti-death protection), THAT would be good. picture the scene....

PLAYER 1: "Right, i'm going to kick the vamp in the nuts, jump on the table, and stake him with Mr Pointy"

GM: "Take an agility test with a -1 as this vamp is trying to kill you.

... it would be SO good.
"This machine cannot turn lead into gold, but it can do the next best thing; it can turn gold into cottage cheese."

Balbinus

I thought Trelliz actually had an interesting point here.  What I thought he was saying with the South Park comment (and I'm happy for him to correct me) was that Little Fears can simulate ordinary children behaving as children do.  Cybergeneration and Changeling in his view (I have not read either game) cannot.

If he is correct, I think it is an important point. Little fears works IMO in part because it starts with a credible child, a believable human being.  Then weird stuff happens.  If Cybergeneration and Changeling don't do that, they start with something other than a real child, in a sense they are failures.  Why?  Because certainly with Cybergeneration (I had no idea people played children in Changeling) you are supposed to roleplay a child, one with special abilities but still a child.  If a Cybergeneration character cannot be envisaged as behaving in a childlike way, if they are superpowered action types for example, then this design objective has failed.

Little Fears characters are children.  This is in part why it is a "good" game (in the sense that it fulfils its design objectives).  A game in which the characters are supposed to be children but where ordinary childlike behaviour is impossible to acheive has not achieved this same objective.

Does that make sense?  Trelliz, I would be grateful if you could say what it is about Cybergeneration and Changeling which makes playing ordinary children unworkable.
AKA max

Balbinus

Oops, sorry.  It is Knight who made the quotes in question, Trelliz was replying.  Sorry for the mistake.
AKA max

Epoch

To the extent that Changeling: The Dreaming was intended to be a game about playing children (and there is that element of it, but it's not the only element), I think it was a dismal failure.  And I say that as a confirmed fan of the game.

The problems, as I saw them, were that the authors had a very narrow and very idealized (in the sense of "of or pertaining to their ideals," not the sense of "unrealistically good") view of what imagination and innocence were.  Among other things, this meant that games which focussed on "Glamour vs. Banality," to use the jargon of the game, were very difficult to make interesting and exciting, and very strictly constrained the roles that the PC's could take.

Now, as a "hidden society" game, I think Changeling really excels.  It offers, in many ways, the most robust and interesting secret society of supernatural monsters in the WoD, and the one that's second only to Wraith in terms of being believably and thematically-appropriately hidden from the eyes of normal humans.

Ron Edwards

Hello all,

As this is the Actual Play column, I'd appreciate it if someone who has PLAYED Little Fears can answer my question.

It's this: is playing a child PC especially notable in terms of identification?

Please note that I have not mentioned and am not interested in hearing about "immersion." I am talking about the sense of caring - very quickly, without reflection - about what happens to the character. This may be expressed as protectiveness toward the PC, or as commitment to playing him or her, or as strong emotional reactions during play, or as any number of other things.

I ask because I made up a couple of LF characters (we're planning on running it fairly soon) and found it emotionally jarring. I didn't want anything to happen to them. It was very different from making up a Call of Cthulhu character; when I do that, I gleefully anticipate the PC's dismemberment, psychological unravelling, and general doom.

Has anyone observed or felt this phenomenon regarding Little Fears? How did it impact play, if it did? Examples would be greatly appreciated.

Best,
Ron