ERA Epic Storytelling Game
ERA Epic Storytelling Game
ERA Epic Storytelling Game
Nicholas Cloister (using Monsters by Email) Playtested by: Jamie Angus, Becky Annison, Andrew Aitken, David Avery, Peter Frain, Lara Gow, Martin Lloyd, Dave Maple, Nick Reynolds ,Nigel Robertson, Gordon Skelly, David Snoddy, Barry Stevens, Steve Wallace, Andrew Watson An Omnihedron Games Production www.omnihedron.co.uk @omnihedron on Twitter Join the Omnihedron Games community on Google+ and Facebook ERA: Epic Storytelling Game Copyright 2013 Omnihedron Games Creature concepts and illustrations: www.MonstersByEmail.com
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CONTENTS
5. 7.
16. Challenge Level Table 17. Animals, Packs and Inanimate Adversaries 19. Step One: Determine elements and intent 19. Step Two: Determine your dice pool 20. Step Three: Match your dice and scores 21. Step Four: The effect of the conflict 21. Wounds 22. Healing
25. Partners - A second player 25. Gaining a Companion 25. Former storyteller characters 25. Companions or Partners in challenges
SETTING PACK: THE DRAGON TOOTH MOUNTAINS 29. 31. 34. 38. 42. 47. DRAGON TOOTH MOUNTAINS EXAMPLE LEGENDS THE WHITE BEAR TRIBE THE HORDE OF THE CRONE QUEEN DENIZENS OF THE MOUNTAINS ADVENTURE SEEDS
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INTRODUCTION
WHAT IS ERA?
ERA is designed to deliver classic epic heroic tale where a hero battles against formidable foes and against terrible odds. As a game where one player plays with one Storyteller, think about the tales of Hercules, Perseus, Judge Dredd, Highlander, Conan and countless others. Where two players play with one Storyteller, think of Han Solo and Chewbacca, Elric and Moonglum, Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, Dr Who and [insert companion of your choice], Batman and Robin - the list goes on and on This version of the game focuses on legendary heroes of a mountainous fantasy wilderness with a distinctly Nordic feel, but your game could take place anywhere or anywhen. As long as your setting has heroes, villains and classic themes to exploit, ERA can tell your stories.
ERA uses a traditional set-up with players, who take on the roles of the Legends within the game, and a Storyteller, who helps to guide the story, interpret the rules and present conflict to the players Legends. However, at times, the direction of the story is directed by the players themselves, balancing out some of this responsibility to create a shared gaming and storytelling experience.
It is a game specifically designed to be played with two or three people one hero and a storyteller, or two players and a storyteller.
You can expect the creation of your Legends to take ten to fifteen minutes - including time to revel in how awesome your Legend is! Playing through a full seven scene cycle of the game should take around an hour.
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ELEMENTS
There are five Elements with which you forge your Legend. They represent the staples of iconic heroic stories Fire Fire represents the strength and fury of the Legend. Mighty warriors and ferocious barbarians will have a high Fire. Weak-willed mages and lithe thieves will have low Fire. Craft Craft represents magic and the unknown forces that shape the world. Strong-minded mages and pious shaman will have a high Craft. Ignorant gladiators and corrupt charlatans will have a low Craft. Song Song represents the presence and charisma of your Legend. A silver-tongued thief and a charming temptress will have a high Song. A repugnant warrior and a vile witch will have a low Song. Granite Granite represents the wisdom and knowledge of the Legend. A learned Lorespeaker and a wizened crone will have a high Granite. A feckless thug or a ill-mannered sailor will have a low Granite. Ice Ice represents the speed and the agility of your Legend. A nimble archer and a shadowy rogue will have a high Ice. A slow moving Juggernaut and a crippled Seer will have a low Ice. Each Element is allocated a dice value either d4, d6, d8, d10 or no dice (0). Each dice value can only be allocated once. Each Element should also be given a short description, to show what particularly quality of the element the character exemplifies
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Example: We decide to create a new Legend called Ragnar, a rugged abrasive warrior who travels the frozen plains and hunts down the monsters that prey upon the weak. A might warrior needs a strong Fire, so we allocate d10 to that Element and give it the description Brutal Fighter. He does not have any truck with magic or such dark arts, so we allocate 0 to Craft and has the description Has no truck with magic. Likewise, he does not win his battles by charming the monsters to death, so we allocate d4 to Song, describing him as gruff and blunt. Our warrior more of a brutal force than a deft stiletto, so d6 is allocated to Ice, described as Battlefield awareness, leaving d8 for Granite. We decide that the warrior is learned he studies the monsters he hunts - and describe it as Student of monsters
d10 d0 d8 d4 d6
Brutal fighter Has no truck with magic Student of monsters Gruff and blunt Battlefield awareness
TRAPPINGS
Of course, a Legend is not just about the elements in their soul they are draped with the trappings of a hero. These trappings can be weapons, armour, spells, charms, spirits, mounts, ghosts whatever things you think that your Legend would carry with them. Each Trapping is allocated an Element and a dice value. The Element that is allocated to the trapping is important as it denotes how the Trapping is used. A greatsword allocated Fire will be a weapon of war, whereas a Greatsword allocated Song will be a status symbol which can sway crowds when it is drawn. The Trappings should also say something about the setting as well. In the example above a Greatsword is dull, boring and non-descript. The Executioners Sword from the City State of Chun however, is dripping with potential. Who is the Executioner? Where is Chun? Why does it execute people? How did Ragnar get the sword? Each Legend chooses THREE trappings, allocating d4, d6 and d8 to them.
Example: The Executioners Hammer of Chun sounds like a great place to start, so that will be Ragnars main Trapping, allocating it D8 Fire. We decide that Ragnar has been a slave-gladiator in his past and has been blood-tattooed by vile sorcerors probably from Chun! We allocate Blood Tattoos of the Gladiator with d6 Craft. Finally, Ragnar wears a neck-chain with the teeth of the monsters he has hunted hung on it. Each tooth is carved intricately with the tale of the hunt. Monster Tooth Chain could be allocated Granite as it stands as a testimony to his experience or it could be something used to intimidate foes with evidence of the monsters that have fallen and thus be Song. We decide that the carved record of past foes sounds better, so allocate it d4 Granite. Ragnar is shaping up now: 8
d10 d0 d8 d4 d6 d8 d8 d4
Brutal fighter Has no truck with magic Student of monsters Gruff and blunt Battlefield awareness The Executioners Hammer of Chun Blood Tattoos of the Gladiator Monster Tooth Chain
MULTIPLE ELEMENTS IN ONE TRAPPING You may, if you wish, attach more than one element to a particular Trapping, so that it can be used in multiple scenes. For example, you could have the Executioners Hammer of Chun as Fire d8 and Song d6, to underline its martial prowess and ceremonial position. This would expend two of your three Trappings during character creation.
LORE
What Legend would be complete without tales of their previous exploits? Their place within the dangerous world they live in? The awe with which they are held by the the people, the Kings and the Gods themselves? This is the Legends Lore and like Trappings, each point of Lore as a Element and a dice value, and should be also expand the background of the game. Each Legend chooses FIVE pieces of Lore, allocating d4, d6, d6, d8 and d10 to them.
Example: We have established that Ragnar is a hunter of monsters, but why? Maybe he hunts monsters because his betrothed is held by a crazed God and he does these tasks for him? Chosen Hunter of Nar-Rehn, God of Death with d10 Fire attached to it is not only thematic, but it also gives Ragnar d10, d10, d8 for Fire which confirms him as a great warrior. If we add in his estranged princess as well, Betrothed of Freya, Princess of Chun with Song d6 we now see where Chun comes into the story! We dont think Ragnar is from Chun he was snatched as a slave by those Sorcerers after all. So he can be a full blooded native of the blizzard swept Dragon Tooth Mountains. Leaping from icy rock to slippery ledge sounds like Ice, so we allocate d8 Ice to this. We still have d6 and d4 to allocate. Ragnar was a gladiator so lets add Undefeated in the Floating Arena as Song d4. Finally, we give Ragnar some history, making him the First Son of the White Bear Tribe as Granite d6
SPECIALISATION Specialising in a particular Element is possible, garnering you a maximum of 2d10 and 3d8 in that element. However, that will leave you woefully vulnerable in scenes using other Elements. Take that into consideration when you allocate your Elements.
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RAGNAR
Elements Fire d10 Craft d0 Granite d8 Song d4 Ice d6 Trappings Fire d8 Craft d8 Granite d4 Lore Fire Ice Song Granite Song d10 d8 d6 d6 d4 Brutal fighter Has no truck with magic Student of monsters Gruff and blunt Battlefield awareness The Executioners Hammer of Chun Blood Tattoos of the Gladiator Monster Tooth Chain Chosen Hunter of Nar-Rehn, God of Death Native of the Dragon Tooth Mountains Betrothed of Freya, Princess of Chun First Son of the White Bear Tribe Undefeated in the Floating Arena
The godspeakers tell of the great warrior Ragnar and his mantle of Hunter for the God of Death, Nar-Rehn. The eldest son of the most scarred warrior of the White Bear Tribe, Ragnar was destined to become King of the Mountain until the mark of Nah-Rehn appeared on his skin and his future was set in stone. To become Deaths Own Hunter, Ragnar needed to prove himself as a great warrior and sacrifice many souls to the Nah-Rehns legions. He travelled from the snow-covered mountains to the volcanic city of Chun and voluntarily entered the gladiatorial hell that is the Floating Arena, where he fought, undefeated, as their champion, earning the Blood Tattoos of a freed gladiator. To honour his achievement, he was presented to the Lord of Chun and was even betrothed to his beautiful daughter. However the Lord of Chun is a suspicious man and upon learning that Ragnar was pledged to Nah-Rehn, he decided that the warrior wished to sacrifice all of Chun to NahRehn and ordered his execution. Ragnar escaped, killing the executioner and stealing his ritual hammer. Returning to the Dragon Tooth Mountains, he roams the highest peaks, hunting the monsters that plague the human villages and adding their teeth to his chain. He knows that one day, Nah-Rehn will give him his great quarry and he must be ready...
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TALES OF LEGEND
Legends live in a chaotic world of rampaging monsters, armies of deadly zombies and foul, despicable Gods. There are, however, many aspects of that world that are constant violence, lost information, impossible love and the pathways of Fate itself. Each game of ERA tells a tale of your Legend and is formed from scenes focusing on these constant themes. Your Legend will celebrate amazing successes and grieve after terrible losses but their own story will march on.
SCENES
A game of ERA has a structure of SEVEN scenes, called a CYCLE. A cycle includes an INITIAL GATEWAY scene, five PATHWAY scenes and a FINAL GATEWAY scene. Each scene is defined by a combination of two Elements. These are added to the scene as follows: Initial Gateway: Storyteller chooses first, player chooses second. Pathway scenes: The loser of the previous scene chooses first, the winner chooses second. Final Gateway: Player chooses first, storyteller chooses second.
FIRE scenes are scenes of physical conflict massed battles, raging gladiatorial combats and death-or-glory duels. They may also be feats of physical prowess, strength and endurance. CRAFT scenes deal with dark magics, summoning spirits and dealing with demons. They may also involve speaking with Gods, matching magical wits with a mage or casting down a possessing Fae. GRANITE scenes are involved with the discovery or revelation of
knowledge or the use of intelligence to win the day. They might involve a flashback to reveal information, solve a puzzle, a debate at a Kings table or a drug-addled sage speaking in tongues in a smoky mountain cave.
SONG scenes involve persuasion, seduction and manipulation. When your Legend sweeps a Princess off her feet, makes a fool of the arrogant Prince or matches wits with the Gods themselves, it is a SONG scene.
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ICE scenes are quick moving scenes of evasion and escape, stealth and
pursuit. A chariot race, an infiltration of a dark tomb, fleeing from a Mages summoned skeletons and losing a pursuing ship at sea these are all ICE scenes.
Example: A scene combining FIRE and ICE would combine themes of combat, violence and strength alongside speed, agility and stealth. So maybe a battle scene amidst falling rocks and crumbling pathways? A scene combining FIRE and SONG however, would take the same themes of combat and strength and add in some social aspects - maybe the fight is partially martial and partly a bragging contest?
Remember these additional rules for choosing the Elements within a scene: You can only have a PATHWAY scene for a particular element once in each story i.e. there will always be a FIRE pathway scene, an ICE pathway scene, a GRANITE pathway scene, a SONG pathway scene and a CRAFT pathway scene, although what order they come in will be determined by the player and the storyteller. The scene cannot share an element with the preceding scene
GATEWAY SCENES
The first scene is always the INITIAL GATEWAY scene. This is the scene that throws down the gauntlet to the Legend and presents their first challenge. GATEWAY scenes are special. The first Element attached to the Initial Gateway scene is determined by the Storyteller. Whoever loses the conflict in this Initial Gateway scene gets to choose and frame the first Pathway scene. Remember, you cannot frame the first Pathway scene with either element that were included in the Initial Gateway scene. The last scene of the story is the FINAL GATEWAY scene which acts as a climax to the adventure and possibly a signpost to the next. The first Element attached to the Final Gateway scene is determined by the Player and can be ANY Element, regardless of what was used in the previous scene. Similarly, the Storyteller can attach any of the remaining four elements to the scene, regardless of what has come before. This scene should bring the tale to a close in some way, although it is perfectly acceptable to leave the story open ended and lead into a new story, with a new set of Gateway and element-driven scenes.
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PATHWAY SCENES
Five scenes follow this Gateway scene are PATHWAY scenes. These scenes form the bulk of the story - answering the challenge laid down in the Initial Gateway scene and building towards the Final Gateway scene. CHOICES Your choices of Element guide the story and the way that your scenes play out inform what will come next. Sometimes, you might want to fight in the next scene, but you have already used your Fire pathway scene - dont bend the rules. Be creative and find a way to work with what you have. In ERA, the nature of the scenes is a resource. If the fight scene is your ace in a hole save it until it is just right for you.
SCENE EXAMPLE
Example: The Storyteller has kicked off the game with the Initial Gateway scene: a ferocious attack upon a wounded maiden by a pack of wolves, a fortunate escapee from the hands of the Serpent. This is a FIRE and ICE scene, as Ragnar wades into the fray to save the maiden and hears the horror befalling the village. Ragnar wins the day (how? See later). The Storyteller now gets to choose and frame the first Pathway scene as he lost the previous scene. He decides that he is going to shake things up by having the maiden be the beloved of the villages chieftain, a former White Bear Tribe mercenary and names the GRANITE scene. The Storyteller could not make this scene a FIRE or ICE scene, as the Initial Gateway scene was a FIRE and ICE scene. Ragnars player can now choose between SONG and CRAFT as the second element. He cannot choose FIRE or ICE as they were chosen in the previous scene. He chooses SONG. Note that this means there cannot be another GRANITE scene until the final GATEWAY scene, but there can be another FIRE scene, as the previous FIRE scene was a GATEWAY 14
The masstyf is the chosen guardian of the princelings of Chun. The massive dogs, who roam wild in the lower reaches of the Dragon Tooth Mountains are tamed and bonded to the young princes during their naming ceremony. They then serve as the protectors, playmates and mounts for the princes until they grow to adulthood. Loyal unto death, a masstyf will fight any foe that threatens his master and legend has it that if a prince dies, the masstyf will venture into the underworld to stand vigil over the boy until the end of time. That is, of course, just a legend...
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CREATING CHALLENGES
All Legends have adversaries that try to stand in their path as they complete their quests. Some of these will be living, breathing (or shambling ) active opponents, whereas others will be inanimate obstacles such as unclimbable cliffs, unfathomable mazes or impenetrable blizzards. There are four levels of adversarial challenges Minion: These are trivial challenges, totally within the basic capabilities of any hero. Only a disaster or complete ineptitude would result in a loss here. These provide an easy challenge to a single hero and a trivial challenge to a pair of heroes or a hero with a companion. Standard: These are challenges on par with the capabilities of any single hero. If they have a companion they should be able to handle these regularly Elite: These are challenges which will stretch the capabilities of a hero and offer a decent challenge to a hero and a companion. Legendary: These challenges will daunt even the strongest hero and challenge strongly a hero and their companion. Dont be afraid of Elite or Legendary adversaries for your Legends. They are meant to be challenged within the game and failing in a scene merely hands narration of the story into the hands of the players. Anyway, how can a hero truly underpin their legend if they never battle true gods and monsters? Rather than being represented by dice for each of their elements, trappings and lores, challenges have a static number that forms their opposition to the hero. These static numbers are derived from their equivalent dice level and the level of the challenge. Dice d4 d6 d8 d10 d12 d20 Minion 1 1 2 2 3 5 Standard 2 3 4 5 6 10
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Elite 3 5 6 8 9 15
Legendary 4 6 8 10 12 20
Example: The storyteller needs to put together the stats for a pack of hungry wolves chasing down the Legend. She decides upon the following:
Fire d8 Craft 0 Granite 0 Song d4 Ice d8 Fire Fire Song Granite Craft Craft d6 d6 d8 d6 d10 d6
Snarling pack fighters Bonded by the pack Swift predator Tooth and Claw Matted Fur and Bone Soul Piercing Howl Pack Borne Instincts Shadow Stalkers of the Night Bound to the Forest Spirits
By cross-referencing the dice associated with each Element, Trapping or Lore, she can now create a minion, standard, elite or legendary foe for this encounter.
Animal Adversaries
As you can see in the example above, animals will have a number of Elements rated at 0 animals rarely have GRANITE or CRAFT and only a few will have SONG
Another option for adversaries are packs of monsters. No selfrespecting Legend is going to be troubled by a single Goblin but what about a pack of Goblins? Packs should be designed just as an ordinary creature , but you only need to defeat the pack rather than each individual one. Note that this pack-mechanic can be used for noncombat groups as well say, impressing a royal court?
Inanimate Adversaries
An inanimate adversary will always have THREE scores of the same type, to represent the nature of the threat that it poses.
Example: A heavily blocked standard door might be 4,4,4 FIRE, a paltry magical trap would be 1,1,1 CRAFT whilst a fiendish labyrinth might be 8,8,8 GRANITE. Note that even the pointless magical trap could cast someone out if they do not have three dice of Craft! Sometimes, that companion is very helpful!
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You can use the different challenge levels to create a number of different challenges from the same core creature. Here is a wolf-pack with their core dice scores noted, and then two quick variants.
Snarling pack fighters Bonded by the pack Swift predator Tooth and Claw Matted Fur and Bone Soul Piercing Howl Pack Borne Instincts Shadow Stalkers of the Night Bound to the Forest Spirits Snarling pack fighters Bonded by the pack Swift predator Tooth and Claw Matted Fur and Bone Soul Piercing Howl Pack Borne Instincts Shadow Stalkers of the Night Bound to the Forest Spirits Snarling pack fighters Bonded by the pack Swift predator Tooth and Claw Matted Fur and Bone Soul Piercing Howl
Pack Borne Instincts Shadow Stalkers of the Night Bound to the Forest Spirits
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RESOLVING CONFLICTS
Legends are forged in conflict, moments of critical importance where fate can take you in a number of undetermined directions. Conflicts are not always based on physical violence - a Legends fate can depend upon decoding an ancient transcript or solving the riddle of the fallen goddess. Conflicts are completed in four steps
Each conflict is determined by the combination of the two ELEMENTS chosen when the scene was framed. Remember: The Elements must not be the same so no FIRE/FIRE conflicts. If this is a PATHWAY scene, it cannot involve either of the elements from the previous scene, be that the first GATEWAY scene or a PATHWAY scene. The participants must also state what they want from the conflict the INTENT. This should be specific rather than vague.
Example: The Storyteller frames the scene of Ragnar arriving in the terrified village with the injured maiden, only to be confronted with the raging Mercenary that acts as their headman. This has already been determined as a GRANITE scene a battle of lore, precedence and authority. Ragnars player ponders whether to make this a violent scene adding FIRE or a matter of personality adding SONG or even using his mythic quest as leverage adding CRAFT. He decides that the fact that he is questing for the Death God could be interesting, so he chooses CRAFT. This scene will resolve using GRANITE and CRAFT. As an intent, Ragnar wants the Mercenary to recognise his authority and status and concede that he has the right to destroy the Serpent. The Mercenary wants to run Ragnar out of his village, into the frozen wilderness again. The Mercenary is a STANDARD opponent
As you are playing out the scene, you should state exactly how these Trappings and Lore are being used to influence the conflict. If a reasonable reason for them to be involved cannot be found, they cannot be used.
Example: Ragnar needs to assert his superiority over his rival if he is to progress and he is the First Son of his tribe, the son of the Chieftain. Rather than chastising him for some supposed slight on his maiden, the Mercenary should open his halls to him. He chooses Granite d8 as his Element. He states that he wants to show that he is an expert monster hunter adding his Monster Tooth Chain (Granite d4) and wants to add his Blood tattoos but he concedes that he would be reaching to try to bring them into this particular conflict. Looking at his Lore, he obviously includes First Son of the White Bear Tribe (d6 Granite). He has no other Lore that he can bring into the conflict. His resulting dice pool is d8, d6, d4.
The Mercenary includes 3 Granite, Ursas Transformation 3 Craft (he is a shapeshifter) and Gnarled Chieftains Staff 3 Granite. He has no more Lore or Trappings which he can apply. His opposition is only 3,3 and 3 WHAT IS REASONABLE? The object of the game is not to create barriers of pedantry by demanding that everything has a cast iron established reason for inclusion. If the players can legitimately find a reason to include their dice, allow it.
There are three phases in each conflict. The Storyteller allocates their scores to each of the three phases of the conflict. At least one score, if possible, must be allocated to each phase. The player then allocates his dice against these scores. At least one dice, if possible, must be allocated to each phase. The player then rolls these allocated dice and notes whether they have exceeded the opponents total in that phase. If they have, they have won. If they have not, they have lost. If both are equal, it is draw and neither side has won that phase.
Example: The mercenary allocates his scores equally to each phase; 3,3 and 3. Ragnar allocates a d8 to one phase, a d6 to another and a d4 to the final phase. Ragnar rolls his d8 (rolling 5, which beats the 3) and narrates his storming entrance into the village catching the Mercenary unawares and with his arms wrapped around another woman! Enraged by this intrusion, the Mercenary demands that Ragnar leaves the village. Ragnar chuckles and picks up the d6 allocated to his second phase, rolling 6 (beating the 3). Ragnar quotes his lineage, back through the 20
Chieftains of the White Bear Tribe, demanding that the Mercenary backs down. Ragnar demands that the Mercenary gives him aid and courtesy whilst he hunts the Serpent. The Mercenary has 3 once again in the final phase of the conflict. Ragnar only has his d4 to roll and only rolls a 2 (losing to the 3). The Mercenary states that he can have his courtesy after he has defeated the Serpent!
After all three phases of the conflict have been won or lost, the results of the conflict are determined. Each side is allowed to make one declaration for each phase of the conflict they won. Starting with the winner of the conflict (i.e. the person who won the most phases. If there is a tie, the player that stated the initial element for the scene goes first), a declaration is made. If you still wish to achieve your intent, one of your declarations must address that issue. Example declarations could include:
The guards let me pass through the gateway without harassment We discover the secret password for the gate of the Gods My sword carves a deep gash across the barbarians face I dash through the castle, hiding in the shadows. My rune magic overcomes the molten barrier and we pass
If the loser agrees with this declaration, the declaration becomes part of the story. However, if they disagree with this statement, they can alter it but it costs them one of their declarations. An alteration to a declaration cannot totally reverse that declaration, but it can change or reduce its effect upon the target. Each side takes turns with any remaining declarations until they have all been used.
Wounds
If you wish to create a lasting effect on something with a declaration, you can do so by wounding them. These wounds do not have to physical they can be emotional, social or organisational wounds instead. To create a wound, you must make a declaration which cannot be altered. You now roll your highest dice associated with the Element of the scene which was chosen first. If a Storyteller character is delivering the wound, they do not roll and simply match their score against the table below.
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The character affected receives a descriptive Wound equal to the nearest highest dice to the roll. A Player Character is allocated a static number for their wound, a NPC is allocated a dice. Roll Wound ( on a PC) Wound (on a NPC) 0-3 2 d4 4-6 3 d6 7-8 4 d8 9-10 5 d10 11-12 6 d12 The wound should be given a description, like a Trapping or Lore, and has the same Element as the scene in which it was given.
Example: If Ragnar wants to inflict an injury on the mercenary, it would be a GRANITE wound almost certainly a social wound that would impact upon the mercenarys respected. He would roll his highest GRANITE dice, d8. If the mercenary wanted to inflict a wound on Ragnar, he would use his GRANITE element of 3.
Using Wounds
Wounds can be included in an enemys score when the associated Element is involved in a future conflict.
Example: In the above example, if Ydar decides to injure Ragnar instead of scarring him. He spends his declaration and using his 3 GRANITE gives Ragnar a 2 point wound. He calls it Shamed in front of Ydars Village 2 Granite. If, in the future, Ragnar is faced with a GRANITE scene, his confidence in his own knowledge has been damaged and his opponent will start with an extra 2 GRANITE from this wound.
Healing
Similarly, you can HEAL a wound by making a suitable declaration, which cannot be altered. This removes the wound.
You may not make the same declaration twice, after it has been altered. Any second declaration should address a totally different issue. If someone has made a declaration and you have chosen not to alter it, you cannot negate it with your own subsequent declaration.
Obviously, there is one declaration that can be made that could have a radical impact on the game - I kill him
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There are three ways to deal with this sort of statement. 1. Play the game with this as a possibility and word your declarations and intent accordingly. 2. Only allow death to be effective in the final gateway scene. 3. Disallow death-related declarations within the game as a whole This is something that should be discussed and agreed between the players and the storyteller to ensure that the rules are clear for everyone.
Example: Ragnar has two declarations and the Mercenary has one. Ragnar, in line with his intent states that the Mercenary opens his doors to him and gives him the hospitality his status demands. The Mercenary considers the implications of this and accepts, begrudgingly, that Ragnar does have the right to be given hospitality. This uses one of Ragnars declarations, leaving him with one. The Mercenary considers his position. Ragnar can alter anything he suggests, or accept it and then have free reign to make whatever declaration he desires. He needs to force Ragnar to alter the result. His intent was that Ragnar would leave his village as he fears the warrior could wrestle control from him. He declares that Ragnar can have hospitality, but as he is a quester for the Death God Na-Rehn, he will have just two nights to hunt the Serpent or the villagers will sacrifice the wounded maiden to the Dark God themselves. Ragnars player scowls at the Storyteller. Ragnar would not want to death of the young maiden on his conscience but he was planning to leverage some extra aid with his final declaration. He shakes his head and alters the declaration extending the time of the hunt until the next moon, three weeks hence. Ragnar has his shelter but the Storyteller has the choice of the next scene
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ADVANCEMENT
Legends grow. Whether through fame and splendour, or infamy and horror, the tales of a Legend spread and their power increases as they progress through their journey. In ERA, this is represented by the passing of cycles. At the end of a cycle, you can choose one of the following Increase the size of the dice allocated to one of your Elements, Trappings or Lore by one size, to a maximum of d12. Introduce a new Trapping or Lore at d4 Add a new element to a Trapping at d4 Heal all Wounds that the character is currently suffering. Whilst it is by no means essential, some storytellers may rule that you should have a good reason to apply the increase to a particular area. Example: Ragnar has completed a cycle. Before the next one starts he can choose one of the following: Increase a dice by one size i.e. increase Brutal Fighter (Fire, d10) to (Fire, d12) or increase Monster Tooth Chain (Granite, d4) to (Granite, d6) Introduce a new Trapping of Lore i.e. add Vanquisher of the Ice Serpent (Song, d4) Add an element to a trapping i.e. add Craft d4 to the Executioners Hammer of Chun (Fire, d8) turning it to (Fire, d8/Craft d4) Heal all wounds he is currently suffering.
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GAINING A COMPANION
During an adventure a hero may acquire a companion character, who assists in their adventures. You may only have one current companion. A companion character has their own set of Elements, Trappings and Lore. The dice allocated to these are: ELEMENTS: TRAPPINGS: LORE: d8, d6, d4, d4, 0 d4, d6 d8, d6, d4
If a companion has its origin as an existing character under the control of the Storyteller, their statistics are reduced to be in line with these characteristics; the companion is after all, an assistant to the hero and should aid rather than overshadow.
When you face a challenge, your companion may aid you by adding dice from their elements, trappings or lore to your dice pool. You may include one dice deriving from an Element and one dice deriving from either a Trapping or Lore.
Example: Ragnar is taking part in a vicious battle of sword and sorcery against a dark warrior daemon. This is a FIRE and CRAFT scene. He is aided in his battle by Tyk the Godspeaker. Tyk chooses one Element (his d8 in Craft) and one Trapping or Lore (his d6 in Craft as a Talented Godspeaker) and adds them to Ragnars available dice.
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SAMPLE COMPANIONS
Example: Ragnar travels into Chun and picks up a young Godspeaker heretic as a companion. The Godspeaker is called Tyk.
Example: Ragnar is granted a spirit of death to accompany him on a quest for Nar-Rehn
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STORYTELLER ADVICE
PREPARING THE GAME
As the Storyteller, it is your responsibility to prepare the game, even if you have decided to use ERA as a quick pick-up game. So what do you do? The first thing to do is gather the materials needed for a game. These include the rules, either some printed character sheets for the Legends, a cycle sheet or some paper that can be used to scribble these on, and a handful of polyhedral dice (d4, d6, d8, d10, d12 and in extreme cases of truly Legendary foes, a d20). Clearly, your players may bring these as well. You also need a playing space that is conclusive to a game that requires people to talk, a lot. You then need to decide which setting pack you are going to use. Each setting pack should have a list of quick-start cycle ideas that you can use to prime an impromptu game - otherwise read through the setting pack and note down any themes that you think would make a great game. When you are introducing the game to your players, this is the place to start so that they understand where you are coming from. The final thing to do is read through the adversaries that are presented in the setting pack and highlight a few that you want to showcase in the game. These too, will allow you to frame the game with a little more certainty. Introduce these elements to the players and let their rabid imaginations loose on character generation. It is time to awaken their Legends!
Whether you are using your own setting or one of the ERA setting packs, the Legends that the players create will define the setting that actually hits the table. Each Trapping, each piece of Lore and each description will add details and nuance to the setting. Use these nuggets of information to the best of your ability. Look at them and ask the players what aspects of them are the most important to the Legends? What to they, as players, want to see explored within the game? Not only does this increase the ownership and commitment within the game, but it also gives the players the idea that they are part of the story creation as well - a very real thing within an ERA game. This input from the players also serves to set the tone for the game and the direction for the story. Settings can offer a massive swathe of game that you can sample, and the ideas of the players will focus down onto one or two themes that can be explored during a cycle.
SHARED CREATIVITY
ERA is a game where the responsibility to be creative is shared equally around the table. This means that as a storyteller, you have to encourage your players 27
to contribute as much as possible, especially when it is their turn to frame the next scene. It is important to remember that this is their story to form, as well as the storytellers. ERA is also a game that cannot work with a pre-planned story arc. As the narrative authority within the game can quickly pass back and forth between the players and the storyteller, nothing is set in stone. Dont remain precious about your favourite ideas or themes - they almost certainly wont survive through a cycle. Taking both of these things into consideration, talk to each other around the table. What sounds like it would be a cool direction for the story to take? Which awesome character that has appeared previously might be great at this point? What devastating fallout from a failure might make for a really interesting twist? This dialogue is crucial to an excellent game.
Your players characters are called Legends for a reason. These are larger than life, epic scale characters who are destined to walk a pathway of danger and majesty and live on in memory forever. Bear that in mind whilst playing the game - nothing should be small, intimate or subtle. ERA is a game of Legends clashing with monsters, treasures ripped from the hands of the Gods themselves, wars that will tear planets apart and plagues that will destroy life as we know it. If you can think of a larger, more impressive way to take the story, dont hesitate to grab that option! That said, the pathway to greatness is never an easy one and these Legends should be challenged in the extreme during the story. As the game plays out there will naturally be scenes where the Legends have an advantage in the Elements that can be brought into play and others where they are out of their ... well, element. This is all part of the trials of a great Legend. Dont be afraid to sorely test your Legends - throw elite and legendary challenges at them. If they win, they have earned their title and if they lose, narration passes over to them and allows them the chance to rebuild their Legend after their failure.
One part of ERA that needs to be watched very carefully, is the pace and structure of the story. Each Cycle should form a fully contained story, even if it is part of a greater multi-Cycle epic. This means that as the game moves towards the final pathway scenes and the last gateway scene everyone should have an eye on the climax of the cycle and moving the story towards that climactic challenge. However, what if this doesnt happen and by hook or by crook the cycle looks like it will end without a conclusion? End in a cliffhanger, with a definite hook into the next cycle! Another pacing and structure issues that Storytellers should be aware of is the purpose of each pathway scene. There is a danger that the game becomes a series of fights, rather than an epic story. Remember that not everything has to be a martial challenge - there can be epic storytelling contests, feats of athletic prowess, debates with Kings and riddles with monsters. All of these are challenges but they do not involve swords. 28
The third is the Court of the Mountain, a gathering of the animal spirits said to represent the Gods themselves. The Court lies high above the Mountains highest peak and act as the guardians of the Spirit of the Mountain itself. Amongst their number are counted Nar-Rehn - the winter wolf spirit of death, Ursa - the mother spirit of the bear, Talyn the Eagle Spirit, and Kel-Sha-Resh - the dead spirit of the sabretooth. The humans of the Mountains are a pious people, linked to these spirits by the Godspeakers - people possessed of the spirits of the immortals. Some pledge themselves to these gods, drawing power from them and becoming their living heralds. Others are blessed (or cursed) at birth to act as their mouthpieces on the Mountain. Godspeakers can share greater power with the Court spirits, even to the point of being able to change shape into their totem spirit form. And then there are the great beasts - the Dragons. These massive, power Wyrms live on the highest peaks of the mountains, swooping down to feed and terrorise everyone on their home. To kill a dragon is the mark of a great warrior and thus, many warriors forge weapons and armour from their skin, bones and hide. To carry a dragon item that you have not killed and forged yourself is considered a sign of cowardice and in some cases, heresy! The Dragon Tooth Mountains offer the chance for Legends to stand against multiple epic threats, an exceptionally hostile environment and battle with, or alongside the gods themselves.
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EXAMPLE LEGENDS
Ragnar, Monster Hunter
Ragnar will one day lead the White Bear tribe, but now he is proving himself as a great warrior by hunting monsters on the Winter Mountain. He has pledged himself to Nar-Rehn and carries the great hammer of Chun, a nearby kingdom of slavers and scum, home of the floating arena. He scours the villages of the Dragon Tooth Mountains, hearing tales of great beasts that he can pursue and glory he can gather. Element Fire Craft Granite Song Ice d10 0 d8 d4 d6 Brutal fighter Has no truck with magic Student of monsters Gruff and blunt Battlefield awareness
Trappings Fire d8 Craft d6 Granite d4 Lore Fire Ice Song Granite Song d10 d8 d6 d6 d4
The Executioners Hammer of Chun Blood Tattoos of the Gladiator Monster Tooth Chain Chosen Hunter of Nar-Rehn, God of Death Native of the Dragon Tooth Mountains Betrothed of Freya, Princess of Chun First Son of the White Bear Tribe Undefeated in the Floating Arena
Mark my words, Bear Lord, the one known as Ragnar will come for your throne. He will crush you with that hammer and use your skull as a crucible to drink your blood. Hush Mongoth, your words are twisted as always. Ragnar serves Nar-Rehn and through him, death is brought to our enemies. He is my ally, not my rival. As you wish, King of the Mountain. As you wish...
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Her pale skin, and white blonde hair marked her as destined to become Godspeaker from an early age, but when she had not spoken a word by the age of ten when most young warriors had made their first solo kill, there was fear the voices had taken her mind. She was shunned and left to wander, so no one notice when she entered the haunted and burned ruin of the temple to Kel-sha-resh, the slain goddess. She returned with a carved and blackened oak staff, and a prophecy that Ursa's temple would fall, before the next chief saw springs thaw. Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 0 d10 d6 d8 d4 Weak and feeble Speaker of the Gods Swift and nimble Lived amongst Godspeakers Voice of authority Charred Staff of the Fallen Temple Silver braided hair Spirit-ridden by Kel-sha-resh Reader of the Forgotten Runes Disowned child of Yale the Godspeaker Native to the Dragon Tooth Mountains Feasted on the flesh of Morna's daemons Walked among the spirits of the Gorle Plains
Trappings Granite d4 Song d6 Fire d8 Lore Craft Song Ice Fire Craft d10 d4 d6 d8 d6
Beyond the boundaries of the White Bear Tribe village, the people of the Mountains live in small, hidden settlements, carving out a living in the snow-covered wilderness. Janek is a young hunter and scout, tasked with the protection of his village and a constant set of eyes against Goblin raiding gangs. Janek is a follower of Talyn, the Eagle Spirit and swears that his eagle claw necklace was gifted by the Spirit herself during a fasting pilgrimage on the highest Mountain peaks. Element Fire Craft Granite Song Ice d6 d8 0 d4 d10 Protector in the wilderness Bonded to Talyn No time for learning Handsome and brave Leaves no snowprint!
Janek
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Trappings Ice d8 Craft d6 Fire d4 Lore Ice Craft Fire Granite Song d10 d8 d6 d6 d4
Heartwood Hunting Spear Eagle Claw Necklace Chun-forged Chainmail Sure footed snow scout Human eyes of the Eagle Spirit I will stand between the innocent and the dark Every stone on the mountain is known to me Friend to the traders of Chun
Janek, Beloved of the Eagle, a scout of some renown yes, but are you sure that he is suitable? The White Bear Tribe hate weakness and the lad is hardly our greatest warrior? Weakness comes not in the sword arm, but in the instinct. Janek is the strongest we have, mark my words...
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Trappings Fire 10 Ice 8 Fire 8 Lore Song 8 Craft 8 Fire 6 Granite 4 Song 6
He is a formidable warrior, I will grant him that, but he is also a man of immense arrogance and self-belief. He truly imagines he is immortal and chosen of the Gods. The fool Morna, Crone Queen
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Great Red Claw, War Bear (Companion to The King of the Mountain)
Element Fire 6 Rugged War Bear Craft 5 Blessed by Ursa Ice 3 Surefooted Granite 0 Song 0 Trappings Fire 4 Craft 6 Lore Fire Craft Ice 5 5 5 Claw and Maw Golden Bear Armour Fated Guardian of the Lord of the Mountain Chosen Daughter of Ursa Two hearts with one RAGE!
Mongoth is old for a White Bear, having lived over sixty winters, many as a warrior, a member of the Eternal Vigil and finally rising to the most exalted position in the Cult of Ursa. His battles have left him scarred and rendered his left arm weakened and impotent, but despite his age he still has the look of a killer born. As the legends demand, he has never removed his hair since taking his position, allowing the growth of a truly impressive beard, plaited with bear teeth. Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 2 3 0 5 4 Only one good fighting arm Shamen of the Whie Bear Tribe Crippled and slow Learned elder My voice is heard... Razor-edged Bear Bone Knife Bear Tooth Beard A Body of Battle Scars Grizzled Veteran Warrior High Shaman of the White Bear Tribe The Power Behind the Bear King Blood of the Great Bear in his Veins My Arm for the Tribe
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Trappings Fire 3 Craft 4 Song 2 Lore Fire Craft Granite Song Song 2 5 4 3 3
A loyal member of the White Bear tribe, YDar has taken the oath of the Eternal Vigil - the warriors pledge to watch over a brethren-clan and protect them from the wilderness. He is a formidable fighter, geared with the best arms and armour his tribe can muster and possessed of his Shamens magic with the power of the bear god Ursa. Only a fool would cross YDar! Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 8 0 6 3 5 Expert spear fighter Pledged to the Eternal Vigil Fast as the charging bear Veteran warrior Blessed of Ursa Dragon Scale Armour Tempered Steel Spear Gnarled Chieftains Staff White Bear Tribe Mercenary Keeper of the Eternal Vigil Betrothed of the Priests daughter Ursas Transformation Mountain Born Toughness
Trappings Fire 6 Ice 5 Granite 5 Lore Song Fire Song Craft Fire 6 8 3 5 5
The White Bear tribe present formidable defences in their mountain strongholds. Their pact with the bear god Ursa has forged bonds between these warriors and the bears of the mountain, who now wear the golden armour of the temple and fight alongside the tribe Element Fire 9 Rugged War Bear Craft 0 Ice 5 Sure footed Granite 0 Song 0 Trappings Fire 5 Craft 6 Lore Song Ice 5 6 Claw and Maw Golden Bear Armour Crazed Guardian of the Temple Relentless Charge
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Trappings Fire 6 Craft 8 Song 4 Lore Song Craft Ice Granite Craft 8 10 4 6 6
You speak no longer for the Gods or their Spirits, Morna of the Mountain. Our blood runs in your veins now and you speak only for the Daemons and the Hellspawn and the Lords of the Dark Beyond. Your soul has been replaced with black ice, your heart has been frozen. You are one of us.
You will sit beneath the Mountain and you will gather your allies. The twisted ones, the ragged and the monstrous. We will send you minions and bullies; creatures of nightmare -and when the time is right you will drive the humans from the Mountain, cast down the Court of the Mountain itself and sacrifice its Great Spirit. This is our pact, that you readily accepted. You are ours Morna For eternity 38
Another threat on the mountain, are goblins. Crazed packs of deformed humanoids from the depths of the warren-like caves which penetrate the rock, the goblins surge from their lairs when they need food or sacrifices for their demonic ancestors. Individually, the goblins and their lupine allies are easy to defeat, but as a pack they offer a greater challenge. Element Fire 3 Craft 0 Ice 5 Granite 2 Song 2 Trappings Fire 3 Fire 2 Ice 3 Lore Ice Craft Song 4 3 2 Scrabbling mob of pointy things No demons! No demons! Quicker than an avalanche Everyone knows everyones business Nervous babbling Short and rusty, sword and dagger Lizard hide armour Pet Wolf Companions Born amongst the icy peaks Ancestor Worshipping Fanatics Heckle and Jeer
Everyday on the mountain, wolves are a constant threat. Packs of mangy, desperate animals will track and slaughter anything they think of as weak and vulnerable. Some wolves are bound to the ephemeral forest spirits as guardians, whilst others are ridden by the goblins. Element Fire 4 Craft 0 Granite 0 Song 2 Ice 4 Snarling pack fighters Bonded by the pack Swift predator
Trappings Fire 3 Tooth and Claw Fire 3 Matted Fur and Bone Song 4 Soul Piercing Howl Lore Granite Ice Craft 3 5 3 Pack Borne Instincts Shadow Stalkers of the Night Bound to the Forest Spirits
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Dragged from the depths of darkness and despair by the magical power of the Crone Queen, the hellspawn are a constantly changing and chittering pack of daemons, afflicted spirits and elementals of pain and anguish. The Crone Queen keeps them near to her as courtiers and sychophants but when she needs to remove a threat, she unleashes them to do her will. Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 8 6 5 3 0 Gouts of burning death Spawned in the pits of Hell Quick as a flashfire Learned of forgotten tradition No mortal trusts a Hellspawn Jet Black Claws and Teeth Chittering and Leaping Shadows Flesh carved with evil runes Voices like the screams of dead children Knowledge beyond the ken of man Pledged to the Lords of the Deep Quicker than a dead mans breath
Lesser than the servitors are the minions, packs of screaming imps. Bred to eat flesh. All flesh Spawned in the pits of Hell Spinning mob of claws and teeth Learned in the lore of the dark No mouths, no voice Millions of tiny razor sharp teeth Never at rest; always moving Shifting souls beneath their skin
Lore Granite 4 Many bodies, many eyes, one mind Fire 3 Consume Kings and Beggars Craft 2 Curse-throwers
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Roots to the Heart of the Mountain Bark from the Tree that holds the World Every stone tells me their story One soul, as strong as the mountain The snow will melt, the dawn will come The Court of the Mountain is mine to rule Daemons tear at my heart, in darkness You are all my subjects, hear my voice
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On the far side of the mountain, three deep, jagged crevasses are cut into the rock, legend has it carved by the dying throes of the dead sabretooth god, Kel-Sha-Resh. Deep within these crevasses is the lair of the last of the dead gods children. This giant sabretooth prowls the night, dragging whatever prey ventures into its abode deep into the mountain. Some say it does not need to feed - being made immortal as the last wish of the god ... and yet it still hunts and forever will. Element Fire 8 Vicious primordial animal Craft 6 Blood of the sabretooth god Ice 8 Faster than fear Granite 0 Song 0 Trappings Ice 8 Fire 6 Craft 5 Lore Fire Ice Craft Granite 8 6 5 6 Sight of the Old World Razor Sharp Sabre Teeth Blood of Kel-Sha-Resh Blood Frenzy The Hunter in the Night Walker twixt Shadows and Dark Immortal Child of a Dead God
The most destructive monster on the mountain, is the dread Winged Ice Serpent. Said to have been the mount for the King of the Giants himself, the serpent is a deadly foe to even the hardiest warrior. Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 12 Crush, smash, swallow, ROAR! 8 Rune carved hide 10 Lashed by wings and tail 8 Older than the Giants 0 Hide of Glacier Ice Wings of the Ice Wind Rending Talons of the Winter Lord The Wind That Freezes Souls Ancient Beast of Lore I Have Ate the Hearts of Gods Wing and Claw, Tail and Maw
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Standing over eight feet tall, Olaf is an outcast from the White Bear tribe and a legend on the mountain. He lives by himself, apparently untouched by every monster, animal and goblin. Olaf knows the mountain and he knows the ways of the beasts that roam there ... and he has his secret. Olaf knows how to call down the Winged Ice Serpent, the beast that can fly to the gods themselves! Elements Fire 3 Craft 5 Ice 0 Granite 4 Song 2 Trappings Fire 4 Song 3 Granite 5 Lore Granite Song Craft Fire 4 2 4 3 Blood of the Giants in his veins Keeper of the Secret Places Big and slow Only I know the secret ways Speaks with dragons Maul of God-Runed Iron Fur Wrap of the Mountain Beasts Calling Staff of the Serpent The Stone of the Mountain in my heart Voice of rolling thunder The Song of Snow, Ice and Wind Hands that can crush granite
The madman of the mountains, Hor is a bent and broken old man now - not the promising young warrior who fought the brash firebrand who would become the Bear King. Hor fought and defeated the Man Who Would Be King - the last time he lost in battle - and was exiled when the King claimed his throne. Bitter and twisted he descended into in the mountains crevasses and lived out his days preying upon unwary travellers ... seeking their flesh Element Fire Craft Ice Granite Song 5 0 3 2 4 Human form with tooth and claw Abandoned by the Gods Crevass jumper Long ago exiled into solitude Rantings of a mad man White Sabretooth Cloak Massive Icebladed Axe Frame of the Ancient Mountain Lords
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3 4 3 3 2
Lord of the Bear Claw Crevass Vanquished the Bear King .... once Eater of Blessed Flesh Friend to the Dead Gods Child Blood of the Giants in his veins
The Dread Skord is a legend on a mountain filled with legends. Some say it is the predator that hunted the dragons into near extinction. Others say that it is death itself, the wolf-child of Nah-Rehn. Others claim it is a creature summoned from beyond and trapped on the mountain by a pact of blood lasting generations. The only thing that can be agreed is that it strikes without being seen, kills everyone it meets and has never been killed. Many say it can never be killed - how can you kill death? Elements Fire 10 Death walks in its shadow Craft 8 Shrouded in magic Ice 10 Moves without sound or sight Granite 0 Song 0 Trappings Ice 10 Fire 6 Song 5 Lore Fire Ice Craft Song 8 8 4 4 Faster than Deaths Last Breath Claws of Ice, Pierce your Soul The Last Words You Will Ever Hear Hunter of the Great Serpents No snow shifts in its passing Dined on the finest serpent essence Chained to the mountain...until when?
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ADVENTURE SEEDS
THE DRAGONS AWAKEN
The Winged Ice Serpent sits alone atop the highest mountain and screams. Villagers cower in their homes and the White Bear tribe arm their finest. The great beast is calling for a mate and it is only a matter of time before they arrive. This time has been foretold and it is the end of days for the humans on the mountain. The serpents will devour all in their path in their mating frenzy. Only an exodus from the mountain or the actions of a true legend can save them - which will it be?
Deep beneath the mountain, Morna has been gathering her warriors; hordes of twisted goblins, packs of rabid wolves and every type of hellspawn her masters will spare. Now she unleashes them on the mountain in an avalanche of carnage and death. Why? Morna seeks to bend the Court of the Mountain to her will by killing every single Godspeaker and silencing their voice. She will be left, the sole voice of the Gods and all-powerful. Stand fast Legends, lest you lose the Gods forever.
The Bear Lord, King of the Mountain, is dead - murdered in his bed. Without a leader, the White Bear Clan is at the whim of Mongoth and his machinations and unable to protect the mountain. Who killed the Bear Lord? Will someone be able to renew the pact with the Mountain Bears? Who will be the new King and what plot does all of this mask?
DEATH AT COURT
The sun is eaten during midday. The skies darken and hot hail falls. Birds fall from the skies and plants wither and die. This can mean only one thing - one of the Spirits of the Court of the Mountain is dying. The Godspeakers flail and rock as their voices scream for a Legend to travel beyond the highest peak and bring peace to the Court - healing the Spirit and returning the world to balance. When Kel-Sha-Resh died, her children tore holes in the mountain and killed thousands. This cannot happen again.
It started as a wager during a celebration in the Bear Lords lodge. Now Ragnar stands beside a Legend as they prepare to undertake the Final Hunt - a life or death challenge between two great hunters. Mongoth has named the Dread Skord as your quarry; a beast that no man has ever defeated. One Legend will rise and one will surely die...
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PHASE ONE
PHASE TWO
PHASE THREE
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DECLARATIONS
The winner of the scene makes the first declaration, linked to the intent of the conflict
This declaration can be altered by the loser, at the cost of one of their own possible declarations
Loser now makes a declaration, if they have any left. This statement can be altered by the winner at the cost of their remaining declaration.
Winner can make a final declaration if they have any left. It cannot be the same as, or even a rewording of, the first declaration made.
Can contain any two elements. Primary element chosen by Storyteller. Second element chosen by the player.
Each element can only be chosen once as a primary element. No scenes that feature the same element twice.
The loser of the previous scene frames the next scene and choses which element is the primary element.
FINAL GATEWAY
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Can contain any two elements. Primary element chosen by players regardless of success in final pathway scene
LEGEND NAME
Concept Strength and Fury Magic and the Unknown Wisdom and Knowledge
FIRE
CRAFT
Element: Element: 50
WOUND WOUND