BECMI – Fail Squad Games Tabletop games and adventures Tue, 05 Dec 2017 20:43:38 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4.2 https://i2.wp.com/www.failsquadgames.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/dice.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 BECMI – Fail Squad Games 32 32 105992839 Those DAM Goblins! /blog/those-dam-goblins-kickstart/ /blog/those-dam-goblins-kickstart/#respond Tue, 05 Dec 2017 20:40:42 +0000 http://www.failsquadgames.com/?p=1345 Labyrinth Lord (BECMI) adventure with 5E rules. The next kickstarter from Fail Squad Games is Those Dam Goblins written by Chris Clark. Extended, illustrated, and all other goblin labor by Lloyd Metcalf. The project funded in just under 24 hours and has continued to...

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Labyrinth Lord (BECMI) adventure with 5E rules. The next kickstarter from Fail Squad Games is Those Dam Goblins written by Chris Clark. Extended, illustrated, and all other goblin labor by Lloyd Metcalf. The project funded in just under 24 hours and has continued to do well for a short run project.

Those Dam GoblinsLabyrinth Lord (BECMI) adventure with 5E rules!

We blasted through the first stretch goal, which means this adventure is now FULL COLOR, but it retains that old school feel. This is a revised adventure from a previously short-run release. There is new art, more content, and Labyrinth Lord rules with 5E rules.

Several years ago human settlers discovered a marsh covered valley which they knew would provide fertile crop land if only the marsh could be drained. The settlers dammed the river and may have damned themselves! The diverted river has awoken the cliffs themselves. Strange rumblings in the earth and smoke from the cliff tops are sure signs of trouble. The residents of Fertile Valley need some heroes, can you save Fertile Valley before it’s too late?”

It is an adventure for 4-6 characters of levels 1-3. This module has a definite “Old School Flavor” written by Chris Clark who worked directly with Gary Gygax.

We’ve loaded it with art collectible levels and low $ entry marks for digital only options. We are adding in a 5E “Interlude Adventure”, which is a 2 page cardstock quest with 3 hole punch for your trapper keeper.

Back it now before it ends on Dec 16th 2017!

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Why is Basic So Limited? /blog/why-is-basic-so-limited/ /blog/why-is-basic-so-limited/#comments Fri, 24 Nov 2017 15:39:00 +0000 http://www.failsquadgames.com/?p=1317 There is a psychology in sales that holds true, “If you let the customer choose everything, they choose nothing.”. This has been proven numerous times in both retail, design… and gaming. Why would anyone want to limit player options? Because when players can choose anything,...

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There is a psychology in sales that holds true, “If you let the customer choose everything, they choose nothing.”. This has been proven numerous times in both retail, design… and gaming. Why would anyone want to limit player options? Because when players can choose anything, they choose everything!

When giving clients design options, smart designers present 2 or 3 of the best options. When more are presented, clients waffle, they are unsure. The designer is asking the client to make design decisions and there comes a hundred revisions before the project ends in frustrated “I guess so” decisions.

In stores, retailers have presented shoppers with a taste test of 50 types of mustard, or 5. When shoppers were faced with 50 the sales were dismal but many samples were had. With 5, sales records were broken and customers returned to sample other flavors later.

Edition Preference

Let’s just start with saying that this is not an edition wars post. If you enjoy your edition and have no issues, wonderful. It is my hope that you might also consider coming back to the origins that new systems claim to emulate and trying them out when you want a change. It’s been my experience that new editions are not emulating Basic as much as they think.

Does it Fall Apart?

When the game options open to any race / class combination and any character spanning any profession at any level, things start to go awry, and here’s why I struggle with it.

Opening the class and race options to everything invites a min/max effort right away. The player feels as if there may be some sort of “edge” to playing a minotaur fighter over a human fighter, and they may be right. Even if the table warns of “Roleplaying social stigma in towns etc.” Most of the player’s life is in a dungeon, where doing 2D12 damage is more important than the barkeep not serving you ale inside. Players start seeking ways to manipulate the numbers of the game before even thinking of their character, and it’s not even on purpose.

If one of the players at the table opts for a dragonborn barbarian that breathes fire, sees in the dark, casts some spells, has some immunities, has extra hit points, can sneak, can go to negative hit-points during bonus rage…. Why would the next one then choose “Human Fighter”? The answer isn’t to give the human fighter more super powers to match the dragonborn. The answer is to balance the player power from the get-go and throughout the game.

Furthermore when one player can advance as a Fighter, Wizard, Thief, Cleric etc.. at any time at will, why do they even need a “party” or “unity”? Maybe only to get more attacks per round.

 Player Options

Why would anyone want to limit player options? Because when players can choose anything, they choose everything. B/X, BECMI, Labyrinth Lord, and the various Basic D&D clones have a commonality. A cap on player class and race power and how it affects gameplay for everyone at the table. Labyrinth Lord (And most B/X systems) offer:

  • Fighter
  • Magic-user
  • Cleric
  • Thief
  • Elf
  • Dwarf
  • Halfling

In the days when this was standard, we didn’t expect the GM or publisher to create a set of rules and mechanics because we wanted to play a pirate. We opted for one of the above classes and told the tale of the character’s sea-faring background. Want a wilderness type ranger? Neat! Your fighter has a bow and comes from the Misty Mountains and knows the outdoors. That was it.

A Fighter also doesn’t arbitrarily decide one day to toss his new XP into being a Magic-user to have the power of both. Switching professions was a serious life choice that would bring you back to level 1. Combining fighting and wizardry is the realm of elves, and has it’s price.

The Balance of Limit

With the BECMI / LL / B/X characters, no one class was “better” than the others. The game was carefully balanced, and each played very different roles in the game with their unique abilities. Humans, the most prolific and wide-spread race had the option of four different professions. The rarer sub-races were a class unto themselves by their nature and scarcity. Each advanced at a different rate that balanced their power in the game.

These power balances and abilities create a situation where players rely on one another and the unique abilities of each class. Every class filled a niche hole in game strategy that was important. Even a BECMI fighter with all 18’s in all stats can’t cure disease, or pick the next lock. She might excel at being a heroic warrior, but it doesn’t fill all challenges of the game, it also doesn’t even dominate a combat scenario.

Never Getting a Turn

I’ve sat at the table of various editions (2E and up) where one character might be a race/class combination that just decimates a battle encounter. They dole out copious amounts of damage and can end a combat in a single round. To keep the party challenged the GM has to crank up encounter power. That means other players, if they ever get a turn in combat, only get one hit before they die. Players are fiddling with their phones and soon the only one playing is the super-character who min/maxed correctly.

In B/X and clones, a thief might level up at 1,200 XP, while an elf, who has some neat abilities and spells, might not level up until they obtained 4,000 XP. Balance of power throughout the game is important. It keeps all players important and allows the GM to easily present a game that is engaging for everyone with minimal pressure.

I Want to be a Unique CharacterLloyd Metcalf

Every character is unique with limited class options. A player could opt to be a Witch, Noble archer, Singing rogue, Arctic Huntsman, or anything that you can imagine. They all fall into the role of one of the classes without adding game mechanics, rulings, and special tables that can up-end game balance. They add story and immersive content.

Distribution of Wonderment

These power-controlled situations in the game also make it easy for the Game Master to introduce wondrous magical items that are fun, exciting and add to the story and fantasy of the realm. When players hold all the wonderment in special abilities, and power by simply leveling up, only magic that totally skews a world stands out. In art I have a saying, “When everything is the focal point, nothing is the focal point.”

Try it

It is my sincere hope that gamers everywhere set aside their shiny new books for a few sessions and just try out the old or OSR rule sets on occasion to get a feel for what the games play like. It’s hard to keep the wizard alive to fourth level, where he starts saving the hides of everyone at fifth. When only one player in this dungeon, a mile underground, can heal that fungal disease, they are contributing to the story. Ragnar can’t smash the lock to get out of a trap and the thief is unconscious? STRATEGY. Dungeons and Dragons can become something like advanced chess when the balance and game works out.

The GM Advantage

Labyrinth Lord, B/X, BECMI, and clones also give ultimate power to the Game Master. It also makes it easy to present and manage the game. Being a GM in newer systems is an intimidating task. The most common thing I hear about becoming a GM is, “I’m afraid I’ll screw it up, I don’t know all the rules.”

When the rules are a short booklet that walks you through running the game, this changes things dramatically.

Becoming a BECMI GM is a future post.

~Lloyd M [FSG]

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Why Play Red Box D&D? /blog/play-red-box-dd/ /blog/play-red-box-dd/#comments Fri, 10 Nov 2017 13:00:56 +0000 http://www.failsquadgames.com/?p=1254 Some controversy around an author has stirred up some strong feelings in the gaming world. It might be time to take a step back and think about what is known to 80’s gamers as BECMI. What is BECMI? B.E.C.M.I. is the abbreviated term for...

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Some controversy around an author has stirred up some strong feelings in the gaming world. It might be time to take a step back and think about what is known to 80’s gamers as BECMI.

Red Box D&DWhat is BECMI?

B.E.C.M.I. is the abbreviated term for Basic, Expert, Companion, Master, and Immortal box sets. “Basic Dungeons and Dragons” was released in the USA in 1983. There were two versions prior to this known commonly as “Holmes edition” and “Moldvay edition”. They were all intended as a gateway into the existing Advanced Dungeons and Dragons systems that intimidated some players with more complex rules and tables. The revision author of the red box was Frank Mentzer with art from Jeff Easley and Larry Elmore.

Who still plays this?

Plenty of people, that’s who. North Texas RPG con is one example of cons focused primarily on the older versions of tabletop RPGs. Many gamers, myself included, came to Dungeons and Dragon through this box set. The original box set is a little difficult to find these days, but the books still exist and have even been re-released by WOTC in PDFLabyrinth Lord is considered the OSR standard version of the game. Some differences exist, but the feel and primary fun are all in place.

Why use it?

Let’s take the controversy of an author out of this post and look at why it’s good to keep the old red box on your shelf.

BECMI Dungeons and Dragons remains a quality product if we set all other things aside. It’s easy to pick up and play, limitless in possibility, and streamlined. It places story telling in the forefront and maintains a fast battle resolution system and extremely fun game that relies heavily on DM rulings to resolve issues. The red set (Basic) gives you just enough to play and run games up to level 3. It doesn’t concern itself with powers, ability or spells beyond that. The product itself is elegant and hard to put down as a read. If it doesn’t excite the gamer in you, you aren’t alive.

For young gamers, it’s a wonderful introduction. The text and wording are carefully chosen to inspire the imagination and feed adventure. Just flipping through the pages, I find myself inspired to get moving on our next project.

Isn’t it too simple for experienced gamers?

If you came into the hobby during AD&D 2.0 – 5.0 it’s worth the read through and at least a night of trying it out. It isn’t really the same game and has a different flavor. It allows to DM to be loose and free with ideas and rulings. It’s almost like gesture drawing in the gaming world. In as little as 20 – 20 minutes you will have the gist of how to play and DM. The cap is put tightly on power while party collaboration takes over.

Races as classes?

Yes, races as classes. This was done to simplify the process and the game. Labyrinth Lord keeps this, and I believe the Rules Cyclopedia does as well. It’s worth at least a few play-throughs with the rules set as written before you begin house-ruling changes about race – class. 0D&D treated things a little differently.

The red box deserves a play based on its own merits alone before you discard it based on anything else. The game is remarkably fun and exciting, even the solo adventure in the players manual. Once you get your BECMI group into the realm of levels 5-8 things really come into their own and become more exciting than should be allowed with one-page character sheets. The game is simply, fun as hell.

To put a point on it, we are releasing our next adventure module from Fail Squad Games in BECMI and 5E. It’s worth while to keep it alive and keep the old school dice rolling.

 

 

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