Thu, 29 Jan 2009
This is an actual play report from the “Rushing Valley” Dungeons and Dragons campaign. These actual play reports are available in html with atom and rss feeds from T.K.B.'s blog and from P.D.F.'s RPG forum's Rushing Valley Campaign History forum.
Here's the very rough first draft of the log of the third session.
Please reply to this message with more details, or you'll end up with only this rambling biased view as the permanent record.
I'll post this to P.D.F's forum after everybody has had time to comment.
Attending
Clockwise round the table, starting with the GM at 9 o'clock:
- P.D.F. as GM
- B.MC. joins us, playing Polonius, Onchu's rowdy young cousin from Riverton
- T.K.B. playing Droston a'Seamus
- M.A.F. playing Bartha
- C.A.F. playing Onchu
J.H. was unavailable.
Introduction
Sunday, May 24th.
Wages:
- Bartha: 5 cp & leather armor
- Droston: 12 cp
- Onchu: 2 sp
- Eirnin: 2 gp (sold a perfect cherry tree to a Riverton businessman)
Actual Play
Somebody (the mine owner?) hires the group to help rebuild a bridge on the old road out past the village, where they want to open another quarry (marble?). Onchu and Polonius are to help Brock Stonearm, old dwarf who lives in a suite inside the iron ore mine, rebuild the bridge while Bartha and Droston guard and supply food.
Leave at dawn and get to bridge site at 9:30 am.
Bartha: 19 on Survival, a deer; Droston: 16 on Survival, 4 rabbits.
Droston leaves out cakes at likely places.
Lots of wolf sign; usually pack of 30, but now split into small groups of 3 or so? Also the tracks of a huge creature: Bartha says "Man Bear" — feathered, beaked, bear.
Droston insists on plenty of fires.
Second watch Droston heard something. He quietly work Bartha, who yelled and carried on. Eventually whatever it was went back the way it came.
Droston insists on more fires.
Tuesday? Day 2?
Bartha ran into 2 wolves 75 yards from camp. The wolves end up dead and skinned.
Droston insists on even more fires.
Day 4? Droston kills a turkey for dinner, but is attacked by a giant demonic weasel with horns and barbs, which he just barely manages to kill by himself, but is severely wounded. The group estimates the demonic weasel weighed 500 to 600 pounds, and its tracks come from the north. The group skins it and takes the head, paws, and pelt to show the village.
Bartha heals Droston to the best of her ability and treats his wounds.
Stonearm tells the friends that he had heard of such creatures, called dire animals, and had even seen one in his childhood, though he didn't want to discuss it any further. He suggests they head back to the village immediately in the morning.
Brock said stay at the mine to get first aid — old Gerdie there is the best in the village.
Somebody (Brock?) mentions that there is a witch in a swamp at Riverton who is said to be able to make potions that can heal wounds.
Town meeting on Saturday, 2 cp bounty for wolf skins starting with the two the group brought back.
Saturday, 2 gp, Monday fully healed.
Polonius is given a heirloom shortsword and a chaw of ‘baccie by old man Grillus.
Brock tells the friends that the only smith who can make weapons is in Riverton.
Back to bridge site on Monday.
On rock where Droston left sweet cake and Bartha left a pretty stone is a marble that tingles when one holds it, the colors swirl and change, and one feels happier when holding it.
Once back at the campsite the group discovers that some of the large tools that they left and some of the timbers are missing, the campsite has been picked through, and things moved and things missing — some turn out to have been thrown down the ravine. Unfortunately, the timber that Polonius (?) spent so much time shaping and the pulleys we need to finish the bridge are missing.
The tracks told Bartha and Droston that four creatures wearing boots, with very small feet, smaller than dwarven feet, were the culprits. Brock said he hadn't seen gnomes here since the dwarves left, and thought these tracks were were definitely not dwarven, and didn't seem like gnome tracks.
The tracks lead them up a mile S.E. to a camp, which was filthy and stank terribly. Found the big timber with end cut off with a rusty saw and hacked about. Didn't find pulleys Droston and Bartha both failed to follow the tracks any further (both rolled 17).
On the way back they found a vine covered carved opening in the hill half way back to the bridge site — dwarven sized, with unknown complex runes around the opening. Droston copied one simple glyph on bark, after Polonius came up with the idea of using bark.
Brock comes back with them to the opening and translates the dwarven rules: “Here lies Rorn (decayed) the savior of (decayed).” He tells them that Rorn Golden Eye was a hero of the first goblin war, 1200 years ago. His chosen weapon was a large hammer, and he died young saving a bunch of dwarves. Brock says leave the opening uncovered — if this is his tomb it should be honored.
Tuesday morning there was a problem with the timber, rope, and pulley arrangement erected to move the keystone into place, and Brock ended up hanging at the end of a rope. Onchu made a furious effort to pull things back to a stable position, but was unable to make any progress. Luckily Polonius had better luck, tied off his side, pulled Brock to safety, and didn't even loose the key stone.
The bridge is done Friday, hear wolves, get two more deer, which will be enough hide to make another suit of leather armor.
Aftermath
We each got 350 XP, except for C.A.F., who got 335 XP (15 XP late penalty).
Droston got 1 Fame Point, for killing the Dire Weasel.
We split the 4 cp bounty for the two wolf-skins amongst the four PCs.
Wed, 21 Jan 2009
Tue, 13 Jan 2009
- Pushing Ice, by Alastair Reynolds, copyright 2005; Ace/The Berkley
Publishing Group/The Penguin Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc., June 2006, ISBN 0-441-01401-1.
Sun, 11 Jan 2009
Saturn's Children, A Space Opera by Charles Stross, copyright 2008; Ace Books/The Berkley Publishing Group/The Penguin Group/Penguin Group (USA) Inc., July 2008; ISBN 978-0-441-01594-8. Bridgeport Public Library.
Despite the cover (which I suppose was appropriate to the content of the book, but still was rather off-putting) I enjoyed this.
Sat, 10 Jan 2009
Bad Monkeys, by Matt Ruff, copyright 2007; HarperPerennial/HarperCollins Publisher; first Harper Perennial edition published 2008; ISBN 978-0-06-124041-6. Bridgeport Public Library.
This book listed three others by Matt Ruff: Set This House in Order, Fool on the Hill, Sewer, Gas & Electric; I think I should check them out.
Wed, 07 Jan 2009
The Dark Heart of Time, by Philip José Farmer, copyright © 1999 by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.; Del Rey/The Ballantine Publishing Group/Random House, Inc.; 1st edition, 1st printing, June 1999; ISBN 0-345-42463-8.
It's been a while since I've read any of Burrough's Tarzan books, so I can't compare styles, but certainly in inventiveness and subject matter Farmer did a good job with this story. I've always been fond of Farmer's various different takes on Tarzan, whether an authorized pastiche like this one, a deconstruction, an alternate mythology, or a backstory element [1].
I really should complete my collection of Tarzan novels, though.
| [1] | See Hadon of Ancient Opar and its sequel, Flight to Opar. |
Tue, 06 Jan 2009
It turns out that if you are upgrading your pkgsrc packages in a sandbox you really need to make sure that the home directory of the user you are using exists in the sandbox, if you use any packages that have a file:configure script that checks for mcs, since mono hangs if it can't use the home directory. Ugh.
Sun, 04 Jan 2009
The Mirror of Worlds, the second volume of The Crown of the Isles, by David Drake, copyright © 2007; Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, LLC, mass market edition: November 2008; ISBN-10, 1st printing: 0-7633-5117-X, ISBN-13: 978-0-7633-5117-X.
This is 2nd book in the trilogy that concludes Drake's The Lord of the Isles series. I've really enjoyed this series because of the interesting characters, interesting setting, and interesting magic.
Sat, 03 Jan 2009
- Mistral's Kiss, by Laurell K. Hamilton, copyright © 2006; Ballantine Books/The Random House Publishing Group/ Random House, Inc., mass market edition 2007; ISBN 978-0-345-44361-8.
- A Lick of Frost, by Laurell K. Hamilton, copyright © 2007; Ballantine Books/The Random House Publishing Group/ Random House, Inc., mass market edition 2008; ISBN 978-345-49591-4.
Two more entertaining entries in Hamilton's Meredith Gentry series.
Fri, 02 Jan 2009
So, one of the things L.B. really wanted to do this winter vacation was play Toon with the kids. Unfortunately, since I'd been so bad about getting things prepared and even worse getting things scheduled, we almost didn't get to play. We did get to play a short Toon session, though, while visiting C.P.B., my older brother, and his family.
The roster was:
- L.B., I think playing a chocolate loving bear
- C.P.B. and M.B., playing an elf named Ralph
- D.B., playing a hovering suit of plate armor
Toon, as an inherently comic game, is hard for me to prepare and run. Luckily, it has a very useful “Adventure Generator”, and I had used it earlier to get some general ideas, and I wrote a few paragraphs in my notebook about them and picked and adapted some characters from the many NPCs in the Toon rulebook. When we finally got around to playing we didn't have time to create new PCs, so I just passed out some old character sheets, and they all picked toons they'd created in earlier sessions, and away we went. I pretty much improvised on the stuff from my notebooks, and the kids seemed to have fun.