Showing posts with label reaction roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reaction roll. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

[Secret Santicorn!!] A second, more serious oracle for character simulation: The Methodical Oracle

As promised, a more serious offering for Kirt Dankmeyr, based on his request of a "A small oracle for solo OSR play oriented toward simulating party members and not the GM. Tho bonus points for a GM replacement oracle that dovetails with the first one".


The Methodical Oracle!

The point of this small oracle is to aid the solo GM in "in-character" decision making.

Create a Profile for each player character in the party by assigning one of the five Methods to each slot:

Profile types:

Balanced

Focused

Hyperfocused

Method slots

2-3

2

2

Rare

4-5

3-5

3-4

Secondary

6-8

6-8

5-9

Main

9-10

9-11

10-11

Secondary

11-12

12

12

Rare

The five Methods:

Violence

Direct confrontation, brute-forcing

Diplomacy

Smooth-talking, bartering, calling in other parties (e.g. NPCs)

Knowledge

Monster lore, survivalism, arts & crafts, history & politics

Trickery

Exploitation of the space, devices, creative use of objects, falsehoods

Magic

Spell-slinging, prayer to higher forces, decipherment of arcane clues, activation of weird objects


The Procedure:

At any decision point, pick or randomize a lead character. Then roll 2d6 and consult the character’s Profile to see which Method they offer.

To make things more interesting, pick or randomize a second character and cross-check their Method using the same roll result as the lead’s (so if you rolled 6 for the lead, check what’s a 6 on the second character’s Profile). Describe the conflict or the synthesis of their Methods. You can use a standard Reaction roll to see whether the other character likes or dislikes the alternative proposal.

 

Example Profiles:

Bubba the Wizard

Hyperfocused

Method

2

Violence

3-4

Knowledge

5-9

Magic

10-11

Trickery

12

Diplomacy

 

Morax the Duelist

Focused

Method

2

Knowledge

3-5

Trickery

6-8

Diplomacy

9-11

Violence

12

Magic

 

Example Decisions:

Situation 1.

The party enters a cave, the lair of a dozen goblins. The goblins are surprised. Bubba the Wizard takes the lead, and, after some deliberations (2d6: 11 = Trickery), offers to sneak by them. Morax the Duelist (11 = Violence) might offer to take advantage of the situation and charge the unaware goblins.

Situation 2.

The party is looking for their patron’s stolen ring in the big city. Morax the Duelist takes the lead and comes up with the ingenious plan (2d6: 5 = Trickery) to create a fake ring. Bubba the Wizard (5 = Magic, Reaction roll: 9 = Positive) agrees and checks his books for an illusion spell to help with the plan.




Friday, December 15, 2023

[Secret Santicorn!!] Player simulation oracle for solo games

It's Santicorn-time on the OSR discord server!

Kirt Dankmyer requested "A small oracle for solo OSR play oriented toward simulating party members and not the GM. Tho bonus points for a GM replacement oracle that dovetails with the first one."

Okay, my entry here is a bit of a stretch... But to truly replicate the OSR (and RPG...) experience, you need to account for the whims of the players themselves! So, you, as the solo DM, present the situation, then roll to see just how you, the solo player, are interested in this stuff...

THE PLAYER REACTION CHART (2D6)

 

 

Sample quip (1d5)

2

deal with it begrudgingly


1.    “Mehh, I think riddles are stupid”

2.    “Sure, although this is not how Jeff runs it”

3.    “This fight is a slog, I stab myself”

4.    “Ugh, not *another* ‘you start in a tavern’ session”

5.    “This goes against all established lore though”


3-5

scatterbrain


1.    “Sorry, I thought this was still Elsa’s turn”

2.    “Remind me, who is this guy again”

3.    “Wait, what do I roll for that?”

4.    “Yeah, it’s on my character sheet. Or this piece of scratch paper. I just can’t read it”

5.    “Can I borrow your dice?”


6-8

acknowledge & participate


1.    “Yes, this is all part of the game”

2.    “Fair enough, I hit it with my sword”

3.    “I ask the wizard if he knows the location of Castle whatsitsname”

4.    “My thief checks the lock for traps”

5.    “We ascend the stairs”


9-11

honest interest


1.    “Oh, I have this in my notes!”

2.    “Let’s try and befriend these goblins, we need allies against the Fish Lords”

3.    “That blacksmith is quite a character, I’m sure we can ask about her battlescars AFTER we are done with what we had planned”

4.    “What a quirky trap! We reset it to lure the next monster into it”

5.    “And I have just the spell we need!”


12

HYPERFIXATE


1.    “OMG so adorable let’s adopt this random gnome fighter”

2.    “We could make so much money by bottling the healing water from this random pool! Leave dungeon crawling behind”

3.    “I check for secret doors and traps every 5’ instead of 10’. There MUST be something here”

4.    “No, these broken chairs cannot simply be dungeon dressing. The GM mentioned them for a reason”

5.    “Okay, I examine the next book. And the next. The next one too…”


  



Saturday, July 29, 2023

Dirt simple 2d6 weather roll

Here's a short entry for this month's Blog Carnival: Terrain, Seasons, Weather!

By now using Reaction rolls to adjudicate, umm, everything and anything, has become an OSR staple, and I'm here for it! I think I first stumbled upon this idea over at Talysman's The Nine and Thirty Kingdoms blog. Since then, this little table has been on my DM screen/binder. 

 

Weather

2

Worst possible, anomalous, no travel

3-5

Very bad,
travel speed halved

6-8

Normal for season, regular travel

9-11

Advantageous, bonus travel speed

12

The best possible, bonus travel speed and morale


I like it, because it gives me a baseline, from which I can improv the actual conditions. If I'm stuck, I use the old "Dolmenwood Hex Crawl Procedure" document (no longer available on Gavin's blog, but pdf's hosted in other places are still around), which has a very nice 4xd8 table of possible seasonal weather types.


Giorgione, you rock.