Friday, March 25, 2022

About Puzzle Dungeon: The Seers Sanctum


Puzzle Dungeon: The Seers Sanctum is a definitely interesting OSR dungeon adventure. It was originally launched during ZineQuest3, and is currently available at DriveThruRPG.








Some basic information. PD:TSS is a 22 pages PDF, offering a10 room dungeon adventure for characters level 1-4, with statistics that allow to use it with pretty much any odnd/BX/BECMI type of ruleset.

The dungeon is the underground temple of the long lost cult of the Seers, and sight is the theme of the whole place.



What's so great about the module? A lot:
  • Original theme. Being original is not a strict requirement for me, but having a dungeon which is not just yet another crypt filled with undead, or cave with a bunch of orcs, is definitely good.
  • Interactive environment. Each and everyone of the 10 rooms offers a "puzzle". These are not actual puzzles as much as environments that the players can examine and interact with in a series of meaningful ways, and this is definitely good. There's a hand mirror that allows to see how the place was in the past, allowing for a lot of investigation. And the general theme of sight is carried on consistently through the place, meaning that players should reasonably figure out how to circumvent traps and reveal secret passages and hidden things.
  • Non-necessary fights. The whole dungeon only host 4 rooms with a single creature encounter and one room with 2d4 creatures. The cool thing is none of them, except perhaps the grey ooze in the first room, is a necessary fight. The 2d4 floating eyeballs don't attack by default, and can be tricked in several ways. There's a medusa whose objective is to leave the dungeon, and a gelatinous cube that first appears trapped inside a pool, and so on.
  • Great formatting. The text organization and layout are excellent and make preparation and running the adventure very easy.

Things I'm not completely happy with.
  • Some unclear points. The text and formatting is, in general, excellent, but I've found a few odd bits. The iron doors in room 2 are described as "no handles, no hinges, locked" and that's it. Perhaps a paragraph is missing? Anyway, before running the scenario the GM must decide how to handle those doors. Personally, I would just treat them like the similar door found in room 1.
  • Treasure. There is a very cool magic item (a stick that can be used like a periscope), but the treasure in the treasure room is barely described ("coins, gems, golden monkeys") and the GM must decide the actual value. Being the only monetary treasure, I would go for something like 1d3 x 1,000gp worth of coins, and two more rolls for the gems and the monkey statues.
  • Treasure, again. The deepest room has a medusa trapped inside. She only wants to be free again, so unless the players mess with her, The problem I see is that getting to her room requires some effort and clever thinking, so I would rather put some treasure here: jewels, jars with precious oils, something like that, for another 1d3 x 1,000gp at least.
  • Room 8 has the "final puzzle", a planar travel device which the group might figure out how to use (finding it is one of the possible reasons to enter the dungeon, as per the provided hooks). It IS cool, of course, but I would keep it as it is only if I'm ready to have the player characters hop into other planes. Should I run this dungeon (which I definitely would like to), I think I'll change the device in someway, if I play it as part of a larger campaign.

[Please note my observation is based on the PDF version I bought and printed at home last week. Later versions (especially the PDF) might have these little things fixed]


 For those using VTTs, redditor StevenZivon has made a very cool map of the whole dungeon.






Into OSR? Check my other OSR posts and reviews!

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Dragon Treasure Alternate Tables

Currently working on finishing the Deadly Dragons Dire and Daunting zine which will be part of the Axian Library book.

It is a LARGE set of tables and tools, and today I want to share this group, which tackles the dragon's treasure hoard.

It is designed to be compatible with Old-School Essentials and so, as usual, it is compatible with BX D&D and similar editions and retroclones.



Treasure Table 1: Value

Alternate Tables: All dragons in Old-School Essentials have treasure type H, with average value 60,000gp. This and the following tables aim at generating a dragon’s hoard more quickly, while maintaining randomness, and also at making it interesting.


Roll 2d6 to establish the overall value of the dragon’s hoard. Apply modifiers resulting from the dragon’s age, if any.


2

Nothing! The dragon’s hoard has been stolen and it is obviously mad about it.

3

5,000gp

4

10,000gp

5

25,000gp

6

40,000gp

7

60,000gp

8

70,000gp

9

80,000gp

10

90,000gp

11

100,000gp

12

110,000gp



Treasure Table 2: Composition

Roll 1d20 to establish the general composition of the dragon’s hoard.


1

Mostly silver and copper coins

2-3

Mostly silver and electrum coins

4-7

Mostly electrum and gold coins

8-11

Mostly gold and platinum coins

12

About half the value in coins (roll a d10 on this table to determine type of coins), and half in gems with an average value of 500gp

13

Mostly gems, with an average value of 500gp

14

Mostly jewels, with an average value of 1,000gp

15

About half the value in coins (roll a d10 on this table to determine type of coins), and half in unusual precious items: fine porcelain or glassware (easily broken); rare spice (ruined by water); cloth, tapestry, paintings, ancient books and scrolls of great artistic or historical value (all highly flammable). Each item is worth 1,000gp.

16

About half the value in coins (roll a d10 on this table to determine type of coins), and half in jewels with an average value of 1,000gp

17

About half the value in gems with an average value of 500gp, and half in jewels with an average value of 1,000gp

18

The value is divided in roughly equal parts between coins (roll a d10 on this table to determine type of coins), gems with an average value of 500gp, and jewels with an average value of 1,000gp

19

About 25% of the value of the treasure is in a single exceptional gem. Roll 1d12 on this table to establish the composition of the other 75%.

Examples of exceptional gems: star crystal, moon pearl, ethereal diamond, astral amethyst, blood ruby, nether diamond.

20

About 50% of the value of the treasure is in a single exceptional jewel. Roll 1d12 on this table to establish the composition of the other 50%.

Exceptional jewels may be made of platinum or even rarer, more precious metals, and may be studded with dozens of gems, or even exceptional gems (see above). They may also be dragon-sized!


Treasure Table 3: Magic Items

Alternate Table: All dragons in Old-School Essentials have treasure type H, which has a 15% chance to include 1d4 magic items plus 1 potion and 1 scroll.

This table determines in a single roll both if any magic item is present in the hoard, and the item type, making treasure generation easier and faster. The results are also more varied, and tied to the dragon’s HD.


Roll 1d20 and add the dragon’s HD.


1-10

no magic items

11

1 magic item

12

1 scroll

13

1 potion

14

1 potion, plus 1 scroll

15

1 magic item, plus 1 scroll

16

1 magic item, plus 1 potion

17

1 magic item, plus 1 potion, plus 1 scroll

18

2 magic items, plus 1 scroll

19

2 magic items, plus 1 potion

20

2 magic items, plus 1 potion, plus 1 scroll

21

3 magic items, plus 1 scroll

22

3 magic items, plus 1 potion

23

3 magic items, plus 1 potion, plus 1 scroll

24

4 magic items, plus 1 scroll

25

4 magic items, plus 1 potion

26

4 magic items, plus 1 potion, plus 1 scroll

27

5 magic items, plus 1 potion, plus 1 scroll

28

5 magic items, plus 2 potion, plus 1 scroll

29

5 magic items, plus 1 potion, plus 2 scroll

30

5 magic items, plus 2 potion, plus 2 scroll

31

6 magic items, plus 2 potion, plus 2 scroll

32

6 magic items, plus 3 potion, plus 2 scroll

33

6 magic items, plus 2 potion, plus 3 scroll

34

6 magic items, plus 3 potion, plus 3 scroll

35

7 magic items, plus 3 potion, plus 3 scroll



Treasure Table 4: Origin

Roll 1d20 to determine whence the dragon’s hoard came from.


1

It was an ancient dwarf king’s treasure. Add 2d6 gems with an average value of 500gp.

2

It was an elven queen’s treasure. Add 2d6 jewels with an average value of 1,000gp.


3

It was a giant king’s treasure. Add 1 giant-sized jewel worth 5,000 gp.

4

It is a collection of several princes’ and princesses’ ransoms.

Add 1,000pp to the treasure.

5-6

It is the accumulation of tolls extorted to travelers crossing the area around the dragon’s lair.

7-8

It is the accumulation of tributes of enslaved or defeated humanoid tribes.

Roll an additional humanoid tribe on the Allies table.

9

It is the accumulation of donations from several cities that paid to be spared.

Add 20.000gp to the treasure.

10

It is the treasure of a long lost civilization.

11

It is the heirloom of the dragon’s ancestry.

12

It was the hoard of another, now dead dragon. Add a dragon skull! 

13-14

It is the accumulation of riches taken from assaulted merchant caravans or ships. Add 2d6 items as listed in entry n. 15 of the Treasure Composition table.

15-16

It is the accumulation of donations and gifts from the dragon’s allies. Add 2d6 items as listed in entry n. 15 of the Treasure Composition table.

17-18

It is the accumulation of spoils of dead would-be dragonslayers. Add two more rolls on Treasure Table 3: Magic Items.

19-20

Roll twice!


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Into OSR? Check my other OSR and Random Tables posts!

Sunday, March 6, 2022

About The Black Wyrm of Brandonsford

 The Black Wyrm of Brandonsford is, well, an excellent OSR adventure, and you should probably stop reading now, click on the image, and buy it straight away.

As I'm writing this, it is even part of the GM's Day Sale at DriveThruRPG...


But since you are still reading, I'll give you a bit more context.
TBWoB is a sandboxy pointcrawl adventure for level 1-3 characters, with statistics compatible with most OSR rulesets of the od&d/BX/BECMI type. You find AC, HD, and so on. Treasure is in line with the gold/xp progression of those games.

It takes place in a small forested area, pretty much the size of a 6 miles hex, with a river and some mountains at the north.
The town of Brandonsford is the only civilized settlement, and the adventure starting place.
The citizens refuse to go outside the city walls because a dragon has been sighted for a few weeks.
This is the basic set-up.

The module includes two dungeons (one is 6 rooms, the other is about 20), and several other smaller locations. The city of Brandonsford includes several NPCs, and others (including a whole humanoid faction) live in the woods.

The theme/implied setting is vanilla fantasy with more than a sprinkle of fairy tale/folklore vibes. I like it.

What's so great about the module? Three things:
  • Number one, everything connects with something. The NPCs in town have their hooks and miniquests and information bits that may lead the adventurers in new directions, look for certain areas, investigate places, and so on.
  • Number two, freedom. There is nothing the group has to do in order to "solve" the scenario, but there are lots of different paths of action that can make the battle against the dragon much easier. Even the "miniquests" are great, interesting situations with no predefined solution but a variety of possible approaches and outcomes. Everything is open-ended, but tightly designed to push adventure on.
  • Number three, great formatting and text. As far as I'm concerned, they're pretty much perfect: sweet and short and well organized, without useless fluff. In just 18 pages you get hours and hours of gaming, and they're very easy to understand and prepare thanks to a clear layout and use of bold and bullet points.

Is it perfectly perfect? Well, almost!
There's basically only three minor flaws that I've found, and you can fix them in 5 minutes.
  • Some creatures don't have their stats in the adventure: I remember the fauns and the witch, not sure if that's all or I'm forgetting something. This is solved with using stat blocks from your game of choice. And if doesn't have them, you can just wing it using the gnoll stat block and a level 4 magic user, I guess! For Old-School Essentials, you have Satyrs in the Advanced Fantasy monsters book, but no witches it seems!
  • Exploring the outdoor area, and familiarizing with the town and the locals is intentionally left to the GM. This means you must think how to start the scenario and run the exploration. Luckily, you may use these maps I've found on Reddit: hex map of the area, and Brandonsford town map, both by  Bricky (reddit user BadRussell). Oh and there's also this colorized map on Imgur.
  • In the goblin castle map, number 3 and 4 are swapped; and so are 10 and 11 in the Barrow Mound. This was pretty obvious from the room descriptions.
[Please note my observation is based on the Print on Demand version I bought last week. Later versions (especially the PDF) might have these little things fixed]

....so, yes, I'll just copy-paste the first line of this post now.
 

 The Black Wyrm of Brandonsford is an excellent OSR adventure, and you should stop reading now, click on the image, and buy it straight away.



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