Saturday, March 21, 2020

Far Sector #2


I have been up all night getting tangled in an ever-growing web of anxiety and uncertainty, and reading Far Sector #2 with a good "breakfast" seems perfect.

This issue begins with Lantern Mullein literally pulling up a chair (a Green Lantern construct) and speaking to the audience directly. She catches us up to current events before we cut to the place we left off in issue #1 and move into an energetic chase. But the high-energy action and tension is slowly released, and we are eased into a much more intimate look into each of the major characters and world throughout the rest of the book.

Far Sector #2 cover by Jamal Campbell

The worldbuilding we saw in issue 1 informed what the world is like and taught some of its history. However, now, we get to know what it is like to actually live in this world for the Nah and keh-Topli and Lantern Mullein, and form a better idea of what it might be like for us readers. The way we are given information is also contrasted with the first issue in that there is a lot of deeper storytelling happening in subtext alongside dialogue and Jo's monologues to us and herself. And there is still great, expressive, visual storytelling but on a smaller scale—from character interactions to flashback vignettes, everything is very intimate.

Lantern Mullein using her powers and encountering an obstacle during the chase


The themes of this issue are emotions, self-control, and imperfection, and they are expertly presented. Much of the monologue and dialogue can be taken at face value, such as when Jo talks to us directly or other characters talk plainly to her. But a lot of the writing and art requires us to read much deeper into the conversational subtext and contextual storytelling in the background, such as when Syzn or the keh-Topli Councillor describe themselves and the emotions (or suppression thereof) of themselves and others. We learn what Syzn thinks of Jo and her capabilities and emotional self-control; we understand the self doubt Jo has when she hears this, and Syzn's desires and self doubt. A lot of storytelling (specifically tone-setting) even happens purely with color, both classical color theory and cultural connections between emotions and colors, and Green Lantern-specific colors (especially in the last scene).

Syzn talking about the keh-Topli

In the last part of the issue we get a climactic realization about one of the characters. This section does a great job at cluing us into the shift in tone and foreshadowing events in the near future. The subtext is deceptively obvious in a way that lets us slip into the moment and feel positive emotions with Jo and another major character while also gradually increasing the tension of the scene without us knowing exactly what's happening until the final page when the tension peaks with the big twist, and the build up to that moment suddenly makes sense. This entire scene contrasts with the tone we feel and with the emotions that Jo and the other characters have felt so far, and that with the more intimately-explored themes leading here make this moment as strong as it is.

Overall, this issue is as fantastic as the first, but more mysterious and eerie in its tone. Whenever there is a sense of discovery it comes with questions, suspicions, a heavier feeling of ominous anticipation rather than the lighter feelings of wonder from before. "Refreshing" isn't quite the right word for it, but it feels like the comic is heading down a winding path, into a deeper, darker tunnel toward more danger and more questions. And, possibly, more and more big discoveries that will answer questions and make unknown elements of the world and its characters clearer for us—or not, as neo noir science-fantasy stories with horror themes can tend to do. I'm excited about the possibility of either happening.

Far Sector #2 impressed me just as much as the first issue and pulled me deeper into the story, not just with its storytelling methods but also with how it changed the pace and themes and tension-stretching. It is different than the first in a lot of ways but still possesses so many of the qualities I already loved about the world; characters (Jo, Syzn, the horror-themed keh-Topli), fashion, the classy maturity, the noir mystery vibes, everything. And ending with the twist that it did while leaving out some notable aspects and characters (the @At Councillor and Jo's ring weren't explored in this issue)—and possibly foreshadowing other things—certainly isn't curbing my hunger to read more.
   It is, however, curbing my hunger to play Android: Netrunner and consume everything Star Wars after getting a taste of Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order earlier this week. And my impulse to create fan-made campaigns for those settings are shifting into impulses to make something for the world of Far Sector. It scratches so many itches for fantasy, horror, and sci-fi while making me crave more.

I do have one complaint about this issue, and it's that I hate how short the issues are. But that isn't exactly a terrible thing, is it?

Shout-out again to Amy Dallen and her book club—check out her enthusiastic discussion of this comic and a bit of Green Lantern lore with other fans of the book on Twitch here—and to the writer of Far Sector, N.K. Jemisin, and the artist, Jamal Campbell. Fingers crossed that I can make time for issue #3 soon. Until then, thanks, go read the comic if you haven't yet, and please, stay mindful and safe, everyone! Cheers!

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Far Sector #1

Because of Amy Dallen's book club (watch the vod here, spoilers be warned) I was sparked to finally start reading Far Sector #1 by N.K. Jemisin and Jamal Campbell. I had the comic on my wishlist since it released November 13, 2019, and was so excited to nerd out after reading it.

Far Sector #1 cover by Jamal Campbell

"The first murder in five hundred-ish years..." —Sojourner Mullein

Green Lantern Sojourner "Jo" Mullein. Style, mood, smart and mysterious. She's a rookie galactic investigator embarking on her first mission with very little experience in "in the field," let alone in this alien setting, and I absolutely love her writing and design so far. She is our mundane, real-world familiar anchor who is immensely engaging with her voice and attitude toward others, the world, and to herself. There are plenty of unanswered questions about Jo; the teases that we get about Jo's past contrast with the more raw and plentiful information we're given about the world and the immediate situation Jo is in, which keeps us turning pages.

The City Enduring in the Far Sector. Simple premise, mixing of genres, sublime worldbuilding, excellent execution. The three humanoid species—the Nah, the @At, and the keh-Topli—and their very strong opinions and emotions are very distinct from and in opposition to each other and quickly become part of the puzzle for Jo. The world is very much science-fantasy, but the story itself is a neo-noir mystery with a new and unique visual buffet. It already feels like everything is serving to accentuate or complicate the story hook (murder mystery), or is here to present classic human problems in new, exaggerated ways (emotions, politics, crime).

If you like Batman: The Animated Series, Men in Black, Starfinder, Shadowrun, Blade Runner, Pulp Fiction, The X-Files, Hellboy, Firefly, Brick, Cloud Atlas, or everything Green Lantern, there's a good chance you will find something to love about Far Sector. Its rating is for ages 17+, which is warranted with a few scenes and the generally more mature tone; in this first issue there isn't much violence shown, only some in brief flashbacks and a few shots in the present of dead alien bodies (one partially seen, the other torn apart and in full view).

For more nerding out over all the elements of the comic, go check out that vod. For other things to read, one of Amy's viewers mentioned The Ballad of Halo Jones by Alan Moore and Ian Gibson, and the first quote of the comic is from Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe which Amy also recommends. The characters and story, aside from Jo being a Green Lantern, are entirely removed from the greater DC Universe and (so far) completely contained within itself. Everything you need to know about the world is taught to you in this first issue.

I love Far Sector so far and can't wait to further indulge in the beautiful verbal and visual storytelling.

Far Sector Soundtrack


When reading this comic, from the very first page, I couldn't help but imagine it as an animated show or a video game. And even without those moving mental images, a lot of songs fit some scenes so well that I had to make a list.

Opening song: Rihanna - Needed Me. Watching people at night, and witnessing broken pieces of events that led up to the murder, ending with seeing cast shadows or the edges of the aftermath of the crime where the comic starts. The sounds and beat of this song are a killer tone-setter for this tech noir story.

The City Enduring

Newcleus - Space is the Place. Parts of this song are playing when we first experience the city "dropping its presence" during the artificial sunrise, and the camera flies around to see the city and busy people in the morning for a breather before Jo gets back to work.

The "sunrise" over Platform Ever Forward

Grimes ft. Janelle Monáe - Venus Fly. I imagine something like this playing when we meet the Trilogy councilors. There are plenty of songs that have some techno-pop and Manic Pixie Dream Girl-ness, including a lot of K-pop and J-pop, but this keeps things close to the core tone of the comic than poppier, hyper songs.

Opening or closing credits: Seal - Fly Like an Eagle. Although it's more uplifting than the darker noir vibes, this song has so much that fits the futuristic, far-away world of the City Enduring.

Other must-have songs: something (anything at all) by Sade, something by Nujabes, the latter half of Beyoncé - All Night, Bomfunk MC's - Freestyler with its slow start and transition into dangerously-late-90s hip hop overload, samples from Beastie Boys - Intergalactic, and something by Deltron 3030, Zapp, and Fatboy Slim - Right Here, Right Now (or a modern song evoking it) for when anyone is ever is a nightclub or in a street chase at night. R. Kelly - I Believe I Can Fly. has to make it in somewhere, maybe everywhere.

So much generative ambient and synth music would also fit the world and tone, spanning from classic drum and bass electronic music and ska-adjacent and alternative hip hop, to the full-on synth sounds of Blade Runner, Terminator, Thief, and Escape from New York. The trippy vocals of Kavinsky - Nightcall would also be fitting, and Deckard's voice and mechanical clacks at the beginning of the Blade Runner Main Titles are an obvious inspiration for any scenes with Jo thinking to herself or speaking out loud to the viewer.

Maybe not in this first comic, but I suspect that any number of songs by Incubus, The Roots, and even Linkin Park will fit in at some point later on.

If any of that sounds interesting, go check out the comic! Thanks for stopping by. Cheers!

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Diablo IV Wish List: New Classes

Since I saw the trailer for Diablo IV, the game has been ever-present, often at the back of my mind but lately at the front of it. Watching gameplay demos and listening to the developers and hearing the thoughts of other Diablo fans got me thinking more about various aspects of the game and, of course, all the possibilities that a new game could fulfill. For now, I'll keep my giant stack of notes and ideas and Diablo game design philosophy ramblings to myself, and will stick to presenting a few ideas I'd love to see in Diablo IV.

New Character Classes


Instead of a righteous, divine paladin or crusader type, I would love to see a grimmer, darker take on a priest or cleric archetype. They might be a fearful, lost pilgrim wandering Sanctuary, hanging dearly onto their last threads of life. Or, a stoic death-seeker following the dying religion of a two-faced god-hero of old. Perhaps they are a warrior poet of sorts, but one that only sings tragic tales of flawed and fallen heroes and false martyrs.
  Alternatively, they are a wounded fallen angel who has long since abandoned aspirations of ever fully healing—let alone re-ascension—and see their strive for a sense of purpose as folly, a sick joke they can't help but play on themselves.

A dirty-fighting urchin from a large city, a roguish scoundrel and grave robber who has been traveling around the world their entire life, or a former pirate lord who has forsaken their mutinous crew and seeks treasure in new parts of the world. Over time they might grow to become a great duelist or battlefield tactician, if they can resist their curse of greed.

An archaeologist-wizard who discovered an ancient power in the desert around their home. They left the desert to escape the horrors they witnessed, and look for other artifacts and lost knowledge that might bring peace to their mind, or at least occupy their curiosity (obsession) and give them short-term purpose in fighting demons. Perhaps they are instead an illusionist or psychic who summons living nightmares from their own mind and cripples the minds of others. Or, a warlock and servant of a distant star who calls unknowable things from the cosmos to Sanctuary.

A twist on the necromancer as a cunning and sneaky curse mage (witch/warlock) who isn't afraid to use their enemies' tactics and forbidden knowledge against them and actually relishes it. They aren't unfamiliar with old ways of healing thanks to their parents' teachings—their darker fascinations are thanks to their parents' supportiveness of their morbid curiosity as a child. Perhaps they are a child of a human and a fiend.

Instead of a monk or another fighter archetype, an opportunistic survivalist who has trained in multiple fighting styles/stances and the use of intricate traps and explosive devices. They might be a ranger specializing in two-weapon fighting, a scavenger who prefers to fight from afar, or a tamer of beasts that hungers for demonic flesh as much as themselves (figuratively or literally).

An old mystic with a greatsword possessed by their only surviving friend: a fiend wreathed in ever-burning, tortuous fire. Either the enchantress from Diablo 3, somehow still surviving and able to fight, or her child/grandchild carrying Maximus—the demon may have been transferred from the weapon to their mind and body. Or, a devout follower of a perverted faith based once upon a time on the life story, deeds, and teachings of the enchantress, and who is consumed by lunacy over time.

An artificial golem who woke up in a hermit's workshop or the depths of a sage's bizarre pocket dimension. They are either an engineer who augments their metallic body and the weapons and armor of their allies or devices they deploy, or an alchemist who concocts unstable potions and steals essence from their enemies to infuse into their alien heart.
  Alternatively, they are a mutant zombie alchemist who uses their bizarre infusions and skeletal grafts to keep their body alive and to turn it into a living weapon. Or, a rotting, resurrected agender mummy and former archivist-wizard whose cursed, shriveled, black heart-phylactery exudes strange energy, or a golemancer/lithomancer lich with an artificial black iron heart-phylactery. (They could also be the archaeologist described above.)

And no class would be complete without...


Legendary and Set Items




Druid: Permanent cursed/diseased-looking inhuman form, or all their transformations are extended and turns their focus to melee. A fey form emphasizing nature, death, and disease, or that of a dark dryad that makes them transform into beasts made of shifting plants that glow inside with eerie green light or swirl with dark shadows. Runestone armor crackling with electricity, with transformations of stone or pure lightning that call down lightning bolts.
Sorcerer: Blue-white armor made by unseelie fey that allows them to become an icy archon. A dress of fine, dark or light purple cloths and thorny silver jewelry inspired by insects, all infused with and oozing unseelie magic. A crown of elements that can be triggered by casting elements of one type, and summons a fiery skeleton, storm spirit, or ice banshee. Armor made from a butchered phoenix.
Barbarian: Patchwork, treated demon skins that fill them with demonic blood and fury when raging. Iron or stone golem weapon, or chest armor made of the belly of a smelter demon or forge of war. Bloodthorn dryad weapons. Runestone plate armor or barkskin and enchanted tattoos that turn them into a furiously growing storm while whirlwinding.
Cleric/Necromancer: A skeletal/phantom mage that can temporarily walk the realm of the dead. Armor that turns them into a white-hot skeleton bound in spiked black iron chains or welded into spiked, smoldering black plate armor. A veiled spirit or blood angel. The form of a vampire themed to a new place/culture in Sanctuary.
Whether or not any of these ideas are seen by the team, hopefully they can inspire you to make your own characters and classes and items for D&D, be it for a game of "D&Diablo" or other adventures in settings like Dark Sun, Ravnica, Planescape, Spelljammer, and Innistrad.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Reminiscing: My Favorite Games of the Decade (2010-2019)

It's strange to think back on the past ten years, how long it's been, how many things have happened for better and worse, and all the people I've met and lost since I was sixteen years old in high school and driving my first run-down vehicle. The things that are easiest (or most comfortable) to think back on are all the games I've played and which ones have stuck with me in some way, and on cold lonely nights it's nice to reminisce on the games and all the people I played them with.

So, here are some of my favorite games of the past ten years, in no particular order for any list.

Top Ten Favorite Tabletop / Pen and Paper RPG Books


Dungeon World (Powered by the Apocalypse)
Fiasco
Guildmasters' Guide to Ravnica (Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition)
Numenera
Kids on Bikes
Predation (Cypher System)
Blades in the Dark (Powered by the Apocalypse)
Weird Discoveries: Ten Instant Adventures for Numenera
Starfinder
Band of Blades (Forged in the Dark)

Honorable Mentions
Consent in Gaming (Monte Cook Games)
Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes (Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition)
Shadows of Esteren
Symbaroum
Dragon Age RPG

Top Ten Favorite Video Games


The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
StarCraft 2 (Wings of Liberty, Heart of the Swarm, Legacy of the Void)
Bloodborne
God of War (2018)
Spider-Man (2018)
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice
The Outer Worlds
Portal 2
Mortal Kombat X
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Ori and the Blind Forest
(actually eleven because cutting one of these is impossible)

Close to the Top

Dark Souls
Guilty Gear Xrd
Doom (2016)
Overcooked 1 and 2
Pokémon HeartGold/SoulSilver
Until Dawn

Honorable Mentions (too many good games to shorten)
Kingdom Hearts HD 2.5 Remix
Darkest Dungeon
Beyond: Two Souls
Batman: Arkham City
Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor
The Witness
Terraria
Control
Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance
P.T.
Transistor
Pokémon (Black/White, Black/White 2)
Her Story
Killer Instinct
DmC: Devil May Cry
Resident Evil 2: Remake
Nidhogg
Fire Emblem: Awakening
Death Stranding
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Cuphead
Chivalry: Medieval Warfare
Shadow of the Colossus Remastered
Lost Planet 2
Darksiders 1 and 2
Final Fantasy XV
Age of Wonders: Planetfall
Call of Duty: Black Ops 1 and 2 (Zombies) and 4 (Blackout)
The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings
Opus Magnum
The Last of Us
Titanfall 1 and 2
Metro: Last Light
Singularity
Bioshock Infinite
Dishonored 1 and 2
Gears of War 3
Bulletstorm
Apex Legends
Celeste
Papers, Please
Dragon Ball FighterZ
Risk of Rain
Diablo III and Reaper of Souls
Persona 5
The Banner Saga
XCOM 2
Evolve
Monster Hunter World
Rayman Legends
Guild Wars 2
Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age
Crysis 2 and 3
Journey
Spyro Reignited Trilogy
Pathfinder: Kingmaker
Hyper Light Drifter
Resident Evil 7

Every single game here was impactful at the time I played them, from single player to cooperative and competitive to speedrunning. But the best ones captured my attention for a long time and had a deep, lasting impact on me as a gamer as well as a writer and game designer, and even as a teacher or mentor in some cases. There are a dozen tabletop and video games that could have been my favorite or close to it but that I didn't get a chance to play; here's hoping I can play a lot more this year in 2020 and throughout the rest of the next ten years. The next ten years... It feels like a lifetime.

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Fatal Encounters: Gorgimerae

There are days when I still get up early, go upstairs, and have the feeling that I need to start getting coffee and brown sugar maple Cream of Wheat and orange juice put out for someone who is no longer here. Or, that the creaking upstairs is from someone walking around and not just the wind. Yesterday was one of those days, and to alleviate the sad thoughts for a moment and keep my mind busy, let's do something easy that makes me feel accomplished for a little while: make monsters!

This time, my twist on the gorgimera, and encounters inspired by The Lost Caverns of Tsojcanth.
  Design and balance note: I had some trouble making this "fatal encounter" less fatal and still impactful. Which, may or may not be a good thing depending on the person reading this. You'll see later that it uses a handful of d6 for its attacks, which used to be a lot more d6 plus a lot of d8. I found this set of stats and abilities to work well for me and the group I intended it for (five 5th-level PCs), and for some DMs/parties those could very well be reduced further to mostly d4 damage dice or increased slightly. Hopefully some of the encounter suggestions are helpful for fine tuning and improvising as well.
  If you missed them, check out my previous blog post and Matt Colville's "Action Oriented Monsters" video here for examples of "villain actions," or "elite actions" as I call them.

Gorgimera (GORR-geh-MAYR-uh)
  • The offspring of terrifying chimerae and gorgons (the D&D gorgon, a metal-scaled bull monstrosity with petrifying green vapor breath), gorgimera are even more fearsome. This monster bears leonine and draconian features and has three heads, two of which (the lion and red dragon) are the same as it, but the third head is a fuming gorgon instead of a rabid goat.
  • Gorgons and gorgimerae, having metallic bodies (or partly, in the latter's case) and lungs that create petrifying vapors, are immune to being petrified by their kin's vapor and are highly resistant to other petrification effects from basilisks, cockatrice, and medusae. The lion and dragon heads, however, are still susceptible to a degree. If turned to stone, the other two heads and all its limbs will slowly regenerate back to normal within a week to a month (longer for older gorgimerae), and the process is hastened by sunlight.
  • Gorgimerae are more rampant and tenacious than chimerae thanks to the attitude their gorgon parents pass on to them, and can be stubborn and unyielding to the extreme. Instead of fleeing when wounded by a powerful foe, most gorgimera will choose go into a frenzy, even fighting to the death in their prideful stubborness. Although they are not as skilled at flying as chimera for their greater strength and ferocity, they can cover much more ground at the first sight of competition and when riled up.
      They rarely fight with their chimera and gorgon cousins, and more rarely with each other being so few and far between, but a gorgimera duel is a spectacular sight. Some try to petrify their opponent as quickly as possible, at which point it will break apart its stone body and eat it. Others opt to try headbutting and goring the goat or gorgon head like a hammer trying to hit and shatter another hammer, at which point the victor (not unlikely to win by the merit of the loser's stupidity against a bulkier foe) will devour the loser with its lion and dragon mouths.
  • When the lion and dragon heads aren't craving fresh meat, aren't picking fights, and nothing is distracting or provoking the gorgon one, it spends that little time casually wandering and grazing plains and riverbanks. Occasionally, a gorgimera can be found pawing and bobbing (almost playfully) in a river or beach for fish with each of its heads (eating salmon, trout, sturgeon, catfish, and small sharks) and picking through rocks to chew on with its gorgon head. A rarer and more exceptional sight is a gorgimera playfully splashing in shallow water like a jovial pup—nothing deeper than its knees, though, as they struggle to swim.
Gorgimera
Large monstrosity, chaotic evilAC 16, HP 152 (16d10 + 64), Bloodied 76, Speed 40 ft., fly 60 ft.
STR 19 (+4), DEX 11 (+0), CON 18 (+4), INT 5 (-3), WIS 12 (+1), CHA 10 (+0)
Skills: Intimidation +6, Perception +7
Condition Immunities: petrified
Senses: darkvision 90 ft., passive Perception 17
Languages: understands Draconic and Giant but can't speak
Challenge Rating: 9 (5,000 XP)
Traits
Three Heads.
The gorgimera has advantage on Wisdom (Perception) checks and on saving throws against being blinded, deafened, frightened, stunned, and knocked unconscious. Additionally, each of its heads can be targeted individually and have the following properties:
  Lion Head. AC 15, HP 38. While this head is unconscious, its frightful roar and bite are disabled.
  Dragon Head. AC 17, HP 50. While this head is unconscious, its fire breath and meteor are disabled.
  Gorgon Head. AC 19, HP 64. While this head is unconscious, its gore and petrifying breath are disabled.
Trample. If the gorgimera moves at least 20 feet and then hits a creature with a melee attack on the same turn, that target must succeed on a DC 17 Strength saving throw or be knocked prone. If a target is prone, the gorgimera can make one stomp attack against it as a bonus action.
Lion Head: Frightful Roar. Each creature of the gorgimera's choice that is within 60 feet of the gorgimera and that can hear it must succeed on a DC 15 Wisdom saving throw or become frightened for 1 minute. A creature can repeat the saving throw at the end of each of its turns, ending the effect on itself on a success. If a creature's save is successful or the effect ends for it, it is immune to the gorgimera's roar for 24 hours.
ActionsMultiattack. The gorgimera makes one of each of the following attacks:
  Lion Head: Bite. Melee Weapon Attack: +9 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 9 (1d6 + 6) piercing damage.
  Dragon Head: Fire Breath. Each creature in a 15-foot cone must make a DC 15 Dexterity saving throw, taking 10 (3d6) fire damage on a failed save, or half as much on a successful one.
  Gorgon Head: Gore. Melee Weapon Attack:  +9 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 9 (1d6 + 6) piercing damage.
Stomp. Melee Weapon Attack: +8 to hit, reach 5 ft., up to four targets. Hit: 8 (1d8 + 4) slashing damage.
Dragon Head: Meteor (2/day). Ranged Spell Attack: range 120 ft. Each creature in a 20-foot sphere must make a DC 17 Dexterity saving throw, taking 17 (5d6) fire damage on a failed save, or half as much on a successful one. Additionally on a failed save, a creature has disadvantage on saving throws against the gorgimera's fire breath until the end of its next turn.
Gorgon Head: Petrifying Breath (2/day). The gorgon head exhales green vapor all around it. Each creature in a 15-foot cone must succeed on a DC 14 Constitution saving throw or begin to turn to stone and restrained. The restrained target must repeat the saving throw at the end of its next turn, ending the effect on itself on a success. On a failure, the target is petrified until freed by the greater restoration spell or other magic.
Elite ActionsFirestorm. As a free action at the start of the first round of combat, the gorgimera uses meteor.
Bull Rush. At the start of the first round of combat, the gorgimera uses its movement to fly up to its speed within 20 feet of a creature and then run at it and use gore and petrifying breath (see trample).
Tantrum. When the gorgimera becomes bloodied, it immediately runs around up to its speed in a straight line or circle, trampling creatures underfoot. This movement provokes attacks of opportunity. It uses stomp against each creature it moved past with a +10 to hit, dealing bludgeoning damage instead of slashing damage, and then it uses stomp against all prone creatures within reach (see trample).



The Rainbow Caverns


Recommended for a party of four to six 4th-6th level characters, intended for five 5th-level characters.
Patiently awaiting the next generation of spelunkers and thieves is a sprawling cavern-scape first discovered by a mage of old who quickly filled it with unimaginable wealth and unspeakable terrors.
  Overgrown, well-worn steps lie ahead, leading down into its twisting halls and absolute darkness. The caves sigh with cool, deep breaths, as if calling out to you.

Environment Features
Absolute Darkness. No light reaches the caves beyond the first few steps at the entrance. All creatures require a light source or special senses (such as blindsight or tremorsense) in order to see anything. Darkvision does not allow a creature to see in the caves unless it has a light source. A creature that can't see must succeed on a DC 17 Survival check to avoid getting lost.
Earthcancer. Much of the ground is covered in aberrant formations and corrupted, fungal growths. Random patches of ground count as difficult terrain (movement speed is reduced by 1/4th on average). A creature that comes in contact with earthcancer or ends its turn in the space must succeed on a DC 17 Constitution saving throw or take 2 (1d4) poison damage. If it fails the save by 5 or more (DC 12), it becomes nauseated and unable to take any action until the end of their next turn.
  If the party is healthy when they enter the gorgimera lair, the more earthcancer there will be. Likewise, if the party is in worse shape, the less earthcancer there will be.

Part 1

As the party journeys deeper into the caves, down both winding natural paths and straight artificial stairways, they come to a flat area. The ground here has become earthcancer and has formed 1d4 shriekers. Swarms of bats and 1d4 stirges swirl around each character and move deftly through interconnected tunnels pocked with large insect (centipede) and stirge nests and little more, bothering the party only for a moment if they disturb the fungi or nests.
  Inside one small side cave lies a body, face-down, wearing loose brown, moldy, moth-eaten clothes and a bulky satchel. Something glints in light (the pommel of a longsword, a flying sword) and the sword and satchel both glow with an aura for anyone benefiting from detect magic. Earthcancer has spread in a 5-foot radius around the corpse, and a gas spore is growing under the clothers in the corpse (DC 14 Perception check to spot the spore). The flying sword (+7 to hit) will attack whoever touches it or the corpse; at 0 HP it falls to the ground and becomes a longsword +1 with 3 charges which can be spent to turn it into a dancing sword for 1 hour (it does not regain spent charges). Inside the satchel are two rings of protection, one of which appears to grant +3 AC if identified but actually curses whoever attunes to it and imparts a -3 penalty to AC (the ring cannot be removed while the wearer is cursed, and the curse can only be removed by separating the finger and ring from the wearer for 24 hours, or by casting remove curse at 5th level).

Part 2

Gem-crusted stalactites hang from the ceiling of a narrowing tunnel. Dirt and a few tiny rocks fall from one of the formations as the party moves through, and minute vibrations from an unseen source cause one stalactite to crack and fall (DC 16 Dexterity save or take 1d6 bludgeoning damage). Walking through the tunnel, each character must make a Perception check. The character with the highest roll spots another stalactite that looks like a crystal-coated piercer; if the roll is 18 or higher they also spot a ruby on it. If damaged, the stalactite will break, fall (dealing 1d6 bludgeoning damage if someone is underneath it and doesn't move), and release a ruby worth 750 gp.
  Rumbling is heard and felt behind the party as a xorn moves through, paying no mind to the party, eating crystals in a wall behind them that causes part of it to collapse and a tight passage to open to another room with a wall full of crystals. In that room, the damp floor marked with patches of earthcancer (difficult terrain not including the walls and ceiling, DC 16 Athletics check to climb the walls) is littered with junk. On the far side of the room, a heavily scarred roper is munching on three dead troglodytes. 1 merrow is on the opposite side of the room sitting against a stalagmite, catching its breath and reading a scroll of stone to flesh written in aquan. It takes ten minutes to sort through the junk in the room and gather one explorer's pack worth of salvageable items (except with 5 rations total and the rope breaks if more than 50 pounds of weight is put on it).

Part 3

The main passageway continues winding onward and sloping down then abruptly starts to widen horizontally and vertically, eventually coming to a wider opening (50 ft in all dimensions) with a 15-foot-deep pool of clear water. A haze of magical darkness lingers in the area, obscuring everything from the surface of the pool to the ceiling. Marred stone statues and broken pieces of humanoids and beasts barely jut out of the darkness at the water's edge. Eight crumbling creatures are frozen solid in the middle of crawling back towards the tunnel, and many more have sunken and piled up beneath the surface, making the pool shallower at the near and far side. On the far side of the pool, some of the statues and limbs have returned to their natural, fleshy state, and dark blood stains the area. Also lurking underwater are 2 swarms of quippers and 3 ghasts. Earthcancer has spread in a 30-foot radius around the far edge of the pool.
For a stronger or more experienced party, replace 1 swarm of quippers with 1 giant zombie constrictor snake (a constrictor snake with the undead fortitude trait).

  Crossing the pool leads to a massive cave (60 ft wide, 100 ft high) covered with crystals and rippling streams and glossy bumps that all sparkle and shimmer with a rainbow of colors from the tiniest glint of light. A heap of treasure—gems, silver and gold and mithril coins and squares of chain maille, and steel and bronze weapons and helmets and armor the designs of which must span centuries—sits in the center of the chamber. Six stalactites at the very top of the cave ceiling twist and end in an elegant jeweled point, which give off sunlight that matches the natural light outside at the current time of day and gradually cure petrification over the course of 1d10 days. After their awe dissipates, characters will notice the broken, prone stone bodies and earthcancer covering the chamber floor. And beneath the mound of treasure lies a gorgimera starved of fresh meat.
For a stronger or fresh party, the gorgimera may push them into areas where earthcancer is festering, grounding the strongest or weakest link in the chain as it sees fit. For a much larger party or long encounter (or after the encounter ends), 1d4 of the statues start to animate every other round (use the ghoul stat block with a speed of 10 feet for the first round they are animated and 30 feet thereafter).
  The treasure hoard contains the following: 6 cp, 5,000 sp, 2,160 gp, 400 pp (enchanted to weigh twice as much and fall out of any pocket or bag they are placed in), 10 gems (each gem weighs 1d10 lbs and is worth 5d10 x 100 gp), fine clothes, costume clothes (goat costume), costume clothes (gorgon costume), a potion of fire breath, 3 vials of saffron (worth 150 gp each and can be used in food or potions to create a potion of clairvoyance that also grants truesight out to 60 feet for the duration), 2 vials of red dragon repellant oil, a scroll of protection from elementals written in draconic, a dagger +1, a mithril war maul head (4 lbs), a bag of holding (contains two diamond dice worth 750 gp each), a heavily-stained 6-page notebook (a cursed copied section of the book of vile darkness, swarms of leeches spawn when opened to the the flawed 5th and 6th pages), and a small vial of purple ooze (when poured out and left in a space with oxygen or water, it grows one size category every 1d8 hours until it becomes a moaning otyugh-shaped black pudding).
  A stairwell is hidden at the back of the chamber behind a towering wall of stalagmites, which leads to a squished tunnel that is flooded for a short length that then leads to a back entrance/exit covered in a mound of dirt and small shrubs and their tangled roots.

Thanks for reading, and if you enjoyed any of this, check out more monsters in my Brash Brutes series and my first DMsGuild adventure, Disturbance at Dusk, set in the plane of Ravnica.

Monday, October 28, 2019

Fatal Encounters: Slum Reapers

"October! It's already here!" And my favorite time of the year is already over.

Nearly thirty days ago I started writing a blog post (this post) about a monster in my (spooky-ish) Ravnica adventure Disturbance at Dusk, but never quite got around to finishing it. The monsters featured in the adventure are riffs on an existing creature from Magic: The Gathering called the slum reaper. Let's jump in and (finally) talk about them, everything that I wanted to do with them, and about a few aspects of general monster design.

Slum Reaper art for Magic: The Gathering by Karl Kopinski

Visually one of my favorite horrors (read: aberrations) in Magic, slum reapers channel both Giger and Lovecraft with their hard, glossy, pseudo-insectile legs and upper bodies with a slew of other alien features, including incomprehensible maws, long clawed arms with too many joints and erroneous extra bones, and winding serpentine lower bodies that almost-but-not-quite clash with the rest of their form. In Ravnica lore, the slum reapers, as their name suggests, are creatures sent into slums to reap the "souls of those no one will miss." They are controlled (according to the card's original flavor text) by the Orzhov Syndicate to bolster the guild's army of indentured spirits, but (according to the text in a reprint) are known by some undercity travelers to roam near the territory of the Golgari Swarm. For official lore, as with most Magic creatures, that's all there is. Of course, for fun, exciting, flavorful Dungeon's & Dragons adventures, that isn't enough, so I've expanded on those two seeds for my own Ravnica adventures using some very old ideas of my own and a few queues from the art.
  • Undercity Abominations. The slum reapers dwell in the darkest, dingiest regions beneath the city, in nasty habitats ranging from ancient catacombs and overgrown churches to rotten sewer tunnels and rubblebelt caves. Their secondary habitats seem to be wherever there is food—and, in Ravnica, the busy streets are the greatest hunting grounds for many predators.
  • Uncommon and Unique. Few slum reapers are the same, even in their general form. They all share a similar chitinous skin, have many legs and claws, and typically have small, bony or membranous wings. All other features beyond those, and their behaviors, vary wildly.
  • Vermin Eaters. Some of the creatures have been suspected to co-exist with vermin and insects—rats, giant centipedes, and possibly even kraul—but such beliefs are only theory for now. What is known is that they feed on small beasts, insects, and humanoids, and that they have an ingrained, insatiable hunger for the flesh and blood of the sick, injured, and forlorn.
  • Born, or Built? The greatest unsolved mystery about the aberrant creatures of Ravnica is their origin, and this is no different for the slum reapers. They have existed for millennia but none know of where they come from or if they mutated and evolved from ancient insects. Few signs point to the same theory, which may suggest that their current form didn't come about naturally. Perhaps their appetites and natural habitats gave rise to mutations that made them fearsome predators of the past, which peaked the curiosity of a fleshwarper or thrull breeder who then captured, bred, dissected, and reconstructed them, releasing their failed experiments back into the underground urban wilds.
In Disturbance at Dusk, a group of uniquely pale slum reapers appears to harass the citizens and the party, all of them with strange contraptions grafted to their bodies and limbs. These I called "dread reapers," just one of many variants I toyed with while making encounters. For their stat blocks, I referred DMs to the flying horror found in Guildmasters' Guide to Ravnica (p. 203) with a short list of adjustments. What I wanted to do was create an all-new monster stat block, but made the decision to use the flying horror because it seemed like an elegant solution that made writing the adventure easier for me. Now, though, I've come up with a much more interesting "base monster" and a handful of monster "templates" or "plug-ins" to, well, plug-in to the base monster.

While making monsters for other DMs to use who don't normally use monsters the same way that I do, and many who haven't played other editions of D&D and used monsters in them (such as 4e), I've been trying to come up with a better way to present monsters that is still familiar when compared to stat blocks and rules in 5e. My intent with the base monster template here is to present a basic monster stat block that follows the design and language (more or less) of stat blocks in the Monster Manual and other official sourcebooks and adventures, but that I and DMs-who-aren't-me can combine with more fun sets of traits and actions.

Action Oriented Monsters


I'll take a second to derail my post and point you to a video by Matt Colville about what he calls "Action Oriented Monsters" found here. The goal of designing monsters in the way seen in the video (particularly "solo" or "boss" monsters) is the same as my goals; to make interesting, memorable encounters that are fun and challenging for players and flexible for DMs. The inspirations for a lot of the design, I presume, are also similar and come from memorable scenes in books and movies and video games, but also the way monsters are presented in 4e. The basic concepts are as follows:
  • Give your monster the basic stats you need (AC, HP, movement speed, initiative, and any important ability scores),
  • Let yourself be flexible with those stats during gameplay,
  • Give it senses (passive Perception, darkvision or other senses if applicable) and a few notable traits or vulnerabilities/resistances (optional),
  • Give it an easy-to-remember basic attack (and a multiattack that uses it if applicable),
  • Give it an easy-to-remember (and probably weaker) ranged or melee attack (whichever one it doesn't already have),
  • And, lastly, give it something unique, such as a more powerful attack it can use once per encounter, a strong spell (or spell-like ability) it can use each round, a reaction, or a special action that lets it move and attack or even summon other monsters or set and activate traps.
For strong, solo monsters, Matt suggests a few other things including one trick I used to use all the time but, for whatever reason, had completely forgot about until I watched his video. That trick is to give it one (or more) special actions that happen on specific rounds in combat. I used to use that all the time for "elite"/solo and boss monsters, and for hazards like weather and traps. Instead of giving a monster a recharge action (an action that, once used, makes the DM roll a d6 to see if it recharges and is used again), these round-based actions remove some of the randomness and reduces the swingy-ness of a fight, making an encounter with that monster more controlled but still exciting and memorable and, if need be, dangerous. For this dread reaper design and the design of a vampire villain (a topic for another day), that was my "Aha! Wait... Why didn't I remember that?" moment.
  The terminology I've been using for the actions varies slightly from his; what Matt calls "Villain Actions" in his video are what I call "Elite Actions" (or sometimes "Solo Actions" or "Encounter Powers") referring to solo or elite creatures that are slightly more powerful than the average creature. Legendary Actions I still use the same way as the official 5e rules. Some minions (creatures that die when hit by any attack that deals damage) I also give these actions to, though I make sure they are very minor effects or for much higher challenge rating monsters.
  For the sake of not having to write it out every time, here's a reminder for the "Legendary Action" rules: A creature can take a set number of legendary actions, choosing from the options in its stat block. Only one legendary action can be taken at a time and only at the end of another creature's turn. A creature with legendary actions regains spent actions at the start of its turn.

Now, back to my monsters.

The Reaper Comes


For the first half of the puzzle, the base stat block:

Slum Reaper
Medium aberration, lawful evil
AC 15, HP 55 (10d8 + 10), Bloodied 24 (HP/2), Speed 40 ft., Fly 30 ft., INI +3
STR 10 (+0), DEX 18 (+4), CON 12 (+1), INT 2 (-4), WIS 15 (+2), CHA 16 (+3)
Skills: Perception +4, Stealth +6
Damage Vulnerabilities: radiant
Condition Immunities: frightened
Senses: darkvision 120 ft., passive Perception 14
Languages: —
Challenge Rating: 3 (700 XP)
Traits
Keen Senses. The slum reaper has advantage on Wisdom (Perception) checks that rely on sight, hearing, or smell. Additionally, it gains a +2 bonus to checks made to locate creatures that are suffering from a disease or injury.
Sunlight Sensitivity. While in sunlight, the slum reaper has disadvantage on attack rolls, as well as on Wisdom (Perception) checks that rely on sight.
Actions
Multiattack. The slum reaper makes one claw attack and one tail attack.
Claw. Melee Weapon Attack: +6 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 6 (1d6 + 3) slashing damage plus 5 (2d4) psychic damage.
Tail. Melee Weapon Attack: +3 to hit, reach 10 ft., one target. Hit: 4 (1d8) bludgeoning damage.
Essentially, this is just the stat block for a paired-down, modified flying horror from GGR that could be used as-is. More than that, it's a foundation to build a better monster on top of, a monster that fits the fantastic art above and (hopefully) the story and tension in whatever adventure you use it in.
  In the adventure, I chose to change their attacks to deal lightning damage to highlight their strange grafts, but psychic damage makes more sense for the base aberration. Also note that the frightening screech attack from the flying horror has been removed; instead, I'm going to have extra actions included in the variants below.

Optional Trait: Death Shriek. When the reaper dies, it lets out a piercing cry with its last breath. Creatures outside the encounter within 120 feet and that are smaller than it in size have a 50% chance to flee in fear, otherwise they slowly approach to investigate.
  With this trait, smaller creature will likely run even farther away from the battle, while some creatures or larger monsters may come to inspect the site or feed on its corpse. It's a quirky, flavorful trait, but it can make the world seem more alive and make the death of the monster more impactful. Another monster in Disturbance at Dusk can mimic the sounds of other creatures, and it might mimic a slum reaper's terrible shrieks to scare aware other predators or attract the party into an ambush.

Now onto the second half (the fun half).

Monster Variants


For each of these variants, everything in the variant is added to the base stat block above, or replaces a stat in it. For example, the base slum reaper's speed is 40 feet, for the screeching horror variant its speed becomes 30 instead; likewise with its damage vulnerabilities. If a variant doesn't list a stat or trait, use whatever is given in the base stat block. In general, I use the AC, HP, Speed, Initiative, ability scores, skills, senses and so forth from the base monster, and its basic attack or multiattack.

For the first variant, I'm just going to recreate the flying horror from GGR with a few changes.
  Notable loot from this and any other variant can include the following: mandibles dotted with distorted yellow and black teeth, long chitinous claws and nails, large leathery wings (for making clothing, light and medium armor, or perhaps a macabre kite), and hollow bones from its grotesquely long limbs (as sturdy as common wood varieties but lighter in weight). Radiant damage, and in this case fire as well, might burn away its wings and weaken some of its limbs and bones, weakening the creature but turning potential crafting materials into ash.
Reaper Frightener
Speed 30 ft., Fly 60 ft.
Damage Vulnerabilities: fire, radiant
Traits
Fear Frenzy. The reaper has advantage on attack rolls against frightened creatures.
Reactions
Psychic Rebuke. When the reaper is hit by a melee attack, it emits a blast of psychic energy, dealing 3 (1d6) psychic damage to each creature within 5 feet of it. Then it can fly up to 20 feet away and does not provoke opportunity attacks during this movement.
Elite Actions
The reaper uses its frightening shriek at the start of rounds one and three.
Frightening Shriek. The reaper shrieks, creating a head-splitting blast of energy that rings out for several hundred feet. Each creature within 60 feet of it that can hear it must succeed on a DC 11 Wisdom saving throw or be frightened of it for 1 minute, and each creature within 20 feet of it must succeed on a DC 15 saving throw instead. A frightened creature can repeat the saving throw at the end of each of its turns, ending the effect on itself on a success. If a creature's saving throw is successful or the effect ends, the creature is immune to the effect for the next 24 hours.

For its elite action, it uses frightening shriek at the start of the first and third rounds of combat, and the scream more dangerous for characters close to the reaper. To me that's fairly simple (after all, I'm the one who made it), but a lot of people who I help create adventures for have a lot questions about abilities like this. Here are a few that I either asked myself or get asked by others:
  • What if the party has a surprise round in which it can't act, like if it's unconscious or paralyzed for whatever reason? In that case, you can just have it use the ability as soon as it's able to, and two rounds after that.
  • What if the encounter goes on for more than three rounds? It might not, but if it does then I could have it continue shrieking every three rounds or so. Or, it might stop shrieking if every PC in the encounter has become immune to the effect, or it will deem the shriek an ineffective use of its energy so it stops—either way, I can forget about it and instead focus on other aspects of the encounter and improvising to keep it interesting, or give it one more round of rampaging attacks and end it before it technically reaches zero hit points if it feels like it's dragging on.
  • If this monster was the final boss of a lengthy undercity delve or foray into a crumbling necropolis, I might give it a heftier flyby reaction, or increase its flying speed further and give it the flyby trait (it doesn't provoke an opportunity attack when it flies out of an enemy's reach).
  • If this reaper was in a group with other monsters, I might remove it's "elite action" entire or decide to have the shriek only affect creatures within 30 feet with a DC of 13 like the flying horror's original attack. Against a party of ranged characters or, perhaps, if it was at the bottom of the initiative count, I might choose to use its rush to close in 30 extra towards an attacker during the first round.

As with everything in D&D, assess the situation and improvise as needed. This world, unlike Ravnica, doesn't have metaphysical law magic preventing you from doing something that isn't in the stat block, the important thing is for everyone playing to have fun. As long you the basic idea and stay flexible, I find that the majority of the time everything comes together fairly naturally. And the more you play, improvise, and make or use interesting monsters, the easier it all gets.
  It may be worth noting again here that, for me, I am using more long-winded language because I send my monsters to other DMs and also use them in published adventures (or at least I intend to). If you make monsters for your own use, you don't need to be nearly as precise with the language you use for anything, as long as you can understand what it means at a glance during gameplay.

For the second variant, I'll make a monster that fits what I imagined when creating Disturbance at Dusk, something closer to what I wanted to playtest against a party.
  Notable loot from this variant would be the spark blade grafted onto its arm:
  Spark Blade. Magic weapon (longsword), rare, 3 lbs. 1d8 slashing damage, versatile (1d10). You gain a +1 bonus to attack and damage rolls made with this magic weapon. This weapon has three charges. You can use an action and expend a charge to cause it to crackle with lightning. The effects lasts for 1 minute or until an attack with this weapon hits a creature. That creature must succeed on a DC 15 Constitution saving throw or take 7 (2d6) lightning damage and become paralyzed until the end of its next turn.
Dread Reaper
Traits
Spark Rig Graft. The reaper has a magical contraption grafted to its body and arms. The spark rig has the following properties:
  If the reaper kills a creature with a soul, the rig absorbs it. All of the reaper's lightning damage dice are upgraded to a d8 until the end of its next turn.
  When the reaper becomes bloodied, the spark rig becomes damaged, and its spark bolt and charge actions are disabled until the spark rig is repaired. Additionally, roll a d4. On a 1, the graft deals 5 (2d4) lightning damage to the reaper. On a 4, the graft deals 5 (2d4) lightning damage to all creatures within 10 feet of the reaper.
Actions
Multiattack. The reaper makes one spark blade attack and one tail attack.
Spark Blade. Melee Weapon Attack: +6 to hit, reach 10 ft., one target. Hit: 6 (1d6 + 3) slashing damage plus 7 (2d6) lightning damage.
Spark Bolt. Each creature in a 60-foot line must make a DC 13 Dexterity saving throw, taking 10 (3d6) lightning on a failed save or half as much on a successful one. The reaper must not be bloodied to do so.
Elite Actions
Beginning on the second round of combat, the reaper uses its charge every other round.
Charge. The reaper's spark rig charges with energy. At the start of the next round, it uses its overload. The reaper must not be bloodied to do so.
Overload. The reaper slams its arms into the ground or slashes in the air, unleashing waves of lightning from its spark rig graft. Each creature in a 20-foot cone must make a DC 15 Dexterity saving throw, taking 10 (3d6) lightning damage on a failed save or half as much on a successful one. Additionally on a failed save, a creature must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution saving or be paralyzed for 1 minute. A creature can reapeat the saving throw at the end of each of its turns, ending the effect on itself on a success.

An attentive or curious PCs can attempt to make an Intelligence (Arcana) check when they first encounter the monster and when it uses its charge. On a 15 or higher, they learn about its spark rig graft trait, and on a 17 or higher learn the effects of the reaper's charge and overload elite actions. On a result of 19 or higher, they also know that the graft is a ramshackle experiment using Izzet technology combined with some kind of spirit-powered contraption.

A reminder for what "bloodied" means: A creature is bloodied when its hit points are equal to or less than half its maximum hit points.
  For the dread reaper, being bloodied also means its spark rig graft is damaged and unstable.

The third variant is a slum reaper warped by the negative energies of the Shadowfell.
  Notable "loot" from this variant is most likely to include lingering madness and despair effects (DMG p. 258-260), and lingering injuries from its claws and bites (DMG p. 272). Such effects may even be "awarded" as soon as a character sees the monster!
Reaper Duskwalker
Large aberration, neutral evilHP 65 (10d10 + 10), Bloodied 32 (HP/2), Speed 40 ft., Climb 40 ft., INI +4
Skills: Perception +6, Stealth +8
Damage Resistances: acid, necrotic, poison, psychic
Challenge Rating: 4 (1,100 XP)
Traits
Mind Sight. Magical darkness doesn't impede the reaper's vision.
Spider Climb. The reaper can climb difficult surfaces, including upside down on ceilings, without needing to make an ability check.
ActionsMultiattack. The reaper makes two claw attacks. If both hit, the target is grappled (escape DC 14) and the reaper makes a bite attack with advantage.
Claw. Melee Weapon Attack: +6 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 7 (1d6 + 4) slashing damage plus 7 (2d6) necrotic damage.
Bite. Melee Weapon Attack: +4 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 3 (1d6) piercing damage plus 3 (1d6) acid damage. Miss: 3 (1d6) acid damage.
Legendary Actions
The reaper can take 3 legendary actions.
Bite. The reaper makes a bite attack. Additionally on a hit, it regains 3 hit points.
Consuming Shadows. The reaper deals 5 (2d6) necrotic damage to a creature standing in darkness that it can see up to 60 feet away.
Shadow Step (Costs 2 Actions). The reaper fills a 5-foot cube within 5 feet of it with magical darkness which remains for 1 minute, and gains +2 AC while in dim light or darkness until the start of its next turn. A creature with darkvision can't see through this darkness, and nonmagical light can't illuminate it. Additionally, the reaper can teleport up to 30 feet to an unoccupied space that is in dim light or darkness.
Elite Actions
The reaper uses darkness at the end of the first round of combat.
Darkness. The reaper casts the darkness spell which covers a 30-foot-radius sphere.

Sample reaper duskwalker encounter:
  The reaper is hiding in the shadows, clinging on a high ceiling, buried under debris or in a giant trapdoor spider lair under the street pavement (the former resident having been eaten), or skulking across rooftops during a "duskfall" (a Plane of Shadow manifest zone that cloaks the area in heavy, asphyxiating mist). As the party passes by, it reaches out to grab a creature and makes two claw attacks. If both claw attacks hit, the target is grappled (escape DC 14) and the reaper makes a bite attack with advantage.

Other Effects

Enraged (Barbarian Rage or basic attacks cleave and hit another adjacent creature), bleeding (Bloodied or steadily losing blood and hit points), infested (by insects), wounded (limping and loses part of its multiattack or deals reduced damage with an attack).
  PCs might encounter a slum reaper displaying one of these effects, or they might cause an affliction like enraged or wounded.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Stress and My Creative Process

Stress. The last two months, for me, have felt like floating in a dull, endless ocean of stress.

At the end of last month, I felt a surge of desire and motivation to write and publish my own D&D adventure (Disturbance at Dusk, available on the DMs Guild). The idea for that adventure came from a lot of places, and the writing and encounters came from twisting some old adventures I made and creating lot of brand new pieces. Whenever I sat down at my tiny desk in my cold room in the week leading up October 1st, I had a lot of positive energy helping me drive myself and the writing forward, helping me progress, helping me come up with new ideas. In four days I wrote over 14,000 words, or about 3,500 a day—2,000 words a day is my goal on days I try to dedicate entirely to writing, and most of the time that writing isn't so completely focused on one story. Around 8,000 of those words made it into the final product, and I had so many other ideas that I never fleshed out and incorporated.

After spending one last day re-reading and editing and tweaking, I published it. It felt great. I immediately wanted to continue working on the next chapter of that adventure, and for a day I did. Then I realized how completely exhausted I was. I needed time to recharge, and I couldn't help but dwell on all the parts of the adventure that could have been better. So, I decided to take a few days off. In that time, my forward momentum stopped, as I expected from resting, relaxing, taking time away from the pen and paper and the keyboard and bright computer monitor. After that break, I wanted to get back into gear, build up that momentum and positive energy again, write and design more cool things for another adventure and have it ready to publish two weeks after my first (yesterday, at the time of publishing this blog post). But, life and stress got in the way.
  The positive energy and forward momentum I had a couple of weeks ago became negative energy and heavy, inert weight dragging me and my ability to create new things and put together ideas. The thoughts of "I can do this," and "this will be good" became "I can't do this," and "this will never work." And not just about writing another adventure. As the days of personal and family business continued, it also became about life in general and my ability to create anything. My desire to write and make is still high, but my ability to do so, my ability to lift the proverbial weight around my ankles and shoulders feels miserable. Now, it feels like I have no ability whatsoever to change anything around me, from being able to put words to paper (or monitor) to putting food on my own plate. It feels like this cycle, like it has countless times throughout my life, will never end.

Some things I know I am in control of, deep down I know I am, but the feeling that I'm not is unshakeable. Others I know I'm not in control of—getting a call back after applying for a new job, the weather cooperating as it gets colder, anything my family is doing or not doing, saddening (and maddening) world news—I know shouldn't feel bad for not being able to control, shouldn't feel as defeated as I do because I couldn't have changed it, but the more my mind dwells on it the worse it feels whether I want to think about it or not.

Being a creative person, to me, at least in this moment, seems to mean that life will be filled with the most vibrant, positive highs but also the most gray, negative lows. Things are rarely even-keel. And when they're at a point, it will never not feel like that low point will ever end, or never return.

For now, I will to do my best to keep moving forward, and have to trust in myself that I can reach another high point in the future full of forward momentum by slogging through the muck in the present.

Thanks for everyone who has purchased Disturbance at Dusk, reads this blog, and follows me on social media. Your mostly silent presence is strange, but nonetheless supportive and motivating.

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