tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8999006694513130928.post7549156781974264234..comments2024-03-22T11:03:29.536+00:00Comments on Mr Saturday's Mumblings: B*stardCon5 - The Sunday GameMr Saturdayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03092917415087033316noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8999006694513130928.post-267792224080013662011-07-14T21:08:28.797+01:002011-07-14T21:08:28.797+01:00I've played a few in my time, and we found the...I've played a few in my time, and we found the best way to keep things running is to have a dedicated GM to watch out for the things you've mentioned. We're lucky in that most of us are about the same skill level though we do have a couple of warhammer ninjas. Happily one of these is the GM! We encourage plenty of diplomacy, so if one player is looking like he's running away with it he may find a loose confederation forming against him.<br /><br />One of the other things that seems to help is a good resource system. Managing this adds another element for players, and it rarely turns out players can expend resources in a war of attrition for multiple turns before they exhaust themselves and are forced to either retire, negotiate or are taken out by a third party. <br /><br />Special tiles, items and scenarios help here too, as well as multiple ways to win the campaign, which also mitigates border grinding. Finding x items, taking x tiles, winning x battles and so on. Special scenarios and secret objectives also keep players interested, especially if they suit the terrain or narrative. Having half a dozen GM controlled trolls enter the table when fighting a game in the badlands tend to mix it up some.<br /><br />Personally, naming provinces, cities, specific armies, units and characters increases the players enjoyment of the campaign immensely. Fighting an ambush in the Iron Hills against Lord Dreux and his horde before he reaches the port town in Garzione is much more pleasant to recount then when I defended tile 24/c with 2000 points of Empire to save my port against the vampire player.<br /><br />I suppose we'll see if all this actually helps!Mr Saturdayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03092917415087033316noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8999006694513130928.post-71594902811852948802011-07-14T20:07:10.384+01:002011-07-14T20:07:10.384+01:00I'd say it's harder to keep a campaign goi...I'd say it's harder to keep a campaign going once the going gets tough. It's tricky to keep it interesting if mis-matches develop, or if one player is significantly better than the rest, or (in the case of a map campaign) if people find they are continually grinding up against only one player for many turns in a row. I'd be interested to hear if you have any experience there.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8999006694513130928.post-70776334363258553272011-07-13T21:37:28.193+01:002011-07-13T21:37:28.193+01:00It was warhammer, but only using characters. We di...It was warhammer, but only using characters. We did use some Mordheim movement rules. I have a copy of the General's Compendium, still one of the best books GW ever brought out, in my opinion.<br /><br />The hardest thing about campaigns I find is actually getting them off the ground. Still, this one shows promise!Mr Saturdayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03092917415087033316noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8999006694513130928.post-1597621256975597672011-07-13T21:12:09.513+01:002011-07-13T21:12:09.513+01:00Were you playing this as a skirmish game? It look...Were you playing this as a skirmish game? It looks from the pictures that there's no ranked up units. Anyway, it looks like fun. For more multiplayer shenanigans, I highly recommend the General's Compendium. It's chock-full of that sort of thing, as well as lots of other fabulous articles (such simple campaign rules).<br /><br />Good luck with the campaign. Ive been having great fun with our Border Princes campaign lately, so I'll be following the linked blog closely.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com