Friday, December 26, 2025

The Cycle: Intermission — My Personal History with D&D

 Before the Cycle moves forward, I want to take a moment to share how I first met D&D.

In the Fall of 1976, I was 14 years old. I lived on the navy base in Millington, TN. My best friend, John, and I played some Avalon Hill strategy games, Tobruk and Panzer Leader, mostly. At school I had been seeing people walking around with copies of The Sword of Shannara and Lord of the Rings. I didn’t know what they were, but the covers definitely caught my attention – and my imagination. I had also seen guys talking over things drawn on graph paper and rolling dice. I overheard a conversation with a dragon. I couldn’t make sense of it, but I was fascinated.

One Saturday John came to my house, very excited. He told me to come with him, that there was something going on at the community center and he wanted me to see it. I didn’t know that John had already sat in on a session. Obviously, it was D&D, but not just any D&D. It was the so-called LBB (Little Brown Books) D&D. By this time the first three supplements were in circulation as well. I was hooked.

In those days, $10 was a princely sum for a 14-year-old, so the boxed set of the first three books were out of the question. Copying was in its infancy, scarce and expensive, so John took it upon himself to hand copy the first three booklets. Somehow we acquired a photocopy of Supplement I, Greyhawk, and parts of Supplement III, Eldritch Wizardry. After that, almost all of our time was spent playing.

I have so many fond memories of D&D. I’ve played every major edition at least once. I eventually scored the boxed set, as well as Holmes basic. D&D taught me basic arithmetic to a high degree. I learned how to count the pips on a handful of d6s at a glance. I made enduring friendships and lasting memories. This “game” has been my constant companion through every up and down I’ve found my way into. Through its lens I’ve come to understand things that may still evade me had I not had it.

My beloved game, my steadfast friend, has changed so much since it first entered the world. Almost immediately, it began to be forcibly morphed into something it wasn’t meant to be. Its combat system was abstract, and never intended to be a realistic combat simulator. Yet beginning with Greyhawk, that was the very role it was forced into. Unfortunately, every change made in support of that goal, in search of “realistic combat”, required multiple rules to prop it up. The cruft grew exponentially throughout the system, and by the time of AD&D, the game I cut my teeth on was buried. Buried, but not dead.

Supplement after supplement, edition after edition, moved D&D further away from its simple, yet profound philosophy. I don’t fault the luminaries that brought it to life. They were answering public demand and corporate realities. In fact, I’m not even sure they fully comprehended the lightning they had captured. Yet, they did bolt system after system onto the simple chassis. As each new system burdened the elegant engine, they sought to remedy the burden by more systems. Every abandonment of a simple truth required yet another “fix”. A myriad of classes, combat rules, and alterations to the magic system came and went. My beloved game, my friend, had become an artifact, a historical curiosity. It was something to look at and marvel, “How did this mess ever become successful?”

I intend to rectify that by stripping away decades of accumulated cruft — not by writing yet another fantasy heartbreaker or retroclone, but by revealing the original philosophy implied by the rules themselves. Only the rules from the first three booklets, Men & Magic, Monsters & Treasure, and Underworld & Wilderness Adventures will be considered. There may not have been a guiding philosophy while the rules were being hashed out, but an implied philosophy is revealed in hindsight. It is a philosophy that is at once robust yet graceful, implied but existential. More than all that, though, it is worthy. It is worthy of respect, not only as an artifact or historical oddity. It is worthy as a game. It’s not broken, flawed, simplistic, or incomplete in its systems. It’s worth playing, on its own strengths, of which there are many.

The Cycle: Movements IV-VI

 

Movement IV: The Fighting‑Man — Mastery as Design

Thesis

The Fighting‑Man is the foundational class of OD&D, expressing the game’s core assumptions about risk, physical confrontation, and human capability. His progression reflects OD&D’s wargaming heritage, where martial effectiveness derives from the individual rather than from equipment or abstraction. The Fighting‑Man clarifies how OD&D models combat, leadership, and the limits of human mastery through its mechanics.


Historical Context

The Fighting‑Man descends directly from the medieval miniatures rules that preceded OD&D, particularly Chainmail. In these systems, the fighting figure served as the baseline combatant — the reference point against which all other units were measured. OD&D preserves this lineage. The Fighting‑Man’s hit dice, attack progression, and ability to employ all weapons and armor reflect a design grounded in the assumptions of mass combat.

The original 1974 rules reinforce this through a deliberate symmetry between hit dice and weapon damage: all weapons deal 1d6 damage, the same die used to measure the Fighting‑Man’s increasing durability. This is not an oversight but an expression of design intent. By equalizing weapon damage and tying both offense and resilience to the same basic unit, OD&D centers the Fighting‑Man’s effectiveness on his hit dice, attack matrices, and survivability rather than on equipment optimization. The class is defined by personal capability, not by technological advantage.


Interpretation

The Fighting‑Man’s mechanics articulate a worldview in which martial success is a function of individual resilience, training, and willingness to confront danger directly. His hit dice progression is the most robust in the game, reflecting the assumption that physical mastery is measurable and finite. His attack progression improves steadily, reinforcing his role as the party’s primary combatant.

Two subsystems further clarify his intended identity.

First, morale.
OD&D’s morale rules assume that the Fighting‑Man is the stabilizing presence in moments of danger. Retainers, hirelings, and allied troops respond to his leadership. When morale is ignored, the Fighting‑Man’s role as a battlefield leader collapses, and the game loses a key expression of its wargaming heritage.

Second, intelligent swords.
Only Fighting‑Men may use swords of any type, including intelligent ones. These items — the most common and most detailed magic items in the 1974 rules — provide detection abilities, communication, and special powers that later editions farmed out to thieves and hybrid classes. Their utility was intended to make the fighting-man a well rounded adventurer, a renaissance man. The class’s XP requirements were written with this access in mind. When intelligent swords are marginalized or omitted, the Fighting‑Man loses a significant portion of his intended capability, and the player pays an XP cost for benefits the referee has effectively removed. This omission is a significant factor in the drift that later produced additional classes and subsystems to fill the "gap".

Together, these elements reveal the consequences of misreading the class. When weapon symmetry is discarded, morale is ignored, or intelligent swords are treated as rare flavor pieces, the Fighting‑Man’s role is reduced to numerical efficiency. The class loses its intended depth, and OD&D’s portrayal of martial capability becomes narrower and less coherent. The Fighting-Man becomes boring and a plethora of rules rush in the rectify the problem.


Reframing

To understand OD&D on its own terms, we must recognize that the Fighting‑Man is not a modern “damage dealer” or tactical specialist. He is the class that embodies the game’s foundational assumptions about combat and leadership. His mechanics express a design philosophy in which physical confrontation is central, equipment is secondary, and the presence of a capable leader shapes the behavior of allies.

The Fighting‑Man clarifies OD&D’s understanding of mastery: it is personal, measurable, and bounded. His progression defines the limits of human capability within the system, and his interactions with morale and intelligent swords reveal how the game models authority, utility, and consequence. To ignore these elements is to misunderstand the class and to sever OD&D from the wargaming principles that shaped its design.


Movement V: The Magic‑User — Power as Design

Thesis

The Magic‑User represents OD&D’s most extreme expression of deferred capability. His progression is built on scarcity, fragility, and the exponential growth that comes from accumulating arcane knowledge. The class clarifies OD&D’s assumptions about risk, resource management, and the long arc of power. His design is not about tactical spellcasting in the modern sense, but about the consequences of limited, high‑impact magical exertions within an exploration‑driven game.


Historical Context

The Magic‑User’s mechanics derive from two primary sources: Chainmail’s fantasy supplement and Jack Vance’s Dying Earth stories. From Chainmail comes the idea that magic is powerful but unreliable, capable of turning battles but not dominating them. From Vance comes the structure of spells as discrete, exhaustible formulae that must be prepared in advance and vanish from memory when cast.

OD&D preserves these assumptions. Spellbooks, scrolls, and spell acquisition rules emphasize rarity and uncertainty. The XP table reflects a class whose early levels are intentionally slow and dangerous, with meaningful power arriving only after significant investment. The Magic‑User’s fragility is not a flaw but a design choice: the class is built around the tension between extreme vulnerability and the potential for overwhelming influence.


Interpretation

The Magic‑User’s mechanics express a design philosophy in which magical power is scarce, costly, and transformative. His early levels are defined by risk: a single spell, minimal hit points, and limited equipment. This scarcity is intentional. OD&D assumes that the Magic‑User will rely on caution and creativity, wile and savvy, and party support, until his spell repertoire grows.

The Vancian system reinforces this worldview. Spells are not renewable resources but singular exertions. Preparing the same spell multiple times is technically permissible but reflects a later, gamist interpretation rather than the assumptions of 1974. In OD&D, spells are discrete tools, each with a specific purpose, and the class’s identity is built around choosing the correct tool in the right moment to achieve best effect.

The XP table and hit dice progression clarify the intended arc. The Magic‑User begins as the weakest character in the game but accelerates rapidly once he gains access to higher‑level spells. This exponential curve is the class’s defining feature. His power is not incremental but stepwise, tied to the acquisition of new spell levels and the expansion of his spellbook.

When these assumptions are ignored — when spells are abundant, when spellbooks are trivial to expand, or when preparation is treated as a tactical convenience rather than a strategic constraint — the class loses its intended shape. Modern assumptions such as cantrips, at‑will casting, and freely renewable spell slots further erode the class’s intended reliance on a scarce resource, replacing OD&D’s high‑risk, high‑impact magic with a continuous, low‑cost resource model the original rules never assumed. The Magic‑User becomes a modern spellcaster rather than a figure defined by scarcity, risk, and long‑term investment.

At 11th level, the Magic‑User becomes a Wizard — a title that marks a shift in expected play. Unlike the Fighting‑Man or Cleric, whose endgames involve physical or institutional domains, the Magic‑User’s late game assumes the establishment of a tower, the recruitment of apprentices, and the pursuit of magical research. His progression reflects a design in which knowledge, not territory or hierarchy, defines the endgame.


Reframing

To understand OD&D on its own terms, we must recognize that the Magic‑User is not a flexible spellcaster or ranged damage specialist. He is the class that embodies the game’s assumptions about limited resources and exponential growth. His fragility is the cost of his future power. His slow early advancement is the price of eventual dominance. His late‑game identity is built around research, apprentices, and the accumulation of rare knowledge.

The Magic‑User clarifies OD&D’s understanding of magical power: it is rare, dangerous, and transformative. His progression defines the long arc of capability within the system, and his reliance on scarcity and preparation reveals how the game models risk and reward. To ignore these elements is to misunderstand the class and to sever OD&D from the literary and mechanical principles that shaped its design.


Movement VI: The Cleric — Faith as Foundation

Thesis

The Cleric embodies OD&D’s assumptions about risk mitigation, party stability, and the management of attrition. His design is not rooted in theology or narrative identity but in the practical needs of an exploration‑driven game. The Cleric’s progression clarifies OD&D’s approach to healing, undead control, and the balance between martial and magical capability. His mechanics reveal a class built to stabilize the party’s survival curve without overshadowing the Fighting‑Man or the Magic‑User.


Historical Context

The Cleric’s origins lie in the early Blackmoor and Greyhawk campaigns, where the need for a character who could counter undead threats and provide limited healing became apparent. The class draws from pulp archetypes such as Van Helsing and medieval warrior‑priests rather than from later high‑fantasy depictions of miracle‑workers.

OD&D’s 1974 rules reflect this lineage. The Cleric begins with no spells at first level, reinforcing his identity as a combatant and support figure rather than a primary spellcaster. His spell list is narrower and more utilitarian than the Magic‑User’s, emphasizing restoration, protection, and situational utility. His ability to turn undead is not a narrative flourish but a mechanical response to the prevalence of undead in early dungeon play.

The Cleric’s XP table and hit dice progression place him between the Fighting‑Man and the Magic‑User, reflecting his hybrid role. He is durable enough to stand on the front line when needed, but his true value lies in mitigating the long‑term risks inherent in OD&D’s exploration model.


Interpretation

The Cleric’s mechanics express a design philosophy in which survival is a resource to be managed. His spellcasting is structured around restoring lost capability rather than generating new offensive power. Healing spells are limited, costly, and insufficient to erase the consequences of poor planning. This scarcity reinforces OD&D’s emphasis on caution, logistics, and retreat.

The absence of spells at first level is a critical design choice. It prevents the Cleric from overshadowing the Fighting‑Man in early combat and reinforces the class’s identity as a support figure whose magical capabilities emerge gradually. When modern assumptions introduce at‑will healing, abundant spell slots, or early access to restorative magic, the Cleric’s intended role collapses. The class becomes tactical with on-demand battlefield healing, rather than a strategic resource.

Undead never check morale in OD&D, which means the Cleric is the only class capable of driving them off. Turning functions as a parallel to the Fighting‑Man’s influence over living hostile troops, giving the Cleric a unique form of battlefield control. This design reinforces the Cleric’s role as a specialist countermeasure rather than a generalist spellcaster.

The Cleric’s spell list further clarifies his intended identity. His magic is practical, situational, and often preventative. It reinforces the game’s emphasis on exploration hazards, environmental threats, and long‑term resource management. When spell lists are expanded to include broad utility, offensive magic, or continuous healing, the Cleric drifts toward a generalist caster rather than a stabilizing specialist.


Reframing

To understand OD&D on its own terms, we must recognize that the Cleric is not a healer in the modern sense, nor a divine spellcaster defined by narrative theology. He is the class that embodies the game’s assumptions about attrition, risk mitigation, and the management of long‑term survival. His progression clarifies OD&D’s understanding of magical support: it is limited, costly, and strategically deployed.

The Cleric stabilizes the party without eliminating danger. His turning ability shapes the game’s treatment of undead. His spellcasting reinforces the importance of preparation and caution. His durability allows him to support the Fighting‑Man without replacing him. To ignore these elements is to misunderstand the class and to sever OD&D from the practical, exploration‑driven principles that shaped its design.


 

Sunday, December 21, 2025

The Cycle: Movements I-III

Movement I: The Endgame — The Forgotten Heart of OD&D

Thesis

OD&D is fundamentally a game about human aspiration in a hostile world, where the endgame of establishing a dominion is not only a reward, but the culmination of the intended arc of play.

Historical Context

The early 1970s were marked by instability — political scandal, economic uncertainty, the end of the Vietnam War, and the pervasive anxiety of the Cold War. In this environment, the creation of OD&D can be understood as an imaginative response to a world that felt unpredictable and indifferent. The 1974 rules assume a landscape in which civilization is sparse and fragile. The recommended wilderness map, drawn from Outdoor Survival, depicts a world defined by scarcity and danger: vast forests, impassable mountains, treacherous swamps, and only a few isolated strongholds of safety. Characters are expected to rise to “name level,” establish dominions, attract followers, and impose order on the wilderness. These expectations are not peripheral; they are embedded in the advancement tables, construction rules, and encounter structures. OD&D emerges from a cultural moment in which the desire to carve out stability from chaos was not merely a fantasy, but a reflection of the anxieties of the time.

Interpretation

This design reflects a worldview in which fear, scarcity, ambition, safety, legacy, and naked audacity define the human condition. Characters begin fragile and exposed, with minimal resources and no guarantees of survival. Yet, with uninformed courage and raw ambition, they venture forth. Their early expeditions into the underworld are not heroic epics but desperate attempts to secure enough treasure to continue living. The wilderness is not a backdrop; it is the primary antagonist — indifferent, dangerous, and vast. The underworld is not merely a location; it is the embodiment of unknown danger, a crucible in which audacity is tested and rewarded. Progress in OD&D is not measured by the accumulation of abilities, but by the gradual wresting of safety from an uncaring world.

Reframing

To understand OD&D on its own terms, we must recognize that the endgame is not an optional mode of play or a vestigial remnant of wargaming. It is the philosophical center of the system — the point toward which every rule bends. The journey from fragile adventurer to established ruler is not a side path; it is the intended arc of play. When characters establish dominions, attract followers, and impose order on the wilderness, they complete the cycle the game was designed to express. To ignore the endgame is to misunderstand OD&D’s purpose and to sever the game from its original vision of human aspiration in the face of unknown danger.


Movement II: Class as Result Engine

Thesis

In OD&D, character classes are not collections of abilities, bonuses, feats, and talents. They are engines designed to produce specific results in the world. Each class expresses a distinct mode of engagement with danger, scarcity, and aspiration, shaping the trajectory of play through the outcomes it is built to generate.

Historical Context

The classes of OD&D emerged from a wargaming tradition in which units were defined by their battlefield roles and the results they could reliably produce. The Fighting Man, Magic User, and Cleric were not conceived as narrative archetypes but as functional responses to the challenges of the underworld and wilderness. Their abilities were sparse, their mechanics minimal, and their identities rooted in what they enabled players to accomplish: holding the line, reshaping reality, or sustaining the party through peril. Early play reports and the 1974 rules themselves reveal a design philosophy in which classes were tools for interacting with a hostile world, not expressions of character concept or personal style. First and foremost, the classes were vehicles of ambition — the means by which characters carved out security in a dangerous world, whether by blade, by spell, or by piety.

Interpretation

In OD&D, a class is defined not by the abilities it possesses but by the problems it is built to solve. Each class embodies a distinct strategy for confronting a world shaped by danger, scarcity, and uncertainty. The Fighting Man answers the brutality of the underworld with inevitability and violence, serving as the party’s anchor against the physical threats and terrors that would otherwise overwhelm them. The Magic User confronts the unknown through volatility and transformation, wielding limited but reality‑altering power that can reshape encounters or circumvent danger entirely. The Cleric stands between these extremes, offering stability, resilience, and the capacity to endure the attrition of repeated expeditions. These roles are not narrative archetypes but functional responses to a hostile environment. The classes exist because the world demands them; they are the means by which characters impose their will on an indifferent landscape. In this sense, each class is a philosophy of survival — a chosen method for carving out safety, asserting agency, and advancing ambition in a world that offers none freely.

Reframing

To understand OD&D on its own terms, we must set aside the modern assumption that classes are defined by the abilities they accumulate. In contemporary design, a class is often treated as a menu of options — a curated identity built from feats, talents, bonuses, and bespoke mechanics. This perspective obscures the original purpose of class in OD&D. In 1974, a class was not a personal expression but a functional commitment: a declaration of how a character intended to confront the dangers of the underworld and wilderness. The Fighting Man promised inevitability and violence; the Magic User promised volatility and transformation; the Cleric promised resilience and endurance. These were not aesthetic choices but strategic ones, each shaping the party’s capacity to survive and advance. When we reduce classes to bundles of abilities, we sever them from the world that demanded their existence. OD&D’s classes are result engines — tools for imposing order on a hostile landscape — and only by restoring this functional understanding can we grasp the game’s original vision of ambition and audacity in the face of danger, in the pursuit of hard‑won safety. OD&D classes are not about what they can do, but about what they can accomplish.

Movement III: Procedure as Worldview

Thesis.

In OD&D, procedures are not optional guidelines but the primary means by which the world asserts itself. The turn structure, encounter checks, movement rates, and resource clocks are expressions of the game’s worldview, defining danger, scarcity, and the cost of ambition.

Historical Context.

OD&D’s procedures emerged directly from the wargaming culture that preceded it, a tradition in which structure was not decoration but the means by which a world operated. In the early 1970s, dungeon expeditions were conducted with a rigor inherited from miniatures campaigns: time was tracked, movement was measured, torches burned down, and encounters were checked with mechanical regularity. These procedures were not abstractions; they were the machinery that made the underworld dangerous and the wilderness vast. The turn structure, encounter frequency, and resource depletion rules found in the 1974 booklets reflect this lineage. They assume a world in which danger is constant, time itself is a precious resource to be marshalled, and every action carries a cost. Early play reports reinforce this understanding: the dungeon was not a narrative stage but a procedural engine, a living, hostile environment whose rhythms and pressures were defined by the rules themselves. In this context, procedure was not optional guidance — it was the world demanding attention. And respect.

Interpretation.

In OD&D, procedures are not neutral mechanisms but the means by which the world exerts pressure on the characters. Every turn, torch, ration, and encounter check is a reminder that the environment is not passive; it is active, hostile, and unyielding. The dungeon does not wait for the players to act — it advances, depletes, and threatens with mechanical inevitability. The world is indifferent, sometimes cruelly so, its dangers emerging not from narrative intent but from the impartial machinery of random generation. Time is not an abstract measure but a resource that drains with every decision, forcing characters to confront the cost of their ambition. Movement rates, encumbrance, and resource clocks are not bookkeeping chores; they are expressions of the world’s indifference, the friction that gives danger its weight. In this framework, procedure becomes ontology: the rules do not describe the world, they are the world. The rhythms of exploration, the cadence of encounters, and the steady erosion of resources define the lived experience of play. OD&D’s procedures transform the dungeon from a narrative backdrop into a living engine of consequence, one that shapes every choice the players make. Through this machinery, the game asserts its worldview: survival is earned, safety is temporary, and ambition carries a measurable cost.

Reframing.

Modern design often treats procedures as optional tools — conveniences that can be loosened, ignored, or replaced without consequence. In many contemporary systems, the rules exist to support the story, and the story determines when the rules matter. OD&D reverses this relationship. In 1974, procedures were not narrative aids but the underlying physics of the world. The turn structure, encounter checks, and resource clocks were not suggestions for pacing but the mechanisms through which danger, scarcity, and consequence manifested. To ignore a procedure was to misrepresent the world itself, the ripples of which will flow outward. When later editions and modern games treat procedures as flexible or disposable, they sever the connection between action and consequence that defined early play. OD&D’s worldview depends on the friction created by time, distance, and depletion — the pressures that force players to make hard choices and accept real risk. Restoring this procedural foundation is not an act of nostalgia but of clarity. It allows us to see OD&D as it was designed: a game in which the world asserts itself through structure, and in which ambition is measured not by what characters attempt, but by what they survive.

Introducing the Cycle: A Restoration of OD&D’s Worldview

For years now, I’ve circled around the idea that OD&D deserves a clearer articulation than it has ever truly received. Not nostalgia, not retro‑cloning, not wistful recollection — but clarity. The 1974 game is often spoken about, often imitated, often invoked, but rarely examined on its own terms. Its worldview, its assumptions, its machinery, and its ambitions have been obscured by decades of reinterpretation.

This project — which I’m calling The Cycle — is my attempt to restore that clarity.

The Cycle is not a ruleset, nor is it a manifesto. At the risk of sounding immodest, it is a Symphony: a sequence of Movements, each exploring a foundational pillar of OD&D’s design philosophy, each building upon the last. My goal is simple: to articulate the game as it was built, not as it has been remembered in various OSR projects. To treat OD&D with the rigor it deserves, and to give language to the ideas that shaped its play long before the hobby had words for them.

These first three Movements form the opening arc:

  • Movement I: The World as Adversary
  • Movement II: Class as Result Engine
  • Movement III: Procedure as Worldview

Together, they establish the frame through which the rest of the Cycle will unfold — the world, the actors, and the machinery that binds them. Each Movement is written with academic discipline, but also with the mythic sensibility that OD&D quietly carried from its earliest days. Like the opening of a symphony, they introduce themes that will be developed, refracted, and deepened in later parts of the work.

I’m publishing these Movements not to elevate my own name, but to clarify OD&D’s. The game deserves to be understood with precision and respect, and if this work contributes even a small measure of that clarity, then it has done its job.

More Movements will follow in time. For now, I offer these first three as the foundation — the beginning of a larger restoration.



Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Revisiting an Old Idea

Honestly, I don't even know why I'm bringing this up. Some time back, like 12 or 13 years, I wrote this post about spell books in DCC. I still like the idea a lot. I wanted to rewrite it a little, maybe make it a little clearer. Hopefully.


One of the things that struck me about the magic system in DCC is the "mythos" of the spells. There are a finite number of "known" spells. They are jealously guarded, and simply knowing that a particular spell exists is a feat. Adding to that is the fact that each Wizard casts each spell in a manner completely unique to himself, through the Mercurial Magic subsystem. Furthermore, each time a spell is cast its effect and effectiveness are determined by the casting roll.

If I ever run a DCC campaign, I have an idea regarding Wizards I plan to put into play. Each wizard player will keep a "spellbook". When the game starts the player will have a full copy of the casting tables for each spell he knows. For spells uncovered and learned during play, he will have a blank sheet, bearing the name of the spell, and blank spaces for all the particulars of the spell. The wizard will have to cast the spell to learn its effects. Certain pieces of information will be known from a single casting. Range, Duration, Casting Time, Mercurial Magic effects will all be revealed by a single casting. Corruption and Misfire should be noted by the player as they occur. Likewise, the player should note the effects of the various casting rolls, as they occur.

For example, a wizard discovers a Sleep spell in a moldering tome. After much study and meditation, he has learned the basics of casting the spell. Yet, only taking it out of the lab and casting it under duress will truly reveal how the spell will behave for our erstwhile wizard. On his first use of the spell in a stressful situation, the player gets a total of 17 on his casting roll. The Judge tells the player the effect of the casting, and the player simply notes the roll. Later, during a break in the action, with the Judge's help, the player records the effect of a casting roll of 17 on his blank spell sheet. He also enters the range, duration, etc, along with the manifestation and mercurial effect. Corruption and misfire are left blank for now, since this casting was successful.

It should be emphasized that these spell sheets are living artifacts of the campaign. The wizard’s player is free to embellish them as imagination dictates—lab notes, marginalia, sketches, or stray observations are all encouraged. Odd smells, eerie sounds, minor mishaps, or fragments of arcane theory can be scrawled into the margins, transforming each page into a record of lived magical experience. In this way, a wizard’s “spell list” ceases to be a static chart tucked on the back of a character sheet. Instead, it becomes a sheaf of dangerous, wondrous pages—a testimony of power earned through risk and reward, scar and triumph.


Thursday, November 20, 2025

Bellerophon

 

Beneath Twin Suns: A New World Awakens

For decades, I’ve carried Aranor in my heart and head. Its foundations were laid long ago, its bones shaped by years of thought, play, and testimony. Aranor is the long‑rooted myth, patiently cultivated, canonized piece by piece.

But sometimes, a world doesn’t wait decades. Sometimes it erupts overnight.


Bellerophon was born less than a day ago, sparked by a sound—Alice in Chains—and forged in conversation with a friend. What began as riffs and fragments has already grown into a setting with factions, worlds, mechanics, and even a publishing roadmap. It is beleaguered, industrial, mythic. It is a closed system beneath twin suns, where survival is testimony and every choice grinds against the axes of Agriculture, Industry, and Knowledge.

This is not a replacement for Aranor. It is a sibling myth, a sudden fire beside the long‑burning hearth. Aranor remains the epic, the legacy. Bellerophon is the crucible, the immediacy, the proof that inspiration can strike and take shape in less than 24 hours.

So consider this your warning: something new is coming.


Bellerophon Science Fiction RPG: Beleaguered Roleplaying Beneath Twin Suns.

It will not sprawl across galaxies. It will not leap between stars. It will live, and die, beneath twin suns. And soon, you will too.


Thursday, November 13, 2025

The Battle of the Chill Bones

Intro

In the time of our grandfather’s grandfathers, they came. From the haunted Snowdowns—long associated with the undead and the subversion of our Queen’s will—they came. Led by their own dark lord, the demon Githraxus, summoned by the cultists of the evil priest Jarrun Croll, known as the Bonecaller. From cairns and crypts, thousands of dead were raised. The frontier stirred.


The Frosty Morn

The Battle of the Rocks
The Queen’s forces sallied forth—some 800 souls—led by Syr Eldas Horn, oathbearer and paladin.
They met the enemy at the Battle of the Frosty Morn, fought at the ford of Essen. After three days of brutal fighting, the frontierfolk were routed, fleeing south toward Ravenhold.

They made a stand on a rocky prominence known as Beggintor. That contest is now called the Battle of the Rocks. Reinforcements from Westerguard arrived in time, smashing the undead lines and gaining the tor. The fighting continued for two more days, until the horde mysteriously withdrew.


Restless Hope

A period of restless hope followed. Syr Edmas repaired to Ravenkeep to plan, reprovision, and seek allies. Westerguard returned to its garrisons, refusing further aid. Chourdulay committed 300 soldiers and 100 cavalry, led by knights of the realm. Marlahn sent 50 temple-knights—elite warriors trained to combat the undead.

Syr Edmas also gathered local replacements, returning his ranks to 600. One rider was sent north to the Arn-law, bearing a bag of dwarven silver quills—the ancient coin of contract. It was a gamble. The Arns answer only to coin and cause, not a foreign crown.


The Queen’s Peace

Word came: an undead horde had crossed the Copper River at Essenford. Syr Edmas marched to meet the threat. The temple-knights had yet to arrive, but there was no time to wait.

The Battle of the Queen's Peace
At Dornby, the battle raged for two days. Then a courier arrived: the undead were pouring out of the Queen’s Peace at Ravenhold. Graveyards throughout the northern frontier are called the Queen's Peace. Through vile enchantment, they had tunneled beneath the graveyard and animated its dead. The temple-knights had arrived and were holding the line, but time was short.

Syr Edmas led his cavalry south with all haste, leaving foot soldiers to conclude the battle at Dornby.
They crashed into the undead lines, pinning them against Ravenkeep and the temple-knights. The Battle of the Queen’s Peace was costly. There were eleven knights killed, and another seven too wounded to fight.

Syr Edmas returned to Dornby to find the village secured. The horde had vanished northward, presumably back across the river and into the Chill Bones.


The Shrine in the Hills

A ranger named Lawrill Black came forward, claiming knowledge of a dark shrine hidden in the Chill Bones. He agreed to lead Syr Edmas’ force.

Two days later, the army crossed the Essenford and pressed into the chalky hills. By mid-afternoon, they had surrounded the shrine. At dusk, the undead attacked. The fighting lasted through the night. The men held the perimeter, knowing the Bonecaller was among them.

As dawn broke, the line faltered. The Bonecaller seemed poised to escape. But then, war horns sounded. A force of Arnhic mercenaries arrived, having marched through the night.


The Midnight Oath

The undead ogre
The Arns turned the tide. Syr Edmas caught Jarrun Croll in the open, guarded by the animated corpse of
an ogre. He crossed steel with the beast, while his squire, Lisandra Torris, engaged the Bonecaller. The fight was punishing, but Syr Edmas prevailed. Lisandra struck down the priest, though she was grievously wounded.

Syr Edmas exhorted the Veiled Queen to spare her. She granted his petition. A shrine was erected on the site. In later years, Syr Edmas Horn became Saint Edmas Horn, and the shrine was rededicated to him. A replica stands within the walls of Ravenkeep.


Legacy

The undead horde was broken. The Copper March entered a season of uneasy peace. Yet Jarrun Croll’s body was never found. Lady Lisandra swore she struck him down, but the Bonecaller’s remains vanished—whether stolen, scattered, or spirited away, none can say.

Many Arnhic mercenaries chose to remain. With sanction, they claimed homesteads, married into frontier families, and became part of the land they helped save. Their descendants still bear the sigil of that night—the horn crest, the midnight oath.


Closing
This is how legends are forged in Aranor. Not by prophecy, but by vow and blood. The Midnight Oath lives on—in the names we speak, the shrines we tend, and the peace we fight to keep.


Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Vows and Legends in Aranor

 

Post Two: Vows that Forge Legends

Intro
Assets give us the shape, but vows give us the weight. In Ironsworn, vows are progress tracks—but in Aranor, they’re more than that. They’re testimony. They’re the stories characters carry, the promises that shape the world.

Each archetype I shared last time—Duelist, Champion, Hunter, Warden, Ritualist—grows not just through ability, but through the vows they swear and fulfill. Here’s how those vows scale, from personal to world-shaping, and how they make a character feel mechanically legendary in play.


Legendary Duelist

Minor Vow: Best a rival in single combat before the gates of Castle Perilous.
Dangerous Vow: Defeat the champion of Ravenhold to prove your mastery.
Epic Vow: Become known across the Copper March as the greatest swordsman alive.

Duelists build legend through decisive victories. Each vow fulfilled adds weight to their name—and their rolls.


Oathbound Champion


Minor Vow: Protect Tarnstead from raiders along the Copper River.
Dangerous Vow: Defend Ravenhold’s liege against assassination.
Epic Vow: Uphold the honor of your order across all Aranor.

Champions grow through service and sacrifice. Their vows are shields, and their legend is forged in defense.


Beast-Hunter

Minor Vow: Track and slay the wolf haunting Dunhill’s outskirts.
Dangerous Vow: Hunt the serpent of Chill Bones.
Epic Vow: Rid the Copper March of its greatest predator, a beast of legend.

Hunters earn their myth one quarry at a time. Their vows are hunts, and each fulfilled promise sharpens their edge.


Warden of the Wild


Minor Vow: Restore balance to a blighted grove near the Copper River.
Dangerous Vow: Call the storm to drive invaders from the March.
Epic Vow: Bind yourself to the land, becoming its eternal guardian.

Wardens grow through communion and elemental resonance. Their vows deepen their bond with Aranor’s living soul.


Ritualist of the Veil

Minor Vow: Perform a forbidden rite to reveal hidden truths in Ravenhold.
Dangerous Vow: Seal a spirit haunting Castle Perilous.
Epic Vow: Master the Veil, commanding powers feared across Aranor.

Ritualists walk the edge of power and consequence. Their vows are thresholds—and crossing them changes everything.


Closing
Legend in Aranor isn’t granted—it’s forged. Assets give the shape, vows give the weight. Together, they ensure that when you play a Duelist, Champion, Hunter, Warden, or Ritualist, your legend grows both narratively and mechanically.

If you adapt these archetypes for your own world, I’d love to hear how they evolve. And if you play in Aranor—may your vows be true, and your legend echo.


 

Assets and Legends in Aranor

 

Post One: Aranor’s Legendary Archetypes

Intro
Some of you know I’ve been circling the question of how to make characters in Aranor feel mechanically legendary. Mythras showed me how organic growth and special effects can make a swordsman play like a myth at the table. Ironsworn, though, gives me a different lens: assets. They’re modular, narrative-driven, and they let a character grow into their legend without bending the world to fit the system.

So, with Ember’s help, I’ve forged a few custom assets for Aranor. Each one is tuned to feel legendary in play, while still breathing with the cadence of the world.


Asset: Legendary Duelist

Category: Combat Talent
Requirement: You wield a blade and have sworn to prove your mastery.

Ability 1 – The Edge of Reputation

When you Strike or Clash in single combat, on a strong hit you may choose one:

  • Disarm your foe.
  • Drive them back, seizing initiative.
  • Inflict fear, forcing hesitation.
    If you narrate the flourish, take +1 momentum.

Ability 2 – The Dance of Steel

When you Face Danger with Edge or Iron in combat, on a strong hit you may also gain +1 momentum or +1 spirit, as the duel fuels your legend.
On a miss, mark progress against your vow to prove your mastery—your failure becomes part of the story.

Ability 3 – The Name That Echoes

When you Fulfill Your Vow to prove your skill in combat, mark 1 extra experience.
In any settlement where your deeds are known, you may Compel with +1 when invoking your reputation as a duelist.


Asset: Oathbound Champion

Category: Path
Requirement: You have sworn a sacred oath to a cause, order, or liege.

Ability 1 – The Weight of Oath

When you Swear an Iron Vow, take +1 momentum on a strong hit.
If the vow is tied to your order or liege, mark +1 progress when you Fulfill it.

Ability 2 – Shield of Legacy

When you Endure Harm or Endure Stress in defense of your oath, on a strong hit you may also:

  • Seize initiative, rallying allies.
  • Mark +1 progress on the vow you are defending.

Ability 3 – Champion’s Presence

When you Compel or Secure an Advantage by invoking your oath or reputation, take +1.
On a strong hit, allies gain +1 momentum as your presence steels their resolve.


Asset: Beast-Hunter


Category:
Path
Requirement: You have sworn to track and slay the beasts that haunt the marches and wilds.

Ability 1 – The Hunter’s Eye

When you Gather Information by studying signs of a beast, take +1.
On a strong hit, also gain +1 momentum as your quarry’s trail sharpens in your mind.

Ability 2 – The Hunter’s Strike

When you Strike or Clash against a beast, on a strong hit you may choose one:

  • Exploit a weakness (inflict +1 harm).
  • Drive it into disadvantage (take +1 momentum).
  • Mark progress on a vow to slay or protect against this beast.

Ability 3 – The Hunter’s Legacy

When you Fulfill Your Vow to slay or protect against a beast, mark 1 extra experience.
In any settlement where your deeds are known, you may Compel with +1 when invoking your reputation as a hunter.


Asset: Warden of the Wild

Category: Path
Requirement: You are bound to the land and its spirits, sworn to protect and learn from them.

Ability 1 – Voice of the Green

When you Gather Information in a natural setting, take +1.
On a strong hit, you may also:

  • Learn of a nearby danger (beast, spirit, or elemental).
  • Gain +1 momentum as the land whispers guidance.

Ability 2 – Element’s Touch

When you Face Danger or Secure an Advantage by calling on elemental forces (wind, flame, stone, or water), roll +Wits.
On a strong hit, choose one:

  • Shape the element to aid you (take +1 momentum).
  • Inflict harm or impose disadvantage on a foe (mark progress).

Ability 3 – Circle of Renewal

When you Sojourn in a community or sacred grove, you may roll +Wits instead of +Heart.
On a strong hit, allies gain +1 spirit or +1 momentum, as your presence renews them.
If you invoke the land’s blessing, mark +1 progress on a related vow.


Asset: Ritualist of the Veil

Category: Path



Requirement: You have learned forbidden rites, binding yourself to powers beyond the mortal world.

Ability 1 – Whispered Incantations

When you Secure an Advantage or Gather Information by performing a ritual, roll +Wits.
On a strong hit, you may also:

  • Glimpse hidden truths (ask one additional question).
  • Gain +1 momentum as the ritual strengthens your resolve.

Ability 2 – Blood and Shadow

When you Face Danger or Endure Stress by invoking ritual power, roll +Wits.
On a strong hit, choose one:

  • Inflict harm or disadvantage on a foe (mark progress).
  • Shield yourself or an ally (take +1 momentum).
    On a miss, the ritual exacts a price: lose -1 spirit or -1 supply.

Ability 3 – Master of the Veil

When you Fulfill Your Vow tied to a ritual or arcane power, mark 1 extra experience.
In any settlement where your rites are feared or revered, you may Compel with +1 when invoking your reputation as a Ritualist.


Closing
These assets are my attempt to bridge concept and mechanics, so that a Duelist, Champion, Hunter, Warden, or Ritualist doesn’t just sound legendary—they play legendary. Next time, I’ll show how vows forge their legends, scaling from personal promises to world-shaping oaths.