Interested in a quick game of horror?

Interested in a quick game of horror?

Interested in a quick game of horror? Like slasher films? Enjoy testing new games? I have a 4 page game for you. 1 playbook for all.

The Oubliette.

Main book:

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BxCt7uQ7CalMdWhPYy15WmZObmM

Playbook:

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BxCt7uQ7CalMR1hhN0dxanllY0k

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BxCt7uQ7CalMdWhPYy15WmZObmM

4 thoughts on “Interested in a quick game of horror?”

  1. Brilliant. I love how you use the numbers on the single die to increment variability in rolls without rolling more dice.

    I would advise you to revise the basic moves. Attempt to escape has a 7-9 formulated in a bizarre way, face a monster and search for answers oppose each other: search for answers suggest that you have to be careful and prepared to have chanches in properly fighting a monster. Face a monster give you a good chance of killing or harming a monster without asking for a “way to harm it”, an “advantageous position” or something like that.

    Perhaps you could make two moves:

    – when you try to fight off a monster desperatly….

    – when you are well prepared against a monster…

  2. Andrea Serafini let me know if you get a chance to try it. Interested to hear how it played. There’s some push and pull in the basic moves that are setup on purpose. Also, take a look at the jailer moves. You can assume the basic AW agenda and principles. Really, the MC moves, but those jailer moves emphasize a few things.

    Changes to basic moves: I’d consider just crossing off the choice on the 7-9 for face a monster. Otherwise, consider the fiction on attempt to escape. 7-9 means you don’t escape — you have a temp reprieve but are still trapped with the monster. Search for answers gives you hard bonuses if you learn any facts about the monsters, but this ain’t CoC.

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