The Reach — Episode Two

The Reach — Episode Two

The Reach — Episode Two

Come to the Garden

Previous episode:

https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/4pj1gDQkT2Q

Episode 0:

https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/QzSQXJCyWWx

[CN_ableism]

Situation: After Drop Troops surgically landed in the city, a majority of Districts have gone dark. Corporate arcologies have put themselves on lockdown, automated traffic has come to a standstill and there are reports that gangs of Devis are creeping up from the industrial Downlows, Surge City’s bottom.

Beliefs

Emet Kessner — The Honed

Belief 1: People are in danger, and as the honed I must aid them. I will save people from the disaster that fell upon the city.

Belief 2: The Mayor of the city is a horrid corrupt person whose mere rule is pain to his people, if I see him close, I’ll punch him.

Belief 3: Enhanced humans can never hope to be as perfect as me and my kind. We are better in everything.

Dr. Veleris Grant — The Catabolist

Belief 1: The city is in chaos, I now have the opportunity to go out and get some cyberware without getting noticed, I seek out a battle ground for some good junk

Belief 2: Dealings with the Yavlin are considered uncouth by many; to keep it a secret I will have to create an illusion emitting implant, and investigate how to manipulate the Yavlin in to a more acceptable appearance.

Belief 3: People have free will and choice, someone should never be forced/forbidden to get cyberware(removed), I wil defend choice. Once I am presentable I will seek out Sarah Kessner.

Andronicus Philotheos — The Seeker

Belief 1: The garden and its followers are my responsibility; I need to understand the factions within the system better. Therefore I will research the Ni Tai Mercs and look into why Skyler Addison asked for asylum.

Belief 2: The loss of contact with Dr Veleris Grant concerns us greatly; I need to secure the Yalvlin.

Belief 3: The needs of the faith go before my own; I will do whatever is necessary to strengthen our stronghold in the Maenalu system, so that no human will be left behind when we transcend.

We get this great interview of Emet as he is being rushed by reporters, only as he is finishing up, his connected device buzzes (miss on Potential): It’s his venerable father, Dov Kessner, the patriarch of the family and the Kessner Mining Corp./Fleet.

With a dry acknowledgment of his deed saving these kids, he then goes to let him know that he expects him to extract himself from the situation, collect his cousin (who they can’t reach) and head to the city’s space elevator. The Kessner family is heading home, he wants no entanglement with the local politics of “these people”.

A horizon stretching meadow, we see Andron, clad in full vestement, approaching a group of others of his order. He exchanges ritual greetings, sits and they talk. He passes little figurines containing memories he shares. He asks if truthfulness and honesty will serve him better should he pursue them. One of the others tells him a tale relating to his situations, a violent revolt on a station, with a lesson to not throw his allegiance to any side lightly but to look out for the common people. (success on Communion; +answer, +insight, +1 cred)

We pan up, high and see the lush green is but part of an island floating in the clouds among a handful of others.

Dr. Grant aches as he collects himself, the damaged scout mecha had set him down and is moving, drawing one leg after itself at the end of the valley. With the security to the power node that the spire is breached, he decides to investigate to better understand what the mercs’ objective is.

With the Yavlin, that is a bulge replacing his left shoulder/upper arm underneath his cloak, and his good hand he interacts with the exposed terminal: apparently this spire is shut down, down to the lowest levels of the city. This means power is out in an entire network, not just one district. But it is not damaged, it is just… in a complex series of dependencies, to restart this one you’d need to be at one of the other spires that have been attacked.

It all seems like a ploy to cover up an entirely different operation. An expensive one and one that’s been done without regard for the consequences (success on Lift the Veil).

Thinking for a moment, he calls up a contact in good standing (success on Links): Koda Shune, CTO of C-DISC Inc. (Chiba Department of Infrastructure for Surge City), a man out for his own who previously achieved good success with research Dr. Grant gave him access to, for the use of construction workers enhanced by specialized industrial cybernetics.

He strikes an easy deal: the info on the shutdown spires for a claim of first salvaging rights and some specialized AR tech.

The call is cut short by a bang from way back in the streets, a flash of light and the sound of automatic gun fire.

You do what you are told to do when it is your dad telling you to, even if you can’t keep yourself from whining to him. But it’s no use; and what is more frustrating, with the bike confiscated… Emet’s got to walk back. Traffic is either completely stuck, or on this highway almost deserted. Automated public transportation refuses to carry anyone.

And now he’s got even a group of hunched peeps clad in dirty rags climbing up on the way and pointing towards him (miss on Lift the Veil to find the way home).

With his curiosity he approaches to greet them… until they very obviously try to surround him. He lunges into a sprint as they try to close the circle, sliding underneath the swings of some extended batons, breaking out of it.

But not before one of them fires a taser gun at him, its hooks burying itself in his jacket and frying his com-device (taking a risk to breaking free).

With this momentum, he vaults off of a lamp post and makes a leap onto a an outside structure of a building over a gap off of the high-way. First shots ring out and miss, he slides down some steel piping to gather more speed and then pushes off.

Landing with an elegant roll on the concrete on a crossing ramp below he can also see the zip lines used by those thugs to get up above: these must be these pitiful people the city calls Devis.

As he scans where to go next, and the first ones trying to make their way down here, he hears the screeching of an engine: a flashy sports car turns a corner, passes him and comes to a sliding stop. Through a lowered window, a quite surprised Sarah Kessner give him a questioning eyebrow (that whole thing: partial success on Parkour, choices: Escape an enemy and avoid all harm; Escape an enemy and avoid all harm).

With Emet giving a cheeky wave from the car at the chasing Devis, we see Sarah punch the throttle (she has stumps for legs).

They exchange a round of quibs, as is the family fashion among peers, but Sarah appears a little pre-occupied, multi-tasking something on a console as she evades the question where she’s headed.

Though it’s apparent that it’s not the Space Elevator, and that it’s a shame about her phone—she must have lost it in the confusion (note: not having a neurochip is a family/culture thing).

As Dr. Grant is creeping along the alley wall, he gets the text message from Sarah: “Hey! U remember the family trouble of mine? Yeah, I need a place to stay… can i count on u?”

Checking on his situation before he replies, he makes out that a unit of TAA security has managed to surprise the scout mecha and has brought it down.

Approaching an officer and using his just procured license for first pick of salvage, he agrees to Sarah’s request and asks her to pick him up.

Just after this exchange he gets a call from Andron, slightly apprehensive he picks up. With his memories of his past with the Dr. back, Andron is immediately concerned, seeing him with his eyes missing and the bandages.

In the ensuing conversation, where Andron openly brings up his concerns about the Yavlin he gave him for safe-keeping, Dr. Grant manages to placate the Seeker nonetheless. He’ll join him soon at the Garden administration buildings.

(Andron’s probing is a clean miss with interferenece from Dr. Grant who wants to hide what happened with the Yavlin, basically letting him probe the surprised Seeker. Andron still gets some insight into Grant which helps establish a basis of trust through his Piercing Gaze.)

As Dr. Grant emerges from the wreckage of the mecha, having scrounged valuable junkware that is to serve as his eyes replacements, Sarah and Emet pull in on the scene.

There is an awkward scene of Dr. Grant maneuvering to the right side of the car, Emet getting out to let him into the back seat and realizing who they are picking up.

A couple of pointed remarks, questions and realizations, Emet asks Dr. Grant if he can help him out, as he needs to get in touch with his father. Sarah ignores to comment on this and Emet informs his father that their trip is going to suffer delay (a “miss” on the Refute roll) but he promises to bring Sarah back with him.

We get the aerial shot of the Garden’s administrative building, temporary housing erected in its courtyard. The place is bustling. Andron has been organizing, using the reserve of power cells to display a beacon promising refuge.

City counselor Skyler Addison has led part of her constituents here: people from lower levels of the street, who while having all of their needs met by technology, live in very packed and dull housing, their Maslow’s pyrimad topped off by a life in the Digisphere. They had to flee as gangs of Devis started to rise up out of the depths as the power failed.

There is a meeting in one of the meditation rooms in the basement that’s been converted into a situation room.

Next to the present Skyler Addison, Andron and another Garden Caregiver, the nervous Raphael Bentzen, we see Sarah on her hoverchair leading the blind Dr. Grant in, followed by a very out of place feeling Emet.

Andron leads the pooling of information. A major point of contention becomes when he openly drops the information that the captain of the attacking mercs stationed herself right here in the Garden: Caregiver Bentzen has serious concerns for the people’s safety, especially as Counselor Addison gets agitated. She needs to report this information, everything else would basically mean treason. Bentzen warns that this place would become a war zone. Dr. Grant urges her to keep this to herself, for the safety of everyone gathered. She turns back to the AR display.

As Andron reads the room during this (success on analyze), he notices the strange bulge where the Dr.’s left arm used to be (what’s out of place?), takes stock of the Counselor and of Emet (how are they vulnerable to me?). He recognizes that Addison is genuine in her concern and dilemma; and to get Emet involved he’ll need a concrete task of helping people.

Emet feels quite out of place, among all these adults trying to discern the situation, he is busy worrying how to get Sarah out of here and why she is here in the first place.

As Andron engages Emet to ask if he might be able to procure help with dwindling resources through his father, Dr. Grant uses the opportunity to get a quiet word in with Sarah.

He suggests that it might be the safer option to bail, if they can. She whispers firmly to him that this is her chance to get away. If she leaves she’d be back on 9-month tour flying a mining ship through the hazardous courses of the outer rings—not that much safer.

With no clear course set, the meeting disperses as Dr. Grant is the first to leave, he’s got some work to do on himself, finally.

This leaves Andron behind with Bentzen and Addison. The counselor pushes her dilemma on him, again. As he shows her that in the end this will need to be her own decision. She rebuts that she is seeking guidance. They share a long look and Andron lays out his thinking to her, how he feels the people close to one are the ones we can really care for. She slowly nods, it’s clear she also understands this that he will be on her side to achieve this (success on sway, option Andron “needs to give a piece of his heart”).

This triggers the Seeker’s special move: they each have a hold on each other now, to get a guaranteed help or hinder on each other.

And he has an answer to his question.

“We gotta talk”—Sarah knew this was coming, so they find one of the few private spots, some cooling storage room. As she turns to Emet she braces herself for him to say what he needs to say. He wants to know what they are doing here, wanting her to lay it out plainly. She fesses up: she is going to get cyberlegs.

Emet is taken aback and tries to grasp with that she seriously would want to alter her body.

Full success on a probe roll.

He realizes Sarah is plagued by the feeling that no one will ever understand her; “what I wanted more than anything since being a girl is to run, feeling the wind in my hair”.

And that she wants him to just let her go her own course.

He is getting exasperated: “If you do this, you won’t be the same person anymore; you’ll be different, not the Sarah I know.”

Emet squats down to her eye level.

She turns herself away from him, closing up.

The player’s last question is “How could I get you to not do this?”; she is determined, Emet can prevent her from doing this, now, by doing [Humanity harm]:

“Sarah, they like to put me forward as the exemplar specimen, as the Honed. But in truth, it is you who is perfect.”

Sarah breaks down into a silent sob and when he touches her shoulder, she twists, slings her arms around him and buries her face against his chest.

I think as the credits roll, we see the blurry images in the background, Grant with the Yavlin doing active surgery on his own eyes (full success on Junkware; +magnification, +threatassessment, no negative tag but harm).

#########

Thoughts & Reflections

Uhm, well. That ending. Ooph.

I think I am still processing this session. There was not much action but a lot of drama.

If the first session was about seeing the characters in action for the first time, this was all about seeing what their relationships look like. It’s a good basis for the future, I feel.

Oh, one note on mechanics: It’s tricky to root the beginning of session move Potential in the fiction, somehow. Currently, thoughts come to mind to have flash backs/scenes where we see the Honed training (or having family issues, depending on the outcome).

Haven’t spoken with the respective player about this, yet. Might be a bit cheesy?^^ (someone brought up the workout scenes from Arrow).

Comments & questions welcome.

Previous entry: https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/QzSQXJCyWWx

Previous entry: https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/QzSQXJCyWWx

Previous entry: https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/QzSQXJCyWWx

The Reach – Episode 1

Memories and Meetings

Situation

Drop Troops of unknown origin and for an unknown purpose fall on Surge City. A sprawl on Maenali II, a dry hot dominantly industrialized planet that is under the thumb of the overly powerful Sahl Consortium.

Protagonists

Emet Kessner — The Honed

Belief 1: People are in danger, and as the honed I must aid them. I will save people from the disaster that fell upon the city.

Belief 2: The Mayor of the city is a horrid corrupt person whose mere rule is pain to his people, if I see him close, I’ll punch him.

Belief 3: Enhanced humans can never hope to be as perfect as me and my kind. We are better in everything.

Dr. Veleris Grant — The Catabolist

Belief 1: The city is in chaos, I now have the opportunity to go out and get some ‘ware without getting noticed, I will seek out one of the impact zones.

Belief 2: Dealings with the Yavlin (=alien omni-tool that integrated into his body) are considered uncouth by many; to keep it a secret I need to find a way to conceal it in all realities.

Belief 3: People have free will and choice, someone should never be forced/forbidden to get cyberware(removed), I will defend choice.

Guide Andronicus — The Seeker

Belief 1: The garden and the people in it are my responsibility; I will personally talk to the ‘guest’ and convince it to leave peacefully.

Belief 2: The loss of contact with Dr Veleris Grant concerns us greatly; I need to secure the Yavlin.

Belief 3: The needs of the faith go before my own; I will do whatever is necessary to strengthen our stronghold in the Maenali system,

so that no human will be left behind when we transcend.

Begin of session moves

[Potential]: As Emet grabs his leather-look vibrant red jacket, passing a concerned concierge as he runs out of the hotel to swing himself onto his flashy Gou-Mang PowerBike, he’ll only have one humanity to use for saving people.

[Communion]: Miss! One of the wants is +memoryloss as the Faith of Unbound Humanity has tech to share and store memories. And as Andron’s apprentice rips him out of that Digisphere meditation to save him from the incoming drop on his garden, some memories are left behind for now.

[Question]: What or who, if anything should I renounce?

Andron, our ancient Seeker, sends his apprentice to collect the people adjacent to the Garden so they can be cared for as he himself tries to discern actual threat levels. Turning to what must have ruined the center of his Garden of Guidance he is faced with a perimeter of “keep out” barriers, set up in mixed reality, shielding whatever is happening on the inside.

After [analyzing] the situation he is sure the dome itself won’t come crashing down from the damage but the AR barrier is not just blocking view, it also has counter-measures to be mindful of, should he try to pass through it.

He also realizes, he apparently set himself a reminder to get in touch “after meditation: the Dr, contact id here” but can’t recall who this person is and what thing of importance of his they got. For now he let’s it stay blinking in his peripheral vision.

Meanwhile, Emet races off on his hover bike, heading towards the nearest impact site. Not caring for the automated traffic systems that are wrestling with the emergency situation. As he turns a corner, he sees he is heading right towards a wall of flame, a platoon of some Corp Security falling back from it with their wounded.

Without a moment’s hesitation, Emet punches the throttle to skip the wall of flame that’s been caused by some incendiary munition. Mastering the [risk] without flaw, he is presented with a chaotic scenery behind it: several wounded huddling to one side, a 20m tall Mecha lobbing incendiary grenades into several streets to prevent direct chases, fire all over, heavy black smoke billowing out of one of the apartment complexes where a grenade has gone astray.

As he lets his hover bike float to the streets, closing his eyes to take in alarms, calls for help and desperation, [analyzing] where his help is needed the most. His concentration is disrupted, though (a miss!), as one of the black-clad sec guards calls out to him, declaring his intention of confiscating his bike.

By now, Dr. Grant is in the streets, concealed and even without eye sight (his cybernetic eyes were rejected by the Yavlin), he might be the one with the most grasp on the situation: Relying on his altered neurochip, he uses anything connected to the Veil to navigate the streets—which turns out easier to do with all ad-blockers turned off, walkways and all traced neatly by AR. He has his goal set as he managed to get a beat on a Drop Trooper Mecha that was damaged by a botched landing. Gotten a [lift of the Veil] by hijacking two public observer drones giving him additional video feeds to track it by foot.

Emet decides to play ball, especially seeing a young woman desperate to get into the apartment complex. In part also because he cannot id the “cop” who is holding up an AR badge as he is lacking any interface to perceive it.

As that one is speeding off with his bike, he kicks down the door, startling the young woman. She falls back, in tears, and incoherently pleads that two kids are still inside.

He rushes into the smoke, only to re-emerge 5 seconds later: what apartment number are the actually in?

Nine stories up he is sure, there is a good chance to save the kids. It’s the other wing of the building that is actually on fire and its security measures are holding it off for now from spreading. It also makes him pause as the apartment door sealed itself with hardened foam.

With an exceptional feat of strength [using his one humanity] he rips out the door and it goes clattering into the hallway behind him. The kitchen wall has started to bubble but he does find the kids in another room: hooked up on VR and with tubes in their veins feeding some sort of sedatives.

This sight sets off his anger as he tries to decide how he wants to deal [miss on analyze] with this, he feels the cold nozzle of a gun put against the back of his head.

A twist of the body, a grip onto the threat’s arm, a bend against the joint, the gun goes clattering and yet [neutralizing] his attacker fails (another miss!) as a second one busts a bat into his face, sending him flying back against the window, making his consciousness give. Just as the district in background goes dark as well.

Out of this darkness emerges the silhouette of Dr. Grant, as we’ve cut to a dark alley in a restricted, mostly AR-less zone: he has followed the damaged scout to one of the Spires that are power nodes that cut the city vertically. It’s moving across the wide gang-way toward it, pulling one leg after it.

Dr. Grant is feeling elated now, this is a great opportunity, the Mecha also has his sensors damaged, making it vulnerable [Wrench in the Gears] to be approached unnoticed from one side. And there is a clear path, 4m to cross the alley, feeling along the walls, a gap of 3m, along the railing. The most difficult part, up a ladder with only one arm, should bring him level with the machine’s head, still to the blinded side. But the things seems to interface with the Spire, head lowered.

Jumping into action, he makes it but had to [risk] that later its owner might be able to reconstruct footage of him (partially success). Using the drone to give him vision, zooming in tight on the sensory parts, the Yavlin’s antennae emerge from the his clothing and wielding a particle scalpel, Dr. Grant tries to [scrounge] directly from an active mech.

So, engulfed in concentration, he is taking in utter surprise as his torso is gripped in the hard armored good hand of the robot. Caught and lifted off of his feet, the mech cocking its head taking in this strange interloper.

This is when Andron, upon having reassured himself that his apprentice is on task, decides to give this Dr. in his contacts a call, after all, they might need one soon, depending how much more mayhem is going to go down.

We get a strange exchange with Andron trying to navigate that he doesn’t know who he is reaching out to and with Dr. Grant sending the video feed of the drone back to illustrate his predicament. He goes right away to [lean on] the Guide to help him out of this situation, having been the one to fix his cybernetics up when he arrived in system.

This pushes Andron to pass through the AR barrier to find out what is going on inside, he navigates the [risk] of feedback easily but gets an incoming call for a different kind of help (partial hit).

As he looks out behind a boulder, over the crash site: a heavy mecha has set up some kind of in field command center, two drones covering it as it’s busy.

This is when city counselor Addison pings him for help; she’s a got a group of her constituents needing shelter and asks for sanctuary for them. Andron quickly agrees, Giri is now owed both ways, instead of being erased.

He then steps out, to approach the Drop Trooper with arms open. Immediately spotted by one the drones, the mech points anti-personnel weaponry at him, loudspeakers urging him to get lost.

Yet, Andron calmy approaches closer, asking what it is doing in his Garden. Noticing that the mech is actually painted with a sign resembling his old order. This is juxtaposed with a rather a disparaging attitude and a slow loss of patience by whoever is speaking to him.

But as Andron insists that he wants to ensure the safety of those people and showing his face behind mask and Veil, a projection of apparently the pilot appears in front of the hunched over robot’s chest. She assures him, if he keeps out their way, no one will get harmed. He’s also got his [Answer] to his [Question]: he will renounce his claim on the Garden to the Ni Tai Mercs for the safety of his congregation.

Andron seems ostensibly satisfied but then turns back once more, sending the recording of Dr. Grant caught by one of her company over. Her curiosity peaked, a four-way call is opened to Vitali the scout pilot and Dr. Grant. Andron, with insurance of Dr. Grant’s non-malicious intentions, manages to [sway] the Captain to let him go.

The call closes and Andron and Cpt. Wakeman exchange names, he now owes her Giri for this favor while having fulfilled his to Dr. Grant.

Emet comes to, hearing an argument between his two attackers who have apparently realized who he is. And that there might have hit a jackpot if they could ransom him off to his father. He gets a good sense of his situation [analyze], he is still in the apartment only minutes later.

Rather non-chalantly, Emet sits up with a smile, even though he has hands and feet tied in zip-locks. He challenges their “ridiculous idea” and wraps them up in a conversation, using their strife and nervousness to [divert] their attention to get his hands free.

He tricks them well enough, they don’t notice how he manages to free his hands and he gets an opening as he leads them into an argument where there is a moment when they are fixated on each other.

It doesn’t take a second thought and Emet leaps to his feet of his sitting position, goes for the more dangerous threat, the one with the gun to neutralize them both: disarming her, pivoting and sending her flying into the other one.

[Dismayed] by how quickly this situation got turned around and at the sight of the gun in Emet’s hand now, the thug with the distorted voice grabs one of their loot bags and takes off. The woman on the floor, fully expecting to be shot, shuffles back on her ass but Emet just gives her a warning and she can’t scramble away fast enough as she realizes her chance.

Disassembling the firearm and scattering the pieces, he turns back to the kids. No patience now, he rips them out of their VR and pulls them out. Shocked and still under the sedatives, they are drowsy and inanimate.

We see him emerge from the smoking building, carrying them under each arm and passing them into the care of their older sister [+2 humanity for saving them, yay!]. The place now busy with emergency drones and personnel.

And the reporters with camera drones.

End of session: Beliefs!

The Honed got into trouble and out of it by being physically dominant and saving people whose way he despises. [2]xp

The Catabolist got into trouble for the daring stunt of trying to scrounge junkware from an active mecha. [2]xp

The Seeker got challenged on keeping people of the faith safe and on recovering the Yavlin he entrusted to Dr. Grant. [1+1]xp

Next episode:

https://plus.google.com/107856115406205338162/posts/AM9PAfKLE5j

######

Thoughts and reflections

My main aim of a first session like this was to spotlight what the characters are about and what they shine at.

It was really a shame, though, that the Catabolist rolled a 6 on his [scrounge] move. There might have been a +1 forward that we missed from an [analyze] that would have bumped him up. The player also kicked himself for not using his receptivity drug for a bonus.

But hey, the scene was great that came out of this.

I do wonder how things will go with the Honed being a playbook so focused on physical feats and saving people. And the other two being aimed much less at violent conflicts. The Seeker has the means—we haven’t seen how cybernetically amped up he is—but his faith is dogmatic, peaceful and about morality.

I also failed to get my players to use the [probe] move which I was hoping for. I will need to entangle them more in interpersonal stuff but this beginning session they brushed past NPCs and weren’t taking much interest in them:

The Honed simply let the cop take his bike, basically went past the crying woman “your predicament is the object of my purpose”-like. Using situation and physical ability more than interest in the looters and their motivation/background to overcome obstacles.

The Catabolist was never really in a position to, this session.

The Seeker had interactions but they were too aloof/too interested in keeping things ambiguous, which is cool as it says much about the character. Yet, the whole Cpt. Wakeman projecting a video feed was there to enable a deeper interaction.

There was also a lot of stuff happening, so something was bound to fall by the wayside. And it is certainly not too late to engage people on the basis of what has happened.

So, I’m not too worried about this. And I get that players need to find a feel for their characters, too, before they can engage other NPCs in more depth.

Same goes for Beliefs, from my experience with Burning Wheel. They need a session or two to get rolling and intertwined as we get more comfortable with the world and story we are exploring.

I’m looking forward to how they shift from the first session, now.

The Final Question

I don’t feel ready to settle on this, yet. But I feel the question the story will revolve around will have to do with “what is the next step for humans?”

Emet has strong (conservative) feelings about this; Andron is angling for a large scale readiness for as much of humanity as possible; Grant is all about the merging with an alien lifeform and tech.

So there are options and I am wondering how they will solidify in the actual action and narrative that happens on-screen.

Also: Myth of Progress, anyone?

Here is the Giri Map at the end of the session:

“Synth-Led Exploration of Sentience”

“Synth-Led Exploration of Sentience”

“Synth-Led Exploration of Sentience”

The opening of this work that you can listen to at the bottom of the article is quite the thing. And screams Apparatus.

Also, it’s called “This Causes Consciousness to Fracture”.

https://thump.vice.com/en_us/track/caterina-barbieri-this-causes-the-consciousness-to-fracture-stream

https://thump.vice.com/en_us/track/caterina-barbieri-this-causes-the-consciousness-to-fracture-stream

Couple of rules questions:

Couple of rules questions:

Couple of rules questions:

For the Catabolist: When it says in their moves “roll + omni-tool”, do you roll + State + omni-tool? The example seems to suggest so.

For the Seeker: Enlightenment is a stat not a resource (like the Hocus’ fortune), right? Meaning it is not spend on use?

Communion is just roll + Enlightenment, no State added? And in Guidance it is roll + State + Enlightenment?

The Reach – Episode 0

The Reach – Episode 0

The Reach – Episode 0

Character and World Creation

Before the game night and basic setting:

Having been enticed into The Veil, we had decided to use Microscope (also for the first time) to give us an idea of a history for our setting. This also came out of the desire of the group to generally have a science fiction game that wasn’t a swashbuckling space opera but instead would explore a more personal space and potentially deeper questions.

I am really satisfied how this turned out, as the Microscope game of two sessions was basically about humanity spreading to the stars with a nice caveat:

As we start The Veil our universe has had FTL communications for a long time but no means for humans to travel at faster than light speeds between star systems.

This makes for a juicy situation where the Veil in this setting is of great importance as it is the thing that connects all of humanity while at the same time it means each world/culture is in reality very much isolated from each other.

(So, it’s basically like being on social media^^. If you have a crisis, people might give you sympathy, help out with resources but they can’t come and actually help you directly.)

Our specific star system is a rather rich one, held in a precarious balance of two habitable worlds that are interdependent. One, dominated by a handful of sprawls is hot and lacks in natural resources, the other, smaller,, is cold, harsher but has an abundance of water, etc.

The Playbooks:

It took some time going over all of the Playbooks with people having multiple favorites (my players are nice in a way where they want to accommodate their fellow players’ desires but this means no one really brings the ‘I want to play this one thing!’ that jump starts everything^^).

After a simultaneous gut choice we ended up with:

The Catabolist

The Honed

The Seeker

Uh. Oh. =D

The initial concepts behind the Protagonists:

The Seeker belongs to an old faith that opposed the integration of an alien life form that directly interacts with tech into the FTL com network (the seed for this came from the Microscope game) and he arrived in the system via “conventional” space travel in cryostasis 6-12 months ago.

The Catabolist is an experimental cybernetics research expert who survived a freak accident by integrating a Yavlin (the name of the above mentioned life form—and now his Omni-Tool) into himself.

The Honed is a descendant of the first settlers of the system and part of the minority culture that remains of them.

That last one, named Emet Kessner, was initially the trickiest to fit into the setting. But the solution that his people had to rely on their own physical toughness and prowess to weather the harsh environments and to be able to cope when machines failed made things come together.

Funnily enough, he now is the youngest kid of a family headed corporation that owns a major mining fleet that work the outer planets & asteroid belts. Full of ideals and being paraded around for his perfect image and living of his family’s wealth. His Jam: being a playboy.

Dr. Grant, the Catabolist (who had a run-in before his accident with the Kessner family because he came to entice a cousin of Emet who has to deal with a physical disability into seeing a future in cybernetics) was part of the expedition that met the spacecraft Andron, the Seeker, was arriving in.

Andron, after waking and having his old cybernetic parts treated and upgraded by Dr. Grant, convinced him to smuggle out a Yavlin specimen that he had locked away on-board so that it wouldn’t be confiscated and fall into the wrong hands(!).

The details of what caused the accident on the research station Belina-Calder, where Dr. Grant took the alien lifeform, are nebulous. The only thing he is sure of is that it was the station’s AI who helped him integrate the Yavlin to save his life.

Only, this also caused the violent rejection of all of his ordinary cybernetics: Currently Dr. Grant is on medical leave in Surge City, still without eyes and one-armed. Navigating his surroundings currently relies on the assimilated neurochip working on creating an abstract representation of all of the things & people connected to the Veil in his surroundings.

While the Dr. has been busy with getting a grip on his new situation, Andron has been received by city officials as he was identified as an old and high ranking member of the Church of Unbound Humanity.

He has settled in and managed to persuade a city politician of the faith to create a Garden of his Order, where he resides as a guide for people who seek help. Taking on a troubled young man as an apprentice and communing with his Order outside of this star system via the Veil, he is dormant in meditation. For what reason or mission he was sent here, he does not know, yet, as those memories do not reside with him currently (one of the wants is +memoryloss, which the Church then keeps save and to enable super long lives for humans).

His major concern right now is that Dr. Grant has vanished and he doesn’t know what has happened with the Yavlin he entrusted to him. And to keep the hot-head apprentice, who seems much more enamored with the celebrity Emet, who they saved them from some drugged-up punks that threatened to wreck havoc in the garden.

It is in this situation that Andron is rudely interrupted by his apprentice: it’s the middle of the night and there is a fireball streaking down straight onto his garden covered by a tranquility dome. Emergency lights and alarms already engulf the city outside of it.

Emet is rushing out of his hotel, seeing multiple impacts go down, heading against the crowds of people fleeing and towards the nearest explosion.

The news are broadcasting emergency evacuations and announcing several dozen unidentified Drop Troopers in Power Frames hitting the city in multiple locations.

And as Dr. Grant takes in the feed sitting in his apartment, we see out of his window across the city.

The first district flickers and goes dark.

Then the second.

The third.

######

What really worked well were the Giri-Questions. Basically beyond the concept all of the story above was generated by them and by talking how they might have come to pass.

While I also had everyone roll up one NPC with the Link move in general, if we didn’t see a PC fit to one of the Giri-questions the player used Link again.

This created the disabled Kessner woman who is convinced by the Catabolist ideology and gotten into deep trouble with her family (a miss). As well as the apprentice who has mutual Giri with Andron plus one more for saving him from his doomed garden (also from a miss^^).

And a father who will up his expectations of his son for representing the family in a proper light.

We don’t have Beliefs, yet, but we ended on the opening situation so I don’t see this being an issue. There is enough immediate crisis, tense relationships and firm worldviews to write them. Looking forward to what the player settle their priorities on!

Thoughts, themes and concerns:

So, the backdrop certainly has some weird themes of victim-less colonization in the sense of humanity spreading across the stars. Which I don’t quite know how to feel about. The Yavlin are a completely alien lifeform with a nebulous relationship to the sentient (?) AIs of human origin. Otherwise, there is not much established interaction between them and humanity.

The Church of Unbound humanity is a vague call-back to catholic monks with institutionalized memory management for their members and the Kessner/original settlers/The Honed are very much informed by Judaism (well, not the literal body image stuff but their culture in general (which I am not an expert in but the respective player is native to)).

Then there is the definite tone of “what’s best for humanity”. This is found in the juxtaposition between the Catabolist and the Honed. And the character with a disability is already caught in the middle of those two stances. This has the danger that it could veer into “what makes one superior” territory which… ugh, well. Mmh.

The Seeker is arguably more on the technocratic side of things, but then again the integration of alien lifeform is seen as sin.

This game /o