Wide roots (Matriarch’s move)

Wide roots (Matriarch’s move)

Wide roots (Matriarch’s move)

Dear Gregor Vuga, two sessions ago, we had some doubts about the Matriarch’s move Wide roots:

Wide roots: When you meet someone new, you can tell them how you’re related through someone dead, absent or lost and you gain a bond with each other (p. 95).”

We had played a one-shot demo several weeks before, but it was so good we decided to go on and play a real saga, with the addition of a new friend as a player.

He created a new character, a Wanderer, and therefore no one gave relationships to him and he gave no relationships to the others, in return, as the rules state (p. 106).

During the game, of course, the Wanderer met the Matriarch and the Matriarch’s player wanted to use Wide roots on the Wanderer but, just to be polite and considerate, he asked to the Wanderer’s player: “Is it ok if maybe we can be relatives?”

The Wanderer’s players answered: “I’d rather not” and the Matriarch’s player said “As you wish” in return, and he didn’t use the move.

Therefore, what happened in our game was not problematic at all but, nonetheless, some questions began to form in my mind.

1. Can one use Wide roots on another player’s character or it can be used only only on NPCs?

2. Have I really to ask permission to another player every time I want to use Wide roots on their character? Is not just having the move enough justification to say “I’m going to use it!”?

3. When the move says “related”, does it mean “family related” or can it also mean just “connected in some way”?

The books have been out for a couple of years now, how are your copies holding up? Binding and colour still alright?

The books have been out for a couple of years now, how are your copies holding up? Binding and colour still alright?

The books have been out for a couple of years now, how are your copies holding up? Binding and colour still alright?

Alpha test of the new Man play took place on Saturday in a generally successful first look.

Alpha test of the new Man play took place on Saturday in a generally successful first look.

Alpha test of the new Man play took place on Saturday in a generally successful first look. The player reported she liked making all the choices although she came to dread making the roll, considering the negative consequences 🙂 The constant threat of needing to have a handful of silver on hand by winter did a good job of adding pressure to the Man’s decisions, I think.

We had a couple of the “catastrophe” occurrences, one which we did on screen: getting ambushed by outlaws while trying to take goods to market. The Thrall took a spear to her back, but Thorolf the outlaw eventually tried to help her escape Iceland out of guilt.

Observations and open questions:

* If you get Bonds as a result of the Profit, name who you have them with right away! We didn’t always do it, but at the very least it will create a larger imaginary space of community.

* A well run farm will have the Man’s wife or close friends using their Bonds with him to help his work 🙂 Or he can go to the Seithkona to get some black magic.

* Could we perhaps simplify this move so that you might have something like: Pick 1, 2, or 3 jobs from this list, pick as many Profit as jobs from this list, and then choose as many Catastrophes from this list. On a 10+ profit all around, on a 7-9 you pick one profit and the MC picks at least one catastrophe, on a 6- it’s bad all around.

* It might work better if the Man can just choose his Obligations anew each time. The Operator has Gigs, and they’re specific ongoing jobs; but the Man has some obligations that don’t make sense to keep carrying through. The Hard Working move will need to get rewritten, probably, in this scenario.

* I made a small change to the Raiding obligation, which I initially saw as hitting another small farm in Iceland but probably makes better sense as buying a share in a raiding venture to the British Isles. The reward became a chest of silver, the catastrophe impoverishment, making it a very high risk and reward venture.

ETA: Jason Morningstar honored me with this marvelous translation of my little hack:…

ETA: Jason Morningstar honored me with this marvelous translation of my little hack:…

ETA: Jason Morningstar honored me with this marvelous translation of my little hack: https://www.dropbox.com/s/cstv4o31vbvjtvv/sagas_of_the_icelanders_man_playbook_ramen_version.pdf?dl=0

I decided to take a crack at my own hack of The Man playbook.

I decided to take a crack at my own hack of The Man playbook.

I decided to take a crack at my own hack of The Man playbook. It’s powered by my use of the Moonlighting move from Apocalypse World to abstract out the work of running a farm and dealing with the web of community obligations the settlers found themselves in.

I owe Keith Stetson thanks and apologies for appropriating parts of his own hack of the man, specifically the farm details and the A Man’s Domain move. And also for letting me rant to him a bit at Dreamation 2016.

Since it looks somewhat likely I’ll get to run SotI this weekend, I welcome any commentary on this people are generous enough to provide; I’m hoping to get an alpha test in during the session.

Hey Paul Beakley and others who have discussed revising the Man playbook – do you want to see what we did with it,…

Hey Paul Beakley and others who have discussed revising the Man playbook – do you want to see what we did with it,…

Hey Paul Beakley and others who have discussed revising the Man playbook – do you want to see what we did with it, or work on your own thing without being unduly influenced by our blabbering?

“The current feud in which you are embroiled seems likely to be resolved by prodding a blindfolded horse off a cliff…

“The current feud in which you are embroiled seems likely to be resolved by prodding a blindfolded horse off a cliff…

Originally shared by Mikael Andersson

“The current feud in which you are embroiled seems likely to be resolved by prodding a blindfolded horse off a cliff with poles. This horse is known for its malice.”

http://the-toast.net/2016/03/03/how-to-tell-if-youre-in-a-viking-saga/