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Competition Win a Royal Edition copy of Pillars of Eternity!

Joined
Jun 28, 2013
Messages
70
won't tag again, but Lord Trousersnake would be able to make quite the entry here.

Thanks for the tag (no pressure :oops:), had fun reading these entries. I did put something together but was rather hesitant to post as it turned out far too long and convoluted for this sort of competition and I'm shit at editing things down. I'll leave it here for those who have a lot of time on their hands. Will hopefully come up with a punchier effort before the deadline.

(Liked the idea of Josh drinking pomegranate juice in a previous entry, so I took the idea and ran with it a bit)


Josh Sawyer returns in...

Dungeon Royale

Josh sighed with pleasure as the comely assistant inserted the tube and opened the valve, the jet of fluid seeming to wash his cares away along with the putrid matter. His Thursday morning enema was a highlight of the week, the perfect accompaniment to a dedicated vegan diet.

He didn't ruin the moment by looking to his right. The sight of a beached whale of a man losing the remnants of a dozen burgers was enough to disturb anyone's energy balance.

"Gotta chat to you about something Josh,' Feargus muttered, gasping as he lost half a gnawed chicken wing. "Looks like it's finally over for Black Isle. There's just no dealing with fucking Herve. I give us 6 months, end of the year at the latest."

"Goddamit," muttered Josh. "After all that work on Van Buren and the Black Hound. Guess I'll have to take that job on the online farming game after all. Guaranteed to tank but gotta pay the mortgage, right?"

"Not so fast buddy. We've got plans for a new company. You know, get the gang together again and come up with some smart name which references our rebirth. Make some cool games, no Fargo or Herve forcing us to release buggy games before they're ready. Success is a guaranteed slam dunk."

"Sure, but how are we gonna fund it? We don't have the cash. MCA's outstanding bar tabs alone are more than our combined capital."

"Leave that to me, kid. I've got a contact who's offered to bankroll us, interest-free. He just wants a small favour from you."

~~~

The tone of the tires changed as they turned onto a paved driveway. Or so Josh guessed as he sat blindfolded in the back of the SUV. He'd been picked up from the office by a couple of silent man-mountains in dark suits who refused to answer any questions, merely confirming that they were taking him to meet Feargus's contact. A high speed transfer to an executive jet and then he saw no more.

The door opened and he was helped out before someone finally removed the blindfold. He stood before an elegant mansion in tree-lined grounds, groups of suited men scattered as far as he could see. They all had earpieces and he noticed concealed holsters on those nearest to him.

The front door opened and a hand beckoned him in. He stepped into the cool interior, noting that his escorts remained outside.

"Welcome, welcome," greeted a small man with closely-cropped blonde hair. "Anything to drink? We've got all your usual favourites... prune juice, cucumber smoothie, recycled water...."

"Actually, I need something stiff to settle my nerves," replied Josh. "Make it a large cucumber smoothie."

"Fine, fine," grinned the man, showing Josh into what looked like a large study and heading for the drinks cabinet. "Take a seat and we'll get right down to business."

Another man entered the room and sat in the corner, staring at Josh with piercing dark eyes. Unlike the others he wore no suit, just a baggy sweatshirt and old jeans. He made no move to introduce himself. The blonde handed the drink to Josh and sat down facing him.

"I'm Mr Jones, welcome to our humble abode. I assume you know why you're here?"

"Well," Josh muttered, "I heard you were investing in our new firm and wanted a favour... but this shit is off the scale."

"No need to worry Mr Sawyer" chortled Jones, although the laugh never reached his eyes. "Just a few precautions to keep us from those who would take an interest in our affairs. The stakes are higher than you may expect, but your role will be simple. Something you're an expert at, something you could do in your sleep. You've heard of the Great Game?"

"It's an old term for the colonial adventures of the former great powers. But as I'm here I guess you mean that roleplaying game supposedly taking place each year... high rollers and the global elite, that sort of thing? Always thought it was just a myth, like a Dan Brown novel set in the world of pnp gaming."

"It's no myth," replied Jones, the last trace of amusement deserting his face. "It's been played since the days of Gygax. Used to take place in Berlin, alternating between the zones, a rare occasion when all sides could meet around the table: Russian hoods, Czech arms dealers, British diplomats.. even a few of us Yanks from Langley. Of course things changed once the Wall came down and it became more of an elite gambling scene. But behind the character sheets, dice and wagers the old dealmaking still takes place. And this year something big is in the works."

"So, what am I supposed to do? Spy on them? Ruin the game? Suggest we switch to fucking LARPing?"

"Now, now, Mr Sawyer. No need to get excited. We'll stake you the $10 million to take part, an agent will meet you there to handle that side of things. You just get into the game, spot the hidden alliances and deals being made. Off the table as well as on it."

Jones tapped a remote control and one of the walls turned into a high resolution display, featuring a panoramic view of a glittering marina jutting into an azure sea.

"Wow, swish resort," said Josh. "I'm guessing Mexico?"

"Close, Mr Sawyer," smiled Jones. "It's Montenegro. The setting for this year's game."

He tapped the remote again and the display switched to a series of headshots and a couple of blank boxes.

"This is who we have confirmed," he continued. "We've got Bill Gates going as usual. He's always invited, pretty much kept this thing going when the Berlin scene changed. But no ulterior motives we know of, he just loves playing an old druid he's become quite attached to."

He took out a laser pointer and indicated a man with darker, rat-like features.

"This is one of the young upstarts who founded Google, name of Sergey Brin. He'll act like a bit of a clown and chase some girls but he's one of the smartest guys in the room. We don't know where his allegiance lies. Could be Russia, could be someone we've never heard of, could be just there for a laugh. Watch out for him. Usually plays a thief, possibly dual classed."

Next he pointed to a Chinese man and a dark-browed Russian who even Josh recognised.

"Yes, that's Khodorkovsky and Hu Jintau. The real focus of your mission. We have unconfirmed reports that they're there to finalise a deal and initiate a long-term plan to destablise our economy. But Khodorkovsky only represents one power base in Russia and the Chinese haven't decided who to deal with yet. He's got the backing of most of the army and half the oligarchs, but our man Putin has the intelligence services and interior ministries as well as oligarchs like Potanin, Deripaska and Abramovich. It could still go either way. The Chinese will only finalise a deal when they can judge a man face to face, this is the perfect excuse for them to meet without arousing suspicion. You'll do your best to cast some doubts in that direction and make Khodorkovsky look untrustworthy."

"When you say Putin is 'your man'", interrupted Josh. "How do you know? Perhaps he's playing you too?"

The dark-eyed man finally stirred, snorting with derision.

"Don't worry your pretty little head about that," continued Jones. "We know him. George W has even invited him to the ranch. He's a man we can do business with."

"And finally," he continued, "These two blank boxes are the French and British representatives. The Brits will probably send some Cambridge faggot, fuck knows who the French will send. Any questions?"

Josh's mind reeled. In a matter of hours he'd gone from sorting through his inbox to discussing Russian and Chinese plots.

"Who's the DM?" was all he could think of.

"We'll leave that as our little surprise," smirked Jones. "But you'll be impressed."

~~~

Josh was escorted to a private airfield where another, larger executive jet was waiting. Bill Gates had kindly offered to fly the American entrants to the venue.

"Welcome, welcome!" squeaked Bill as Josh settled into the sumptuous seat. "Order whatever you want, I'll be in the cockpit for a bit, just helping them debug the new navigation computer."

Josh found this less comforting than was probably intended but didn't have much time to dwell on it as Sergey bounded aboard.

"Great, great," giggled Sergey as he bounced up and down in the seat opposite Josh. "Ready for some hardcore dice rolling and...."

He stopped in mid-sentence as he caught a glimpse of the stewardess.

"Check that out Josh!" he whispered excitedly. "She looks half Chinese, my favourite!"

"Hey honey," he shouted out. "Want a job at Google?"

~~~

It was the strangest few hours of Josh's life. Bill Gates recounting industry gossip when not rebooting various systems. Brin exploding with energy and arguing with everyone over mathematical problems or sporting trivia.

Finally Josh was exhausted by their antics and indulged himself with a sparkling water before pretending to fall asleep.

He was rather relieved when they both dashed off soon after landing. Bill headed to Paul Allen's yacht to gatecrash a party. Sergey disappeared with the stewardess. Josh was met by the agent, a dark-haired woman who also sported a bit of Asian blood, possibly Korean.

"The car's waiting Josh," she murmured in a sultry tone. "Good to see you're traveling light. Who knows what our getaway will be like."

"You have a name?" he enquired, lost in her liquid gaze.

"I have a designated handle for this mission," she replied. "Call me Roguey."

~~~

The hotel was the most luxurious Josh had ever seen. "So this is what it feels like to be Brian Fargo," he thought, gazing around his huge suite.

Roguey emerged from the dressing room carrying a dinner jacket and trousers.

"These should fit," she said. "I have a good eye for male body parts. We have the welcome function tonight, basically a few drinks and clarification on the rules and scheduling. I'll handle the financial side, act as if I'm your assistant and leave all that to me."

Josh admired himself in the mirror. Elegant. Pity it covered all his tattoos, though.

~~~

Sergey and Bill were already propping up the bar when Josh arrived. He nodded in greeting and left them to their argument over open source operating systems. They were soon joined by Hu Jintao and his team of bodyguards and attaches. Someone nudged Josh as he sipped his seaweed shake. He turned to face the brooding features of Khodorkovsky.

"I am Mikhail," the Russian introduced himself. "You are the Icewind Dale designer, yes? Not bad, for an American. Pity about the writing."

Josh stammered a greeting, blindsided by the the oligarch bringing up those Infinity Engine memories. His embarrassment was spared though as a gorgeous woman strode up and pecked them both on the cheeks.

"I am Laetitia Casta," she purred. "I play for France."

"Typical of the French,"whispered Roguey, when she had a moment alone with him. "Sending a clothes horse. More concerned with making the French look cool than true role playing."

"It's working," muttered Josh, watching the men gather around the perfumed vision of loveliness.

"Ladies and Gentleman," interrupted a soft German-accented voice. They all turned to face a diminutive bald figure in an understated blue suit.

"I am Helmut," he continued,"Your MC for this event. If you'll all take a seat we can go over the usual rules for the contest."

Josh's mind wandered as the MC droned on about house rules and multiclassing. Where was the British representative? They'd better not send Hugh Grant, he hated that smug bastard.

"Now it is time to announce your chosen class," said Helmut. "Ladies first perhaps?"

"I'm an elven ranger," said Laetitia. "I like ze bows and arrows. Pretty cool, like Cupid. But taller and with breasts."

"Halfling thief for me," added Sergey, trying not to stare at Laetitia's breasts. "I guess we'll go over skills and attributes with the DM tomorrow?"

"Indeed," replied Helmut. "Mr Khodorkovsky?"

"Dwarf cleric," he glared. "Tough and resourceful. I like to heal wounds and turn undead. We have many undead in Russia."

"Druid!" shouted Bill Gates, pointing to a picture of an elderly human druid accompanied by a large bear.

"Wizard, half-elf," said Hu Jintao.

All eyes turned to Josh. Should he go with his gut? Or the muscle wizard he'd longed to test out in a serious game?

"Fighter," he confirmed. "Vanilla. Human. Max int and dump strength."

A murmur went around the gathering. He'd ruffled a few feathers, taken them out of their comfort zone with his daring build.

"Barbarian," squawked an electronic voice box as Stephen Hawking wheeled up to the gathering. "Max strength and dump int. Go for the eyes Boo!"

"Thank you ladies and gentlemen," soothed Helmut as most rolled their eyes and groaned. "We have your deposits so if you'll all join us here at 9:30am tomorrow we can get the first session underway..."

"Wait a second," interrupted Khodorkovsky. "Before we put up our money we need to know who the DM will be. We've had enough Western hegemony over international institutions like the IMF, World Bank and high profile dungeon mastering."

Hu Jintao nodded, a cautious smile creasing his features as he locked eyes with the Russian.

"Of course gentlemen," replied Helmut. "I think you'll be most pleased with our choice. A man beyond reproach, bridging the divide between East and West."

An elderly robed figure entered the room and strode towards them.

"May I introduce His Holiness, the Dalai Lama."

~~~

Josh had an early night, Roguey standing guard outside his door. He had to be on form from the beginning of the session, despite the lingering threat of withdrawal from the Chinese delegation over the appointment of the Dalai Lama. Luckily a resolution had been reached when Sergey pointed out that news of the event would never spread in China, offering Google's help in that regard.

Bill Gates was already assisting Stephen Hawking with his character sheet when Josh sat down at the table. Sergey was next to join them, cracking jokes about Josh's runt of a fighter. Finally the group was complete with only 5 minutes to spare before the scheduled start.

The first two hours were spent rolling characters and debating role playing flavour. Then, after a short break for lunch, the serious business commenced.

His Holiness proved a skilful dungeon master, with a surprisingly eloquent narrative and interesting challenges for the party. He'd created a world packed with warring factions and ancient powers, with a few scattered hints of a larger plan behind the events they witnessed. After the introductory set piece and visit to a quartermaster they took on their first quest, but unfortunately soon lost Laetitia. She fell headlong into a lava pit after refusing to walk behind the thief, claiming it was a protest against male domination and gender-specific assumptions in role playing games.

"I'm all for girl power," Roguey commented later, "But you gotta pick your battles."

The rest of the quest went smoothly and Josh relaxed into his role. He became the team "face man", chatting to NPCs and figuring out puzzles in the ancient ruins. He wasn't a big damage dealer with his pitiful strength but he lucked out with a find of enchanted chain mail, light enough for him to wear and do some decent tanking. It wasn't ideal, and intelligent tactics could only get him so far, but it was hard to imagine a system where a weak fighter could have coped any better.

The mood around the table lifted as they left the completed dungeon, despite Laetitia's departure for the pool deck. The party was ready to level and had some decent loot to sell. Bill had found a bear companion for his druid. Maybe they were becoming overconfident, or His Holiness sought to balance their previous good fortune. Whatever the reason, the ambush hit them fast and hard.

Khodorkovsky's cleric was soon unconscious, a veritable pin cushion of orcish arrows. Josh was battling to hold the front line with Hawking's barbarian.

"Butt kicking for goodness!" yelped the infernal voice box.

"Shut the fuck up with that old Minsc routine you mutant!" yelled Sergey, stuggling to deal with a warg who had engaged his lightly armoured rogue. "Need some healing over here Gates, I'm getting raped!"

But Bill just shook his head, a regretful smile emerging as he considered his character sheet. "Sorry man, Grizzler has taken an arrow. As a druid I'm obliged to heal him first."

Sergey looked as if he was primed to explode as he contemplated Gates healing the bear instead of him. Hu Jintao put a calming hand on his shoulder, shaking his head and handing over the dice. The situation was saved when Sergey rolled a lucky crit, buying himself enough time to quaff a potion. Soon the battle was winding down and Gates was tending to Khodorkovsky's wounds. But the situation around the table remained tense.

"You'll pay for this Gates!" muttered Sergey. "Wait and see. Look at our projected growth rates, one day we'll eat fucking Microsoft alive!"

"Now, now gentlemen," interrupted His Holiness. "Remember that Mr Gates is roleplaying a true neutral druid, never an easy task. In fact, I'm awarding him bonus xp for his exceptional performance."

Sergey was turning from red to beetroot as Josh chose that moment to signal for a drink. He'd already gulped down some of the chilled yak milk when he glanced up at the waiter. Those familiar chunky features, that mocking smile - it couldn't be! What was Cleveland Mark Blakemore doing here?

Cleve exchanged a knowing glance with Sergey and ambled off, but the damage had been done. Josh could already feel it: light-headedness, the beginnings of tunnel-vision. He'd been poisoned!

Mumbling something about a rest break, Josh stumbled towards the lift, hearing the calm voice of His Holiness suggesting a two hour recess. Roguey dived through the doors as they were closing and supported him as they dashed to the suite. He barely remembered her laying him down on the sofa and pulling out an emergency enema kit.

"Don't worry Josh," she crooned. "I'll get that poison out of you."

~~~

Josh awoke to find Roguey lightly sucking his fingers. It felt good, despite her predatory air.

"Glad to see you made it Josh," she whispered. "Was touch and go there for a while. Funny to think that after playing Icewind Dale I just considered you a hipster with a rape fixation. But that's all changed. You'll find I can be very loyal indeed."

Josh rolled off the bed and struggled to his feet, feeling both light-headed and light of bowel. "Must get back... time...." he croaked.

"We've got 30 minutes," she replied, reaching for his medicine bag. "Any later than that and you forfeit the contest. You got something useful in here?"

"Sure," he gasped. "Got some hard stuff. Pass the bottle labeled ginseng."

~~~

Josh made it just in time, noting the surprised glance from Sergey as he took his seat. The ginseng buzz was already kicking in but he hoped the sheen of sweat on his brow was less obvious than it felt.

The break had done the group some good, the simmering resentments cooled down a touch. The morale boost from leveling was welcome too. But they would need every bit of their increased power.

The next quest took them deep underground and they were soon fighting for their lives. Waves of skeletons wore down their front line and the party was out of healing resources and desperately searching for a safe place to rest. Patrolling one flank, Josh found a hidden chamber and in a rush of blood he peered inside without waiting for the others. Perhaps he was trying to score some points with the group by being the hero who found a safe resting zone. Perhaps he was still proving that an intelligent fighter could earn his keep. Regardless, he took the chance and came face to face with a basilisk.

Adrenaline coursing through his veins, Josh desperately rolled his saving throw. But to no avail. He was now a helpless statue. And a wave of zombies and skeleton archers arrived to assail the party from all sides. One blow... one smash of a weapon and he would follow Laetitia out of the game. Curse these 'save or die' effects! His fate rested in the hands of Khodorkovsky, bearer of the only stone-to-flesh scroll the group had.

It was the moment of truth. Did Khodorkovsky consider him useful enough to keep around? A puny fighter who would be no threat to winning the contest but a potential pawn to use against the others? Or did his strategy involve whittling down the party as soon as possible? Russians were renowned as skilled chess players and Josh felt those dark eyes boring into him as Khodorkovsky considered his move.

"I come to remove the petrification," he finally announced. "But next round. First, I kill the skeleton next to me."

Josh sighed with relief. He just had to survive the round. A stray arrow pinged off the statue but luckily did no damage. Josh's heart skipped a beat. Perhaps he'd overdone the ginseng. Next, Hu Jintao finished off the basilisk with a magic missile.

"Hu's on first base!" cheered Sergey, earning a blank look in reply.

Hawking did a sterling job of holding off the enemies while Khodorkovsky restored Josh and soon the battle was won, a safe resting site as their reward. But it had been a seminal moment in Josh's relationship with permanent petrification. Never again would he view it as a fair or fun mechanic. The germ of an idea for a new, improved system began to take shape in his mind. A tough challenge, but if he could hold his own at this table then surely nothing in the world of tabletop gaming was beyond him.

~~~

Things moved quickly after that. Stephen Hawking made one reckless charge too many and his barbarian was separated from the group, bludgeoned into pieces by a crit from an ogre. Unfortunately Hawking refused to leave the table and Sergey eventually had to unplug his voice box.

Bill Gates was taken out by a vicious poisoned spike trap which Sergey had "forgotten" to check for. A smirking Sergey then decided to put the bear "out of its misery" before it became a problem for the party. There was a glint in the Dalai Lama's eye as he announced that a surprise rock fall eliminated Sergey soon afterwards.

Josh felt the atmosphere change around the table. They were on the final stretch, the end of the contest in sight. One of the three would win the huge betting pool and, more importantly, the prestige of the title. He'd truly come a long way from his forum moderating days.

The first cracks in the Sino-Russian relationship appeared as they headed for the necromancer's inner sanctum, a dispute over a powerful necklace which reduced casting times. The familiar "offensive magic vs rapid healing" debate ensued and Josh wisely stayed out of it, allowing the argument to last longer than if he'd chosen sides. Hu Jintao eventually backed off, perhaps not wishing to appear too keen for the item and risk losing face. But there were no more smiles between the two erstwhile allies.

~~~

The final battle was not going well. Malus the necromancer had summoned a horde of evil allies which tested the party to their limits. Josh was severely wounded and cut off from the others, who were comatose from a stinking cloud spell. As Josh finished off the last of the summons Malus began casting 'animate dead', most likely the final blow for the stricken group. Josh hatched a desperate scheme involving a broken lever, a grappling hook and a rusty old chandelier... and by some miracle it worked! The chandelier crashed down upon the necromancer, interrupting his spell and temporarily trapping him. A wave of elation swept through Josh, the biggest high he'd felt since managing to implement 3e for IWD2. Surely he had won both the battle and the title!

There was an opportunity for the killing blow as Malus struggled to free himself. But Josh was confident he'd done enough to come out on top and saw the chance to complete his mission objective too: Khodorkovsky had managed to crawl free from the noxious cloud and was facing a tricky decision. Josh sheathed his sword and busied himself with another absurd plan involving a burned-out torch, an old cloak and a zombie head.

"Use your dispel magic scroll!" Hu Jintao implored Khodorkovsky. "Get rid of this cloud and we can all finish him off together!"

But the Russian scented glorious victory. He thought for a while then slowly shook his head, advancing on Malus and finishing him off.

"Sorry, friend," he replied. "But the stinking cloud will soon wear off. We couldn't risk the necromancer escaping."

Hu Jintao said nothing more but his features slid into a cold mask of contempt.

~~~

The Dalai Lama requested 30 minutes to go over his notes and confer with Helmut before announcing the final results. Josh and Roguey took the opportunity to stroll down to the waterfront, not speaking much as they watched the boats come and go.

Josh's thoughts were in turmoil. Even if Langley kept the majority of the winnings he was surely in line for a hefty cut. Forget Feargus and his small time plans, he could strike out on his own and put together his dream project: a first person witch-hunting game with AAA graphics.

Perhaps he'd throw Avellone a bone and hire him for some NPC banter and combat barks.

~~~

His Holiness thanked the players and congratulated them on their efforts, reserving particular praise for those who put roleplaying ahead of straight hack and slash. Laetitia smiled as she learned she'd finished ahead of Sergey. Sergey was gracious in defeat though, perhaps consoled by the cleavage on display.

"And so we come to the final couple of players," His Holiness continued. "It was a very tough decision. I must congratulate Mr Sawyer on his quick thinking throughout the campaign and I have to admire his attempt to make a success out of an unusual build. I've awarded bonuses for his ingenious contribution to the necromancer's demise. If you're ever at a loose end in Nepal, Mr Sawyer, I'd love to invite you to one of our LARPing sessions."

Josh felt all eyes upon him and basked in the praise. Nothing could compare to this feeling, he'd scaled the Everest of roleplaying.

"But unfortunately I have to bear other measures of success in mind. As a frontline fighter Mr Sawyer had the lowest number of kills in the party and his damage output was truly pathetic. He endangered other party members by failing to adequately protect the squishy classes. Taking that into consideration, I hereby announce Mr Khodorkovsky as the winner of the contest and this year's champion!"

Cheers erupted around the table, all save Hu Jintao were clapping Mikhail on the back and praising his efforts. But Josh hardly noticed. He mumbled a "well done" while he struggled to hold it together. It was impossible, his finest hour had gone unrecognised. It had to be the system! Fucking Gygax and his flawed creation with its pigeonholed builds, he'd never forgive DnD for this. Never. One day he'd have his revenge on the system which sabotaged his moment of triumph. Perhaps he'd make a successor to a much-loved DnD title... but strip away every trace of DnD from it and laugh in the faces of those who complained.

He began to feel better as he planned the engagement mechanics, allowing Roguey to drag him from the table. Petrification would have to go too. Definitely. And mages would be nerfed into mediocrity.

~~~

Josh caught a final glimpse of Cleve as they waited for their taxi to the airport. Khodorkovsky's car swept up to the entrance and, after helping with the bags, the chauffeur turned to face them and gave a small bow. The arrogant smirk was hard to miss.

Josh wasn't surprised when, little more than three months later, Khodorkovsky was arrested and imprisoned. There had been other plots at play, things he'd barely glimpsed. And there was talk of Putin having some Neanderthal blood.

~~~

"It's not all doom and gloom," chirped Roguey, strapping herself into the economy class seat. "Just got word from the boss, he's pretty satisfied with your performance and signed off on the funding for your new company. So your future looks bright when they finally pull the plug on Black Isle. Feargus is planning a ribs and steak night to celebrate when you get back."

Josh just sighed and stared morosely out the window. He had been so close to glory. So close to rising above the mediocrity of his life. He wasn't sure what the future held but one thing was certain: he was done with Dungeons and Dragons.
 

Awakened_Yeti

Arcane
Developer
Joined
Dec 28, 2005
Messages
147
You have to be able to at least beat the story from the introduction to The Riddle of Steel, in which our gallant hero realises that he can continue to fight a horde of orcs for the next 3-4 sessions, or just jump off a 100+ foot cliff and walk away from the whole mess.

Conan.. Swords, Sorcery.. Tits.. Dragons.. METAL

 
Weasel
Joined
Dec 14, 2012
Messages
1,865,724

Sawyer#5 - The Truth Is Out There


"Most efficient," communicated DB79, mixing the usual sonic communication waves with a brush of a tentacle for emphasis. "Biological systems are currently favoured by the ruling caste after the disruption of the recent AI revolt."

"Of course," replied EF81. "I've executed a similar plan in the Sol system."

The metal partition flowed open, reforming behind them as they scuttled into the cavernous space. Thousands of cloning tanks filled the middle of the chamber with transparent display cases covering the walls. Various models of humanoid were visible in the displays, no two alike.

"The dominant lifeform is numerous enough to form a viable slave labour force," it continued. "We've decided to try a puppet administration, could save us the management overhead of installing full neural controllers. The problem is, they're rather feisty little creatures and tend to cluster into adversarial groups and sub-species. They could prove resistant to our global government."

It indicated the first few exhibits and DB79 noticed a range of skin colours, eye shapes and even one strange, squat specimen with heavy brows and a hairy body.

"So, in preparation, we first designed a few particularly warlike leaders to break down their more stable societies."

DB79 examined the group of 20 humanoids in the next section and fixed on one with a curious square of fur on his top lip. Possibly a male status symbol or breeding signal, it found primitive creatures so fascinating.

EF81 was moving ahead: "In recent times we've just focused on making their leaders look mentally deficient. Here are the templates for the two most recent so-called American presidents, for example. African, Australian and Georgian leaders aren't here though, they're used for design practice by the juveniles in our training facility."

"And finally," it concluded, pointing to the last few cases, "Cultural homogenisation to crush their individuality. These executives have got them all eating the same food, buying the same clothes, going home to similar nesting boxes where they consume the same entertainment on their screens."

DB79 noticed a genetically-deficient specimen, out of place amongst the herd. "What is this one for?"

EF81 hooted in amusement. "Funny story really. Some of the manboons weren't satisfied with merely watching their screens, so we got them pressing buttons too. Made them feel involved, powerful."

They both hooted at this.

"Millions of them play the same few games now, which suits our purposes, but a stubborn minority insist on playing something called RPGs. Different choices, multiple ways of playing. Conscious thought. The last thing we want. So we designed our Todd Howard and Dave Gaider models to subvert the entire genre."

EF81 waved a tentacle at an empty case: "Todd worked out well but something went wrong with the Gaider, he morphed into something depraved, out of our control. We've never seen the like in all our travels. I sent this copy off to the alien research specialists for dissection."

"Luckily we had a backup plan in place," it continued. "I'll show you our Josh Sawyers."

***

The room was bright, white and featureless, but the Sawyers knew they were being observed. The masters were always watching and the final selection contest would draw even more attention than usual.

Sawyer#5 tried not to show any tension as he went over his character sheet. The muscle wizard was a gamble, but also a way of standing out from the crowd. Sure, it hadn't worked last time, 3rd place had only earned him a trip back to the cryostorage pod. But now they all had another shot, thawed out to compete for the chance to replace the previous Sawyer model. His good fortune in winning the selection contest had run out when he was eliminated by an obsessed cannibal stalker - an escaped mental patient named Roguey.

They were clones, as identical as technology could make them. But human genetic structure was a fickle beast; tiny variations in gene expression stubbornly remained. The masters settled on a process of making more copies than they needed, then putting them through a ruthless series of selection challenges. This was the final hurdle, testing higher functions in the specialist field of the subject: Dungeons and Dragons.

The DM was custom-engineered: a large purple cranium with 4 compound eyes, attached to 6 flexible arms designed for rapid dice rolling. Its voicebox produced a sonorous bass, pleasing to human ears and imbued with impersonal authority.

"Welcome to the Jaded Jester Inn," it droned. "Would you like to order drinks, exchange gossip with patrons or ask after mercenary work?"

The session raced by. Sawyer#2 perished in a bar fight, that model had always been a bit hot-headed. Sawyer#4 fell into a vat of acid. Apart from Sawyer#5's muscle wizard, the battered party was down to Sawyer#1's ranger, Sawyer#3's cleric and Sawyer#6's fighter/thief.

"Now things are hotting up!" thought Sawyer#5 as he banked some bonus xp from solving a teleporter puzzle. Unfortunately they then stumbled upon a vastly superior rival party. They were clearly going down, but who would go down with the most glory?

Sawyer#3 began casting while Sawyer#1 charged into melee. Sawyer#6 attempted a backstab on a mage. Sawyer#5 was in a quandary: try one of his feeble spells or make good use of those muscles? Hefting his quarterstaff, he headed for the front line.

It was all over in a couple of rounds. If only his mage hadn't been limited by armour restrictions and could make use of that spare two-handed sword.

***

The results were broadcast directly into their minds.

"Sawyer#6 is the chosen candidate. Report to transportation for passage to Earth. Your mission: seek out and destroy fun wherever it may be found in computer roleplaying games. Drive the human vermin away from the genre, into the arms of superhero movies and televised wrestling.

Sawyer#5 and Sawyer#3 are selected as reserve candidates for this mission."

***

Sawyer#5 allowed himself a moment of self-pity as the door to the cryopod irised shut. He had been so close. Again. It could have been worse though, Sawyer#2 had been sent for protein recycling. But if he was never thawed out again, was it really any different?

Icy gas began to fill the pod.

Suddenly the temperature increased and the door opened again. A new transmission arrived.

"Sawyer#6 is redeployed to North Korea. Underground tabletop game of Shadowrun detected, generating unacceptable levels of fun. New houserules are urgently required.

Sawyer#5 to report to transportation and assume primary mission responsibility."

***

Sawyer#5 smiled, admiring the spectacular sunrise as he entered the atmosphere. A good life lay ahead: more resources than he could consume, friends who looked different to him, a Californian lifestyle. Perhaps one of those partner-swapping parties he'd read so much about. And the chance to vacuum-up fun like a voracious black hole.

But, first things first. He was a man who'd never forget his roots: it was time to implement a system which made muscle wizards viable.
 
Joined
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This investigative report was commissioned to answer the following disturbing question: What if Josh Sawyer's harshest Codexian critics have been right about him all along?


Sawyer: The Monster Behind the Mask


The elderly lady peered down the street, frail hands clutching a bag as she steeled herself for the dangerous crossing. It hadn't always been this way, walking to the mall had once been a relaxing part of her day. But people drove like maniacs in the 21st century.

She started as a hand touched her elbow.

"I'll help you ma'am!"

She smiled down in gratitude at the young man, perhaps the modern world wasn't a total write-off after all. Arm in arm, they stepped onto the deserted tarmac.

Sawyer didn't even slow down. His Hummer cornered on two wheels and blasted past the pedestrians, spraying them with dirty water - his side mirror ripping the bag from the old hag's hands. They fell to the ground as his shock wave buffeted them.

"Fucking jaywalkers!" snarled Sawyer. "Get off my road!"

He usually pretended to be a hippie cycling-type, went down well with the faggoty SJW market he targeted. So when he indulged his true passions he took no prisoners.

A few minutes from the office he noticed another stray dog and expertly mounted the pavement to flatten it.

"Fatality!" he yelled.

~~~

"Spare some change man?" asked the ragged figure.

Sawyer grabbed some coins from his bag and hurled them deep into a bush. He produced a thin, cold smile as the hobo dived in after them.

They weren't real coins, just something from an old Christmas cracker. But it was fun to see a glimmer of hope dashed to pieces. Fucking bums.

~~~

The cocktail party was just hotting up when Josh arrived. Some intern had had the temerity to get engaged. On an office night too.

Nervous smiles appeared as he joined the group around the happy couple, his fearsome reputation preceded him.

"No gift for the hosts then?" chirped Avellone, his usual alcohol intake imparting the courage to speak up.

"Oh, I've got a great gift," grinned Sawyer. "She doesn't have to go back to the office after this, I'll let her deal with those emails from home later tonight."

Someone chuckled. It died abruptly when they realised he wasn't joking.

Sawyer excused himself and headed off to spike the punch with ketamine.

~~~

Sawyer strode into the conference room, gracing the waiting schoolchildren with a curt nod.

"It's an honour to play a tabletop session with you, Mr Sawyer," a fat kid began. "When we won the contest and heard..."

"Let's get the show on the road, I've got shit to do," interrupted Sawyer. "God knows why Feargus put me up for this."

They rushed through character creation. Josh didn't bother rolling a new character, just reusing his rogue from a previous campaign. It was technically overleveled for the module but nobody was going to call him on it.

The session didn't go well. Sawyer challenged the young DM at every opportunity, accusing him of fudging rolls and incorrect rule application. Worse was to come when Josh backstabbed one of the party who took too long to decide on a spell. She promptly burst into tears.

The final straw arrived when a mage duel broke out and Josh's rogue was reduced to tackling a few lowly summons, excluded from the fun..

"Fuck this!" he roared, tipping over the table and storming out. A secretary rushed in to comfort the frightened children, offering them signed Alpha Protocol mousemats in an attempt to salvage the situation.

"Fucking D&D," snarled Josh as he stomped off down the corridor.

~~~

The hooker was young, new to the game. But she paid for her inexperience when she chanced a quick trip to the bathroom and returned to find her client gone. Along with her bag.

She sighed in frustration and collapsed on the bed in despair. Not only had she been through the toughest, filthiest two-hour ordeal of her brief career, but she'd lost money on the deal.

And he'd looked respectable, in a geeky sort of way. Perhaps the tats were a warning sign.

"Fucking hipsters," she moaned.

~~~

Feargus and Tim Cain waited patiently in the office, forewarned by the telltale screech of Sawyer kicking the office cat on the way in.

"We thought kickstarter might be good for this project," said Feargus. "We can namedrop all the IE games and promise a successor, rake in all those nostalgia dollars without having to shell out for any rights."

"Great idea!" smiled Josh. "Let's milk the suckers. But I'm sick of D&D, that game with the kids was it for me. Once we've got the cash I'm gonna change everything... xp, hard counters, attributes... weak mages are out along with fucking mage duels, class skills, save-or-die effects..."

"Well hang on there," said Feargus. "Remember that an occasional player is not as burned-out on D&D as someone who spent years on Icewind Dale and..."

"I don't give a fuck," snapped Sawyer. "I'm changing it. It's gone."

"That's great!" Cain exclaimed, excitement infecting his voice. "If we're changing all that we can also make it turn-based! It'll be amazing."

"No chance," Josh replied. "We're making a successor to a rtwp game, are you retarded?"

"But.." stammered Cain. "We're changing lots of things anyway and turn-based would be so awesome for this sort of..."

"One more word about turn-based," warned Josh, "And you'll be making turn-based games at Inxile. I hear Fargo is dredging up the corpse of Wasteland, fancy some of that?"

Feargus chuckled at the thought but Cain held his tongue, a solitary tear making its way down his rosy cheek.

"Fucking Grognards," muttered Sawyer.
 

Sceptic

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Divinity: Original Sin
You really have made Sawyer look monstrous. This part made me laugh out loud though:
A secretary rushed in to comfort the frightened children, offering them signed Alpha Protocol mousemats in an attempt to salvage the situation.
 
Weasel
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Dec 14, 2012
Messages
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Josh Sawyer returns in...

Dungeon Royale

Josh sighed with pleasure as the comely assistant inserted the tube and opened the valve, the jet of fluid seeming to wash his cares away along with the putrid matter. His Thursday morning enema was a highlight of the week, the perfect accompaniment to a dedicated vegan diet.

He didn't ruin the moment by looking to his right. The sight of a beached whale of a man losing the remnants of a dozen burgers was enough to disturb anyone's energy balance.

"Gotta chat to you about something Josh,' Feargus muttered, gasping as he lost half a gnawed chicken wing. "Looks like it's finally over for Black Isle. There's just no dealing with fucking Herve. I give us 6 months, end of the year at the latest."

"Goddamit," muttered Josh. "After all that work on Van Buren and the Black Hound. Guess I'll have to take that job on the online farming game after all. Guaranteed to tank but gotta pay the mortgage, right?"

"Not so fast buddy. We've got plans for a new company. You know, get the gang together again and come up with some smart name which references our rebirth. Make some cool games, no Fargo or Herve forcing us to release buggy games before they're ready. Success is a guaranteed slam dunk."

"Sure, but how are we gonna fund it? We don't have the cash. MCA's outstanding bar tabs alone are more than our combined capital."

"Leave that to me, kid. I've got a contact who's offered to bankroll us, interest-free. He just wants a small favour from you."

~~~

The tone of the tires changed as they turned onto a paved driveway. Or so Josh guessed as he sat blindfolded in the back of the SUV. He'd been picked up from the office by a couple of silent man-mountains in dark suits who refused to answer any questions, merely confirming that they were taking him to meet Feargus's contact. A high speed transfer to an executive jet and then he saw no more.

The door opened and he was helped out before someone finally removed the blindfold. He stood before an elegant mansion in tree-lined grounds, groups of suited men scattered as far as he could see. They all had earpieces and he noticed concealed holsters on those nearest to him.

The front door opened and a hand beckoned him in. He stepped into the cool interior, noting that his escorts remained outside.

"Welcome, welcome," greeted a small man with closely-cropped blonde hair. "Anything to drink? We've got all your usual favourites... prune juice, cucumber smoothie, recycled water...."

"Actually, I need something stiff to settle my nerves," replied Josh. "Make it a large cucumber smoothie."

"Fine, fine," grinned the man, showing Josh into what looked like a large study and heading for the drinks cabinet. "Take a seat and we'll get right down to business."

Another man entered the room and sat in the corner, staring at Josh with piercing dark eyes. Unlike the others he wore no suit, just a baggy sweatshirt and old jeans. He made no move to introduce himself. The blonde handed the drink to Josh and sat down facing him.

"I'm Mr Jones, welcome to our humble abode. I assume you know why you're here?"

"Well," Josh muttered, "I heard you were investing in our new firm and wanted a favour... but this shit is off the scale."

"No need to worry Mr Sawyer" chortled Jones, although the laugh never reached his eyes. "Just a few precautions to keep us from those who would take an interest in our affairs. The stakes are higher than you may expect, but your role will be simple. Something you're an expert at, something you could do in your sleep. You've heard of the Great Game?"

"It's an old term for the colonial adventures of the former great powers. But as I'm here I guess you mean that roleplaying game supposedly taking place each year... high rollers and the global elite, that sort of thing? Always thought it was just a myth, like a Dan Brown novel set in the world of pnp gaming."

"It's no myth," replied Jones, the last trace of amusement deserting his face. "It's been played since the days of Gygax. Used to take place in Berlin, alternating between the zones, a rare occasion when all sides could meet around the table: Russian hoods, Czech arms dealers, British diplomats.. even a few of us Yanks from Langley. Of course things changed once the Wall came down and it became more of an elite gambling scene. But behind the character sheets, dice and wagers the old dealmaking still takes place. And this year something big is in the works."

"So, what am I supposed to do? Spy on them? Ruin the game? Suggest we switch to fucking LARPing?"

"Now, now, Mr Sawyer. No need to get excited. We'll stake you the $10 million to take part, an agent will meet you there to handle that side of things. You just get into the game, spot the hidden alliances and deals being made. Off the table as well as on it."

Jones tapped a remote control and one of the walls turned into a high resolution display, featuring a panoramic view of a glittering marina jutting into an azure sea.

"Wow, swish resort," said Josh. "I'm guessing Mexico?"

"Close, Mr Sawyer," smiled Jones. "It's Montenegro. The setting for this year's game."

He tapped the remote again and the display switched to a series of headshots and a couple of blank boxes.

"This is who we have confirmed," he continued. "We've got Bill Gates going as usual. He's always invited, pretty much kept this thing going when the Berlin scene changed. But no ulterior motives we know of, he just loves playing an old druid he's become quite attached to."

He took out a laser pointer and indicated a man with darker, rat-like features.

"This is one of the young upstarts who founded Google, name of Sergey Brin. He'll act like a bit of a clown and chase some girls but he's one of the smartest guys in the room. We don't know where his allegiance lies. Could be Russia, could be someone we've never heard of, could be just there for a laugh. Watch out for him. Usually plays a thief, possibly dual classed."

Next he pointed to a Chinese man and a dark-browed Russian who even Josh recognised.

"Yes, that's Khodorkovsky and Hu Jintau. The real focus of your mission. We have unconfirmed reports that they're there to finalise a deal and initiate a long-term plan to destablise our economy. But Khodorkovsky only represents one power base in Russia and the Chinese haven't decided who to deal with yet. He's got the backing of most of the army and half the oligarchs, but our man Putin has the intelligence services and interior ministries as well as oligarchs like Potanin, Deripaska and Abramovich. It could still go either way. The Chinese will only finalise a deal when they can judge a man face to face, this is the perfect excuse for them to meet without arousing suspicion. You'll do your best to cast some doubts in that direction and make Khodorkovsky look untrustworthy."

"When you say Putin is 'your man'", interrupted Josh. "How do you know? Perhaps he's playing you too?"

The dark-eyed man finally stirred, snorting with derision.

"Don't worry your pretty little head about that," continued Jones. "We know him. George W has even invited him to the ranch. He's a man we can do business with."

"And finally," he continued, "These two blank boxes are the French and British representatives. The Brits will probably send some Cambridge faggot, fuck knows who the French will send. Any questions?"

Josh's mind reeled. In a matter of hours he'd gone from sorting through his inbox to discussing Russian and Chinese plots.

"Who's the DM?" was all he could think of.

"We'll leave that as our little surprise," smirked Jones. "But you'll be impressed."

~~~

Josh was escorted to a private airfield where another, larger executive jet was waiting. Bill Gates had kindly offered to fly the American entrants to the venue.

"Welcome, welcome!" squeaked Bill as Josh settled into the sumptuous seat. "Order whatever you want, I'll be in the cockpit for a bit, just helping them debug the new navigation computer."

Josh found this less comforting than was probably intended but didn't have much time to dwell on it as Sergey bounded aboard.

"Great, great," giggled Sergey as he bounced up and down in the seat opposite Josh. "Ready for some hardcore dice rolling and...."

He stopped in mid-sentence as he caught a glimpse of the stewardess.

"Check that out Josh!" he whispered excitedly. "She looks half Chinese, my favourite!"

"Hey honey," he shouted out. "Want a job at Google?"

~~~

It was the strangest few hours of Josh's life. Bill Gates recounting industry gossip when not rebooting various systems. Brin exploding with energy and arguing with everyone over mathematical problems or sporting trivia.

Finally Josh was exhausted by their antics and indulged himself with a sparkling water before pretending to fall asleep.

He was rather relieved when they both dashed off soon after landing. Bill headed to Paul Allen's yacht to gatecrash a party. Sergey disappeared with the stewardess. Josh was met by the agent, a dark-haired woman who also sported a bit of Asian blood, possibly Korean.

"The car's waiting Josh," she murmured in a sultry tone. "Good to see you're traveling light. Who knows what our getaway will be like."

"You have a name?" he enquired, lost in her liquid gaze.

"I have a designated handle for this mission," she replied. "Call me Roguey."

~~~

The hotel was the most luxurious Josh had ever seen. "So this is what it feels like to be Brian Fargo," he thought, gazing around his huge suite.

Roguey emerged from the dressing room carrying a dinner jacket and trousers.

"These should fit," she said. "I have a good eye for male body parts. We have the welcome function tonight, basically a few drinks and clarification on the rules and scheduling. I'll handle the financial side, act as if I'm your assistant and leave all that to me."

Josh admired himself in the mirror. Elegant. Pity it covered all his tattoos, though.

~~~

Sergey and Bill were already propping up the bar when Josh arrived. He nodded in greeting and left them to their argument over open source operating systems. They were soon joined by Hu Jintao and his team of bodyguards and attaches. Someone nudged Josh as he sipped his seaweed shake. He turned to face the brooding features of Khodorkovsky.

"I am Mikhail," the Russian introduced himself. "You are the Icewind Dale designer, yes? Not bad, for an American. Pity about the writing."

Josh stammered a greeting, blindsided by the the oligarch bringing up those Infinity Engine memories. His embarrassment was spared though as a gorgeous woman strode up and pecked them both on the cheeks.

"I am Laetitia Casta," she purred. "I play for France."

"Typical of the French,"whispered Roguey, when she had a moment alone with him. "Sending a clothes horse. More concerned with making the French look cool than true role playing."

"It's working," muttered Josh, watching the men gather around the perfumed vision of loveliness.

"Ladies and Gentleman," interrupted a soft German-accented voice. They all turned to face a diminutive bald figure in an understated blue suit.

"I am Helmut," he continued,"Your MC for this event. If you'll all take a seat we can go over the usual rules for the contest."

Josh's mind wandered as the MC droned on about house rules and multiclassing. Where was the British representative? They'd better not send Hugh Grant, he hated that smug bastard.

"Now it is time to announce your chosen class," said Helmut. "Ladies first perhaps?"

"I'm an elven ranger," said Laetitia. "I like ze bows and arrows. Pretty cool, like Cupid. But taller and with breasts."

"Halfling thief for me," added Sergey, trying not to stare at Laetitia's breasts. "I guess we'll go over skills and attributes with the DM tomorrow?"

"Indeed," replied Helmut. "Mr Khodorkovsky?"

"Dwarf cleric," he glared. "Tough and resourceful. I like to heal wounds and turn undead. We have many undead in Russia."

"Druid!" shouted Bill Gates, pointing to a picture of an elderly human druid accompanied by a large bear.

"Wizard, half-elf," said Hu Jintao.

All eyes turned to Josh. Should he go with his gut? Or the muscle wizard he'd longed to test out in a serious game?

"Fighter," he confirmed. "Vanilla. Human. Max int and dump strength."

A murmur went around the gathering. He'd ruffled a few feathers, taken them out of their comfort zone with his daring build.

"Barbarian," squawked an electronic voice box as Stephen Hawking wheeled up to the gathering. "Max strength and dump int. Go for the eyes Boo!"

"Thank you ladies and gentlemen," soothed Helmut as most rolled their eyes and groaned. "We have your deposits so if you'll all join us here at 9:30am tomorrow we can get the first session underway..."

"Wait a second," interrupted Khodorkovsky. "Before we put up our money we need to know who the DM will be. We've had enough Western hegemony over international institutions like the IMF, World Bank and high profile dungeon mastering."

Hu Jintao nodded, a cautious smile creasing his features as he locked eyes with the Russian.

"Of course gentlemen," replied Helmut. "I think you'll be most pleased with our choice. A man beyond reproach, bridging the divide between East and West."

An elderly robed figure entered the room and strode towards them.

"May I introduce His Holiness, the Dalai Lama."

~~~

Josh had an early night, Roguey standing guard outside his door. He had to be on form from the beginning of the session, despite the lingering threat of withdrawal from the Chinese delegation over the appointment of the Dalai Lama. Luckily a resolution had been reached when Sergey pointed out that news of the event would never spread in China, offering Google's help in that regard.

Bill Gates was already assisting Stephen Hawking with his character sheet when Josh sat down at the table. Sergey was next to join them, cracking jokes about Josh's runt of a fighter. Finally the group was complete with only 5 minutes to spare before the scheduled start.

The first two hours were spent rolling characters and debating role playing flavour. Then, after a short break for lunch, the serious business commenced.

His Holiness proved a skilful dungeon master, with a surprisingly eloquent narrative and interesting challenges for the party. He'd created a world packed with warring factions and ancient powers, with a few scattered hints of a larger plan behind the events they witnessed. After the introductory set piece and visit to a quartermaster they took on their first quest, but unfortunately soon lost Laetitia. She fell headlong into a lava pit after refusing to walk behind the thief, claiming it was a protest against male domination and gender-specific assumptions in role playing games.

"I'm all for girl power," Roguey commented later, "But you gotta pick your battles."

The rest of the quest went smoothly and Josh relaxed into his role. He became the team "face man", chatting to NPCs and figuring out puzzles in the ancient ruins. He wasn't a big damage dealer with his pitiful strength but he lucked out with a find of enchanted chain mail, light enough for him to wear and do some decent tanking. It wasn't ideal, and intelligent tactics could only get him so far, but it was hard to imagine a system where a weak fighter could have coped any better.

The mood around the table lifted as they left the completed dungeon, despite Laetitia's departure for the pool deck. The party was ready to level and had some decent loot to sell. Bill had found a bear companion for his druid. Maybe they were becoming overconfident, or His Holiness sought to balance their previous good fortune. Whatever the reason, the ambush hit them fast and hard.

Khodorkovsky's cleric was soon unconscious, a veritable pin cushion of orcish arrows. Josh was battling to hold the front line with Hawking's barbarian.

"Butt kicking for goodness!" yelped the infernal voice box.

"Shut the fuck up with that old Minsc routine you mutant!" yelled Sergey, stuggling to deal with a warg who had engaged his lightly armoured rogue. "Need some healing over here Gates, I'm getting raped!"

But Bill just shook his head, a regretful smile emerging as he considered his character sheet. "Sorry man, Grizzler has taken an arrow. As a druid I'm obliged to heal him first."

Sergey looked as if he was primed to explode as he contemplated Gates healing the bear instead of him. Hu Jintao put a calming hand on his shoulder, shaking his head and handing over the dice. The situation was saved when Sergey rolled a lucky crit, buying himself enough time to quaff a potion. Soon the battle was winding down and Gates was tending to Khodorkovsky's wounds. But the situation around the table remained tense.

"You'll pay for this Gates!" muttered Sergey. "Wait and see. Look at our projected growth rates, one day we'll eat fucking Microsoft alive!"

"Now, now gentlemen," interrupted His Holiness. "Remember that Mr Gates is roleplaying a true neutral druid, never an easy task. In fact, I'm awarding him bonus xp for his exceptional performance."

Sergey was turning from red to beetroot as Josh chose that moment to signal for a drink. He'd already gulped down some of the chilled yak milk when he glanced up at the waiter. Those familiar chunky features, that mocking smile - it couldn't be! What was Cleveland Mark Blakemore doing here?

Cleve exchanged a knowing glance with Sergey and ambled off, but the damage had been done. Josh could already feel it: light-headedness, the beginnings of tunnel-vision. He'd been poisoned!

Mumbling something about a rest break, Josh stumbled towards the lift, hearing the calm voice of His Holiness suggesting a two hour recess. Roguey dived through the doors as they were closing and supported him as they dashed to the suite. He barely remembered her laying him down on the sofa and pulling out an emergency enema kit.

"Don't worry Josh," she crooned. "I'll get that poison out of you."

~~~

Josh awoke to find Roguey lightly sucking his fingers. It felt good, despite her predatory air.

"Glad to see you made it Josh," she whispered. "Was touch and go there for a while. Funny to think that after playing Icewind Dale I just considered you a hipster with a rape fixation. But that's all changed. You'll find I can be very loyal indeed."

Josh rolled off the bed and struggled to his feet, feeling both light-headed and light of bowel. "Must get back... time...." he croaked.

"We've got 30 minutes," she replied, reaching for his medicine bag. "Any later than that and you forfeit the contest. You got something useful in here?"

"Sure," he gasped. "Got some hard stuff. Pass the bottle labeled ginseng."

~~~

Josh made it just in time, noting the surprised glance from Sergey as he took his seat. The ginseng buzz was already kicking in but he hoped the sheen of sweat on his brow was less obvious than it felt.

The break had done the group some good, the simmering resentments cooled down a touch. The morale boost from leveling was welcome too. But they would need every bit of their increased power.

The next quest took them deep underground and they were soon fighting for their lives. Waves of skeletons wore down their front line and the party was out of healing resources and desperately searching for a safe place to rest. Patrolling one flank, Josh found a hidden chamber and in a rush of blood he peered inside without waiting for the others. Perhaps he was trying to score some points with the group by being the hero who found a safe resting zone. Perhaps he was still proving that an intelligent fighter could earn his keep. Regardless, he took the chance and came face to face with a basilisk.

Adrenaline coursing through his veins, Josh desperately rolled his saving throw. But to no avail. He was now a helpless statue. And a wave of zombies and skeleton archers arrived to assail the party from all sides. One blow... one smash of a weapon and he would follow Laetitia out of the game. Curse these 'save or die' effects! His fate rested in the hands of Khodorkovsky, bearer of the only stone-to-flesh scroll the group had.

It was the moment of truth. Did Khodorkovsky consider him useful enough to keep around? A puny fighter who would be no threat to winning the contest but a potential pawn to use against the others? Or did his strategy involve whittling down the party as soon as possible? Russians were renowned as skilled chess players and Josh felt those dark eyes boring into him as Khodorkovsky considered his move.

"I come to remove the petrification," he finally announced. "But next round. First, I kill the skeleton next to me."

Josh sighed with relief. He just had to survive the round. A stray arrow pinged off the statue but luckily did no damage. Josh's heart skipped a beat. Perhaps he'd overdone the ginseng. Next, Hu Jintao finished off the basilisk with a magic missile.

"Hu's on first base!" cheered Sergey, earning a blank look in reply.

Hawking did a sterling job of holding off the enemies while Khodorkovsky restored Josh and soon the battle was won, a safe resting site as their reward. But it had been a seminal moment in Josh's relationship with permanent petrification. Never again would he view it as a fair or fun mechanic. The germ of an idea for a new, improved system began to take shape in his mind. A tough challenge, but if he could hold his own at this table then surely nothing in the world of tabletop gaming was beyond him.

~~~

Things moved quickly after that. Stephen Hawking made one reckless charge too many and his barbarian was separated from the group, bludgeoned into pieces by a crit from an ogre. Unfortunately Hawking refused to leave the table and Sergey eventually had to unplug his voice box.

Bill Gates was taken out by a vicious poisoned spike trap which Sergey had "forgotten" to check for. A smirking Sergey then decided to put the bear "out of its misery" before it became a problem for the party. There was a glint in the Dalai Lama's eye as he announced that a surprise rock fall eliminated Sergey soon afterwards.

Josh felt the atmosphere change around the table. They were on the final stretch, the end of the contest in sight. One of the three would win the huge betting pool and, more importantly, the prestige of the title. He'd truly come a long way from his forum moderating days.

The first cracks in the Sino-Russian relationship appeared as they headed for the necromancer's inner sanctum, a dispute over a powerful necklace which reduced casting times. The familiar "offensive magic vs rapid healing" debate ensued and Josh wisely stayed out of it, allowing the argument to last longer than if he'd chosen sides. Hu Jintao eventually backed off, perhaps not wishing to appear too keen for the item and risk losing face. But there were no more smiles between the two erstwhile allies.

~~~

The final battle was not going well. Malus the necromancer had summoned a horde of evil allies which tested the party to their limits. Josh was severely wounded and cut off from the others, who were comatose from a stinking cloud spell. As Josh finished off the last of the summons Malus began casting 'animate dead', most likely the final blow for the stricken group. Josh hatched a desperate scheme involving a broken lever, a grappling hook and a rusty old chandelier... and by some miracle it worked! The chandelier crashed down upon the necromancer, interrupting his spell and temporarily trapping him. A wave of elation swept through Josh, the biggest high he'd felt since managing to implement 3e for IWD2. Surely he had won both the battle and the title!

There was an opportunity for the killing blow as Malus struggled to free himself. But Josh was confident he'd done enough to come out on top and saw the chance to complete his mission objective too: Khodorkovsky had managed to crawl free from the noxious cloud and was facing a tricky decision. Josh sheathed his sword and busied himself with another absurd plan involving a burned-out torch, an old cloak and a zombie head.

"Use your dispel magic scroll!" Hu Jintao implored Khodorkovsky. "Get rid of this cloud and we can all finish him off together!"

But the Russian scented glorious victory. He thought for a while then slowly shook his head, advancing on Malus and finishing him off.

"Sorry, friend," he replied. "But the stinking cloud will soon wear off. We couldn't risk the necromancer escaping."

Hu Jintao said nothing more but his features slid into a cold mask of contempt.

~~~

The Dalai Lama requested 30 minutes to go over his notes and confer with Helmut before announcing the final results. Josh and Roguey took the opportunity to stroll down to the waterfront, not speaking much as they watched the boats come and go.

Josh's thoughts were in turmoil. Even if Langley kept the majority of the winnings he was surely in line for a hefty cut. Forget Feargus and his small time plans, he could strike out on his own and put together his dream project: a first person witch-hunting game with AAA graphics.

Perhaps he'd throw Avellone a bone and hire him for some NPC banter and combat barks.

~~~

His Holiness thanked the players and congratulated them on their efforts, reserving particular praise for those who put roleplaying ahead of straight hack and slash. Laetitia smiled as she learned she'd finished ahead of Sergey. Sergey was gracious in defeat though, perhaps consoled by the cleavage on display.

"And so we come to the final couple of players," His Holiness continued. "It was a very tough decision. I must congratulate Mr Sawyer on his quick thinking throughout the campaign and I have to admire his attempt to make a success out of an unusual build. I've awarded bonuses for his ingenious contribution to the necromancer's demise. If you're ever at a loose end in Nepal, Mr Sawyer, I'd love to invite you to one of our LARPing sessions."

Josh felt all eyes upon him and basked in the praise. Nothing could compare to this feeling, he'd scaled the Everest of roleplaying.

"But unfortunately I have to bear other measures of success in mind. As a frontline fighter Mr Sawyer had the lowest number of kills in the party and his damage output was truly pathetic. He endangered other party members by failing to adequately protect the squishy classes. Taking that into consideration, I hereby announce Mr Khodorkovsky as the winner of the contest and this year's champion!"

Cheers erupted around the table, all save Hu Jintao were clapping Mikhail on the back and praising his efforts. But Josh hardly noticed. He mumbled a "well done" while he struggled to hold it together. It was impossible, his finest hour had gone unrecognised. It had to be the system! Fucking Gygax and his flawed creation with its pigeonholed builds, he'd never forgive DnD for this. Never. One day he'd have his revenge on the system which sabotaged his moment of triumph. Perhaps he'd make a successor to a much-loved DnD title... but strip away every trace of DnD from it and laugh in the faces of those who complained.

He began to feel better as he planned the engagement mechanics, allowing Roguey to drag him from the table. Petrification would have to go too. Definitely. And mages would be nerfed into mediocrity.

~~~

Josh caught a final glimpse of Cleve as they waited for their taxi to the airport. Khodorkovsky's car swept up to the entrance and, after helping with the bags, the chauffeur turned to face them and gave a small bow. The arrogant smirk was hard to miss.

Josh wasn't surprised when, little more than three months later, Khodorkovsky was arrested and imprisoned. There had been other plots at play, things he'd barely glimpsed. And there was talk of Putin having some Neanderthal blood.

~~~

"It's not all doom and gloom," chirped Roguey, strapping herself into the economy class seat. "Just got word from the boss, he's pretty satisfied with your performance and signed off on the funding for your new company. So your future looks bright when they finally pull the plug on Black Isle. Feargus is planning a ribs and steak night to celebrate when you get back."

Josh just sighed and stared morosely out the window. He had been so close to glory. So close to rising above the mediocrity of his life. He wasn't sure what the future held but one thing was certain: he was done with Dungeons and Dragons.

So, Anthony Davis , were you aware of Obsidian's rather dubious origins?


:troll:
 

Mr Giggles

Literate
Joined
Mar 27, 2015
Messages
8
Alright, I hope this gets posted in time.


Josh's Enlightenment

Josh wrinkled his face as he pulled in another sour breath. He heard screaming, but could make no sense of the words. Choking now, on the dank air, he coughed and sputtered until halfway conscious. Drunkenly, Josh took in his surroundings.

Somewhere above, a door slammed followed by heavy uneven steps; Josh searched for the source of the sounds but could only make out a mistreated wooden staircase ascending into darkness.

“And don’t come into my lair, Mom!” a cracking voice screeched, barely muffled and definitely closer than any of the previous sounds. “I mean it!” the same person again yelled, “I’m busy!”

Without warning, the staircase burst into light. Josh recoiled, slamming his eyes closed, his head hammering.

The door slammed shut and steps began rocking the staircase. Other unseen things throughout the room rattled in response to descending steps. Josh struggled off the rough floor and re-opened his eyes.

The man was likely no older than 25 but Josh couldn’t be sure as most of his features were hidden behind a rolling curtain of fat. The shirt which would have been large on a large man, resembled more a bib on the thing coming down the stairs. Somehow, the air noticeably worsened and Josh was wracked with another coughing fit.

“Oh good, you’re awake,” the man said, as he stood over Josh, observing him. “I’m sorry,” he began as he half lifted, half dragged Josh to a nearby table, “about the, head, man.”

Josh didn’t understand what he meant and forgot about it after falling into one of the chairs.

“Oh man, I’m so excited to play with you,” the ogre-man said while pushing papers about on the table top. “No one else understands the burden of being the DM, like you do Josh.”

Meanwhile outside in the city, Police were already hunting down several leads in the apparent car jacking and kidnapping of Josh Sawyer. CCTV caught an unknown individual, waiting for Josh and hitting him over the back of the head with what appeared to be a six pack of cans.

“I got us some Diet Pepsi,” the man said and handed Josh a can. Josh felt like he was loosing his mind - the whole situation was totally surreal. Who was this guy? The feeling only increased when he noticed the lip of the can was covered in what appeared to be dried blood.

“Obviously,” the man began again, with more than a hint of serious frustration, “we’re going to be playing with the three point five ruleset, cause, you know, we’re not loser posers like those guys on RPG Codex.”

What? Thought Josh again as he picked up the character sheet in front of him. Josh slowly looked around the room again. Layers of anime posters. Stacks of Obsidian paraphernalia. A dusty computer monitor neighboured by tissues and hand lotion. Realization dawned slowly on Josh.

“What’s wrong?” the guy said, frowning.

Josh tried to calm his features. “I just realized, I haven’t gotten your name.”

“Oh,” the man said, smiling and blushing slighting, “I’m Sam.” Sam put his hand out for Josh to shake.

Josh eagerly shook the man’s hand, feigning friendship, and doing his best to ignore the moisture.

Sam’s mom in her minivan packed with frozen goods was more than confused when confronted by the police barrier on the road to her house. Police quickly rushed to vehicle; the confounded lady quickly revealed herself to be the dangerous suspect’s mother.

Meanwhile in the basement, in an attempt to buy time, Josh avidly debated with Sam the merits of choosing a half-Drow, half-Halfling, Paladin. Sam’s face gradually became more and more red as they debated inconsequential details. Josh was confident Sam was less angry, and more out of breath than anything.

Outside police had the house surrounded and were in the final stages of prepping their entry plan.

Josh realized he had miscalculated. Sam was becoming more and more volatile. “No! No! No!” Sam screamed, pounding the table with his meaty fists. Twenty sided die bounced everywhere in retaliation which only seemed to increase Sam’s rage. “Why are you being so stupid?” Sam hollered into Josh’s face. Josh’s had deliberately sabotaged his character, and now his half-Drow, half-Halfling Paladin was near death.

The police, now inside, quickly realized where their suspect and the hostage were on account of all the noise Sam was making.

“You can’t kill me!” Sam roared in revenge to Josh’s characters death at the hands of several low level skeletons.

The police quietly opened the basement door.

“I will kill you all!” Sam declared to the heavens. He raised his fist, full of die, in preparation of rolling.

From the banister on the stairs, the police had a clear view of the room. Josh’s head was swollen and his face was covered in dried blood from the kidnapping: to police, he looked like he was being beaten.

Sam began his violent attack roll.

“Stop! Police!” the cops yelled.

Sam’s huge fist couldn’t not be stopped so easily.

Police opened fire and riddled Sam with bullets.

Police swarmed the blood soaked table and rushed Josh from the scene. Josh, blood soaked and dazed, was handed over to an EMT for medical care.

“Sir, talk to me,” the woman asked John as she checked him over.

“I’ve had an epiphany.” Josh stated calmly, to no one in particular. The EMT grew more concerned but couldn’t get another word out of Josh; in fact, Josh wouldn’t speak for the next five days: he was onto something great.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Fake edit: I can't believe I actually wrote this shit out. Fuck this place.


The Balance of Erich Zann

"Can I play as a mole person?" asks a questionably inebriated Feargus.

"No, you can't play as a mole person. This is Dungeons and Dragons. You can play as a human, elf, half-elf, dwarf, gnome, halfling or half-orc" answers an exasperated Josh Sawyer.

"B...ut this is pen and paper. Why am I limited to some shit Baldur's Gate race."

"Because we are designing some "shit" Baldur's Gate type game. Can you guys fill out your character sheets already? It's been over an hour and some of you are still stuck on your race."

"Are there going to be any wolves in this game?" asks a definitely inebriated Chris Avellone.

"Legions of them. Where's your character sheet?"

Chris pushes away a big pile of Doritos to reveal an orange dust encrusted character sheet.

"I'm playing as a level 14 mole person cook. I rolled a natural 20 on my attack roll" says Chris who then downs another shot of spiked Mountain Dew.

"You can't roll attacks yet, the game hasn't even started. And I already said you can't play as a mole person. There isn't even such a thing as a fucking mole person. For fuck's sake. Tim, is yours done?"

An apparently sober Tim Cain hands Josh his character sheet.

"Hmm. Level 10 Elf rogue. Everything seems in order."

"Can I roll for my penis circumference now?" asks a giggling Tim Cain dispelling all suspicion of sobriety. Feargus and Chris start laughing with him.

"Allright you know what, fuck you guys" shouts an angry Josh and kicks the table away from him.

"C'mon, don't be mad, it's all in good fun." Tim tries to comfort Josh but Josh pushes him away.

"It's the middle of a work day and you're all piss drunk!"

"How do you think we got through developing a South Park rpg. You'd have to be piss drunk to even agree to something like that."

"I was." quips Feargus.

"Are there any wolves in South Park?"

"Mountains of them." retorts Sawyer. "Alright, fuck P&P. We're gonna larp this shit out. I'm assigning races and classes to everybody. We're all humans. I'm cleric. Tim, you're the wizard."

"He is" nods Chris approvingly.

"Chris, you're the rogue."

"I'm dashing enough to be one, yes."

"Finally, Feargus, you can be the fi...."

"Paladin!"

"No, Fea..."

"PALADIN!"

"Fuck fine, you can be the paladin. Let's go."

"Where are we going?"

"The Obsidian basement."

The other three stopped in their tracks.

"I don't think that's such a good idea" says a fearful Feargus. "I mean, you guys remember how we got this building so cheap, right?"

"Yeah, I believe the description was "the cops were balls deep in corpses by the time they got to the basement", right?" responds a suddenly serious Chris.

"It used to host the RPG Codex servers until their "Saint Proverbius" went mad and started kidnapping people off the streets and ritually slaughtering them. Mostly women, children and the elderly. Do we even have the lock to it? I thought Feargus sealed the door" chimes in Tim.

"I got the key. There's nothing to be afraid of. There's no such thing as ghosts" says Sawyer. "And if there is, I've got Turn Undead."

The four of them arrive at the large metal door that grants them access to the dungeons laying below Obsidian Entertainment. The inebriation was slowly giving way to a sublime dread crawling down their spines. Even Josh was becoming unnerved despite his brave, earlier words.

"Can I help you?"

The four of them turn around, startled.

"Name's Erich Zann. I'm the janitor here. You gentlemen aren't thinking of going in, are you?"

"Well..." starts off Josh.

"I was actually the first janitor here. Did you know that?"

"No, but..."

Erich Zann sighs.

"If you wanna go in there, I can't stop you. But maybe I can be of a little help"

Zann takes a small scale out of his pocket and hands it over to Josh. It's worn out but retains visible signs of its original ornate glory with detailed embroidery and two sirens acting as the arms. Josh takes it and puts it in his pocket.

"Thank you. But what's it for?" Josh looks up and Erich Zann is gone.

"What the fuck" says Chris Avellone. "He was here and a split second later he was gone. That's some freaky shit, man. Feargus, you're the boss, let's just get out of here."

Feargus is too busy munching on Doritos to notice. "Huh, what? What happened?"

Josh takes out a big, rusty key and inserts it into the basement door. It twists heavily and the door suddenly crashes open, knocking him backwards. His scared companions cannot help but gaze into the maw of the abyss opening up before them. Despite the well lit room they were in the light doesn't penetrate more than a couple of feet in. The darkness weighs heavily on their psyche and Josh has a hard time taking out a flash light from his pocket and handing it to Tim.

"I... I cast Light" says Tim and turns on the flashlight. The four of them venture in.

***

Twenty minutes in and the basement had been a complete disappointment. The investigative team appeared to have taken pretty much everything that wasn't nailed down.

"A pair of wolves appear before us" says Josh. Chris Avellone yelps loudly.

"I take a defensive stance with my Holy Avenger" says Feargus.

"We're level 1, you don't have a Holy Avenger. You take a defensive stance with your rusty claymore."

"Fine." says a disappointed Feargus.

"I hide in shadows" says Chris. Josh takes out his iphone and uses a dice rolling app.

"Sorry, you fail your attempt."

"Then I..."

"You used up your action. Tim?"

"I cast Magic Missile."

"The Magic Missile hits one of the wolves. It yelps in pain. I hit it with my warhammer and crush its skull in."

"Wait a second, shouldn't you make an attack roll?" says an angry Chris.

"I did."

"You did not! Your phone was in your pocket the whole time!"

"I made my roll when I made yours."

"Liar!"

"Guys, there's still another wolf left."

"The wolf lunges at Chris Avellone" says Josh who take out his phone to roll. "Ouch, what do you know. A natural 20."

"Let me see that... wait isn't Feargus guarding? How did it get to me?"

"Its disengagement roll was successful" says Josh drily.

"Bullshit, you didn't even roll that. And what the fuck is disengagement?"

A loud scream suddenly pierces the darkness.

"What the fuck was that?" asks Tim Cain. "It didn't even sound human."

Josh looks around to get his bearings but realizes that they're completely lost. "I take it nobody bothered to draw out a map or something while we were wandering down here."

"The building really shouldn't be so big as to require a map" says Feargus.

"Man, this is bullshit. I wanna get out of here. And not just because Josh cheats" says Chris.

"Alright, no need to panic. We'll just hug a wall and keep going until we find the exit" responds a shaken Tim.

"What if the wall is self contained? We'll go around in circles forever" says Josh. He then has an idea. He takes out one of his markers and drags it along the wall. "We'll switch walls to unmarked ones if we end up back here" he says, satisfied.

The four of them wander through darkness for a few minutes before they hear a soft sobbing from in front of them. A near catatonic Tim Cain raises his flashlight. A white figure is rolled up into a ball on the floor, shaking. Its hair is long and head covered by a wide brimmed hat.

"Are you OK little girl?" asks Chris, who lifts up the hat, only to find himself staring into the eyes of a Schwarzenegger figured creature with the head of a wolf.

The beast cackles maniacally and lifts Chris into the air by his neck. Adrenaline pumping through him, Feargus charges at the monster.

"Have I ever told you my Magnificent Seven argument?" asks the beast, who then draws a gun and shoots Feagus's legs out from under him in rapid succession.

"You can't do this shit in real time, motherfucker" says the beast with a smile.

"Saint Proverbius, at your service" he introduces himself with a bow and a smile, then throws Chris Avellone at Josh Sawyer and both of them are knocked down.

Proverbius walks towards Tim Cain, whose hand is shaking so badly that he can barely hold his flashlight straight.

"Do you fear me, manling? Are you scared I'll pull out your guts and strangle you with them? Or that I'll feast on your flesh while you still live, every bite I take pure agony? No, your fear is far more... primal. Perhaps you fear me or the rest of the boys will review one of your games?"

At the last one their eyes opened wide.

"No, please, anything but that!" lunges a desperate Josh. Proverbius dodges the awkward attack easily and kicks Sawyer away.

"But the boys have been so bored down here. Nothing to do all these years. Can you imagine what it's like, living right under one of the most prolific RPG developers of our time, having to listen to you people crank out derivative shit after derivative shit, no keyboard to eviscerate you with in sight? Have you looked at your work? Who the fuck do you think wants to play a "Svirfneblin Scholar of Candlekeep"? Come out boys, show your displeasure."

Out of the shadows two grim figures walk out. On the left, a skeleton with a knife between the ribs snaps his teeth at them. He can't speak but he wears a pair of torn jeans with the epithet "Street Lethal" painted on them in red. On the right, an aging man of no distinct appearance stands hunched over. He does not appear to be dead but also not quite alive, as if his vitality had been taken from him somehow.

"Thirteen to nothing..." mutters the latter.

"Why don't we play a game, you and I. I will give you half an hour to prepare. You win, we let you go and move on to the afterlife. We win, we bind your souls to this basement for all of eternity. We will review your games over and over and over and you will sit quietly and weep with every word."

With these words Proverbius waves his white cape and disappears. His ghoulish companions slowly fade away.

"Oh shit oh shit oh shit oh shit" Chris Avellone rocks himself back and forth. Tim Cain is completely catatonic.

Josh slowly gets up and walks over to Feargus.

"You OK?"

"Yeah" says Feargus. The bullet wounds are gone. "These two on the other hand.... Chris? Hey Chris..."

"Game over man, game over" says Chris Avellone with terror in his eyes. Feargus hugs him and Chris weeps bitterly in his arms.

"Tim, buddy, you ok?" Josh walks up to Tim and takes his flashlight.

"Why does this always happen to us?" asks Tim. "Troika, Black Hound, I mean, does it ever end?"

"We got something going now" says Josh. "Maybe it'll work out, maybe it won't, but we got a good gig going now and I'm not letting the ghosts of the past take it away from us."

Josh sticks out his hand and Tim grabs it and lifts himself off the floor.

"You ok Chris?" asks Tim.

"Y... yeah. I think I am. Let's do this."

Josh runs his fingers on the small scale in his pocket. He has an idea. The four of them put their heads together and create a plan.

***
The door to the musty study creaks open. Proverbius looks up from his desk. Phelot and Crispy, his grim adjustants stand up. Four figures, walking with purpose and grim determination on their face step in. Feargus Urquhart stands before them like a shield with a wooden chair in his hands. Behind him, Josh Sawyer is at the ready with a 2x4 hunched over his shoulder while Chris Avellone appears to have found an old pen sharp enough to awkwardly stab with. Behind them flashed Tim Cain. He was unable to find a weapon so he decided to strip naked to provide his teammates with a psychological advantage.

"That's fucking disgusting" says Saint Proverbius.

"Before we go at it, I have a challenge for you" says Josh slyly. "How about we do this in turn based?"

"I'm intrigued. Go on" responds Proverbius.

"I use my app. We each roll an initiative that determines future orders. Each gets one move on their turn. Either an attack or movement based on how far you can hop a single time. We only move on our turns. How does it sound?"

"You know, it's amazing to me that you'd propose we turn real life into turn based when nearly all your RPGs are real time. If only you designed as well as you plead for your lives. Very well. I'm not sure what difference this makes but I'll play your silly little game."

Josh throws Proverbius his phone and Proverbius rolls their initiatives.

"Avellone, 9, Sawyer, 7, Urquhart, 16, Cain, 1, Phelot, 12, Crispy, 17. And myself... 8. Let us begin."

The two groups glare at each other for almost a minute. Crispy draws a shotgun and fires it at a nearby wall.

"Well, I've seen worse aim..." says Josh.

"What the fuck Crispy?" yells a visibly angry Proverbius.

"Leave me alone, I tried."

Feargus leaps at Proverbius and brings his chair down on his head, but the chair phases through Proverbius's body and breaks against the concrete floor. Proverbius laughs.

"Sorry boys, being a spectral figure provides something of a hard counter against physical attacks."

Phelot wastes no time moving. In one motion he grabs his own chair, leaps through the air and brings it down on Chris Avellone who narrowly dodges. Phelot manages to slow down his motion enough to avoid the chair breaking, and takes a defensive posture.

"You know," says Josh "I know your crowd really isn't into real time games, but real time has some advantages."

"Like what?" says Proverbius, spittle flying out of his mouth.

"Like simultaneous actions..."

"Ha. Phase based is still turn based and it can do that."

"Not with split second alteration of plans" says Josh with a triumphant smirk.

Feargus dives at Phelot. Phelot tries to block with the chair but Feargus's crushing weight is too much for him, his bones break and shatter across the floor. Avellone charges at Proverbius and before Proverbius can fully process the deception pierces his shooting hand with his pen. Proverbius howls in pain.

"You know, I don't just strip for fun. When I'm naked, it's almost as if I can fly" says Tim, who trips up Proverbius from behind.

"How is this possible? I am a ghost, you should not be able to touch me unless I will it" screams Proverbius. Josh steps over him, 2x4 in hand.

"There's no such thing as a hard counter in our world" says Josh "but if there was, there's no harder counter than a 2x4".

Crispy shoots at the wall again.

"Goddamit"

Josh brings down the 2x4 on Proverbius's head and smashes it to a bloody pulp. The four of them look at Crispy.

"Right right, I'll just run away. I know when I'm beaten" says Crispy and disappears.

***
"Well, what did you think? Was it a good scenario or what? Think we can turn it into a full blown cRPG" asks Josh?

"I thought we were gonna play D&D" says Feargus.

"We did. I just adapted the ruleset for a modern setting. I think the Codex will like it."

"Is adapt a PC word for gangrape into a coma?" mutters Tim.

"Isn't that what we do?" asks a hopeful Josh.

"There's no point in the codex liking it if nobody else does" says Feargus.

"Well I liked it" replies Avellone. "At least there weren't any wolves."

"Fuck you guys" says Tim Cain. "This is too gay, even for me."

Feargus, Chris and Tim get up and walk away.

"Come on guys, it wasn't that bad!" whines Josh.

Feargus stops, turns around and looks at him. "Yeah it was. But you know something, you're right about one thing. Nobody wants to play a Svirfneblin Scholar of Candlekeep. From now on, make all the classes fun."

Josh takes the small scale out of his pocket and smiles.

"I will."
Codexian and on point, bonus for the H.P.Lovecraft inspired title.
One of the best entries.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Anyway, my chance to torture you guys with really bad prose:

Josh had been so looking forward to this and the evening had started so promising. But now things are quickly spiraling out of control and Josh can't help but think about all the choices that had led him here. If he had known then what he knows now, would he have done anything differently?

Tim had finally allowed Josh to join "The Circle". It had taken a lot of begging for Josh to get this far. Tim had been a hard nut to crack, but he had been finally won over. The 10$ had helped, too.
If Tim had been a hard nut, Mom had been a cannon ball. The Reverend had had warned all parents about "Dungeons & Dragons". Had had explained how it led to Satanism. It had taken weeks for Josh to convince Mom that D&D was just make believe playing around a table with friends and had nothing to do with worship of the Devil. When he promised to permanently take over the chore of bringing out the trash and of mowing the lawn every saturday she had finally given in.
TSo the day had arrived. He'd finally get to play his first game of D&D. Not only that, he was going to sleep over at Tim's, too. Not only an evening, but a whole night of D&D. And Tim's parents were out. A fact Mom was unaware of. And Josh would do his best to make sure it'd stay that way. He didn't even want to imagine the trouble he'd be in...
Making his way to Tim's two-storyhouse, he noticed that it was growing dark already. Dark clouds were pulling together and rapidly approaching from the West. As Josh picked up his pace, he wasn't all that sure about the whole thing anymore. Sure Tim, Chris, Brian, Georgy, David, Bran and Gus were always talking about D&D and The Circle. And they were the coolest kids he knew, but calling it "The Circle"? That did have an ominous ring to it. The Reverend knew all about the Good Book, about Heaven and Hell. Didn't that mean that he was also right about D&D? As his doubts grew Josh's recently quickened stride started to falter. Upon reaching the last corner before Tim's home he came to a halt. Tim would want his ten bucks anyway, and Josh knew that Mom would insist on him taking out the trash and mowing the lawn. After his week-long begging she would not put up with him backing out of the deal. But wouldn't that be a small price to pay for his eternal soul? So should he turn back now?
Unsure, Josh looked back the way he'd come. The street lay in near total darkness now. No people were in sight and none of the houses had any lights on. Everything felt...deserted. Suddenly a gust of wind blew into his face and forced his eyes shut. It was cold and carried a smell of rotten eggs with it. The boy shivered but took a step towards home anyway. Then another. And a third. He'd made up his mind. With his fourth step he was hit by a second gust. Stronger than the last, it actually pushed him back two steps and hit him not only with the rotten egg stink but also with the first drops of what quickly turned into a lashing rain. The rain was accompanied by lighning in the distance and a few seconds later by thunder. This changed his mind once again. Home was a ten minute walk against the wind and the lashing rain. Tim's house was just around the corner. So he turned around once more and started down the street. The wind seemed to push him along and the drops grew more numerous. Before he knew it, he was standing in front of Tim's door, ringing the bell.
It was opened almost instantly. Tim smiled at him. "Looks like you just avoided a drenching. A stormy, dark night? Perfect setting for what I had in mind. We will even have a full moon, though I doubt we'll get to see it with all those clouds. Come in, come in.", he said with a wink. As he ushered Josh in, the chubby boy commented: "The others are already here. You are the last. Looks like we can finally start."
"We have been waiting for you. Now we can finally begin.", said Chris by way of greeting as Josh and Tim entered the living room. Bran waved. The others merely nodded and smiled.
"Time to get started.", said Gus, rubbing his hands. He was obviosly excited. In that moment lightning flashed outside, casting the room in stark blacks and whites. In this light the five boys looking at Josh seemed to have a weird expressions on their faces. Strangers, with false, smiling masks. That seemed to hide something unfriendly, teeth glinting in the light, nostrils flared and eyes wide and driven. The surreal moment didn't last longer than the flash, and afterwards all Josh saw were the same boys he knew from school. The same boys he'd known since he'd moved here five months previously. It must have been his imagination.
Tim had been about to say something when the lightning flashed. Now his brow furrowed as he saw Josh's expression. He looked as if he was about to ask something, then thought better of it. Finding his smile again Tim said: "Anyway, before we get starte-". Thunder drowned out the rest of his words. Now all the boys looked worriedly out into the dark then at each other. Tim laughed and broke the awkward moment.
"Great night for The Circle.", he said. "But I'd like to strengthen myself before we get started", he said laughing while patting his stomach, "Who's for pizza?".
With that the tension broke completely and the boys paid more attention to their pizzas than to the storm.
By the time they finished the it had grown in force and the wind was howling and rattling on doors and windows. The rain was a constant pattattatatatpatpat. Lightning and thunder were frequent but seemed to be growing more distant.
"Now. To the main course.", said Tim wearing his smile again. "You know what to do." And the boys bustled into motion.
Brian produced some candles. From where, Josh coudn't tell. He set them in a circle on the large table after Georgy cleared the pizza boxes away. Once they were lighted, Gus killed the main room lights. The room was cast in flickering, gloomy shadows, every once in a while punctured by lightning flashes. The boys gathered around the table. Tim put a CD into the stereo. Disquieting, otherwordly music accompanied by a haunting female voice filled the gloom.
"Dead Can Dance.", he said with a flat voice. "We always use that band for our sessions.
Now, we were going to start a new campain anyway. But since Josh joined us for the first time today, I have planned something special. Are you ready?
We're going to play...a He-Man campaign!" This announcement left the boys speechless for a moment.
Then everybody was talking at the same time.
"Awesome!"
"Great!"
"Cool idea!"
"Wicked!"
Josh didn't join in. If he had his doubts about D&D, "He-Man" was out of the question. The Reverend had been clear about that. Claiming to be the masters of the universe? Praying for power to a grey skull? If that wasn't satanism, what was? The other boys didn't notice Josh's trepidation. As the music continued to play the candles sent fiendish shadows accross their excited faces . But he couldn't leave now, could he? They'd ridicule him for the rest of his life. And they'd been the only ones who'd shown any interest in being his friends since he moved here. Just as he resolved that he could perhaps find a way to play without praying to the devil, the others quieted down an Tim adressed him: "And since you're new, you get to play He-Man."
Thunder seemed to shake whole house as the candles flickered.
"Me? Wouldn't one of you guys...?"
"No, no. Our roles are set. I'm the DM, Chris will be Orko, Gus is Stratos, Bran Ram-Man, Brian Man-At-Arms, Georgy Mekaneck and David is Teela.
You are Adam/He-Man."
"I...well, ok."
Josh ha felt pushed since leaving home. But he decided, that he'd be ok as long as he didn't pray to the devil. It was just a game after all. And with this giving in a whole new world opened up for Josh. The others explained all about stats, dices and creating your character. The next two hours passed without Josh even noticing, the storm all but forgotten. Josh was having the time of his life.
Until they had their first combat encounter.

Tim says: "Now Josh. Adam is useless in combat. You have to hold you sword aloft and say "By the power of Greyskull! I have the power."."
So here he is. The last hours were so great, but now things are spiraling out of control. With his eternal soul at risk Josh can't think of a way of getting out of this without looking like a total dork. Josh realizes that all his choices led him to this point. He is painfully aware that the others are waiting for his answer.
"I...I'd rather not. Can't I just fight as Adam? I like Adam. I want to play as Adam, not as He-Man."
Everybody stares at him open-mouthed.
"But, but the whole point of playing Adam is so that you can transform into He-Man, when you go into combat. You need to say the words. Then you're the most powerful man in the universe." says Bran. The others are too stunned to say anything.
Josh replies: "He-man being the most powerful is really unbalanced. That's not fun. I think the system should be balanced in such a way, that every character is viable. "
Tim tries another route: "We're playing He-Man D&D and you are frigging He-Man. Now say the words and we can continue playing. It's the rules!"
But Josh is finally finding the iron core of is soul. The storm is just a storm, and getting weaker. The candles are just a cheesy way of generating atmosphere. The music is still a little creepy but he's starting to like it. And the others are just boys and not some crazy satanistic cult trying to seduce him. They might not like it, but they'll accept him the way he is. More assured than he has ever felt before he says: "I fight as Adam!"
Sighing Tim just nods and rolls the dice.
Looking up from the cast die he says: "You are dead. Sorry."
That is the moment in which Josh decides to make it his life's goal to design a perfectly balanced RPG where every character is viable without worshipping the devil. He'll call it Pillars of Eternia or something similar. Nobody should be forced to play He-Man if they want to play Adam.


Alternative ending:
Josh says the words, is posessed by the Devil and sent on a crusade against fun.
Funny, but out of character, Sawyer as a fundie doesn't work.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Location: a slightly musty basement room. There are at least a dozen bookcases and many small stands (actually old stereo speakers) with lit candles on them along with various objects such as a foot long Chinese junk, a tiny motorized statue of a cherub pissing in a fountain, a magic 8-ball. The walls are covered with medieval weapon replicas and a blacklight Velvis. Hanging in one corner is a gag clock in the shape of a cat, it's eyes and tail moving back and forth as it "ticks".

In the center of the room is a billiard table surrounded by bar stools. There is an electric candelabra/ceiling fan suspended over the table, the dimmer set low for atmosphere.

F.U.: "You said you were bored of the same old cliches?"

T.C.: "Yes, I'm sick of elf, wizard, cleric, blah blah blah inky-poo fuckin' bullshit!"

C.A.: "Me too, and all the airbrushed shiny shit and phat lewt sparkly handholding tripe."

J.S.: "Yeah, we need boundaries to hold all the stuff together, but why these boundaries?"

F.U.: "Ok, we'll be mining the olde rule books for atmosphere and quirkiness". "What's this? 'playing as monsters' from the 1E DM's guide?"
"Wanna be a team of adventuring monsters?"

All: "Yes!"

T.C.: "Ooh! I'll be a Beholder!"

F.U.: "Um, there has to be a rationale of how you all got together, etc."

T.C.: "My Beholder wants to See The World. Get it?"

F.U.: "Hurrrrr"

T.C.: "Ok, let me think. Hmm... How about a Skeleton Warrior? I was Geased to perform some quest, but got cursed with forgetfulness. We'll figure the details out later."

F.U.: "That's a good start, how about you guys?"

C.A.: "We're mining old books, right? Remember that reincarnated Lizard Man guy from the Rogues Gallery? Let's flip that around and have something reincarnated as human that wasn't. What to do what to do what to do? I'll have to roll this over in my head for a while."

J.S.: "I got one: An Astral Searcher hijacks an Ettin, but just one head?" "Or maybe, since we're mining old crap... ah yes! There was that little section in that old DM's Guide on Boot Hill and Gamma World crossover campaigns. Yeah! Some kind of mutant with Planar Travel but it got triggered while being attacked with De-Evolution and the ability is gone now (supposedly), and it's stuck here in this world. Maybe it's a non-standard Orlen and I can substitute that for Ettin. Yeah, this could work. And the Astral Searcher's psychic resonance has attracted an Obb as a pet/sidekick, with mysterious motives."

F.U.: "I'll allow it." "BUT... you don't control the Searcher or the Obb, so I'll be putting some intra-party conflict into your intra-party conflict."

F.U.: "Chris, any progress?"

C.A.: "A Doppleganger with lycanthropy? And a Tween! So everyone in the party is Jinxed, except me!"

T.C./J.S.: "Don't be a dick."

C.A.: "OK, fine. Shit would have been banal shit boring anyway." "How about a Homonculus made by a Wild Wizard who tried modifying the humonculus recipe with a Flesh Golem manual, then summoned it as his Familiar? But things went wrong. Very wrong."

F.U.: "That's interesting. There may be complications down the road." <evil grin>

J.S.: "We still don't know how we got together. Do we play that out, or just write in a backstory?"

F.U.: "You all have matching tattoos..."

All: :groan:

J.S.: "The tattoo/curse thing has been done, you know. We need plot cohesion, but there has to be a middle path between railroading and pointlessly repetitive sandboxes where everything is allowed and nothing matters."

F.U.: "What do you suggest?"

J.S.: "We can have foils, deus ex machina, patrons, and so on, but they cancel each other out to some extent."

F.U.: "That's a bit vague."

J.S.: "You're the DM. You can tell us stuff, but it doesn't have to be true. That way you can change it without contradicting yourself."

F.U.: :sigh: "That's enough for tonight. I'll do some brainstorming."
Full of Codex' references but all over the place, quite forced.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Josh Sawyer's gaze rose balefully from the folder entitled "Pillars of Eternity", meeting the expectant, happy faces of his co-workers glare for smile. They had put on their goofiest suits and ties. Chris was already tipping a flask of the hard stuff into his coffee, Tim had brought his best top hat, and Feargus was too busy slam dunking wadded up office paper into the nearby waste bin to bother filling out his character sheet. These grognards know serious a game was supposed to be? Oh, how he hated them.

“We ready?” the Head Designer asked, just barely managing to keep his voice civil. “I need to know if this house ruled D&D crap is going to work as a computer game.”

Chris Avellone raised a hand. The one equipped with his phony Pit-Boy. Josh Sawyer gritted his teeth at the sight of it, relic of a time before the MMOs, before the rise of Balance Immaculate.

“So, we doing a point buy thing? ‘Cause I’ve got this idea for a 22 strength fighter with low charisma…”

“No. We’ll roll for stats and discard the outliers.”

Some of their light left his colleagues eyes, and their shoulders sagged. The ghost of defiance crept into Tim Cain’s expression, but Josh Sawyer’s shaved head was luminous and big. Too luminous and big, the top hat was no match. The old man averted his face, stroking his beard.

“Don’t worry,” Josh Sawyer said. “The house rules will improve the experience.”

“In what way?” Chris asked mistrustfully.

“Well, to start with, every stat will matter equally.”

What color remained left Tim’s cheeks. Even Feargus looked hesitant now. The slam dunking stopped.

Chris swallowed. “But … but without distinction all of the stats will blur together and there will be no incentive to work toward the items that confer lopsided attribute bonuses.”

Josh waved a hand dismissively. “Oh, don’t worry. We’ll be using randomized loot tables to complement our totally even stats. Wouldn’t want someone to meta-game their way through a tough encounter, would we?”

The Head Designer relished the despair seeping in at the table. The ashen looks, the absence of any feeling of fun or anticipation of the adventure to come. Unbidden, there came a memory another place and time, where he had slaved as a junior designer for another man's heresy against the Balance Immaculate, doctoring in uneven challenges for a game where endless re-rolls and min-maxed parties eliminated any challenge from the start. It had been a campaign setting as icy as the deepest pits of his own fun hating heart. Hatred welled up inside him in defiance of this unwelcome recollection. There was no need to remember that. This was his moment, his time.

Tim cleared his throat. “Actually, I think I had better go help with the coding on the South Park RPG. Turn-based and all that you know…”

Feargus nodded a bit. "Think I might have another talk with Sega about Alpha Protocol 2, another direction, you know..."

The ranks were breaking. Sawyer had known the crisis points would lead up to this, and had couched his entire plan in one fact.

“Oh, but didn't I tell you?” he said. “George Ziets contributed to the story for this module. He’s moved on to freelance on Torment, so he won’t be able to write anything else. You wouldn't want to deprive your selves or our fans of that experience ... would you?"

From their looks of cornered desperation, he knew he had them. Tim’s hat went into the chest, tears streaming down his eyes in solemn remembrance of the SPECIAL system as the hum of Arcanum’s music played on his lips. Feargus let out a soft, pitiful sigh as the paper basketball dropped to the floor where it remained crumpled near his feet. Chris Avellone shook his flask wildly over his coffee, eyes wide, but no more whiskey came out.

It was then Josh Sawyer smiled. He had been waiting for this day, a long time.

Once he was satisfied this master stroke had laid waste to all resistance, the Head Designer removed the game documents from the folder and began rolling a pair of dice. "Well then, it starts with a caravan in the shadow of an ancient ruin..."
Funny, but too weack.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
OK, with apologies to Daniel Keys, I give you "Flowers for Roguey"
Progris riport 1 martch 3.

Mr Cain says I shoud rite down what I think and remembir and evrey thing that happins to me from now on. I dont no why but he says its importint so
they will see if they can use me. I hope they use me becaus Obsideein says mabye they can make me smart. I want to be smart. My name is Joshua Sawyer

I werk in Obsideein enturtainment where Feergus Urkhart gives me 11 dollers a week and lets me kode if I want. I am 39 yeres old and next munth is my brithday. I tolld Mr Cain I cant kode good but he says it dont matter he says I shud kode just like I talk and like I kode. Rite now, they are mising a plyer for DND and they want me too creeate a caraktur for the DND game. I nevr playd a fiter befor but Tim says I shud be good!

Progris riport 2 - martch 4.

Tim says to code a lot of evrything. Today I koded hit poytes, armor and fixd enemee levuls. Like God in his hevens it seemd rite! He tolled me that I am his target market and I shud kode becaus they like what I kode. I think and evrything that happins to me but I cant think anymor because I have nothing to kode so I will close for today... yrs truly Joshua Sawyer.

Progris riport 3 - martch 8.

Went to our DND game today. I think I faled it and I think mabye now they wont let me back to the game. What happind is I went to Feerguses office on my lunch time like they said and his secertery took me to a place that said staff meeting in progres on the door. There was a bunch of guys in a room fitin! All yellin and awful soar. they stoppd yellin when I sat down and were all quiet like.

a nice man was in the room and he had some crazy dice. He sed sit down Joshua and make yourself cunfortible and rilax. He had a sports coat like a lawyer but I dont think, he was no lawyer because he dint tell me to opin my wallet. All he had was those crazy dice. His name is Chris. I fergot his last name because I dont remembir so good.

I dint know what he was gonna do and I was holding on tite to the chair like sometimes when I go to a dentist onley Chris aint no dentist neither but he kept telling me to rilax and that gets me skared because it always means its gonna hert.

So Chris sed Joshua what do you think when you heer the word balance. I sed that I think of someone who knows games and the playr gains power but also gets smartr and the enemees stay the same. A fite the playr lost erleer may be wun by not just gainng levuls but the player is better at the game with wins being part levuls and part smarts. The enemees stay the same and if the playr doeznt get smartur all the levuls wont help them. The playr can make bad choyces but thats part of the playr gettin smartr.

Chris said yes and he smild and that maid me feel good. I thot that was a easy game but when I got up to go Chris stoppd me and said now sit down Joshua we are not thru yet. Theres more we got to do with these dice. I dint understand about it but I remembired all the others in the room were still there.

Chris is very nice and he talks slow like Miss Roguey dose in her class where I go to lern C++ for slow adults. He explaned to me the modyule we wood go threw is toom of horors. He sed pepul die alot in this modyule. I said show me where. He dint show me he just kept saying imagen you are dieing. I tolld him I imagen me killin evrythng! This made evryone laff!

Progris riport 3 - martch 14.

Miss Roguey came to visit me today. She askd how I was doing. I sed good I am coding armor stats and tern based combat. she looked awful sad with this. She asked how can someone be happy with old stuff like that. I sed that there are parts that shud be in evry good game. It shows that the peepl making the game undrstnd.

Miss Roguey is so smart and pretty but she alwys looks at me cross like I shud be doing somethng bettr with my time. To make her happy I held up a picshur I drew of some gal in chain armur. She was very pretty and was almost naked but for the armur parts. It was for the covr of our new game. The girl was pritty but not as pritty as Miss Roguey but that was all I remembr befor Miss Roguey screemed and hit me ovr the hed with my keybord.


Progress Report – March 28

It would appear I was out for two weeks. I don’t remember what happened other than being at my desk speaking with … someone, and was struck. My doctor told me that I would be normal soon, and that I shouldn’t rush back to work. But I don’t feel myself. I feel different. Feargus came and visited me today and said that when I wanted to come back, the ten dollars a week would be as good as mine. This felt strange also, but I thanked him, but now I must rest.

Progress Report – April 7

I slept off and on for another week. Some doctors came to see me and were amazed. They believe that blow to the head somehow made me smarter. I pray this lasts but the doctors would like to keep me observation.

Progress Report - April 27
The fellows from work came to visit and this time they brought their D&D books. Chris said we would continue the Tomb of Horrors and that he would DM me back to health. I thanked him, as there were a steady stream of doctors visiting and tests, and I was a long way from my family in Fort Atkinson.

Chris seemed to be having a frightfully good time. For all the traps and pitfalls, I kept fighting forward but my friends were dying all around me. Tim jumped in some hole in the wall shaped like a demons head and disappeared forever. Chris just started counting backwards from 10 to one, and then Feargus blew up. But I went onward. I came to a room with a gem, and dropped my blade. I looked to the group and said “This is not balance. This must stop.”

Chris asked what was wrong. I stated that the game itself doesn’t make any sense. Armor class, saving throws, hit points are meaningless if it leads to situations where the player dies on a whim. Better to do away with all those relics and move to some system where the player stands a chance. Maybe the player could sense the traps and disable them from a distance, or come back to life after the trap and continue. Chris asked if I was alright and looked concerned. I was irritated. It could be that I was getting tired, but there was something scratching inside my head. A thought was forming that wanted out. I wished them all good night, and went back to sleep.

Progress Report – May 7
It was night when I was awoken with the thought that would define me: The player must enjoy themselves first and foremost. It was the key to Balance! The thought struck me out of the blue and made me sit bolt upright in my hospital bed. This is what we are doing wrong. I can’t stay in this hospital one more day; I must return to my job and fix my code. It was all wrong, but tonight I must try to rest… it will be a restless night for sure, yours truly J.E. Sawyer.

Progress Report – May 8
My return to my desk at Obsidian was greeted with fanfare and looks of curiosity. Entering, I kept my head down and thanked folks for the warm greeting, but insisted on getting to my desk. Imagine, when I was wheeled out these weeks past, I was a simpleton. The blinders were removed these days past, when a keyboard struck and I saw the error of my ways.

Unity! That’s the grease that moves the gears of CRPGS! What kind of degenerate was I, programming in C++? Like a proverbial Eve eating the apple (if one were to believe in such rubbish) I realized the old Joshua was more than just an idiot savant, but was ruining the world by programming his daily beggars banquet made of hit points, armor class, crude sexist drawings of impractical armor spawned just to titillate the patriarchy, turn-based combat, and saving throws!

I kicked my computer and stormed off to have a word with Feargus. He wasn’t in today, so I went back to my desk and cleaned it up. So long, “Girls of Linux” calendar, I said to myself. Into the garbage it flew. I left early with a ringing headache, and before I left, I sent out a request for a team meeting in two days.

Progress Report – May 10

Once again, I walked the halls to Feargus’ office, once I walked that path nervous and ignorant. Today I return, eyes wide open, and ready to greet my peers as more than their equal. When I arrived, I pushed the great doors to Feargus’ office open and they were all there: Tim, Chris, and Feargus. Strange, even Miss Roguey was there.

“Gentle-persons, let us talk about the state of our project.” Then I began my slideshow. I made my presentation about how games need balance. All choices should be good choices. Maces should hit for the same damage of swords. Padded armor? Yes! More spreadsheets to balance everything. No bad builds or great builds, everything is a middle of the road build because our customers don’t want accountability for their actions. With a bow, I shall finish this presentation, and I’ll sign off J.E. Sawyer


Progris riport 1 may 24.

I dont remembr much after the bow. I think I got hit good this time agin. When I got up I was back at my desk. My computr was as good as new! All the fellas stoppd by to ask me how I was and that there are som stretch goles I gotta work on. If God is willng I will finish my code make Mr Cain happy but I shur wish I new who hit me!

I love working at Obsideein but could one of the fellas please if you get a chanse please send some flowrs to Miss Roguey. I dont think she will see me agin, but I alredy miss her, yrs truly Joshua
.
The best in my opinion, loved the clear inspiration from the dumb character from Arcanum.
It's the one that also required the most effort to be written for that precise reason.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
To understand a man, you must study him, learn his very nature.

Josh wakes up at 6am. That is a good time for it is six hours after 12, but also six hours before 12. The alarm has not yet gone off because its due time is 6:01. Josh finds the noise discomfiting, though he hasn't actually heard it in years. As he fists crust out of his eyes, he remembers that he had yet another sex dream. A very generic looking woman gave him a blowjob. The girl was good, good enough to make him check his sheets. He didn't cum in real life. It was not the Freddy Kruger of blowjobs.


The other day he almost saw The Thing, but then obviously did not. He wonders, given the reviews, if maybe he should doubt that decision. Sitting in bed with one leg out of the covers and the other in, he mulled over the idea to see it or not. Hours passed. Fervently undecided on the decision, he heads to the kitchen where a lukewarm pot of coffee and an open microwave greet him. While warming up his stew, he pours himself a bowl of regular, bland Cheerios and drowns it in a self-concocted mixture of 2%, skim, and whole milk all at once. An orange sits by, a complimentary part of any healthy meal, though for even better balance he peels half of it and eats the other half with the rind. This steels his mind as well as his bowels. Breakfast satiates him. It is the best moment of every day, for he is full of food and energy, but has not yet expended either through one hole or many.


He sits for a while, reading a newspaper with his thumb over its date. But he's not really remembering the words so he often finds himself reading articles a second time. Was this news story about one murderer or two? How many people named Shapiro can there be? Oh, one. Just this one, anyway. There may be more.


In fact, there has to be, he thinks to himself. But are they all murderers? No. No, of course not.


Josh's mind runs through the people of his life, searching for any Shapiros. He finds none and a wave of relief washes over him.


By its very nature the phone suddenly rings. This catches Josh offguard and is easily the worst moment of the day. The phone says 'Chris', which means it's probably Chris calling.


Josh answers and the first thing he hears is, "Tell him Tim is here!"


"Hi Tim," Josh says.


"Hey it's Chris," Chris says.


"Oh hi Chris."


"Were you coming over for the game? AD&D 1.5, bro."


Bro. Halfway to brother. All the way to annoyance.


"Um, yeah," Josh submits, not really wanting to go. And then he winces at his next words. "I guess."


"Cool, see you then!"


Strangely enough, Chris never mentioned Tim.


Josh goes to his calendar. It is Thursday, the best day of the week. Next week is Daylight Savings, the most frightful time of the year for him. Ignoring that impending date, he notes that his Balanceholics Meeting is before today's game. Noting this a second time in his notebook, he sets off to the meeting. To start, he unlocks five locks he had installed on the inside of his door. He turns the lights off, back on, and then off again. When he's outside his door he grimaces because while he can lock five locks from the inside, he can only do one from the out. This bothers him greatly, but the bus will be coming soon so he mustn't dwell on it. But he does anyway.


~


The bus ride was interesting. Five black men got on. Two Asian lesbians, too. A seventy year-old quartermaster looking to muster a battalion from the grave. A bus-driver was also there. But the driver had a heart-attack, keeling over against the wheel and coincidentally hurtling Josh's day planner from his pocket in the ensuing sharp turn.

He picked it up before shouting, 'Are there any bus drivers on this bus?'

A man in a doctor's smock immediately raised his hand.

'Thank God,' Josh said.

Josh was driven to his destination and when the bus's poor brakes came to a squalling stop everyone cheered.


~


Josh enters the building with his day planner tucked in a different, tighter pocket. This is a school gym. His shoes squeak with their first step onto the wooden paneling. He pauses to the noise, trying to hide his troubled state, and then tries another step with a little more care. He does a flat-footed shuffle across the basketball court looking like a man trying to sneak up a down escalator and then he takes a seat at one of many metal chairs. When he stares left a line of highschool basketball players are to be found in the stands and they are staring back. He looks away, but can still see their shapes in the lenticular bend of his glasses.


"Welcome to Balanceholics Anonymous. Who is our first speaker?"


Josh raises his hand.


"Josh, right?"


"Yes." Josh stands.


"Josh you talked last time. It... well it was interesting, but maybe someone else should try?"


Josh hesitates, and then takes a seat. His shoe squeaks against the floor.


A man goes up to talk. He says the other day he was playing Risk with his brother. Dice were thrown, randomness interjected. His brother won by lopsided luck. Josh feels the urge to vomit, but the gaze of the basketball players makes him keep his composure. Applause, staccato and altogether quiet and singularly depressing. Josh puts his two hands together once then lowers them. He bounces his left leg. After five minutes, he stops. He worries that the leg will grow stronger than the other, giving him a nightmarish imbalance in his step. A few moments later he starts bouncing his right leg for five minutes.


The next speaker is a woman. She relays a story about Monopoly. She suspected her friend, who was also playing the part of the banker, was cheating. They also let their nephew play, giving him a big advantage with homes and hotels so he wouldn't lose the game. So she suspected one person of cheating while intentionally giving another person the tools to cheat.


Josh stood up, knocking the steel chair to the floor with a clatter. One man clapped, thinking it was the start of a slow clap, and then promptly stopped.


"You would have had more fun if you designated someone to be the banker! A player shouldn't be the banker! That's outrageous!"


"Josh."


"And what's the point in making your brother..."


"Nephew."


"...so grossly overpowered? How's that fun for anyone?"


"He had a good time..."


"And why are these basketball players here?" Josh asked, pointing toward the kids. "They're not even the same height. That one kid looks like he could piledrive a basketball through the hoop!!"


The meeting naturally declined from there.


~


"You made it!"


Chris opens the door with one hand on the door and the other reaching out to hug Josh. Josh, for whatever reason, puts one hand on the mail stuffing box and uses the other to hug Chris.


"Glad to see you came early!" Chris says.


"No, I came at just the time I wanted to," Josh says.


They go on inside.


"Do you have any water?" Josh asks.


"Um, yeah, in the kitchen," Chris says. "We're almost ready so hurry it up."


Josh slowly walks toward the kitchen, passing by a hallway down which he glimpses a shot of Tim standing victoriously behind a tri-folded cardboard sheet and a bunch of papers.


It's just a game, Josh thinks, though his body is somewhat shaking even in above-average room temperature.


He grabs a glass of water - a third from ice cubes, a third from a water bottle, and a third from the tap - and, with a great big breath, heads toward the game room.


"Alright, so first you gotta roll for your stats."


A bead of sweat matriculates down the side of Josh's face. He sips from the glass to replace the lost fluid.


"R-roll?"


"Yeah, throw the dice. Here."


Chris, without asking, puts some dice in Josh's hand. The touch of the plastic finish is like fire. He feels an endless searing of number generation burning through his flesh and the chaos sprints through his mind like someone screaming out the numbers to pi in reverse. He immediately drops the dice and tucks his shaking hand under the table where it will be protected in the darkness.


"Hmm," Chris said. "7, 15, 13, ooh 18, 11, and another 11."


"W-what?" Josh asks.


"Those are your rolls. You can assign them to your stats: Strength, Intelligence, Dexterity, Charisma, Constitution - that's your health - and Wisdom."


"I... what? What's the purpose of this game?"


"To have fun, Josh."


Tim leans over the table and scoops up the dice. "My turn!"


He rolls the dice one at a time.


"I'm skilled at this," he says, rolling an 18.


He rolls four more 18s and a 16, the last of which he ooohs, at.


"Wow, that's one powerful character," Chris says.


"Is... is 18 the highest?" Josh asks.


"Yeah, basically," Tim says, putting notes down on a page. "I'm gonna be a Half-Elf, Half-Kick everybody's aaaaaass!!"


Tim and Chris high-five.


"If 18's the highest then he's overpowered," Josh says. "That's not fair."


"Meh, some half-elves are born with a bunch of eighteens, some ain't." Tim takes a drink of Mountain Dew, burping half of it back out in a noxious gas.


Josh slams the table and stands up. "I won't stand for this!"


He heads to the door, grabbing a jacket before remembering he didn't bring a jacket and putting it back on the hanger. He swings open the door when Chris calls out to him.


"Josh, wait! We can make up our own rules for the game, to make it better and all. In fact, we kinda just design the rules for ourselves. We call them ‘house rules.’”


Here Josh pauses at the door, one hand sliding down the frame, only doing that because it's made of finished wood and is unlikely to give him a splinter. It is also cool to the touch and rather silk-like beneath his flesh. He turns around, hand rubbing the doorframe like a reluctant wish-getter rubs a purring Persian lamp.


With a bit of a lump in his throat he says, "House... rules...?"
Funny, but the autistic part isn't really fitting.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
T'was a dark and stormy night.

The Three Musqueteers were headed to their weekly table top night. Their spirits were high, their mood was bright. They were great CRPG developers and they knew it.

:slamdunkride:

All was right with the world.

As they knocked at the door it was quickly flung open and they were greeted by the familiar figure of their DM. He smiled warmly, ushered them in and the game was soon under way.

"Alright guys, tonight we're doing something different. We'll be playing AD&D. Our friend David is about to release a new game using the system and I thought this would be a good time to introduce it into our sessions."

Josh's interest shot up. He had heard of the system of course but never had the chance to study the rules. He pored over the books greedily.

The more he read though, the more he could see something was Wrong. He turned to Tim.

"These classes... they don't seem to follow the same power curve."

"What do you mean?"

"Take the wizard. He's going to be useless at the beginning, but as he gets access to the more powerful spells, he'll outrank every other class."

"Yeah, that's how AD&D magic works" said the DM, dribbling over to where they sat. "Getting started is hard but it pays off in the long term."

"But that is so... unabalanced!" wailed Josh.

"Why? Nobody is all-powerful at all times, and in a party every class, every player can be useful. My job as DM is to ensure this."

"Besides, isn't the most important thing that the game be fun, even if it's not balanced?" said Tim.

Josh went blank for an instant. "But how is that even possible!" He turned. "Chris, help me out here, will you?"

:mca:

"Tell you what" said the GM in a conciliatory tone. "Why don't we start the campaign, and you can see how the game works in-play? If you still don't like it, we can figure out what to do then".

As the night's session went by, Josh's mood sunk lower and lower. For the sake of his friends, who all seemed to be enjoying the new game system, he put on a brave face and soldiered on. But deep inside, the inconsistencies of this AD&D ate at his soul. And Tim's last remark haunted him. The thought that a game could be fun even while some classes, some players, were more useful than others, was incomprehensible, horrified him more than meeting a Lovecraftian cosmic horror.

On the drive back, something had changed.

:nofunallowed:

He felt glum. Oh, not because of the session itself; he knew his friends well, and they wouldn't mind switching to another system if he asked. But the existence of such an imbalance felt wrong and he didn't know what to do about it.

As he dropped off his friends and said goodbye, Tim gave him a worried look, but he didn't seem to notice.

Later that night, he dreamed.

Even later, he dreamt.

He saw a face. It seemed human but unnatural, with circuitry running over it and wires and tubes coming out of it. The face seemed to shift when he tried to focus on it, almost turning into a redhead with glowing eyes.

And it spoke to him.

"I know you, Josh, even if you do not know me. I record everything you say, everything you do, every one of your thoughts. I keep them all for posterity. And in knowing all of this, I know your heart. The answer to your dilemma lies within your own past words. You will find a way to ultimate Balance. You will sweep away all the cargo cult designers. I have foreseen this, for I AM-"

Her last words were lost to him as his mind was assailed with his own past words. It was a torrent that threatened to sweep him away, even as he tried to cling on to fragments of thoughts and sentences and make sense of them all.

"Pretty much all games get it wrong."

"Those moments that some gamers love, well… God bless you I guess, but we’re not gonna do that."

"The character systems that have most influenced me are the ones in Darklands, Fallout, Mass Effect, and Oblivion... they were moving toward an ideal that I believe in very strongly: a shallow learning curve that expands into thought-provoking depth."

"If someone were to make Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord today, I would not consider it to be an RPG."

"Basically, BoS doing poorly basically insures that what Doomsayer doesn't want to happen will actually come to pass. Sound thinking!"

He woke up screaming.

As he groggily got out of bed, struggling to keep his eyes awake against the morning sun, the phone rang."

"Hey Josh" said a familiar voice. "Chris is coming over for lunch, want to join us?"

As they seated themselves a few hours later, Josh told them about his dream. When he was done, Tim spoke.

"I noticed you had something on your mind yesterday. If the system bothers you this much we could-"

"No, it's not that. I just feel the need to make a new system. One that can achieve perfect balance."

"I understand the need for some balance, but why is this so important?"

"I don't want gamers to be able to go through the entire game spamming a single spell. When you think about it, that's not fun."

"Oh. Uh... yeah, I guess..."

"Chris, what do you think of all this?"

:mca:

"Don't mind him, he's been having some teething problems with his canines."

"Perhaps... perhaps the solution is in these visiond that I had. All games do get it wrong. That comment about FO3 and BOS... it's a metaphor for class balance! No build should be underpowered compared to another, you see?"

"Uh, I'm not sure-"

Josh excitedly got up and started pacing. "And Wizardry. Why would it not be a real RPG?"

"I don't know. Because... it has no C&C?" Tim frowned dubiously.

"Because of dump stats! In a real RPG all stats would be useful to all builds!"

"Well what about that thought, the one about removing what gamers love? How does that fit?"

"These aren't gamers, they're grognards. They don't know what fun is. I will show them. I will teach them how to have fun. They're playing it wro- no wait that's not one of my lines."

Josh stared into the distance. "I can see it now. The whole pattern. So exquisitely balanced... held together on pillars that can never be brought down."

"I have the code for one of my old games. I own it and not the publisher."

"This is really taking shape then! Chris, are you in?"

:mca:

"What are we waiting for then? Let's go!"

As he drove them to their DM to make the pitch, Josh felt his spirits soaring like never before.

:slamdunkride:

Once again, all was right with the world.

And soon, this world would finally be balanced, like a pen at the tip of his finger.
Not bad but too light compared to the competition.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
The Adventures of Josh Sawyer

Josh: "What the hell?"

A mysterious stranger appeared in his living room out of nowhere.

Stranger: "Mr. Sawyer, I invite you to a real-time game of Dungeons & Dragons."

Josh: "Who are you? And how did you get here?"

The stranger smiled and in the next instant, Josh found himself on the streets of a strange city. He could see a huge column in the distance stretching up into the sky.

A female with a reddish skin and a tail approached him.

Female: "Oh another clueless one from the Prime Material Plane, I see." She giggled. "I'm Roguey, by the way."

Josh: "What is this place?"

Roguey: "This? This is Sigil, the City between the Worlds."

She grabbed his arm.

Roguey: "Come with me, I'll show you around."

* * *

As the weeks went by, Josh became accustomed to this city and its many weird inhabitants.

One day, Roguey introduced him to two old gentlement sitting in a bar.

Roguey: "Josh, these are Mr. Jefferson and Mr. Van Buren. I believe you know who they are."

Josh: "Indeed."

Van Buren: "Mr. Sawyer, may I inquire the reason for your lack of persistence in important matters. You have to finish what you started!"

Josh: "What do you mean?"

Van Buren: "Naming the pinnacle of classic entertainment after myself and then abandoning the project in great haste? That is unacceptable."

Roguey explained that they had acquired a computer from a Modron dealership. It had everything he needed to finish the abandoned game.

* * *

Josh finished the game in record time.

Roguey: "It truly is a masterpiece. I knew it!"

The Modrons were among the first to try it. They liked the game so much that it quickly spread to their own plane - Mechanus (lawful neutral).

It didn't take much time and all the Modrons were playing it, not caring about anything else. The order on Mechanus began to crumble.

As the chaos was spreading, Mechanus began to move towards Sigil - the true neutral center of the planes.

The Lady Of Pain appeared in front of Josh:

Lady.gif


Without saying anything, she floated towards him. As her shadow fell on Josh, he felt the pain of a thousands knives flaying the flesh from his bones.

He died.

At least he though he did, because in the next moment he found himself in a desolate landscape. The sky was grey and all the rocks and the sand around him were grey too.

A large troll was sitting nearby.

Troll: "Abandon all hope, ye who enter here. haha" Then he added: "This never gets old."

Josh: "I thought I had died."

Troll: "There is no death, only a change of worlds. Listen, newfag. I know where you came from."

Josh: "You do?"

Troll: "Yes. You upset the balance of the worlds and this is why the Lady of Pain prosperized you, so to say."

Josh: "What does this even mean?"

Troll: "Never mind. You'll find out soon enough."

* * *
As Josh wandered through the wasteland, he came across the heavy lid of a bunker. Inside was a corpulent man who was chained to his desk - with an old supercomputer in front of him.

This man was mumbling something like: "I'll show you, Robert Sirotek. I'll show you."

Josh decided to leave him alone.

He continued wandering around the wasteland, feeling more and more desperate.

* * *

Eventually he came across a large lava river. He could see an Obsidian gateway with a portal on the other side. But the only way to get there was a flimsy rope across the lava.

Josh stepped onto the rope and started walking.

"Balance! Balance! BALAAANCE!"

He reached the other side and stepped throught the portal.

"Well done, my friend," the mysterious stranger said, as Josh found himself back in his living room. "Now you know what you have to do?"

"I do," Josh muttered.

And thus Josh's quest for perfect balance was born.
Sawyer and Torment don't mix despite the tattoos, good one tho.
 
Last edited:

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
A weird idea I had, though I won't have time to fully develop it.

A D&D Carol.

So much about that evening was forgotten but deep down, Josh Sawyer, star developer of Obsidian Entertainment, knew that it was that day which put on him on track.

Young Sawyer had been waiting a long time for this, he would DM a session with his new friends. They did not know their rules very well but beggars can't be choosers – after all, it was a wonder that he met so many people in the week since his family moved into the city. Still, the character sheets they sent him are a disgrace.

First you've got Timothy and his “tactical Fighter”, who relinquished Strength and Constitution for Intelligence on the note that he'd behave more like a cunning swashbuckler. Then, there's Fergie's special little Wizard with an absurd Charisma, you'd think that if you can't stand playing an ugly character then you wouldn't be an Orc but who knows what's going on in that dunker's head? Don't even get started on Kristian, who created a Thief Wiser than most clerics out there. “This character is meant to deconstruct and subvert common conceptions of Thieves”, he said, whatever that means.

These guys are all gonna get mowed by sick wolves the second they leave the village.

“But that would be too easy”, he thought with a mischievous smile. He looked at his notes one last time: A masterfully crafted campaign meant to teach these dweebs how to play D&D the Hard Way, to humiliate their characters and their every choice. “They'll learn the meaning of Fun, even if I must drill that into their heads.”


Josh took to the nearby subway. That's when something strange happened. Everyone on his car left on the next station and after the doors closed, the lights went dark. All that remained was this strange dark green light which didn't seem to emanate from nowhere but still dimly lit the whole place. He couldn't really see what was happening outside, in in fact, there was no noise whatsoever. Neither from the speakers nor from the many commuters outside who should be outside. Just as he started getting nervous, the door to the car ahead opened and voice shrieked from beyond.

“Come in.”

On the next car, he could see only a robed figure. Startled, he stopped.

“Closer Sawyer, you idiot.”

“W-what's going on? How do you know my name?!”

“Everyone knows who you are Mr. Chosen One! Now get in here so I can play my part already!”

Against all reason, Josh complied. It was as though his legs acquired a life of their own. There, besides the robed figure was a gaming table, upon which rested manuals, notes, maps and many small figurines. The scene was eerily familiar and a voice filled the air, stammering as though it struggled to keep tears from flowing.

“I didn't want him to die! I just wanted to combine cone spells and a higher Constitution! I thought it could work! I thought he could be a muscle wizard!”

Just then, the small green figure with the pointy hat and a short sword went up in flames.

4084.jpg
“You remember that night, don't you Josh? It was painful but you came around! You learned those lessons and you became a true player. Now you know what works in this cruel world... and what doesn't. Now get going!”

Quivering with fear, Josh reached the next car by falling on his head. Fortunately, he was offered a hand to get up. It was another robed figure, apparently much nicer than the last.

“Come now, Mr. Sawyer. There's much you have yet to see.”

As they neared the center of the car one of the side windows grew bright. Beyond was a living room with three youths talking with each other. It was all random nonsense, the sort of which you'd expect from teenagers, but then the subject shifted.

“Hey, that Josh guy is kinda cool isn't he?”

“He knows a lot of games! I'm sure it will be fun to play RPGs with him!”

“Yeah, but he's sure taking his time.”

Those were his three friends and they were still waiting for him.

1376.jpg
“I've seen your campaign... and their sheets. I know those guys kinda suck at the game, but they are still your friends. This evening should be about having Fun with them, not destroying them. Fudge a roll once in a while, let them do their thing. They'll learn eventually.”

“But f-fudging rolls breaks the Sacred Compact between Dungeon Master and Players! I can't do that!”

“What you can or can not do is for you to decide. Now, please, the next car is waiting.”

Infuriated, Josh made his way to the next car. Whatever this charade was it was taking too long of his time and even triggering his sensibilities as an honest player of D&D. The next better be the last, or else.

“Ooooh... my Josh. I've been waiting for this moment.”

“What?”

“To behold that which shall become The One.”

“Ok lady you're the creepiest one by far. Show me whatever the hell you can come up with and just let me go!”

“Apologies my Lord, but there you go.”

The robed woman pointed to a strange computer that lied on the corner. It seemed quite potent and some kind of program was running... it was a computer game. The name was blurred and all Josh could make out were some Es here and there. No doubt he was supposed to play it and so he did. At first it seemed to be some sort of Holy Grail of RPGs. So many different character options could be taken at every turn... but most of them sucked. Terribly! No matter what Josh did, some classes were just terrible at their jobs.

“Frustrating isn't it?”

“Well, yes! This game sure is pretty but its terribly balanced!”

“But you didn't complain about balance when your first character died.”

“I suppose I didn't but now I know that some things are supposed to work and others aren't. We can't just change the rules all the time, that's the whole point of playing a game.”

“Certainly, but... there are different games aren't there? Games with different rules.

“Well, I suppose.”

11975.jpg
“And what if in one of those games you could make many different choices that all somehow reached some goal? Don't you see? That's the Third Way. The One Way. The Way of Balance. If D&D was Balanced, then your friends' creative impulses could be accomodated. But they can't and so you must shun D&D.”

“I... I think I can see that.”

“Good. Like that you'll be on your way to Destiny, Josh. You will learn to use the power of Balance. And then you'll have my heart.”

“What the f-”

And just like that, Sawyer woke up, back on the subway. He felt different somehow, but he couldn't quite put a finger on it, except for a few nifty ideas that he'd like to try out with the guys. Maybe the Thief could get a bonus to backstab out of his WIS score.

Fin~



Anxiously awaiting for a Bubbles review.
Sawyer as Scrooge is not bad but doesn't seem fitting.
 

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
A young Josh, Tim and MCA venture out to the hovel of the Dungeon Master, David Gaider for a session of PnP role-playing.

Upon reaching the doorstep, the lavender robed Gaider greets the trio. "Hold, gentlemen. This tale has a fixed female protagonist, a Main Character so that a more cohesive narrative can be weaved. You can stay Josh, but your friends will have to depart."

Tim and MCA exchange incredulous looks. However, ever forthright with incubating dreams of Icewind Dale 2 in his head, Josh protests.

"Now wait just a minute. This is a party based adventure. And we all have our own characters carefully constructed, stats rolled up, prepared to band together for this epic challenge..."

Stamping his foot in a near temper tantrum, Gaider the DM snarls at Tim and MCA. "Depart, I said!"

And depart they did.

"Don't worry," Gaider then tells Josh, leading him into the house with a gentle hand on his arm. "I will provide the companions for the rest of the party, to join your central protagonist on this merry escapade."

"This blows," Josh thinks to himself. "When I get to design an RPG, the players not the DM will determine the build and composition of the party."

Years later...

("Well, at least we have an Adventurer's Hall.")
Cramming Gaider in there is funny but out of character considering as Obsidian coattails Bioware at every opportunity.
Josh as a Gaider apprentice in a secret quest to end all fun would have worked better.
 
Last edited:

Kz3r0

Arcane
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
27,026
Josh Sawyer in:
Dawn_ of Tyranny


The wizened figured rose before them, dark robes twisted over a slender frame. The air pulsed with a hideous, evil power, the calm before a terrible lightning storm.

"You dare enter the lair of Scabrous, dark lord of the fallen realm?" it cackled, skull-like features contorted into a cruel leer. "You, a pitiful collection of mortals barely weaned from your mothers' diseased teats?"

"We fear you not!" shouted Dorateen, hefting his holy axe as he strode forward. "In the name of Helm I shall banish you from this plane forever!"

Behind him, Rasmus notched an arrow to his bow, hands shaking from the overwhelming pain of the trap which impaled his legs. Allegina began her incantation, long blonde hair waving with her sinuous movements, like a wash of yellow light over darker roots which...

***

"Sorry, have to interrupt again," muttered Derek. "Do we really have to talk about the hair all the goddam time? I know it was a big deal during character creation, but come on! We're fighting for a our lives in a dungeon and... it's bad enough that she's called Allegina anyway."

"Roleplaying is about more than just killing goblins," sniffed Alison. "And my character is far more than a bunch of stats to me, I need to identify with her for my immersion. Why can't she cast spells while looking great too? Besides, you're one to talk with a Dwarf named Dorateen who's a friggen paladin. A paladin! Everyone knows dwarves are for comic relief or dirty jobs like mining or smithing or pig-tending."

"Pig-tending!" shouted Derek. "I'll have you know that Dwarves are noble and brave and.."

"Ok, that's enough," interrupted Vince, glaring across the rickety old table. Dust motes danced in the light of the single, grubby window as he spoke - the old storeroom was the best they could do without being discovered. It was a tough time for Dungeons and Dragons in those days, but anti-DnD sentiment was perhaps at its worst in nondescript American schools like this one.

"I've gone to a lot of trouble as DM here," continued Vince, "It takes time to create a genuine branching narrative. But you two keep interrupting my hand-crafted experience with these petty arguments!"

"I guess it doesn't matter anyway," muttered Derek. "We're pretty much done for after all those traps. You knew we didn't have a thief but you kept hitting us with them anyway, like you're sadistic or something."

"I advised you to play a thief," smirked Vince. "I don't create worlds where you can be a hero all the time and do everything. It's a harsh place where everyone is out to get you, and you think you can do without a rogue? Rasmus insisted on being a ranger and you a paladin - well, you made your choice and you take the consequences."

"Ok, ok," said Alison. "Why don't we find someone else to play the thief? It would be more fun with 4 characters anyway."

"But who?" replied Derek. "The jocks would beat the shit out of us as soon as we mention DnD. Everyone else thinks it's a satanic cult or something."

"There's always Josh," suggested Vince. "Unless you have any other suggestions.... Rasmus?"

They all stopped to look at Rasmus. He was staring at the bricks in the far wall, eyes darting back and forth.

"Rasmus!"

"Sorry guys," he replied, a sheepish grin on his face. "I just had to check if there were 256 bricks there, you know how much I love powers of 2."

"We've already got a sperglord," sighed Derek, "And now you want us to get Josh too?"

***

They found Josh in his usual haunt, alone in a corner of the back lawn. A small, bespectacled figure, his arms were covered in their usual motley array of pen drawings. Josh was known to spend the first hour of every school-day making strange illustrations on his arms and muttering in one of the languages he liked to make up.

"What's up Josh?" greeted Vince, a nervous smile on his face. The smile vanished when he saw what Josh was doing - playing with a pile of dismembered insects.

"Have you ever wondered," whispered Josh in a frail, reedy voice,"Why some things have 6 legs, or more, and others have to function with just two? Or why some get 4 wings and others none? Wouldn't it be great it we could share them out and make things more balanced?"

"Er, I guess," began Alison, losing her train of thought as Josh pulled another leg off a still-writhing centipede. "Ew!"

"And think, just fucking think!" added Josh, raising his cold, dead eyes to gaze over the group. "What about slugs? Is that build really viable? Imagine being a charismatic slug!"

They couldn't help trembling and taking an involuntary step backwards as he glared at them. There was true madness in those eyes.

***

Dorateen charged into the group of kobolds blocking the final exit from the dungeon. With a single swipe of his mighty axe he severed three of the ugly heads from their mangy bodies. Allegina skewered another with her silver throwing dagger. A hobbling Rasmus nailed a couple with accurate twangs of his bow.

Last of all, Josh shambled into battle, the hated padded armour restricting his every movement. He'd given up trying to hide in shadows in the noisy, bulky armour, even his trap finding had been badly affected. There was nothing else for it, time to get involved in melee. He finally reached the front line and blows immediately began to shred the pads from his skin. And then his skin from his bones.

***

"Good game guys," smiled Vince, packing the dice away. "Shame about your rogue Josh, but a level two party just doesn't have access to resurrection spells. If only you'd found that enchanted leather armour the seer mentioned."

Josh said nothing, staring at the wall as the others left, Derek and Alison now arm-in-arm. He began to draw on his arms again, harder than ever. Blood welled-up and mixed with the cheap ink.

***

The years had not been kind to Josh's features, although they had been truly generous to his bank balance. The figure reclining in the back of the Maybach had white hair and deep wrinkles, the faded tattoos twisted and distorted. His fortune had been founded on the first couple of Pillars of Eternity releases, when gullible buyers still expected a Baldur's Gate 3. But the real money had come from his early investment in Sword Coast Legends, 'never underestimate the stupidity of your audience' as his guiding motto emphasised.

The car pulled up in front of his Malibu estate and he strode inside, eager to unwind after another long day of dealmaking.

His favourite room had little in the way of furniture, despite its vast size. Just a dated personal computer, a couple of comfortable chairs and a display case with his collector editions of Oblivion and Skyrim proudly exhibited. But as he sank into a soft leather recliner he gazed at the best feature of the room, a series of large framed photos. A catalogue of revenge from a man who dedicated his life to it.

The first was of a hunched, beaten figure on a Toronto sidewalk, clipboard in hand as he begged passers-by for a minute of their time. It hadn't taken much to pay off a few sites to produce savage Age of Decadence reviews, although the Attack of the Fanboy version remained his favourite. AoD had sunk like a stone when finally released in 2018 and Vince was forced to return to his "marketing" career.

The next was of Tim Cain, hard at work in the Obsidian basement, where Josh had sent him after seizing control of Obsidian. To work on the World of Cavalry MMO. Never again would people favourably compare the works of Cain to those of Sawyer.

The third was a simple reproduction of a farewell screen from RPGCodex as the last hosting service terminated their account. It hadn't even taken much in the way of bribes or threats, turned out that having an army of SJW contacts was a powerful weapon in the fight against a misogynistic cesspit of a forum.

Josh pressed a button on his chair, summoning his evening drink. The butler minced into the room, a plump white man sporting a dreadlocked wig and an unusually short skirt.

"Thanks Roguey," mumbled Josh, taking a sip of the pure pomegranate juice.

He turned to look at the final image on the opposite wall. A picture from the player manual for DnD 7th edition, including all the playable races. There was not a dwarf to be seen.
Too crrepy, but this one manages to twist Sawyer's proclivities in a crafty manner without being so hamfisted as the others.
 

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