Saturday, February 17, 2018

Cannibal Cave of the Suicide Cult!


Cannibal Cave of the Suicide Cult!
            This ruin is a short but potentially deadly dungeon crawl.  It is full of traps, secrets, cannibal dogs and fungus.  What a lovely day!
                I generated the basic idea using the ruin generator in Other Dust.  The Other Dust ruin generator has fewer variables than the generator in Sandbox #1 (example here), but it uses Kevin Crawford’s signature tag system to create depth and possibility.  It’s more geared to the Stars Without Number setting where Other Dust takes place, but it’s easy enough to reskin for other settings, including Pugmire.
                The results for the rolls were: Location: sinister caverns; Cause for ruination: madness; Current occupants: cannibals; Tags: Secret Base, Abandoned Traps.  The tags are quick notations that include short lists of possible Enemies, Friends, Things, Complications and Places.  For example, the Abandoned Traps Enemies entry includes Mad trapsmith survivalist, Creatures that float or fly above the snares, and Dormant security bots.  These lists can be used to inspire, or you can select items and plug them into adventure seeds included in Other Dust.  Adventure seeds look like this: A Friend has left a Thing in a Place.  An Enemy is trying to claim it for her own.  You can plug the tags into the seeds for various locations and get a huge variety of adventure hooks that tie directly into locations.  It’s a handy system for creating a rich, living sandbox.  Most of the mechanical ideas presented here are from the Index Card Role Playing game, which I cannot recommend enough.  It’s a fast, simple system for building compelling action stories that leaves plenty of room left over for heroism, drama or whatever kind of role playing your group prefers.
The original Cult
A Nordic supremacy fire cult tried to initiate Ragnarok through ritual self-immolation. The walls of the cavern are inscribed with runes and other cult symbols. In their meeting hall is a small library of books and journals about the Norse occult and other Nordic supremacy concerns.  The cult kept supplies both ritual and material in these caverns and guarded their secrets with traps.
The Current Occupants
                A strange fungus has overtaken the ruin.  It covers the walls, obscuring the runes and symbols and making the rocky floors treacherous and slippery. (If you’re feeling really nasty, any attempt to climb, run or otherwise move using the slippery surfaces of the ruin for traction is at disadvantage.) A musty smell hangs in the air.  The fungus uses sentient creatures as agents to fetch nutrition; these are the zombie cannibals that inhabit the ruin.  They raid the surrounding area periodically to abduct travelers, loners, and derelicts to feed the fungus.  The victims serve as agents until they are totally consumed by the fungus.
                The fungus can change how the characters are able to rest.  If the players take a short rest in the ruin, they must make Con saves.  If they fail, they are infected with the fungus.  Magical healing, a successful Heal or Medicine check, or fire kills the infection immediately, but the characters are always susceptible to the fungus.  Anyone who takes a long rest in the ruin is automatically infected.  Anyone who is infected has 1d4 days before they are completely zombified by the fungus.  Tell the players when you use this timer what will happen; it’s terrible but fair, and it will create an urgent problem for them to solve. The fungus isn’t hard to cure, but it’s quick and the effects are irreversible.  It will eat up resources quickly.
                This would also be a great location for a yellow musk creeper, if the fungus thing doesn’t float your boat.

Map and Key
All checks, saves and other rolls are dC 15. Hard rolls are dc 18 and easy rolls are dc 12, per ICRPG (check it out.  Srsly.)



1.Entrance:  This is a metal door set into a rock face.  It was better concealed at one time; now it’s rusting and barely hanging on its hinges. Make a Dex check when opening; failure means it falls and clangs.  Crit failure alerts the zombies in area 4 so they cannot be surprised.
2.Bunker:  Bunker is barely visible, requiring a Notice roll to find.  Crit failure means zombies are alerted and present in Workshop.  The door to the bunker is an easy lock. Crit failure breaks the lock; crit success earns the picker advantage on their next lock pick attempt because they learned something. Inside is the intake for a broken air filtration system.  The fungus is growing around the intake ports. On the floor inside is a trap door, opening onto a metal spiral stair.  The stair is electrified, doing 1d10 damage to anyone who touches it.  Dex save for half damage, but climbing the down stairs assures two shocks. The stairs can be shorted; doing so ruins the power cells in the workshop.
3.Tunnel: The long, dark, winding tunnel eats up light and time.  1 in six chance of being surprised by a zombie
4.Workshop: This workshop contains two metal benches, an extensive collection of post-tech tools, and a broken plasma chisel (Hard repair roll). One type B power cell is wired to the metal staircase leading up to the bunker.

5. False Supply room:  This room opens into a sizable chamber, with supply crates and barrels scattered about the perimeter.  These are rusted, covered in fungus, and trapped.  If the PC’s check them for traps, they find 1d4 concussion grenades.  If they are not successful in making the checks or don’t bother, they set off the grenades which do 1d10 damage (Dex save for half) and push them ten feet towards the pit in the middle of the room, into the pit. There are two zombies hiding in the natural alcove in the south end of the chamber who will rush the PC’s and attempt to shove them into the pit as well.  Ten feet down in the pit, near the water line, is a field emitter which creates a plane of energy parallel to the water.  This is a portal to the cage in the spring cave, which contains the sister emitter.  (Together these portal emitters comprise a relic.) Anything that falls into the pit disappears and reappears in the cage.  If the PC’s manage to detect and disable the emitter before they fall into the pit, they find that the walls of the pit are Hard to climb, being covered in slippery fungus. Along the side of the pit near the water line is a cave tunnel that leads to the spring room.On the opposite side from the zombie alcove is a carved alcove (easy to spot; DC 12) which contains four black robes with a white rune embroidered on the left breast.  Wearing these robes allows wearers to bypass the traps in the ruin, including the portal in the pit.  One the robes has a prosthetic link hanging with it. (This basically works like a Google glass, but the augmented reality it accessed is mostly disrupted or destroyed.  It can be used as a two-way radio with another link holder, and it can be a great device for giving extra information on critical successes.)  On the floor is a dusty hygiene kit.
6. Escape cache: In the tunnel between the workshop and the store room one of the cultists hid a rotting bugout bag containing one Type A power cell, two Old Terran rations, a TL 4 bedroll, and a Navcomp. Use the ruin target (15) to spot.

7. Supply room: This room can be approached two ways.  The way from the main tunnel is protected with a force field emitter; it can be bypassed by characters wearing the runic robes, by interacting with its interface with a prosthetic link or by making a successful Hard Know Arcana and Steal checks.  The same character does not have to make both checks. The other entrance to the store room is through the tunnel from the workshop. Anyone who comes through either way is targeted by a small laser turret located on the top tier of natural dais (+3, d10 damage).  Once activated the turret continues to attack once per round until it is destroyed or the room is empty of living creatures.  The turret will target zombies in this are as well as PC’s. If the turret is destroyed on a critical, 1d2 TL 3 spare parts can be retrieved in its wreckage.On the dais tier just below the turret is a locker containing 11 Old Terran rations and a smaller box containing 1 unit of TL 3 spare parts and three Type A power cells.

8. Meeting hall: This room is located behind a secret door concealed by a small shrine to Odin (a rotting flag hung above a candle-flanked silver bowl containing two crow feathers).  The characters can discern the concealed door with a Notice or Stealing check, or by examining the inexpertly installed ductwork and power cables.The cult used the plasma chisel to shape the hall into an elongated octagon.  Solid benches and an altar on a dais have been carved into the living stone.  Moldy, flickering holo-tapestries and ragged flags hang from the walls.  Plasma-carved into the wall is a book shelf.  On the shelf are several books about Nordic occult concerns, political ideology, and a journal full of screed and venom.  These are not in a language that the PC’s know, but they could provide advantage on Know: History rolls or attempts to decode the runes. Any critical success on these rolls proves distressing to dogs; they discover some truth about the fallibility and pettiness of Man.  Dogs exposed to this knowledge must make a Cha save or be at a disadvantage for all Charisma and Wisdom based saves and checks until they take a long rest.  However, dogs who use this knowledge in any way to connect to their community, engage with others constructively or grow personally will gain a permanent +1 increase to Charisma or Wisdom.The runes and diagrams are all dedicated to Nordic ideals, mythology and magic.  They have little relevance to the world outside the ruin, unless the GM decides otherwise.  (In fact, the nature of the cult is up to the GM as well.  There’s nothing about the location that makes a cultural supremacy cult necessary.)

9. Sinkhole: This slippery-sided sinkhole drops into the spring chamber.  Climbing down is a hard check.  The fall does 1d6 damage.

10. Spring: The water in this chamber is calf-deep and very cold.  It feeds the pools below the false storeroom and the sinkhole and the stream that cuts through the immolation chamber.  In the one end of the chamber sits a large cage, big enough to hold the PC’s.  A field emitter sits on top of the cage, completing the portal in the false store room. Anyone who falls into the pit there is dumped into the cage, taking 1d10 from the fall and the portal itself, which is not meant to transport living things without regular, meticulous calibration.  The cage is rusty and corroded, especially at the water line.When the PC’s appear in the cage, the cave contains as many zombies as there are PC’s plus one. Roll a d4. The PC’s have that many rounds to prepare, escape, or make ranged attacks before the zombies break through the bars and attack them. (It is also the number of round it takes the PC’s to break out of the cage, should they choose to do so.  Let them figure that out.) Each round that the fight continues, roll a d4; that many zombies appear.  Once a turn ends with no zombies standing, the fight is over and no more random zombies appear in the room.

11. Immolation chamber.  This high-ceilinged natural cave can be accessed either through the tunnel that opens onto the sloping path leading down to the floor or through the tunnel that leads from the spring room to the rock face below the path.  A stream flows from the spring through the center of the room via the tunnel opening.  Several large stalagmites jut from the floor and stalactites cover the ceiling.  The walls are carved heavily with cult symbols: Runes, black suns, and runic wheels.  At the far end of the chamber is a stone altar, blackened and partially melted by some horrible conflagration.  Evidence of fiery destruction radiates some three meters around the altar, and strange shadows seem burnt into the cavern walls. Characters who search find burnt a few small blackened bone fragments teeth; these are relics of the Old Ones. At the base of the natural ramps that surround the rock face, two empty robes are lying on the ground: two black and one a shimmering white.  The black robes are identical to the robes in the false supply room.  The white robe belonged to the cult leader; it reveals the skeleton of the wearer, yellowed with age. The negative space surrounding the skeleton is filled with dark soil, with worms and beetles burrowing about.  The robe contains a highly sophisticated medical diagnosis algorithm that has been modified to match the cult’s aesthetic.  The diagnosis routines can be accessed via a prosthetic link.  This robe counts as a Relic.
A cannibal demon (CR 5) is living in this area. If you need to lower the challenge, the demon has been infected by the fungus which has weakened it (lower hit points, lower AC from fugal damage to hide, etc.)  If you decide the demon knows about the cult’s origins and activities, you can use that knowledge to torment the dogs.  The demon can harangue the dogs as an attack.  This acts just like the Confusion spell, in addition to having the same short- and long-term effects as reading the books in the meeting hall.  A harangue also attracts 1d4 zombies to the immolation room.  The cannibal demon is carrying a plastic figurine.
Hooks:
The PC’s have several reasons to investigate this ruin.

  1.           It’s a ruin.  Everybody loves a good ruin.
  2.          There are rumors of an artifact in the ruin.  It is a matter transporter which the cult used as trap component.  The GM can mete out as much information about the transporter as will entice the players.
  3.          There is a cannibal infestation that needs to be cleared out. This can include a rescue.

Only pre-tech items (TL 5) are considered “relics”.  All other salvage is common enough to be of no real status value in Pugmire.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Death Garage!


          In the next few entries, I’m presenting several ruins for your PA game or campaign.  My own setting is Pugmire meets Other Dust; change the setting details to suit your needs.
          I designed the ruin using the “What Is That Ruined Structure?” table in The Sandbox #1 with a flourish from Monte Cook’s Injecting the Weird. The tube-as-dungeon idea came from Runehammer’s video “Dungeon Building 101: Part 2”.
          The table uses all the standard dice to answer several questions.  Here are my results:
1.       Entrance: Wall or window has given way; Visible damage: outer sheathing is decaying and falling away; Original function: Entertainment (club or theater), What’s valuable inside: a functioning vehicle of some kind; What’s the threat: something waits for those who emerge; What’s unusual about this place: a vicious combat was here. Once a tower; now laying on its side(From Injecting the Weird). All checks are DC 15 (an idea from Runehammer.) The Runehammer channel also recommends each location has a Threat, a Timer, and a Treat, which I have included in this location.

The Death Garage

Surrounding Area

Steel splinters of a broken city loom around the ruin. A wooded sward trails behind it in a verdant wake.  Its entrance yawns like the broken-toothed maw of an idiot god, an amphitheater of destruction choked with rubble. The implacable agents of decay-rust, vines, lichen-penetrate every crack and fissure.
A one-mile halo of mayhem encompasses the ruin. The fragments of war machines and fused automatons testify of a long-forgotten battle. There is little to salvage.

Getting In

The way to the entrance is difficult and close; only one character at a time can make their way into the ruin. Characters must make few Strength or Dex saves to see if anyone takes 1 hp of scrapes and bruises. Once inside, they are in near-total darkness, standing on the edge of a fifty-foot drop.  This is the parking level of an entertainment complex. The complex, a high tower filled with clubs and restaurants, toppled over in the battle. The parabolic entrance is the tower’s bottom edge, ripped from its foundation. In the intervening years, time has buried the bulk of the tower and plants have taken hold on the land above it.  This is the green sward that cuts through the rubble of the city. This bastion of nature presents its own set of adventuring opportunities.
Standing inside the ruin, the PC’s can see a few blinking lights at different levels below them in the darkness. These are running lights of the few grav cars whose batteries are still good.  Some of them float in pairs forming platforms. Others hang from one corner as if pinched by a giant's fingers. They pirouette like demented party lights.  The "floor" is a thick layer of wrecked and rusting vehicles that slid to the ceiling when the garage toppled. The treat hovers above the wreckage: a pristine black grav car, its stereo thumping.

Descending the Tower

Once all the PC's have all reached the first floating car, roll a d4. Describe a terrible grinding sound. An ancient robot from the battlefield had powered up and is trying to chase them into the garage!  In up to four rounds it will tear an opening in the ruin large enough to get itself in (and to get the grav car out). It will then enter the ruin and attack the characters, trying to destroy them as they leap from car to car.
If the players leave a guard at the entrance, the robot ignores the guard. It focuses on getting into the tower to attack the group. If you must, give the robot a dying shield that lasts as long as the timer.
Characters make 3-5 checks to get to the lower level and reach the Treat.  The floating cars are between eight and fifteen feet apart, but most of this distance is vertical.  Failing the check for moving from car to car results in a character hanging from the target car for dear life. Critical failure means the car’s battery dies it plunges to the floor!  Anyone of a falling car takes 2d6 damage as the vehicle drops. Crashing into other grav cars on the way down slows the vehicle's fall.  This can send cars spinning off in other directions, re-configuring the battlefield!

The Robot

The robot can be expressed in several ways, depending on the group’s level and makeup.  It leaps and climbs like a gorilla, charging the PC’s to knock them off the cars.  Add a climb speed and construct qualities to the following creatures and ignore irrelevant abilities:

Minotaur Skeleton (CR 2)
Minotaur (CR 3)
Gorgon(CR 5)
Clay golem (CR 9)
Girrilon (Volo’s Guide to Monsters) (CR 4)
Ogre, add the pounce ability from a tiger (CR 3)
Iron golem (CR 16)

Other Monsters

On every round that someone stands on the wreckage at the bottom of the garage, 1d4 rust monsters appear. They live in the strata of rusty cars and are hungry for fresh metal.  If the PC’s are clever, they can kite the robot onto the floor and let the rust monsters swarm it. The rust monsters ignore the black car because they hate the taste of its nano-enhanced body. (or because of the vibrations of the stereo.  If the players turn it off, the rust monsters swarm the car!)
Besides to the rust monsters, there are three darkmantles living on the ceiling of the ruin.  They drop on prey and use darkness to make leaping or climbing between grav cars much more hazardous.

The Car and the AI

Hooks to retrieve the treat car could include an assignment, a map, or a happy accident. It may have led the PC's to itself via a key card with GPS.  Emphasize that the car looks badass: black, aerodynamic, expensive.  Make it drool-worthy. Emphasize that the hole the robot tore in the entrance is big enough for the car. The car may contain a personal possession of the former owner or a key card to an executive suite higher/deeper in the tower. In a post-recording world, the sound system is a priceless treasure.
Nigel, the car's friendly AI, is unclear about what’s happened in the last several centuries. It can tell PC's a little about life before the fall, but it has no news of the years it spent hovering in the dark. Nigel is politely curious about who is driving the car and why they smell like dog. The GM can decide how keyed into the internet of things Nigel is, and whether it can access the net at any given time. Nigel can maneuver the car out of the garage if asked. The PC’s can make Nigel an ally if they treat it with a modicum of respect.  It will do its job regardless of treatment, but no more if the PC’s abuse it.
The car can’t fly, but it can levitate up to one hundred feet with limited mobility and speed.  Consider its Speed score to be 0 when levitating, with a fly speed of 20 feet. (Speed is a Sine Nomine quality of vehicles seen in Stars Without Number and Other Dust.)

The Rest of the Tower

The rest of the buried tower awaits exploration.  It is an entertainment complex full of holo-suites, dance clubs, bars, restaurants and private rooms. Populate it with vermin, mutants, and fungal threats, as well as demented companion, service, and security bots.
       
The Death Garage!


          
The garage and the rest of the tower.  The small maps are extras.

          Any questions or comments that could improve this encounter and location are welcome.  I'm always trying to improve as a GM and designer, and I sure as shootin' don't have all the answers.