Showing posts with label works-in-progress status report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label works-in-progress status report. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2015

State of the Platonic Duck report

Top priorities:

As of June, 2015, my current top priorities as Platonic Duck Kitchen are:
  • getting Awkward and Enter the Avenger (as a stand-alone booklet) into several digital shop-fronts and other sale venues — i.e. trying to make these games better known and played more.
  • getting much-deserved paper copies of the above two games into the hands of my international patrons at the "Collector" reward level, at last!
  • finishing writing a draft of my currently untitled "manhunt" game, for external playtesting and possibly submitting to Worlds Without Master (in case the text turns out within their word-count limit). With this design, I really believe I've created my finest non-larp rpg so far, and I had several awesome games of it during in-house playtesting (partly conducted at gaming conventions).
I'd really like to be done with these all within the month, two months at most, but I'll make no promises here, as I'm currently involved in two significant for-hire projects which I need to prioritize over Platonic Duck Kitchen things (I'll tell you more as soon as I can).

Then:

Once I'm done with the above, what will I do?
  • My next closest to completion game is Lift Girl - La ragazza dell'ascensore. Originally my Italian Game Chef 2013 entry, it's a "slice-of-life" game set in our tragic age of extreme consumerism. Quite popular with playtesters, this game covers uncommon ground for an rpg in the kind of stories and characters it tends to bring forward.
  • A revision of Not in the Mood, my Rentpunk Game Jam entry, is also due shortly. As soon as I get to play a couple more playtest runs, basically.
  • Plus there are ongoing translation projects, both of games of my own (La casetta di marzapane, still to be translated to English) and by other designers (I'm partly-done translating one of Epidiah Ravachol's fine games to Italian).
I really hope to complete at least one of these tasks during the summer, in addition to the above top priorities.

And furthermore:

You already know I have a lot of games in the development queue. The ones I currently have half-formed new ideas for and/or I'm more eager to get into playable shape are:
  • The Shackled Self, a game of heroic asceticism, defying temptation and world-saving sacrifice.
  • Passeggeri, a minimal footprint long-form rpg optimized for playing anywhere and anytime with close friends; a game about discovering an unknown world and each other's identity.
And here are some new game-ideas I had over the last few months, and I'm now eager to test by trying to develop them into playable drafts:
  • Random Encounter — a self-esteem-lifting, upbeat-but-quiet role-playing game about the occasion leading to, and extended aftermath of, casual sex. To use techniques previously seen in La casetta di marzapane.
  • The Fourth King —  a multi-episode fantasy game of magic, politics and travel to distant lands. Best understood as a game in the Trollbabe (extended) family, but employing a form of "troupe style" play and some choice tarot card mechanisms from my own I reietti di Eden.
  • A game about feuding, tower-house building families in an Italian city-state during the late Middle-Ages, using a checkerboard as the centerpiece of play. Pseudo-historical blood opera!
What I end up developing is ultimately subject to bouts of momentous inspiration, really, but I do appreciate comments and suggestions. Go ahead and speak your mind! And in the unlikely case you'd really like to give me strongly worded input concerning what I ought to work on first and why, may I suggest you become my patron at the "Board of advisors" level?

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

The duck’s alive and quacking

I went a long time without updating this blog, or my Patreon page. The last few months I mostly spent frantically translating Fate Worlds Vol. 1 to Italian for Dreamlord Press: a 300-page monster of an RPG book, and a job which left me with not much idle time on my hands. But finally the time has come to resume my various Platonic Duck Kitchen projects – of which I have many in progress, so many in fact that a new status update was long overdue!

Enter the Avenger (a.k.a. Entra il Vendicatore) has seen a lot of play over the last year. Originally released in the premiere issue of Worlds Without Master, it’s a fair assumption to call it my best known and most successful game. An Italian translation has been up on DriveThruRPG for a while, but hasn’t been selling – probably because of an utter lack of marketing antics on my part. This Italian edition is layed out for printing as a booklet and embellished with some additional artwork by Tazio Bettin. A similar layout for the original English text is in the works and almost done: my plan is to put it up for sale on a variety of digital stores and also to send it to my Patreon backers as a complimentary (free) update.

La casetta di marzapane (tentative English title: The Gingerbread House) has also seen quite a lot of play, though in Italian only. In case you’re reading about it for the first time, this is a short-story-as-a-game about the chance (?) meeting between some children and the ruler of their badly ruined land. My planned effort translating it to English (not as easy a task as I’d hoped) had to be delayed due to more urgent concerns; meanwhile, a number of players came up with suggestions for improving the game, including catching some bugs and textual quirks. Due to extremely tight integration between rules, thematic content and text, no change is trivial to implement – thus, I’m still in the process of sorting through the feedback and pondering the exact fixes to make. While I’m not yet sure whether I’ll release a revised Italian edition first, I want the first English release to be a fully revised one.

The so-called “manhunt game” (working title used to be “Wolf and Deer, Hound and Fox”, but I’m growing less and less enamored with it) is a whole new project I’ve been working on as a distraction in whatever little spare time I’ve had lately. I don’t have much on paper about it except notes, but I’ve been playing it a lot and it does create some kickass fiction! The cards-and-numbers based pacing mechanics still need some tweaking (and, thus, some more playtesting) before I can draft a text. Since the default backdrop for the game is swords & sorcery (as in Enter the Avenger) I’m considering submitting this game to Worlds Without Master, depending on how long the final text will turn out to be.

Awkward/L’imbarazzo is another out-of-the-blue new project! Quickly drafted out for a chamber-larping convention, it turned out to be one of my most successful designs to date, not to mention my first successful attempt at doing comedy. It’s a game to be played with your whole body rather than just with words: a hilarious Jeepform-like scenario (though structurally and mechanically simpler than a game such as Doubt, not to mention shorter) about the difficulties people of different gender experience in having a non-romantic, non-sexual friendship in a heteronormative society, as well as the different expectations younger and older people hold about life. Despite only existing as a bunch of scribbled notes, this scenario has been played multiple times, including with first-time role-players, and people other than myself have run it. I now look forward to writing a concise English-language manual for the game.

Lift Girl – La ragazza dell’ascensore, my (Italian) Game Chef 2013 entry about small & fractured stories crossing at at an elevator in a near-future high-rise shopping center, is one game I haven’t been making any progress with lately, but it’s next to done. It just needs a very minor rules-tweak or three (and a round of playtesting those tweaks) before I go into producing a new release, which I’d like to be either English-language or bilingual.

I haven’t made much of a progress on The Shackled Self, my game about a prince-turned-ascetic striving to achieve sainthood and the power to save humankind. The playtest I ran last year showed that my new dominoes-based mechanics for face-offs between the Prince and Temptation might be working, but overall the game is… way too hard on the players. My plan is to re-formulate all of the rules to fit on a set of well-designed handouts, as a set of “moves” players can perform (to borrow a useful piece of terminology from Apocalypse World). A mechanical overhaul is also required for pacing reasons, to make the game ran satisfactorily within a realistic timeframe. I suspect it will take me a while, though.

Passeggeri ("Passengers") is another project I made very little progress on. I'm aiming for a role-playing game playable anywhere, anytime, by as little as two people but also by larger groups, without carrying any books or other items around: as such, it requires *extreme* rules minimalism. What little work I've done on it was in the form of short playstorming sessions. The resource I most need, here, is lots of time I can afford to spend in testing, as I'm walking into mostly uncharted territory (figuratively as well).

No progress on Cast Down from Eden/I reietti di Eden, either. Much like the struggle it depicts, this urban-fantasy game of fallen angels and occult superheroes fighting against enemies almighty proved to be a really ambitious project. There’s something deeply personal to me to this game-idea, a deeper layer of meaning which, despite so many in-house iterations and playtests, still has a hard time emerging from the multiple layers of mechanical complexity and colorful action-y fiction. I’m currently happier with what I get out of my tighter, smaller-scope, more focused projects, while Cast Down from Eden now feels like an elusive, hard-to-win fight I can only make a comeback to after I get some more practice.

Then there’s a bunch of collaborative projects!

To Hunt Down the End begun as a swords & sorcery themed re-skin of Giovanni Micolucci’s Nomadic Hunter I wrote in English based on the Italian-language draft he showed me early this year. We meant to release it as a Vas Quas/Platonic Duck joint production, and I commissioned some artwork from artist Mik (who created the original title banner for Platonic Duck Kitchen, which also served as concept art for the logo), which turned out just as awesome as I hoped for. Unfortunately, I lagged behind in production schedule; meanwhile, Giovanni has made significant improvements to the original Nomadic Hunter, leading to a new and better prototype (again, in Italian). The exact fate of To Hunt Down the End, then, is yet to be determined: it would take me some more work to port some or all of the latest NH improvements into THDtE through translating and re-skinning, and more graphic design work is needed to produce a finished, playable game. But it can be done, indeed. Just like Nomadic Hunter, To Hunt Down the End is a hybrid board-game/role-playing game of wilderness crawling and monster-slaying which you can also play solo.

The Behemoth is a character playbook for  Vincent Baker’s ApocalypseWorld created by Tazio Bettin. I helped Tazio fine-tune his design and we’re most likely going to release it through Platonic Duck Kitchen, with gorgeous art by Tazio himself. I just need to do some editing of the text before we proceed to its final layout.

La casa sulla roccia (roughly, “The house built on stone”) is a wonderful, profound and moving “chamber” larp scenario by Barbara Fini: a day in the life of the inmates and staff of a facility for the mentally ill, deep in rural Southern Italy. By “chamber” larp I mean a small, self-contained live-action RPG scenario that can be set up and run with minimal costuming and props and very little prep, in a perfectly mundane location. This game currently exists as a set of Italian-language character sheets Barbara wrote, plus the oral wisdom I collected over a number of extremely successful runs – I’d like to eventually piece together an actual “manual” for hosting and running the scenario. What I’m now wondering is whether making an English translation of it would also be possible, or too much of the setting and general tone would be lost in translation on a non-Italian audience.

Settembre poi ci troverà (roughly, “September will come and find us”) is another “chamber” larp/Jeepform-like scenario, co-created by Barbara and me. Fresh out of our pen and yet to be playtested (it’s scheduled to premier at a chamber larping convention roughly a month from now), it combines features from both Barbara’s La casa sulla roccia and my own Awkward to tell a cross-generational story about short-lived summertime loves.

All of the above are “half-done” games: games for which either a significant body of text already exists, some playtesting already happened, or both. Releasing them all is only a matter of having enough spare time available – which ultimately boils down to having money on my hands: sponsor me by becoming my patron and make all of those role-playing games happen! “Board of advisors” level patrons also get a say in which ones ought to be finished first.

But there’s even more brewing! Game ideas which are still in a fluid state, but might gel into something playtest-able anytime soon. One is a game about witches as disgraced goddesses, and the weird process by which a majority or 50% segment of a populace is persecuted into effective minority status. Another one is the game of aggressive revenge against the powerful and its house-of-cards-like consequences on society I’ve briefly blogged about a long time ago – working title: “The Taller They Stand”. “Changing Speed” is instead my working title for a self-contained scenario in which I plan to exploit the tropes of 70s and 80s’ Japanese super-robot TV shows to do some hopelessly grim, as-angsty-as-you-can-get teen drama (and I might or might not work some Italian pop music into the mechanics).
Tree of Worlds, my tentative Everway remake, also belongs in this category because, well, I didn’t do much work on it yet. One design goal is I want to be able to employ the original Everway components, but I want those to be entirely optional too; one huge roadblock is that playtesting (or, heaven forbid, playstorming!) a long-form role-playing game is a logistical nightmare. Meanwhile, a friend requested a dungeon-crawling game out of me with some very specific features, and a design is slowly gelling around a quirky setting idea of mine: armed Illuminists standing against the literal forces of darkness in a nightmare city. The main challenge here is not to get sucked into making it “just” a tactical skirmish board-game.
Then there’s this hitch I need to scratch, to make something which might fit in with the OSR movement – something based on the “core technology” of 1970s-to-80s D&D. And, after spending six-months knee-deep in Fate Core, I guess I’ll need to do something with that as well (I love it that they made it open source).

Stay tuned and hear the duck quack!

Monday, September 30, 2013

Apre la mia pagina Patreon

[This is an Italian translation of yesterday's English post.]

Ho appena aperto al pubblico una pagina su Patreon (un nuovo sito di autofinanziamento per "artisti" d'ogni sorta). Servirà da punto locale per un tentativo di monetizzare il tempo sempre crescente che dedico al game-design. Qui una traduzione italiana del testo della pagina. Il vostro patrocinio (un dollaro ogni tanto) mi permetterebbe di procedere più speditamente in progetti come questi:

Enter the Avenger (Arriva il vendicatore): il mio semplice e lineare gioco di ruolo "swords & sorcery" di incertezza, bluff e tremenda vendetta, scritto per la nuova rivista elettronica di Epidiah Ravachol. Stato del progetto: la versione inglese è pronta e uscirà sul primo numero di Worlds Without Master. In futuro troverò altri modi per distribuirla, creerò almeno un supplemento e, naturalmente, una traduzione italiana. Col feedback dai giocatori di tutto il mondo mi aspetto di poter realizzare in seguito anche una seconda edizione riveduta e migliorata.

La casetta di marzapane: un breve ma intenso gioco di ruolo "giocabile alla prima lettura", adatto tanto ai principianti assoluti quanto agli scafati veterani. In un paese ridotto alla disperazione dalle mancanze dei suoi governanti, dei bambini si avventurano in un bosco e là, per caso, incontrano il responsabile: l'adulto che ha rovinato il loro mondo. Stato del progetto: disponibile una versione italiana preliminare (versione 0). Con i risultati dei primi playtest, la sto riscrivendo per perfezionarla; questa nuova versione verrà ulteriormente testata ed eventualmente tradotta anche in inglese.

The Shackled Self (I vincoli dell'io): il Principe, fattosi eremita, cammina verso la santità su una via erta e perigliosa, tra le richieste inarrivabili che gli pone la Montagna e il volto fin troppo umano della Tentazione. Un gioco di ruolo per tre giocatori. Stato del progetto: la versione "0" in inglese è disponibile da tempo, ma contiene almeno due fondamentali buchi di design, giustamente evidenziati da Ron Edwards nella sua recensione. Ho riprogettato quelle parti del gioco e sto or ora cominciando a collaudarle: se questo primo playtest darà esiti soddisfacenti, pubblicherò immediatamente una bozza corretta finalizzata al playtest esterno.

Lift Girl - La ragazza dell'ascensore: un gioco di ruolo sulla vita quotidiana, in cui le storie di perfetti sconosciuti si toccano, per un fugace attimo, dentro il ventre oblungo della società dei consumi globalizzata. Stato del progetto: disponibile la versione in italiano scritta per il Game Chef 2013, ma dai playtest sono emerse piccole modifiche che la rendono già superata. Presto un'edizione riveduta e corretta in italiano, a cui seguirà una traduzione in inglese.

Passeggeri: un gioco di ruolo minimale, ridotto all'essenziale, così da poterlo giocare letteralmente ovunque e in qualsiasi momento insieme ai propri amici e ai propri cari. Sono storie di persone che intraprendono un viaggio fantastico, verso mete spesso metaforiche, a bordo di un veicolo di cui non hanno il pieno controllo: ogni fermata può portare a un'avventura, ma la domanda è se ciascuno dei viaggiatori riuscirà a trovare un luogo dove, finalmente, fermarsi per davvero. Stato del progetto: al momento ho solo degli appunti, da cui mi accingo a mettere insieme un documento di playtest.

I reietti di Eden: è sempre lui, il mio gioco di ruolo occultpunk di azione sopra le righe e dramma esasperato su sfondo metropolitano, che per protagonisti ha angeli caduti ed eroici eretici presi in uno scontro apocalittico contro le legioni celesti. Stato del progetto: la versione 0.2 italiana è ancora disponibile, ma del tutto antiquata; in seguito a vari passaggi di playtest ho ormai ridisegnato il gioco quasi completamente, e la "versione attuale" esiste solo nella forma di appunti sparsi e frammenti di componentistica. La situazione, insomma, è fluida. Il mio piano è di playtestare ancora entro quest'anno e, solo se sarò soddisfatto di quel che ho per le mani, realizzare di conseguenza un documento da far circolare per il playtesting esterno.

Anche se non volete o non potete promettermi denaro, potete comunque darmi un grosso aiuto semplicemente passandone parola ai vostri amici e condividendo il link: www.patreon.com/rafu


Logo creato da Michele Manzo

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Patreon page launched

[Questo post ha anche una traduzione italiana.]

I just launched a Patreon page, as the new central point for attempting to crowd-fund my game-design efforts and turn them into a self-sustaining side-activity. Your patronage (every single dollar counts) translates to time I can spend working on such projects as:

Enter the Avenger: my uncomplicated swords-and-sorcery role-playing game of uncertainty, double-bluffs and vengeance, written for Epidiah Ravachol’s shiny new e-magazine Worlds Without Master. Status: English version 1 released in Worlds Without Master issue #1. The future will bring additional modes of distribution, supplementary materials and of course an Italian translation. Then, after receiving feedback from more players around the world, I will most likely compile a revised edition.

La casetta di marzapane (The Little Candy House): a short but intense play-on-first-read role-playing game, suitable for complete beginners as well as experienced players. In a country ruined beyond hope by the failings of its leaders, one or more children venture into the woods and there, by chance, encounter the grownup politician who broke their world. Status: preliminary Italian draft available (version 0). Based on playtest feedback, I’m currently rewriting it to perfect the form factor: this release candidate is to be playtested again and, in case of positive feedback, I will translate it to English.

The Shackled Self: a 3-players role-playing game about the ascesis of a prince-turned-hermit, treading the narrow path between the inhumane Mountain (representing the steep requirements of sainthood) and the all-too-human face of Temptation. Status: a preliminary English draft (version 0) has been available for a while, but contains obvious design faults, as correctly detected by Ron Edwards. I’ve redesigned those subsystems and I’m now beginning a first round of in-house playtesting. I expect to release the corrected English draft text within the year, to allow for external playtesting.

Lift Girl – La ragazza dell’ascensore: a slice-of-life role-playing game about the stories of perfect strangers touching, for a brief moment, in the elongated belly of our globalized consumerist society. Sometimes heart-warming, sometimes unsettling. Status: preliminary Italian draft (version 0, written for Game Chef 2013) available, but playtesting brought small changes which make it slightly outdated. A revised Italian text (version 1) is pending, followed closely by an English translation.

Passeggeri (Passengers): a stripped-down-to-the-essentials role-playing game you can play anywhere, anytime with your friends and loved ones. It’s about people going on a journey to fantastic, often metaphorical places, carried by a vehicle they cannot directly control. With each stop comes a potential adventure, but will each traveler finally find a place to settle down? Status: I only have notes for this jotted down, but I’m planning to finalize a preliminary playtest document ASAP.

I reietti di Eden (Cast Down from Eden): my urban fantasy occult-punk role-playing game of high-drama and high-action, starring fallen angels and heretic heroes in their apocalyptic struggle against the legions of heaven. Status: Italian version 0.2, though still available for download, is long outdated: after the first rounds of playtesting, I radically redesigned most of the game. The current version only exists as a bunch of hand-scribbled notes and disposable play-aids. My plan is to resume in-house playtests within the current year; if satisfied with those, I will soon after compile a new draft text for external playtesting.

If you can't or don't want to give me money, you can still give me a huge boost by telling your friends about this! Just spread this link around: www.patreon.com/rafu

Platonic Duck Kitchen logo created by Michele Manzo