Difference between revisions of "Adventures"

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(Using the pattern)
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== Using the pattern ==
 
== Using the pattern ==
[[Adventures]] are typical used as a format in [[:Category:Tabletop Roleplaying Games|Tabletop Roleplaying Games]].
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[[Adventures]] are typical used as a format in [[:Category:Tabletop Roleplaying Games|Tabletop Roleplaying Games]]. Two patterns are commonly used as parts of [[Adventures]]: [[Quests]] and [[Scenes]]. The former provides goals and promises of [[Rewards]] for achieving those goals while the latter are used to contextualize actions and events that are part of an [[Adventures|Adventure]].
 
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Two patterns are commonly used as parts of [[Adventures]]: [[Quests]] and [[Scenes]]. The former provides goals and promises of [[Rewards]] for achieving those goals while the latter are used to contextualize actions and events that are part of an [[Adventures|Adventure]].
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[[Summary Updates]] are quite often used as parts of [[Adventures]], especially when [[Scenes]] change.  
 
[[Summary Updates]] are quite often used as parts of [[Adventures]], especially when [[Scenes]] change.  

Revision as of 14:45, 22 October 2014

The one-sentence "definition" that should be in italics.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Wikipedia has a page for Adventures[1] which uses a slightly different meaning (e.g. that a campaign can be a lengthy adventure).

Examples

Tabletop Roleplaying Games often offer pre-made gameplay structures through Adventures. Early examples include "The Keep on the Borderlands", "Rahasia", and "Ravenloft" for Dungeons & Dragons and "The Rise of R'lyeh" for Call of Cthulhu. Later examples include "Orcbusters", "Me and My Shadow, Mark IV", and "Send in the Clones" for Paranoia as well as "100 Bushels of Rye" and "The Staff of Fanon" for Hârnmaster. "Botbusters" and "The Harder They Clone" are examples of mini-adventures for Paranoia while "An ARD Day's Night" and "Whitewash" are even shorter and in practice impossible to complete for the same game.

Using the pattern

Adventures are typical used as a format in Tabletop Roleplaying Games. Two patterns are commonly used as parts of Adventures: Quests and Scenes. The former provides goals and promises of Rewards for achieving those goals while the latter are used to contextualize actions and events that are part of an Adventure.

Summary Updates are quite often used as parts of Adventures, especially when Scenes change.

Narration Aspects

As have been said above, Adventures is a Narration Pattern.

Consequences

Adventures are Predetermined Story Structures. When several of them are designed to be played in sequence they can create Campaigns, as for example is the case with the Dungeons & Dragons series of Adventures beginning with "G1 Steading of the Hill Giant Chief"[2] and progresses through five more (G2[2], G3[2], D1[3], D2[3], D3[3]) before ending with "Q1 Queen of the Demonweb Pits"[4].

The presence of Game Masters allow Adventures to be adjusted to better fit players' wishes as well as help save the overarching narratives when players have done actions which make the original structure impossible (or when the players simply are stuck and neither gameplay nor narration progresses).

Adventures can give rise to Non-Consistent Narration in games which allow different players to experience specific Adventures independently of each other but later let them play together. The most likely scenario for this is when players are allowed to bring Characters from one group of a Tabletop Roleplaying Game to another.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Campaigns, Predetermined Story Structures

Can Modulate

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Can Be Instantiated By

Quests, Scenes

Can Be Modulated By

Game Masters, Non-Consistent Narration, Summary Updates

Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

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History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

  1. Wikipedia entry for Adventures.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wikipedia entry for "Against the Giants" module that combines G1-G3.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Wikipedia entry for "Descent into the Depths of the Earth" module that combines D1-D2 and has information about D3.
  4. Wikipedia entry for the "Queen of the Demonweb Pits" module.

Acknowledgements

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