Jump to content

Powered by the Apocalypse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Blablubbs (talk | contribs) at 23:02, 8 August 2020 (Reverted edits by 5.90.1.46 (talk) (HG) (3.4.10)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Powered by the Apocalypse
Powered by the Apocalypse logo
DesignersVincent Baker
PublishersLumpley Games and others
Publication2010
GenresRole-playing game
Websitehttp://apocalypse-world.com/

Powered by the Apocalypse (PbtA) is a tabletop role playing game system developed by Meguey Baker and Vincent Baker for the 2010 game Apocalypse World and later used for Dungeon World, Monsterhearts and numerous other RPGs.

Mechanics

Powered by the Apocalypse games are centered around resolving what characters do as Moves. Characters have access to a default selection of moves based on the expectations of the game setting. In the fantasy game Dungeon World, characters have access to a hack and slash move, as combat is central to the dungeoneering experience. Alternatively, Apocalypse World has a "seize by force" move, as the game assumes a setting where collecting scarce resources is part of the game-play experience. Apocalypse World, Dungeon World, and most other PbtA games are class-based. Character classes have access to a number of class-specific moves.

Moves are resolved by rolling two six-sided dice and adding the relevant modifier, should modifiers be a mechanic in the game. Success levels fall on a scale of total success, partial success, or failure—referred to as a "miss" in the system.

List of games

Because of the simplicity and the flexibility of the Powered by the Apocalypse engine, and Vincent Baker's encouragement of publishing hacks,[1] there are at least four dozen fan-made hacks that have reached the point of public playtesting.[2] This list only covers the ones actually published.

A list of Powered by the Apocalypse games who have obtained permission to use the mark is available on the Apocalypse World website.[3]

Alas for the Awful Sea
Alas for the Awful Sea, designed by Vee Hendro and Hayley Gordon, is a game about a ship’s crew in the 19th century navigating the remote corners of the British Isles in a world consumed with suspicion, sadness, and desperation. It is published by Storybrewers.
Apocalypse World
Apocalypse World is the post-apocalyptic game the system was created for and is set after an unspecified apocalypse (which may either be specified in the course of play or left a mystery) that created a psychic maelstrom.
Dungeon World
Dungeon World is a fantasy game, created by Sage LaTorra and Adam Koebel. The game is advertised as having old-school style with modern rules.[4] The text of the game was released under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.[5] The setting for Dungeon World is Dungeons & Dragons-esque fantasy. Rather than present a pre-written setting, the game master is instructed to "Draw maps and leave blanks", meaning to not put too much detail in the setting but allow it to emerge in play.
Epyllion
Epyllion is a game where you play dragons in a dragon-centric world about dragons, published by Magpie Games.
Farflung
Farflung was written by Friedrich Wallenhaupt, with Norman Rafferty and Robert Vance, and published by Sanguine Productions in 2017. It is set in a generic whimsical far-future setting inspired by The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Barbarella and other inspirations. The game offers 24 Playbooks each for a character class ranging from mundane to unusual SF personalities.
Fellowship
Fellowship is a high fantasy game where players control every aspect of their chosen race. The player who controls the Elf, for example, is the only person who has the final say in anything regarding elves. The goal is to defeat the Overlord, a GM controlled character, by gathering sources of power while trying to prevent the Overlord from destroying communities that could be helpful in defeating them. The game was successfully Kickstarted in 2015 and released in 2016 by LibriGothica Games.
KULT – Divinity Lost
KULT: Divinity Lost is a reboot of the contemporary horror role-playing game Kult, originally released in 1991. This Kickstarter-funded version of the game features a completely new rule-set, and the setting is updated to present day. Published by Swedish Helmgast and distributed by Modiphius.
Legacy – Life Among the Ruins
Legacy: Life Among the Ruins is a game of survival and rebuilding in a world ravaged and altered by incomprehensible calamity. Its biggest feature is gameplay at multiple levels: each player builds a Family of survivors and a Character from that family. Stories take place across multiple generations, with each generation creating new characters and altering the families. Family stats are Reach, Grasp, Tech, and Mood, with playbooks including The Enclave of Bygone Lore, The Brotherhood of Gilded Merchants, The Tyrant Kings, The Servants of the One True Faith, and The Lawgivers of the Wasteland. Character stats are Steel, Sway, Force, and Lore, with playbooks including the Hunter, the Envoy, the Seeker, and the Sentinel. Legacy was designed by Mina McJanda (published under the name James Iles)[6][7], and was successfully crowdfunded on Kickstarter in December 2014.[8] After another successful Kickstarter campaign,[9] a second edition was released in June 2018.
MASHED
MASHED explores life in a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH) during the Korean War. Default statistics are Luck, Nerve, Skill, and Tough. The character playbooks are the Angel (nurse), Corpsman, Cowboy (pilot or mechanic), Cutter (surgeon), Doc (physician), Grunt (aka pogue), and Padre (chaplain). Designed by Mark Plemmons, MASHED was Kickstarted[10] in October 2016 and published by Brabblemark Press in January 2017.[11]
Masks
Masks focuses on the lives of a team of teenage superheroes, inspired by the Young Avengers, Teen Titans, and Marvel's Runaways. The playbooks include the Beacon, the Bull, the Doomed, the Legacy, the Janus, the Transformed, the Protégé, the Delinquent, the Nova, and the Outsider. It was successfully funded on Kickstarter in fall of 2015 and subsequently published by Magpie Games.
Monsterhearts
Monsterhearts is "a story game about the lives of teenage monsters"[12] by Avery Alder. Default statistics are Hot, Cold, Volatile, and Dark, and the playbooks presented in the main rulebook are The Chosen, the Fae, the Ghoul, the Queen, the Witch, the Werewolf, the Infernal, and the Vampire. It was nominated for six separate awards, although it didn't win any.[13]
Monster of the Week
Monster of the Week is "an action-horror role playing game"[14] about a group of monster hunters, written by Michael Sands. Statistics are Charm, Cool, Sharp, Tough, and Weird and the default classes are the Chosen, the Expert, the Flake, the Initiate, the Monstrous, the Mundane, the Professional, the Divine, the Spooky, and the Wronged.
Offworlders
Offworlders is a framework based on the rules lite variant, World of Dungeons, for creating space based games.[15]
Ruma – Dawn of Empire
Ruma: Dawn of Empire is an upcoming game by Martin Greening.[16] The game is set in an alternate Roman Empire, called the Ruman Empire, where magic and mythology also exists. The project was launched on Kickstarter where it was successfully funded, having raised $10,046.[17]
Sagas of the Icelanders
The game Sagas of the Icelanders is set "sometime after the year 874, when the first Norse settlers set foot on Iceland. They were escaping war, poverty and the dissolution of their political freedoms on the mainland."[18] Statistics are Versed, Young, Gendered, and Wyrd. Default classes are The Child, the Woman, the Man, the Matriarch, the Godi, the Seidkona, the Wanderer, the Shield-Maiden, the Huscarl, the Thrall, and the Monster.
Spirit of 77
Spirit of 77 is an action RPG based on 1970s pop culture, including The Six Million Dollar Man, Shaft, and the Dukes of Hazzard. Popular music of the time plays heavily into its gameplay, including the option for players to play 1970s "rockers", ala Fleetwood Mac and Kiss. The game includes multiple adventures packaged as "Double Features", including titles such as "Women's Prison of the Apes", "BEAST: Bound and Down", and "Jurassic Parking Lot". Published by Monkeyfun Studios.[19]
The Sprawl
The Sprawl is a cyberpunk RPG in which parties of underground criminals run missions for and/or against vast megacorporations while trying to avoid exposure and extermination. William Gibson's Sprawl trilogy is cited as a major inspiration. Graphics, editing, and supplemental fiction for the RPG were funded via Kickstarter. Game books began releasing in early 2016.[20]
Transit – The Spaceship RPG
Transit: The Spaceship RPG is a 2019 science fiction game of Artificial Intelligence, interstellar craft, and galactic exploration. Players take on the role of AI inhabiting interplanetary vessels, with different AI Types and Ship Classes combining to form unique characters. The fleet will expand the universe through play while contending with the needs of their headquarters, external threats ranging from hostile ships to bizarre cosmic phenomena, and even their own biological crews. Transit is sold exclusively through DriveThruRPG[21], and is published by Fiddleback Productions.[22]
Tremulus
A storytelling RPG in the style of the works of H. P. Lovecraft, Tremulus was Kickstarted and raised over $60,000.[23] Statistics are Reason, Passion, Might, Luck, and Affinity, and the default classes are The Alienist, The Antiquarian, The Author, The Devout, The Detective, The Dilettante, The Doctor, The Heir, The Journalist, The Professor, and The Salesman. There were plans for the kickstarter to produce a "The Congo" playset, allowing characters to explore "the Heart of Darkness"; this idea was dropped after a backlash.[24]
Uncharted Worlds
Successfully backed on Kickstarter,[25] Uncharted Worlds is "a Space Opera pen-and-paper roleplaying game of exploration, combat, politics and commerce across the stars." Designed by Sean Gomes.[26]
Urban Shadows
Urban Shadows is an urban fantasy game set in "a dark urban environment drowning in supernatural politics",[27] with Archetypes including vampires, werewolves, wizards, ghosts and human monster hunters using the main stats of Blood, Heart, Mind, and Spirit. Urban Shadows introduces systems to emphasize the political, tragic, and horrific aspects of the genre: characters must interact with different Factions to advance, or mark Corruption to gain unique and powerful moves while drawing closer to being retired from play dead or to become antagonists.[27] Written by Andrew Medeiros and Mark Diaz Truman and published by Truman's Magpie Games as a result of a successful Kickstarter campaign.[28] 2016 Ennie Award Nominee for Best Game[29]
The Warren
The Warren is a game that involves "intelligent rabbits trying to make the best of a world filled with hazards, predators and, worst of all, other rabbits. It is a game about survival and community."[30] Published in 2016, "This game takes inspiration from classic rabbit tales such as Watership Down, Fifteen Rabbits, and Peter Rabbit. It uses a heavily-modified version of the game mechanics from Vincent Baker’s Apocalypse World."[30]
Worlds in Peril
Worlds in Peril is a tabletop roleplaying game designed to tell collaborative stories about superheroes taking on both the challenges faced as a superhero, with the villains and public image and fame (or perhaps infamy) that goes along with it, as well as the challenges they face in their personal lives when they take off the mask and have to deal with everyday problems and relationships like everybody else. Designed by Kyle Simons, Adam Bosarge, Jason Faulk.

Reception and analysis

In addition to other awards won, Apocalypse World won the 2010 Indie RPG Award for Most Innovative Game[31] and Dungeon World won the 2013 ENnie award for Best Rules.[32]

Multiple reviews, including Play Unplugged's review of Apocalypse World[33] and on the streamlining and focus on the fiction the system's reliance on moves produces.[34][35] Bitch magazine has commented on the messy interconnected relationships the system produces.[36]

References

  1. ^ Forum statementVincent Baker, 11 June 2010
  2. ^ "Big List of Games Powered by the Apocalypse". Google Docs.
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ "Dungeon World: A Game with Modern Rules & Old-School Style". Kickstarter. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  5. ^ LaTorra, Sage. "Open License". Dungeon World. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  6. ^ McJanda, Mina [@minahoneybat] (April 24, 2020). "Hey hello! Just as a public service announcement, Jay Iles is no more~ I hope you'll continue to visit Minerva McJanda (Mina for short) for all your excellent tabletop RPG needs" (Tweet). Retrieved July 5, 2020 – via Twitter.
  7. ^ McJanda, Mina [@minahoneybat] (April 24, 2020). "not sure - probably 'By Mina McJanda, published under [old name]'" (Tweet). Retrieved July 5, 2020 – via Twitter.
  8. ^ "Legacy: Life Among the Ruins - world-rebuilding roleplaying". Kickstarter.
  9. ^ "Legacy: Life Among the Ruins 2nd Edition". Kickstarter.
  10. ^ "MASHED: A Korean War MASH RPG". Kickstarter.
  11. ^ "Brabblemark Press". Brabblemark Press.
  12. ^ "The Monsterhearts website".
  13. ^ "Monsterhearts (1st & 2nd Eds.) | RPG | RPGGeek". rpggeek.com.
  14. ^ "Generic Games". genericgames.co.nz.
  15. ^ "Offworlders". www.drivethrurpg. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  16. ^ Girdwood, Andrew (2017-05-29). "Ruma: Dawn of Empire – an alternative Roman Empire". geeknative.com. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  17. ^ Greening, Martin. "Ruma: Dawn of Empire RPG". Kickstarter. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  18. ^ "Sagas of the Icelanders on DrivethruRPG".
  19. ^ "Monkeyfun Studios". Monkeyfun Studios.
  20. ^ "The Sprawl: Cyberpunk Roleplaying, Powered by the Apocalypse". Kickstarter.
  21. ^ "Transit: The Spaceship RPG - Fiddleback Productions | DriveThruRPG.com". www.drivethrurpg.com.
  22. ^ "Transit RPG". Fiddleback Productions.
  23. ^ "tremulus: a storytelling game of lovecraftian horror". Kickstarter.
  24. ^ RPG Cultural Appropriation, RPG Review issue 17, September 2012
  25. ^ "Uncharted Worlds: A Space Opera Roleplaying Game". Kickstarter.
  26. ^ "Home". uncharted-worlds.com.
  27. ^ a b "Urban Shadows (official page)". Magpie Games. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
  28. ^ "Urban Shadows Kickstarter". Kickstarter. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
  29. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-07-25. Retrieved 2016-07-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ a b "The Warren". Bully Pulpit Games. 2014-09-08. Retrieved 2016-11-11.
  31. ^ Most Innovative – 2010 Indie RPG Awards
  32. ^ "2013 ENnie Awards".
  33. ^ Review of Apocalypse World Archived 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine Play Unplugged, July 2012
  34. ^ Apocalypse World Review Flames Rising
  35. ^ Barf Forth Apocalyptica Critical Hits review
  36. ^ "The Sexuality of Monsterhearts". Bitch Media. Retrieved 2019-07-10.