One Page RPG Jam 2024 – We Go In – Saving the World when you’re not From The World

The third RPG I’ve posed to the Jam is

WE GO IN

The concept is being a disaster relief operative. A little like “International Rescue” also known as Thunderbirds.

Now there are differences

  1. It’s team based per player rather than playing a single “brother” with their own craft.
  2. Every player has the same vehicle (though this could change if it gets a full release)
  3. The PCs are all aliens. They’re not brothers from a secret island on Earth, they’re concerned citizens from the worlds involved in the war
  4. Every ship is slightly different.

One Page RPG Jam 2024 – Chosen Men – “Sharpe” by any other name

The second RPG I’ve posted for the Jam is

Chosen Men

This game is the “Sharpe” of RPGs. The idea of romping around Spain putting Napoleon back in his place has entertained me for years while watching the TV movies and also then reading the books.
If you’re familiar with the concept, you’d have no trouble at all with the system.

One Page RPG Jam 2024 – Talking to Dragons – an Earthsea-inspired RPG

So far I’ve posted two entries for the Jam

The first is….Talking to Dragons

This is the base system for “Tales of Distant Lands” and could be considered a QuickStart so it’s also available on DTRPG. I’ll still be working on the full release of Tales of Distant Lands obviously

Public Update for Tales of Distant Lands

Today we made two private entries public.

Both are more detail on the Cunning Folk. Cunning Folk are the “lesser” wizards of the worlds. People who have a smattering of wizardry in one area. They’re cure-alls, chanters, wind workers and fish-callers, but the title may be used for anyone who has a little magic and uses it to enhance their trade.

The Cunning Folk, part 1

The Cunning Folk, part 2

Tales of Distant Lands: The Song of Rusal and Erse

The Song of Rusal and Erse

In the history of Saaland, Rusal was a legendary warrior, poet and prince. In the story, Rusal become enchanted with a woman he sees on a passing ship and pursues her by jumping in the water.

But the waters are too strong for him to catch her. The song is about his call to the woman as the waves eventually take him. She can only watch as he drowns.

The second part of the song describes how the woman, Erse, takes the same route on the ship years later and the shade of Rusal rises from his watery grave to court her once more. This time she chooses to jump into the water and they embrace, the waves bearing them to the depths.

The story highlights the dangers of recklessness and obsession and serves as a warning tale to intemperate youth. Various renditions of the story exist with the apocryphal Rusal (also known as Russe in the south of Saaland) having varying accomplishments and adornments. He has also been syncretised into other heroic myths.

The identity of Erse (Elspe in the south of Saaland) is less straightforward but is said to represent the historical drowning of Lady Erse on the crossing between Erea and Saaland. Erse was exiled from Saaland during the overthrow of her father, a local warlord and was able to return in her old age, once all of her enemies were dead. Her sorrow at her dead family results in her throwing herself from the ship once she sights the coast.

In the tongue of Saaland, these verses rhyme and are accompanied by music.

The waters of Saaland speak his name,
Rusal, the prince of legend,
Warrior with a heart of poetry,
His eyes found her on a passing ship,
An ethereal vision,
Her silhouette a beacon on the horizon.

With reckless abandon he plunged,
Into the depths, toward her shadow,
The waves mocked his valiant pursuit,
Their cruel embrace dragging him deeper,
His call to her lost in the roar,
His fate sealed by the unforgiving sea.

Years drifted by like autumn leaves,
Erse, her heart laden with sorrow,
Returned to the waters of her exile,
Her eyes searching for a coast long unseen,
A spectral figure rose from the depths,
Rusal’s shade, his love undimmed by death.

This time she did not hesitate,
The waters held no terror, only reunion,
She leapt from the ship, arms wide,
To meet her lover beneath the waves,
Their embrace a final, fateful dance,
The sea their eternal witness.

Together they sank into legend,
Two souls bound by the currents,
Their story a whispered warning,
To those who chase shadows on the water,
Recklessness and obsession,
The waves’ unyielding toll.

In Saaland, their tale endures,
Rusal, the poet prince, and Erse,
Echoes of their love and loss,
Resounding through the ages,
A myth to temper youthful ardor,
A love as vast and perilous as the sea.