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"Still A Slacker? Another Fast City Idea..."

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Blogger mordicai said...

I have been using the Major Arcana-- "The Trumps"-- as the religion in my current campaign. I'm totally going to use this for the next "religious" town they go to.

April 16, 2011 at 10:37 AM

Blogger C'nor (Outermost_Toe) said...

The Tower could also be some sort of major potential trigger for something that will completely change the face of the city, like a cache of harpy eggs, or an arcane ritual preventing some strange magical thing.

April 16, 2011 at 11:12 AM

Blogger huth said...

Fuck you blogger eating my long-ass comment.

Anyway, short version:

Chariots could mean transport hub, like a zeppelin port or canal-boat centre or dock or airport or railroad station or teleportation circle.

Moon could be something that changes depending on what time it is, like a district or street that's only there at night, or a library that's a brothel (or mandatory party zone) on certain festival days (or both, yuan-ti bookpeople?), or something to do with the passing of time (a magic clocktower?)

Tower could be a stronghold or prison, something kept away from the populace. Asylums, harems, quarantine zones, holy places.

Strength could be something that defends or makes the city resilient, an abode of protective genus locii or something they have that no one else does.

Similarly the Sun could be a thing that the city's nature revolves around, like a marketplace for a trading civilisation, or a mine for Deadwood. Or, like the Sun, it could go away sometimes, but with more totalizing effect than the moon–when the Sun flips over, the whole city is affected.

The World could indicate a sub-dimension, demiplane or some nested reality.

The Lovers are also a duality (cf gemini), so they might indicate something the PCs are in relation to, something that shares a quality with the PCs or someone they're co-orbiting.

Temperance, Judgement, et al could mean a place where these traits are called for or tested in a PC, places where they can be demonstrated in the PC for their benefit (time for some fairy tale challenges? Be nice to the old lady, and you'll get some magic help?).

April 16, 2011 at 12:11 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

improvisation through tarots rocks.
As for the interpretation, I usually stick to "traditional" meanings, as they are somewhat helped by illustrations (Rider-Waite decks are beautiful) as are chocked full of symbols. Yay symbolism!
Knowing the meaning of cards, both major and minor arcana, allow also to generate plots and events really, really fast (and 9nth of swords can both mean in this case a violent figure or profetic dreams of ill omen).
Tarot reading is quite easy and recommended for DMs: not only it's practice in framing a number of tropes and archetypes in a story, but also the actual reader-readee brainstorming/fortunetelling resembles in many ways a collaborative RPG :)

April 16, 2011 at 12:27 PM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

@tsocjanth

yeah, tarot reading is itself very improvisational, but i am thinking the "obviousness" of most of these cards gives you a broad-brush level of detail even if you don't know the "right" way to do it.

And the 9 of swords is obviously a vampire, duh.

April 16, 2011 at 12:39 PM

Blogger Blair said...

The Moon? Obviously the location where a bridge to the moon materializes when showered by moonlight...

I'm digging this and will try to try generating a starport with the method.

April 16, 2011 at 1:09 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm too much of a slacker to go to all the trouble of making that readable...

Although, not so much of a slacker that I won't comment on it...

April 16, 2011 at 3:46 PM

Blogger squidman said...

I need to get into tarot more. I've finished reading the scar two days ago and this presents me with a new perspective. Thanks.

April 16, 2011 at 4:37 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

@zak: vampire? why would a vampire sleep under a duvet embroidered with roses (or was it poppies) and zodiac signs? :)
But yeah, the symbols on the cards remain really powerful anyway, their original meaning being partly lost does not impact on the usefulness in any way as long as some kind of tension results from the reading.

April 16, 2011 at 5:14 PM

Blogger C'nor (Outermost_Toe) said...

Different pictures. The 9 of Swords has a dragon of some sort on it in mine, most likely.

April 17, 2011 at 1:46 AM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

i was thinking the 9 of cups

sorry

April 17, 2011 at 1:47 AM

Blogger huth said...

Hey guys! Stuff! for anyone looking for the images, the Rider-Waite deck is public domain and if you type "free tarot reading rider-waite" or whatever in google it'll get you plenty of options.

The Tarot Bourgoise might let you do, uh, literalist versions of the above, while the Thoth deck might work for even more abstracted versions. The Visconti-Sforza just sounds cool.

April 17, 2011 at 7:23 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I feel the itch to write a serie of articles about tarots, improv and RPGs... but I have just 8 exams to prepare in the next month :/

April 17, 2011 at 10:30 AM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

@tsocjanth

my recent thing is tarot and Not-Improvisation--that is, finding ways to use card decks that give you complete, useful, fully-formed idea right out of the box.

April 17, 2011 at 12:39 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

@zak: oh, that's way more interesting.
By the way, I just finished my first Vornheim session. It ran smoothly except for:
1: I put a winery and attached hanging garden/vineyard on a tower. Which is kinda cool. Except it seems in Vornheim it snows all the damn time. Is the weather always snowy and cold? What's the deal with the gardens?
2: I missed a "random stuff going on on the street which is interesting and possibly interactive but less intense than the encounter table" table. So I just faffed with the npc table. It worked allright, especially after i followed the advice to keep on throwing stuff at the players :)
Am about to blog a mini-report as well.

April 17, 2011 at 3:35 PM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

@tsocjanth

1: I believe I mention in the garden section that such flora as fluorish in Vornheims flora are bizarrely hearty hybrids.

2: that's the way i'd go--i think i recommend that actually. The encounters are for Unavoidables only. If you want to know just who's there, roll on the NPCs.

April 17, 2011 at 5:00 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Have you read The Castle of Crossed Destinies by Italo Calvino? Recommendation of the day. Not exactly the same thing, but you could probably weaponize it for D&D as an adventure generator.

April 18, 2011 at 6:22 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

@ticktockman: While I had to study and read some Calvino in school (of all the mandatory reading it was sure the most enjoyable) I never heard of CoCC. Strangely enough his novels are split in two categories: famous in Italy and unheard of abroad, and the other way around. I reckon also Calvino's Invisible Cities (on my reading list) could be really useful for urban adventures. Anyway, a great fantasy author, The Nonexisting Knight a really good novel.

April 18, 2011 at 5:21 PM

Blogger Peter Robbins said...

This is incredibly good work Zak. I've only recently been introduced to your blog as a whole, and I've got to say, bravo : across the board. I will be using this method. This is extremely practical. And thanks to others for posting the public domain deck images as well.

September 9, 2011 at 10:13 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

Good use of the pack, Zak
I like a bit of Tarot for my Campaign Politics generation.
A few cards for each faction, depending on how powerful they are and BANG - got yourself a little history there.

May 26, 2015 at 10:12 AM

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