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The Fantasy Trip. Death Test PDF

26 Pages·2019·3.44 MB·English
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™ ™ Game Design by Steve Jackson TT TT WW YYOOUU!! hhee hhoorrsszz aannTTss TTwwoo pprrooggrraammmmeedd aaddvveennttuurreess ffoorr uussee wwiitthh TThhee FFaannttaassyy TTrriipp:: MMeelleeee aanndd WWiizzaarrdd The Fantasy Trip TM TM Game Design by Steve Jackson Cover and Interior Illustrations by Rick Hershey Counter Illustrations by Liz Danforth Logo and Production by Ben Williams • Prepress Checks by Monica Stephens Thanks go to the following people for comments on the design and help with playtesting: Howard Thompson, Ben Ostrander, Bill Williams, Robert Taylor, Kenneth Schultz, Robert Schultz, Dragomyr the Cossack, House Thornwell, Tracy Harms, Jerry Epperson, and Scott Rich. May you all duck the Gargoyles. The Fantasy Trip, Death Test, Warehouse 23, the pyramid logo, and the names of all products published by Steve Jackson Games Incorporated are trademarks or registered trademarks of Steve Jackson Games Incorporated, or used under license. The Fantasy Trip: Death Test is copyright © 1978, 2018 by Steve Jackson Games Incorporated. All rights reserved. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this material via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Dhallak m’Thorsz Carn is the ruler of a powerful city. He is also famous as a war leader. His ruthlessness with his soldiers, and his generosity toward those who meet his standards, are proverbial. Thus, many adventurers seek his city of Ardonirane – to face death there. You are one such traveler. Entering Ardonirane, you quickly learn that the Thorsz is, as usual, hiring mercenaries . . . but the test they must pass is severe. Singly or in small groups, they must enter a labyrinth under his palace as though in search of treasure. And, indeed, treasure is to be found there – guarded by monsters, prisoners, wizards, and other would-be soldiers of the Thorsz. The penalty for failure is death. Those who survive the labyrinth honorably will be hired and given rank appropriate to their performance; in addition, they may keep what treasure they bring out. (The Thorsz does not consider the treasure in awarding rank; he feels gold is its own reward.) He takes into account the number that originally made up the party, their bravery in combat, and the number and kind of foes they slay on their way through. You decide to take your chances, and report to the officer in charge of testing. He tells you that: (1) The Thorsz has eyes everywhere. Nothing you do in his labyrinth will go unnoticed. (2) You need not search for “secret” doors. All chambers, passages, etc., will be clearly marked. This is a test of skill and bravery, not eyesight. (3) Rooms are separated from passageways by “curtains of darkness” rather than doors. These are magic, and appear to be thick velvet-black rectangles. You will usually be able to step through, although you can never look through. However, the beings within a room will never be able to follow you through a curtain. If you are pursued and escape through a curtain, nothing will follow you. Sometimes, though, a curtain will not let you leave a room! The only way to find out is to try – and a curtain may let one person pass and stop another. (If you understand magic, you will realize that the “curtains of darkness” must be Shadow spells, which some hidden wizard occasionally throws a Wall into. However, don’t try to look through a curtain with Mage Sight. It won’t work.) (4) You will be loaned a set of magic rings that allow your party to speak with one another even if you become separated. You are advised to rejoin as quickly as possible. While you are split, you must operate as two separate groups, but each will know what is happening to the others until you can get back together. (These rings are the only magical items, except for ordinary wizards’ staffs, that candidates may take into the labyrinth.) The testing officer wishes you luck and tells you to report back, with the weapons, armor, and companions of your choice, at noon the next day. And so it comes to pass that you find yourself opening a heavy door at the lowest level of the Thorsz’ palace . . . •2• HOW TO PLAY DEATH TEST This is a programmed adventure using the Melee and (optionally) Wizard combat rules. You must have Melee to play; Wizard will allow you to add magical combat if you wish. The Death Test booklet sets up the rooms for you, gives you decisions to make, and tells you the outcomes of these decisions, but you need the Melee map and rules for the combats you will face. Death Test can be played several ways: Solitaire – One lone player can take both sides, creating a party of adventurers and running them through. The booklet will give instructions regarding the foes in each room; the player sets up both sides on the Melee map and plays out the battles. Two-Player – One player creates a party of adventurers and enters the labyrinth. When foes are encountered, the other player controls them on the Melee board. His objective is to kill all the mercenaries. Multi-Player – One person plays the creatures in the labyrinth. The others each play an individual fighter or wizard, cooperating (or competing) to get through the labyrinth. (If you play this way, the player who operates the monsters should act as Game Master to settle disputes, and players should agree beforehand on whether they will be permitted to fight each other while on the trip.) After a few games, the GM will be familiar enough with the game to introduce new variations, thus keeping the players from anticipating traps they have already seen. CREATING FIGURES FOR DEATH TEST Since Death Test uses the Melee rules, characters are created as in Melee; wizards are created as in Wizard. However, this labyrinth is tough. Although a group of four “beginning” characters can sometimes make it through, experienced figures will have much better odds. Therefore, you may want to let your figures build up ST, DX, and/or IQ in regular Melee / Wizard combat (or just start with more experienced figures) before attempting the Death Test. •3• ENTERING THE DEATH TEST LABYRINTH One to four figures may enter. If you are using Wizard, any or all of the figures may be wizards, and magic may be freely used. If you are using the Melee rules only, you will be able to use no magic, but some (combat-type) magic will be used against you, and when it happens, it will be clearly explained. Record sheets should be made up for each entering figure, just as in Melee. All Melee rules apply except those for experience. Experience is awarded to survivors based on their labyrinth performance. If you are using Wizard, all Wizard rules except experience apply. All combat in the Death Test labyrinth is considered “one fight.” Thus, wizards have no opportunity to recover lost strength by resting, and must ration their energy carefully – and hits cannot be healed except by magic, for either wizards or heroes, until you are out. To enter the labyrinth, turn to instruction number 1 and read it. Like each later instruction, it will give you information and directions. Some instructions call for a decision. In this case, make up your mind what you will do before turning to the next instruction. To avoid losing your place, you can make a note of each instruction number as you pass it. You should try never to read instructions you have not legitimately come to; to do so will lessen your enjoyment of the game. (Also, there are a few instructions included that cannot be reached if you play fair.) As you read the instructions, you will move down long corridors and into rooms. All combat takes place in the rooms; the corridors merely take you from one room to the next. (However, you must follow the corridor instructions carefully, or you’ll get lost.) When you enter a room, Melee turns begin. It is permitted to stop just before entering a room, either to change weapons or armor or to cast one or more protective spells on yourself or other members of your party. As soon as you are in a room, look at the room map and/or instructions and place obstacles, pits, enemies, etc., on the Melee map. Place your own figures in the starred entry hexes at the end of the room (east or west) you entered. Finally, read the rest of the room instructions to see what is happening and what your options are. In each new room, game turns begin with your four (or fewer) figures standing in the entry hexes at one end of the room, having just stepped through the curtain of darkness. No figure may both come through the curtain of darkness and do anything else on the same move. Obstacles (black hexes) shown on the room maps stop both movement and thrown/missile weapons and spells. Pits (gray hexes) prevent movement (except into the pit), but weapons and spells may pass over them. •4• LEAVING A ROOM When all your foes in a room are dead or fled, your party may freely leave and re-enter that room thereafter. However, if a figure (or the group) wants to leave a room containing living enemies (even if they are asleep, trapped behind a fire, etc.), they must (a) be given the chance to attempt escape in an instruction, (b) successfully move to one of the three starred hexes at either extreme end of the board, and (c) have at least one hex of MA left in order to leave. (It is also permitted to leave by a shift or disengage which takes you off the board from one of those six end hexes, or by teleporting to the other side of the curtain.) When a figure trying to escape reaches the edge of the board, turn to the instruction indicated by the “run away” choice to see if the curtain allows passage. If it does, the figure may use that last hex of MA to get out and to safety. If the curtain does not allow passage, the figure stays in that hex, ending movement there, facing the curtain. If the figure tried to shift out, the attempt fails and the figure stays in the same hex. The same goes for an attempt to disengage. Teleporting out always works, but costs a wizard lots of ST. Note: It is perfectly all right to kill an unconscious foe. MAPPING AND RECORD-KEEPING You will need to keep the following records as you play: (1) the standard record sheets for your own figures, (2) a map of the labyrinth as you explore it, and (3) a record sheet for each room you enter. The regular figure record sheets are kept in normal Melee/Wizard style. Keep track of treasure and weapons carried, hits taken and ST expended, and MA reductions for heavy loot carried (see below). Your labyrinth map will show which rooms you have passed through. Each room is a different color, to aid you in keeping track. You will need the map if you double back, either accidentally or on purpose. You should also make a record for each room as you enter it. The book will tell you what foes you encounter (or refer you to the Fighter Table to let you roll for enemies). The room record is made up of one record for each foe there, together with any other notes you make. If you leave living enemies in a room, they will be there if you return. Any corpses (friendly or enemy) will also be there as you left them. However, unattended treasure may vanish, or wounded friends may die (see Abandoning Treasure). Therefore, you should keep all the room records until you finish the adventure. When you re-enter a room, go by the record sheet instead of the printed instructions. Things a group has killed will not come alive and attack again. However, foes left alive will be back in their starting positions with the wounds you gave them and will attack on sight. You may wish to keep a record of the number of each instruction you take, in case you lose your place. •5• PICKING UP TREASURE When you find treasure, make notes on the figure record sheets to show who is carrying it. Each gold bar a figure carries will reduce its MA by 1, down to a minimum MA of 4. A figure cannot carry more than 10 gold bars. (Extra weapons picked up in the labyrinth count as gold bars for weight – see below.) Other treasure weighs nothing; any amount may be carried. ABANDONING TREASURE (OR YOUR COMPANIONS) If a party wishes to avoid being slowed by the weight of gold or extra weapons, some or all of these may be left in any room after it has been cleaned out – that is, after its occupants are dead. Note the abandoned treasures on the record sheet for that room. If the party comes back for them, roll one die. On a 5 or 6, everything is gone; another party came by and took them. Otherwise, they’re still there. Roll the same way for wounded but living friends left behind in an empty room; when you come back, they’ve had their throats cut on a 5 or 6, and are still alive otherwise. Gold, weapons, or bodies left in a corridor will always be gone when you return. SPLITTING A PARTY It is legal (but unwise) for a party to split up. Not only does it cause inconvenience as you try to read two sets of instructions . . . a party that divides its force will probably be wiped out. If you want to send one scout into a room to see what’s there, the rest of the party can enter on any later turn (but must still stop in the entry hexes). However, this is a good way to lose a scout. If a party bugs out during combat and runs out both doors, it may try to rejoin by entering an unexplored room from both ends at once. Place the figures entering from the west on one set of entry hexes, and those entering from the east on the other. If the instructions say there were enemies at one end, they will be in the middle instead. Strength lies in numbers. Don’t split unnecessarily. ILLUSIONS It is legal for a wizard to summon something, or create an illusion, to scout a room before entering. However, images cannot pass through the curtains. It takes at least 12 turns to walk down each corridor. Thus, any image or illusion created in one room will vanish before it or you can get to another room. If two or more players are involved, the “monster” player can choose whether and when to attempt to disbelieve the mercenary wizards’ figures. However, when one player is playing solitaire, use the following rule: Only foes with IQ 8 or higher can attempt to disbelieve – that is, wolves, bears, and other animals can’t disbelieve illusions. Foes will only attempt to disbelieve when they see nonhumans attacking them, or when more than •6• four figures at once attack, or if they actually see a wizard create a figure in the room. In any of these cases, roll one die for each foe, each turn. On a 5 or 6, it will attempt to disbelieve one of your figures. PLAYING THE MONSTERS If you are playing solitaire, you may use any strategy you like while playing the mercenary side, as long as you follow the instructions. To play the monsters, use the following guidelines: (I) Monsters and foes always fight to the death, and never run, unless an instruction specifically says otherwise. If an instruction says they might run, assume they will do so as soon as they are hurt worse than you are. (2) Most monsters will use standard tactics – that is, they will run at you and try to kill you. Human and humanoid foes will attempt to close with you unless their main weapon is a missile weapon. If it is a missile weapon, they will try to stand off and fire as long as they can. (3) Some monsters or foes will have favorite tactics (mentioned in the instructions). Use these tactics as long as they seem sensible. (4) In general, use “common sense” to decide what the foes will do. If two or more reactions are equally likely (for instance, one orc trying to decide which of two humans to attack), roll a die to decide. FIGHTER TABLE When the instructions refer to this Fighter Table, roll 3 dice for each fighter you need, and refer to the list below. When you first encounter a fighter, their shield (if any) and first-named weapon will be ready. All except Number 15 carry one dagger. Assume a fighter is human and has IQ 8 unless specified otherwise in the instructions or the table. If the instructions say “orc” and the table says otherwise, it’s an orc. 3. ST 15, DX 14 (11), IQ 10. Chainmail, battleaxe, two-handed sword. 4. ST 14, DX 13 (11). Leather, two-handed sword, light crossbow. 5. ST 13, DX 16. No armor. Longbow, morningstar. 6. ST 13, DX 12 (10). Leather armor, halberd, small ax. 7. Halfling. ST 9, DX 13, IQ 10. No armor. Javelin, small shield. 8. Dwarf. ST 15, DX 10 (8). Leather armor, pike axe, battleaxe. 9. ST 13, DX 11 (10). No armor. Large shield, morningstar. 10. ST 11, DX 13. No armor. Longbow, shortsword. 11. ST 12, DX 12 (9). Leather, large shield, broadsword. 12. ST 10, DX 14 (11). Chainmail, hammer, horse bow. 13. ST 11, DX 13 (11). Leather armor, small shield, mace. 14. ST 12, DX 12. No armor. Small shield, broadsword. 15. Elf. ST 9, DX 17 (15). Leather, small bow, rapier, main-gauche. 16. ST 13, DX 13 (10). Chainmail, small shield, morningstar. 17. ST 11, DX 18 (15), IQ 9. Chainmail, small shield, small ax. 18. ST 12, DX 17 (13), IQ 11. Fine plate armor, broadsword, light crossbow. •7• 1. Your party goes through the door and goes west. You come to a curtain and step through. Go to 48. 2. You come to a 3-way intersection. You can go south (116), east (4), or west (17). 3. You are in the Indigo Room (see below). There are two orcs there, at the Xs (roll from Fighter Table). They attack; roll for initiative. You may fight or run for an exit. If you try to go out the east door, go to 34. If you get to the west door, go to 49. If you stay and kill the orcs, go to 22. X W E X 4. You are facing east. In front of you is a curtain. Walk through (13) or turn around (41). 5. You are facing west. There is a curtain in front of you. Walk through (57) or turn around (87). 6. You are facing east. In front of you is a curtain. Walk through (11) or turn around (18). 7. You are facing west. You can go ahead (156) or turn around (44). 8. You are facing east; you turn north and come to a 4-way intersection. You may continue north (86), go back south (19), turn west (144), or go east (42). 9. You are facing west. Go forward (84) or turn around (20). 10. You are facing east. In front of you is a curtain. Go forward (60) or turn around (46). •8• 11. You are in the Gold Room (see map below). As the last of your party passes through the curtain, you hear growling. There is a large bear at each of the Xs. Position your party on the four entrance hexes and go to 21. T X W E X 12. You are in the Silver Room (see map at number 38). There are three fighters there (roll from the Fighter Table), one at each F. They are all wounded; roll one die for each fighter and give him that many hits of damage. You surprised them, so you have movement initiative for the first turn. If you attack, go to 24. If you do not attack, but start to run for the east door, go to 36. If you do not attack, but want to run for the west door, go to 51. If you want to talk to them, go to 55. 13. You are in the Green Room (standard Melee map without obstacles; no map needed). Arrange your party on the entrance hexes. If you have any wizards in your group, go to 25. Otherwise, go to 53. 14. You try to run through. After each turn of running, roll one die. If you roll a 3, 4, 5, or 6, go to 135. If you roll a 1 or 2, you may keep running for another turn and roll again – and so on. If you make it to the exit without rolling a 3, 4, 5, or 6, go to 162. If you want to stop running while in the room, go to 135. 15. It contained two gold bars and a flask of white liquid. If you drink the liquid (there is only enough for one to drink), go to 39. You can save the flask and drink it at any time you are not in combat. If you save the flask, make a note of Number 39, and read it when you drink. Number 39, obviously, cannot direct you back to your place, so keep your finger on your place as you read 39. Now you may leave. Go to 162. •9•

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