I did make a couple of revisions from my last post on the subject. These were:
1) The table for generating the number of citizens or zombies has been incorporated into the card itself. Turns out there was enough space to do this and it worked fine.
2) The other encounters (i.e. not the zombies or Rep 3 citizens) are now in their own deck. Why? Well, it means that I can have a static deck that is not changed, and a different deck consisting of all the other encounters that can be modified as I want between games without having to rebuild the core deck each time. Instead, I created 'Special Encounter' cards, which go in to the Zombie/Citizen deck and indicate that you need to draw from the second deck. Also, some of the cards ended up asking for specific cards to be pulled (more on this later) and by having all of them in one big deck, you don't end up spoiling future 'surprises' when you look for other cards.
So the rules now look like this:
ATZ Encounter Deck
To build the deck, start by including zombie cards based upon how long it has been since the outbreak. These cards represent a roll of 1d3 or 1d6 depending on the card:
Days
|
Cards with 1d3 zombies
|
Cards with 1d6 zombies
|
1-10
|
8
|
4
|
11-20
|
6
|
6
|
21-30
|
4
|
8
|
31+
|
2
|
10
|
To this deck of 12 cards, add cards representing 1d3 citizens, again based on the days since the outbreak:
Days
| Civilian cards |
1-10
|
6
|
11-20
|
4
|
21-30
|
2
|
31+
|
None!
|
Finally, add a number of 'Special Encounter' cards to bring the number of cards in the deck to 24. When one of these is drawn, take the top card from a separate deck consisting of all the possible encounters you have figures for. This deck can be adjusted as you get new figures or if you want more of a specific encounter (i.e. More National Guard encounters near a quarantine zone).
Whenever a PEF is resolved during the game, draw the top card from the main deck and follow the instructions.
Having revised the rules and printed the cards, I took the system for a test run.
Cards in the starting deck |
I decided to set the encounter between the 11th and 20th day of the outbreak. So I took 6x 1d3 zombie cards, 6x 1d6 zombie cards and 4x 1d3 Citizen cards. (You should be able to see the table of modifiers on each card in the picture. These are just drafts, so the photo quality is not great, but they get the job done).
Special Encounter cards and the Special Encounter deck |
I started by wanting to select a character for myself. Suddenly I realised why it was a good idea to keep the special encounters separate! I could just randomly draw the top card of the Special Encounter deck and take whatever that was as my starting group. I was lucky and drew 'Chopper Ed'!
Chop, chop! |
Initial lay out |
A PEF moved towards Ed in the first couple of turns, but was nothing much:
Two zombies. No problem! |
Ed was doing okay, searching the first house with no problem, until he got to the white car by the front of the church...A random event meant a cell phone started to ring. It stayed that way the rest of the game (Presumably if was one of those persistent PPI calls) attracting zombies each turn...
Not the time to stop and take a call... (yellow counter = phone location) |
The second PEF was when things took a slight turn for the worse. It turned out to be two SWAT team members, who, as a result of the Meet & Greet test, demanded Ed turn in his weapons.
Rep 5 with Assault Rifles... not worth trying to resist! |
No such luck! It turned out to be the SWAT leader and a couple more of his team! I guess this must have been a group who were planning on sweeping the town for survivors...
More well equipped men who deny Ed his right to bear arms during an apocalypse! |
So that was a whole bunch of SWAT on the table, none of which were likely to lend Ed a gun! With all the PEFs resolved and the zombies drawing closer, Ed decided to take a chance and enter the house...
It doesn't end well... |
So there you have it. Aside from the lack of variety, which was just down to luck of the draw, it worked very well. I'll definitely be using this system for future games. The deck of pre-generated characters is also fun for randomly selecting a group for a one off game as well.
As ever, any thoughts or comments are most welcome. And thanks for reading!
Sounds great. I think it;s always best to have as much as you can on the card itself. And there's quite a bit of room on a standard playing card size
ReplyDeleteThanks! While I don't object to the variety the tables in the rules offer, I certainly prefer drawing a card with all the stats done in advance and knowing I have exactly the right figures! :)
DeleteThe cards look like they work brilliantly
ReplyDeleteThanks. I think they work well. And you don't even have to go down an expensive route to make them. I printed them at home on paper and used regular playing cards in some old card sleeves I had to stiffen them up and make them easy to shuffle. Works great!
DeleteThey seem to work really well, though of course there are some drawbacks to using cards, a lot of folk do prefer them.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I think for me it is about striking the balance between ease of play and flexibility. Ideally I'd have so many figures that I could accommodate anything the tables in the rules might turn up, but the reality is different, alas! And it does help speed things along. Easy to change if I get bored of some of the same things turning up all the time as well.
DeleteProfessional looking cards! I look forward to seeing them working in some ore scenarios. What were you saying about NPC movement?
ReplyDeleteThanks, David. Aside from the dark pictures I took in a rush, I'm quite happy with them!
ReplyDeleteI'm working on my own set of table(s) for NPC movement. I'll probably post about this when it is more fully formed. Stay tuned for more on that!}