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Playing Kids' Games
Dark Places & Demogorgns (DP&D) is fantastic. Full Stop. But, I should say a little more than that, and I have and I will. I have even dedicated other PWWO to their Cryptid Manual.
DP&D is a "Stranger Things" like game of playing kids in the 80s, early and mid-80s in particular, when the audience for this game was the age at the time their characters would be. It is a great game that captures a time that many remember as simpler (though I also remember trying to get "online" with a 300 baud (bps) modem...nothing simple about that!) time.
That is the main focus of the game, playing kids and 80s kids in particular. But that is not all it can do. It is a great game of "mild" supernatural terror. A lot less than Call of Cthulhu, or even Chill, but greater than say Scooby-doo or Ghostbusters. For me, it is exactly the sort of shenanigans I wish I could have gotten in to. You know, but minus all the death.
But let's say for example you don't play DP&D (and why not?) you play something like NIGHT SHIFT that deals with more adult matters? Not R or X rated mind you or even bills and jobs, just people over 18. What can a game like DP&D do for you?
DP&D is such a delight. It really is. I am very fond of this game and I still enjoy playing it. On the surface it looks like DP&D and NIGHT SHIFT could be used to tell the same sorts of stories, and that is true to a degree, but that really underplays what makes both games special.
NIGHT SHIFT covers adults in a very dangerous supernatural modern world.
Dark Places & Demogorgons covers kids in a very dangerous supernatural world of the 1980s.
Getting the Characters to Play Well With Others
It seems to be an unpopular topic among old-schoolers, but new gamers love this stuff. They want to know about their character's backstory, what they did when they were younger. Even down to things like what their favorite foods are, who was their childhood crush, and more. Personally, I think it is fun as hell and I love that these newer players have so much excitement for their characters and games.
But how can an old guy like me do that and still stay true to my own roots?
Easy. Take my characters and play them as kids. There are a few ways to make this work.
The Flashback
This is the technique used in the Stephen King movie "It" and a couple of times on Supernatural.
Take your NIGHT SHIFT characters and re-do them as DP&D characters. Something I mentioned before, and it is true here as well, do not try to make a one to one correspondence between the classes. Think about yourself, what you were, and what you were doing when you were 13 vs. now. I would not be the same "class" at all. In fact, this is part of the fun. What was your character back then that made them who they are now? Were the actions of the DP&D game what made your character into who they are now? OR, and I will admit this is a favorite, was the event so traumatic that your adult character forgot it so you have to replay it as a kid.
The forgotten flashback is a good way to build some background and then they can get XP or perk once they remember. So in a NIGHT SHIFT based game, I'd give a character some perk from DP&D related to their "kid" class. Nothing to unbalance the game, but certainly something to add to each character. Making them something a little "more" than they were before.
Lifespan Development
Another great option is to start as a kid in DP&D and progress to the logical end (18) and then pick up as an adult, maybe a couple of years later even, in NIGHT SHIFT.
Again, there is not a good one to one class correspondence between the games and nor would I want there to be. A Jock (DP&D) might end up as a Veteran (NS) or even as a Chosen One (NS). In truth, I would give any DP&D kid character some "free" levels in Survivor but allow them to keep some of the perks of their original DP&D class. So Goths still see ghosts, Karate Kids still kick ass, and so on.
This is the option for people that want a rich backstory for their characters, but don't want to write it, they want to live it.
Age Regression
There are also a few ways to do this one. In Star Trek: The Next Generation there was a great episode "Rascals" where Picard, Ensing Ro, Keiko O'Brein, and Guinan were transformed into pre-teens due to a "transporter accident". Their bodies were de-aged, but their minds were the same.
In the third season of Charmed the episode "Once Upon a Time" did it the other way around; the cast stayed in their own adult bodies but their minds were like children. They needed to do this because only children can see fairies. In this case, it was a spell and this also makes it more useful for your NIGHT SHIFT game. Your character stays the same, but not your mental attributes are DP&D.
Alternate Reality
Finally, one I have been using a lot lately is an alternate reality/timeline. In this one the characters are children. It's not necessarily the same character, but certainly the same character in a different situation.
Case in point I run a "Sunny Valley, OH" game is an alternate version of my Buffy RPG. Same characters (mostly) but the differences are the characters are all younger than they were in the show/RPG, they are set in the ironically names Sunny Valley, Ohio instead of Sunnydale, CA, and it is set in DP&D's proper 1980s instead of the late 1990s/early 2000s.
Pulling it Together: The Characters
One of my better examples and I have a few, would be my versions of Willow and Tara for both NIGHT SHIFT (my "The Dragon and the Phoenix" timeline) and DP&D (my "Sunny Valley, OH" timeline).
This split allows me to different things, have different sorts of adventures, tell different sorts of stories.
Can I do this all in one system? Of course. Especially for a game like NIGHT SHIFT. BUT changing the system allows me to do two things. It allows me to give the different times/ages a different feel via the system. Do I feel the same way now as I did in the 1980s? No. Do I do things the same way? No. The mechanics are a good way to reflect it.
It also allows me to force the players to feel the experience as being different. ESPECIALLY if it is a game that is similar but slightly different. Like NIGHT SHIFT and DP&D are. Combat is largely the same for example, but saves are different. Skills are different. This difference helps mimic the feel of being younger and not always knowing what to do or how to do it.
I have always said a "rising tide raises all ships." Other designers/games are not my competitors, they are my colleagues. Playing games from other designers gives me new insights into my own games.
For more details and examples I am providing some links below to other posts.
And don't forget the Kickstarter!
Dark Places & Demogorgons
- All DP&D Posts
- Plays Well With Others: DP&D Cryptid Manual
- Plays Wells With Others: Dark Places & Demogorgons and Buffy the Vampire Slayer
- Review: Survive This! Dark Places & Demogorgons Companions
- Review: Survive This! Dark Places & Demogorgons
Sunny Valley, OH
- Welcome to Sunny Valley, OH
- Willow & Tara: Survive This! Dark Places & Demogorgons
- Survive This! Dark Places and Demogorgons - Supernatural / Buffy Crossover
- Dark Places & Demogorgons: Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Charmed; How Soon is Now?
- Dark Places & Demogorgons: Buffy the Vampire Slayer and The Hex Girls; Bizzare Love Triangle
- Survive This! Dark Places and Demogorgons - Carmilla / Buffy Crossover
NIGHT SHIFT Veterans of the Supernatural Wars
- All NIGHT SHIFT Posts
- Plays Well With Others, Generation HEX, and my Traveller Envy
- Plays Well With Others: Night Shift and Modern Supernatural Games
- Willow & Tara: NIGHT SHIFT Veterans of the Supernatural Wars