Story Inputs and Outputs
What can a story do?
Story Inputs
What can you rely on? What can a story know about the state of the game, and how can you incorporate that in your writing?
Company State
Legacy Unlocks
Present Heroes
All Heroes
Hero Personalities and Stats
Almost always, it's a good idea to call out heroes for your stories by some particular personality trait, relationship, hook, or stat. Here's why.
todo.
Here's how.
What order to call them out?
the most iconic and necessary should be first, because targets are picked in order. By the time you get to the fourth pick, it's pretty wishy-washy whether that character is a real exemplar of those traits.
Hero Aspects and Hooks
Where are we
What are we fighting?
Plot/Chapter progress
Specifying NPCs
Anything else you want?
Story Outcome Guidelines
What results are possible? What's desired? A lot of this will vary based on event type, but there are some general guidelines.
Dramatically Appropriate
Outcomes should be basically fair, in the sense that if a particular choice is risky, it should feel clearly risky to the player. Don't have a quiet conversation where an idle musing leads to character death or mutilation.
Trade offs and Risk
One kind of choice that remains interesting the second and third time you see it is the risk trade-off. One path is relatively safe, one path is relatively risky, with upsides and down sides. As long as it's clear to the player which is which, this generally feels good, and allows you to put much more positive and negative outcomes into play.
Avoid Choices that are Just Bad
Risky choices are great. Choices that give you something you want at a high cost are great. But Choices that always result in a purely negative outcome are not fun.
Dramatic, Permanent, and Mechanically Simple
For big moments at the ends of story chains, we want big changes to happen. We want the player to feel like their choices were really important. Permanent, visible character change is sortof the gold standard here. Map change is also great. As far as mechanically simple, that mostly means, don't specify complex new gameplay. Stick to the outcomes listed below when possible. If you need something more / else, let's talk!
Types of Outcomes we support
Anything from this list counts as mechanically simple.
Grant Gear
Gear gotten from an event may include augments, weapons, off-hand items, or (rarely/epically) a new type of armor.
Body Modifications
Heroes' arms, legs and heads can be replaced with exciting things. These replacements may happen as the result of a choice in an event (e.g. a hero gets a wolf head after agreeing to join the wolf god), or they may be gained as rewards for quests that become available after the hero loses a limb in combat (e.g., after losing an arm, a hero discovers an abandoned Morthagi who offers to build them a mechanical one).
In addition to replacements, modifications like wings, scars, or tattoos may be added.
Most body modifications will affect the hero's stats or abilities in some way (e.g., our hero with wings can now ignore obstacles when moving during a battle).
Add History Lines
Adding a little line to a character's history is a good way to memorialize an important moment. Generally combined with another outcome like gear, stat, or hook.
Stat boosts
Permanent stat boosts are a good outcome for stories that are not farmable. (Tactical stories are considered farmable and shouldn't give too many positive rewards like this.)
Add/remove hooks, aspects
Story hooks are a great, generic way to say "this character has a weird thing about them that we want to tell stories about." Hooks are intended to be starting places for further stories. Some examples: Inhabited, Gorgonized, Wildheart, etc..
Overland Stations
Add (or rarely, remove) a station. Stations grant resources during the interval, and some stations have other uses as well.
Modify Overland State
Change a Biome? Add or destroy a wall? bridge a river? Add or remove a lurking threat?
Trigger Calamities
Calamities are fun! Monster-related, infestations, or incursion all make good negative outcomes.
Affect combat
Combat advantage and disadvantage are excellent outcomes for tactical and other combat-related stories. Since the advantage is just for that combat, it doesn't create a balance problem or a farming problem, and it almost always feels relevant, fair, and interesting. Plus, it spices up our missions, making them more replayable.
Hero Relationships
Boosting or changing the aspect of hero relationships is fun and interesting! Some players will like this stuff more than others but it's great to sprinkle it in.
Unlock stuff
One of the key long-term goals of the game is to have each play through feel richer, contain more weird content. Bring your ideas for what this should look like. See Unlockables??
Sacrifice a Hero
Losing a hero is a heavy cost but it could be appropriate in some stories.
Recruit an NPC as a Hero
Yes! we want to organically grow our company by finding able fighters and teaming up with them.