A World of Fire and Sand
A World of Fire and Sand
A World of Fire and Sand
A storytelling game
about the Dark Sun D&D setting
By Nick Wedig
Setup:
At the beginning of play, you will do three tasks simultaneously: 1)
create primary characters, 2) establish relationships between primary
characters and 3) personalize the Theme Deck. You can do these three tasks
in whatever order seems natural, but you should go back and forth between
them so that each task can tie into the other ones.
Once those pieces of setup are done, arrange the Theme Deck in
two rows, one of Seofean cards, in order, and one of Endlean cards in order.
If you want to go all totally authentic Dark Sun, you should start with Priest
and Defiance as the active theme cards to start, since that was the year of
the original DS boxed set. But it’s totally cool to just start with Ral and Fury
(i.e., the first card of each cycle) as active instead. Then the Narration cards
are dealt, the player with the Highest Sun begins narrating a scene, and the
game begins.
Think about the character in purely narrative terms, then boil them
down into three aspects that are most important. These can be skills,
personality quirks or whatever interests you about the character. They can
be good or bad, it doesn’t matter here. Just think about a character and then
try to model them. You don’t need to have a character fully formed before
you start writing things down: maybe you write down a Blood trait, then wait
on the Sand and Fire until you’ve seen other people’s characters, themes or
relationships. Then you know better what the game will look like and can
use that to make a more interesting character.
Traits do have to fit some guidelines, though. You have three traits:
Blood, Sand and Fire. These traits each have distinct characteristics:
• Sand: Your Sand shows how your social position has made you who
you are. You might be a Worshipper of the Sorcerer-King Doubting His
Faith or a Slave Gladiator or Informing to the Local Templar or a
Penniless Wanderer in the Desert.
• Fire: Your Fireis what drives your character to act, what drives them
into conflicts and how they plan to change the world. You might use
this to define psionic gifts, or if your character is a Defiler or a
Preserver, or if they are Skilled at Finding Water. Are you Rebelling
Against The Sorcerer-King? Are you On the Run From the Templars?
Seeking a Legendary Hidden Valley?
In play, primary characters are ‘owned’ by you. You have authority over
them and their behavior. You can hand off some or all control to another
player temporarily, but ultimately you have the authority to say “no, he
doesn’t do that”. This includes if another player tries to modify or kill one of
your PCs: you have veto over that.
Because your veto power over PCs is pretty strong, you only can have two
PCs at a time. You can, if you want, remove one of your PCs from play, by
killing them or having them leave the story, or ending their story (happily or
tragically, your choice). You could also decide that you’re not as interested
in playing that Pc as you thought, and demote a PC from PC to Incidental
Character status. Then you come up with a new PC to fill the gap, or possibly
promote an existing Incidental Character to full PC status.
Locations are characters, too, though their Blood trait represents the
Blood of a place’s builders or inhabitants. Sand still reflects the location’s
societal position: is it Richly Appointed or Abandoned for Decades or Full of
Beggars? A place’s Fire represents the site’s purpose or how it will change
the world or how it will test the mettle of those present there. The Fire shows
how the place is a backdrop for action or interaction or conflict or change.
Most often, locations are incidental characters, but you could have a game
focused around a specific location, in which case a place could be a primary
character. Magic or psionic items might also be PCs, if they are unique and
important enough. Just make sure that the PC is interesting enough that you
want to see them in a lot of future scenes.
Establish Relationships:
While you are creating characters, you should also create relationships
between primary characters. Each PC will have one positive and one
negative relationship with another PC. Don’t ever make relationships
between your own PCs, just between your PCs and other players’ PCs. These
relationships keep everyone involved in the same larger story.
This modified Theme Deck should only be used for this story, using this
set of players and characters. If you play another game, then you should
modify the set again for those players and those PCs. Each playthrough of
the game needs its own set of unique themes to go with it.
Narration and Scenes:
Narration Cards are marked Highest Sun (rank 1), High Sun (rank 2),
Sun Ascending (rank 3), Sun Descending (rank 4), Low Sun (rank 5) and
Lowest Sun (rank 6). Each scene, you deal out one card to every player,
which determines the order of narration. If you have fewer than six players,
you remove some cards from the Narration Deck, so that the deck only has
as many cards as players:
• Two Players: Highest Sun (rank 1), High Sun (rank 2), Sun
Descending (rank 4), and Lowest Sun (rank 6). This is the same setup
as four players, except each player receives 2 cards per scene instead
of one.
• Three Players: Highest Sun (rank 1), Sun Descending (rank 4), and
Lowest Sun (rank 6)
• Four Players: Highest Sun (rank 1), High Sun (rank 2), Sun
Descending (rank 4), and Lowest Sun (rank 6)
• Five Players: Highest Sun (rank 1), High Sun (rank 2), Sun Ascending
(rank 3), Sun Descending (rank 4), and Lowest Sun (rank 6)
Everything you say while narrating is true, though you should only say a
little bit (like maybe a paragraph worth of text) before you should allow
another players their input. Once you are done narrating, the next player
gets to narrate their own additions to the scene, on down through the ranks
of cards.
When Theme Cards are incorporated into narration, that Theme Card
becomes tapped. Turn the Theme Card on its side to show it is tapped.
Tapped Theme Cards can still be incorporated into later narration, but when
both Theme Cards are tapped, they cycle onto the next pair of themes cards.
Take the two active Theme Cards and place them in at the end of their
respective rows of cards (Endlean or Seofean). The next card in each cycle
then becomes the active card.
Character traits that get used are expended and cannot be used until the
next scene or until the Theme Cards cycle.
When everyone has had a turn to narrate, the scene ends, Narration cards
are shuffled and redealt, and the new Highest Sunstarts a new scene. Note
that you can always return to a scene later on if things are unresolved,
though it should change in nature in some manner: a change of venue, or
introducing a new character, or a change in mode of conflict, etc.
At the end of a scene, you can modify or rewrite or change or remove one
trait on each character you played in that scene.
Incidental Characters:
ICs start with only one trait defined, out of their Fire, Blood and
Sandtraits. When you create a new IC, you describe the character in
general terms, but only fill in one of their traits. If the character is
reibntroduced in a later scene, the person reintroducing that character gets
to define one of their blank traits, if they still have any, or rewrite one of their
existing traits.
Endlean:
1. Ral Shadows, Muls, Mystery, the Unknown, the Freezing Night