henrythemad
Adept
Your typical Alliance event ends on an upswing. Or a definitive downswing. Some form of resolution. A catharsis - a point where you can clearly define that part of the story has ended, and the next part has begun. In my opinion, to do otherwise is essentially rude to the players who show up for one weekend - and also can be frustrating. Continually ending on a cliffhanger is why I, personally, don't read comics or watch anything less than a full season of a TV show. I find it frustrating.
"Tell a full story!!" I will futilely yell in frustrating whilst shaking my fist.
Our game is nicely defined into 3 acts per year, and 3 years. We are approaching the storytelling with that in mind. We want to end on a catharsis for the players each event - it's a formula without which people can walk away from the event saying "yes, it was cool, but what *actually* happened? What did we, collectively, accomplish?"
This event we could not end on a clearly defined note for one of the two main arcs and a somewhat muddled end for the other arc. This was because we are taking the time to setup the entire three year trilogy. One could argue that the inspection by the Emperor was the main (political) arc of the weekend with the Troll War as a secondary (monster) arc. We found out about the Emperor's visit Friday, he missed dinner on Saturday prompting speculation, and the catharsis was that he is actually missing (discovered Sunday) - a little muddled and buried but present. We heard about the Frostfang Trolls on Friday, we took out one of their camps on Saturday and fought them to a standstill on Saturday night, and on Sunday one would expect narratively that they would either be driven out of the area or we would find out about some horrible thing that made them stronger (the confirmation of the Cauldron, perhaps?).
I feel that the Troll arc did not have such a successful arc - Saturday's two battles setup how many spawn points there would be for Saturday night. Trolls spawned at two points on the field, rather than three due to the success of one of the battles. IG there was planned to be a "final push" on Sunday which we knew would be ignored by the development of the Emperor's disappearance. Still, though, the Trolls did not have any sort of definitive transition- they are still in the same state that they were at the start of the event - and this is the sort of thing that keeps me up at night.
To that end, please participate in this poll!
"Tell a full story!!" I will futilely yell in frustrating whilst shaking my fist.
Our game is nicely defined into 3 acts per year, and 3 years. We are approaching the storytelling with that in mind. We want to end on a catharsis for the players each event - it's a formula without which people can walk away from the event saying "yes, it was cool, but what *actually* happened? What did we, collectively, accomplish?"
This event we could not end on a clearly defined note for one of the two main arcs and a somewhat muddled end for the other arc. This was because we are taking the time to setup the entire three year trilogy. One could argue that the inspection by the Emperor was the main (political) arc of the weekend with the Troll War as a secondary (monster) arc. We found out about the Emperor's visit Friday, he missed dinner on Saturday prompting speculation, and the catharsis was that he is actually missing (discovered Sunday) - a little muddled and buried but present. We heard about the Frostfang Trolls on Friday, we took out one of their camps on Saturday and fought them to a standstill on Saturday night, and on Sunday one would expect narratively that they would either be driven out of the area or we would find out about some horrible thing that made them stronger (the confirmation of the Cauldron, perhaps?).
I feel that the Troll arc did not have such a successful arc - Saturday's two battles setup how many spawn points there would be for Saturday night. Trolls spawned at two points on the field, rather than three due to the success of one of the battles. IG there was planned to be a "final push" on Sunday which we knew would be ignored by the development of the Emperor's disappearance. Still, though, the Trolls did not have any sort of definitive transition- they are still in the same state that they were at the start of the event - and this is the sort of thing that keeps me up at night.
To that end, please participate in this poll!