Perdition is a book by +Courtney Campbell,
detailing a campaign setting best described as hell by way of Hieronymus Bosch.
Along with this setting is provided a significant corpus of house rules, enough
so that the book can stand on its own as a singular game, or be sorted through
as needed.
The setting
of Perdition, its primary selling point, is not built with maps or lists of
proper nouns, but in a minimalist, in-passing style. It is more the idea
of a setting, rather than the setting itself. If there is detail at all, it
will be brief (the great devils that rule the world of Perdition get a
few paragraphs of description each), and more often it will be a feature
brought up without extraneous comment: the equipment lists in particular excel
towards this end. There are war cassowaries. You can hire gimps as hirelings. You
can buy a bicycle. There is a list of hats that give you skill bonuses.
That last
sentence is easily the most important point I will make in this entire review.
There is a list of hats that give you skill bonuses.
All of this
means that the book is geared toward relating mechanics to the setting’s core
conceit (see: the rules for cutting deals with devils), rather than bogging the
reader down with exposition. Perdition is not an invitation into the
specific world of Courtney Campbell, but an invitation to take that idea and
use it how you will. You can buy in as much as you want.
The
mechanics displayed in Perdition hit a sweet spot between OSR/DIY
simplicity and newer-school crunch – reading through the classes was fun,
because there are both many options to take and they are all easily understood.
Additions to the typical formula, such as mental HP, the wickedness stat and
the spell dice system (+Arnold K’s GLOG rules are similar) are all easy to
grasp.
I’ll give
additional praise for the book being a complete text – classes, equipment,
mechanics for magic and combat, a bestiary for both normal animals and various
fiends, and everything else that would be needed to run a game.
The art is
excellent. It’s not necessarily of anything specifically in the book,
but it’s certainly effective at driving home the fact that people have entered
the wrong neighborhood of the Garden of Earthly Delights. What more
could be asked for?
On the
whole, Perdition is what you make of it. For my own part, I think I
would perhaps not run the setting as unrelentingly bleak as it is presented,
but the light touch of the worldbuilding makes changes to taste easy. If, say,
I wanted to run a more heroic campaign fighting against the darkness instead of
working for it, I could do that handily enough with what is presented here. The
mechanics are nourishing food for thought beyond that.
Perdition
is a fine book, and I am quite glad I purchased it.
I have three main complaints about Perdition.
ReplyDelete1) It is a game about hell, with only 12 classes. Why is there no antipaladin?
3) I will end up ignoring about half of the combat rules, because there are a lot of different options for players to use in combat. I 100% predict any group of players blindsiding what I think will be a difficult fight at least once/session. This is also one of the reasons I like the game.
Now I'm wondering what number 2 is...
Delete1) You have to leave something for expansions. :-)
Delete