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Thursday, January 21, 2016

Cynical Sequel of Saltmarsh: An essay about a module

Way back when I started my Saltmarsh sequel tirade--it's been almost a year now--Commentator Darrell made a great point that The Big Secret of adventure module U2 Danger @ Dunwater can be sussed out before you even finish clearing out the Sea Ghost in Act 2 of U1, thus eliminating the need for this sequel.

"Hey Ralph, check out this awesome wood paneling."
If you'll recall, in the final encounter of U2's predecessor U1 Sinful Secret of Saltmarsh, there are several lizardmen lounging on the smuggler's ship whose sole purpose is to raise the PC's suspicions and provide an entree to the follow up module. Sadly, there is a Module-Writer's Fiat in place that forces the DM to withhold from the PCs the "in game" reason for the Lizardude presence--purchasing arms to fend off the sahuagin invasion--but if the PCs are inquisitive and persistent, and the DM is not one to allow a module developer to shackle his game, then you have a situation where the party knows about the Sahuaguin threat without ever setting foot in Dunwater. This is not ideal from a module sequencing standpoint.

I'm of the opinion that the lizard men would do a much better job at being clues of neighborhood unrest if they were found somewhere--indeed, anywhere--other than the boat. Perhaps as a wandering encounter on the way to the Haunted House or in muttered rumours back in town; preferably both.  The problem with having them on the boat is that it would not at all be unreasonable for any normal adventurer--especially a newb who probably isn't too familiar with the motivations of the avg lizardman--to assume that the lizardos are just hired goons of the smugglers and therefore to slaughter them without giving it a thought. But if the Party hears rumors of encounters with non-gender-specific anthropomorphic lizard-beings in the neighborhood, this, combined with the evidence provided by Oceananus the aqua-elf on the SeaGhost--remember: he tells the Party that he overheard the Cap'n negotiating with some lispy-sounding critters about delivering loads of weapons--raises much more concern that there's a festering lizardman problem than the setup proposed in U1. Maybe take it a step further and have the hold of the Sea Ghost stacked high with Rocket-Propelled-Glaives, concussion darts and some of those awesome shields for which Trampian lizardmen are famous packaged for imminent delivery.

Besides, the presence of the lizardmen on the Seaghost just doesn't make any sense.  Few smugglers I've dealt with have ever offered me a hammock in their yacht as part of the negotiations, and I like to think that I make a slightly better house guest than a bunch of fangy, cannibalistic, mud-wallowing lizard fiends.  And, as unlikely as it is that a gang of smugglers would offer room and board on their ship, it's even less likely that the lizardos would take them up on the offer. What do they have to gain from sailing around with a bunch of humans unless they're planning on eating them?

I think the U-series modules, in order to fit into an old school campaign, needs to be de-railed a bit. So let's say that the PCs roll into Saltmarsh hunting around for an adventure. They hear about the haunted house, but they also maybe catch wind of some lizardman activity in the vicinity. And maybe those lizardmen the folks are skirmishing with are actually Sahuagin, but no one in the village or the party can really discern one species of scaly freaks from the other, not having had a lot of commerce with either species up to now.

In this set-up the party will most likely still head off to the haunted house cuz at least they know where that is. And if they survive the Seaghost--big if--then they meet this dipshit water elf who tells them that he overheard the smugglers and lizardmen haggling over a few crates of AKs and a jumbo-sized block of C4. The PCs report this to the Privy Council or whatever it's called back in town and the folks there are all "Run for your lives--there's a Lizardman invasion coming!" So they go into full-on panic-mode and do what every troubled village in D&D-land always does: hire, persuade, or coerce a band of sociopathic outsiders--aka "PCs"--to take care of the problem.

The PCs get to work and track down the lizard lair at Dunmouth. While they're clearing the place out they find out that the lizards, too, are afraid of an invasion by the aforementioned Sahuagin. Perhaps the Sahuagin even attack the Lizardman lair while the PCs are in it; a little Amtrak-y for a lot of old schoolers perhaps, but something to consider. Anyway, the lizardmen--famous for preferring human flesh to other foodstuffs--are still a potential threat to Saltmarsh, even if they're currently concerned more with the sahuagin, so the PCs don't need a guilt trip over the slaughter they've committed. But maybe they think "Crap, sahuagin are no good for business. Maybe we should call a truce with these lizardfuckers and help them take on the fishfuckers, only to wipe them out once they've taken out the sahuagin for us." Or perhaps something less cynical; let the PCs decide.

Essentially, what I'm saying is don't make U2 a Gotcha'. Let the PCs and lizardmen figure out whether or not it's a good idea to drop their hostilities and team up against the Sahuaguin on their own. So forget the were-gild crocodile fiasco; the lizard men can either team up or piss off.

3 comments:

  1. I love the caption. That was so unexpected.
    Anyhow, I have uncovered* a prehistoric bone to be unearthed and studied. "The Saltmarsh Murders" was written by British mystery writer Gladys Mitchell (of 22A Rancorn Avenue, Dorset) in 1932. It includes a smuggling operation from the cliff-side home of one of the roguish (in the true sense of the word) citizens, but no lizardmen.
    The story itself is so-so, but the depiction of town characters and their various dastardly deeds would be quite handy for a game master.
    *I spotted it in my local library in the "we don't want this anymore" shelf. It was worth the 25 cents.

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  2. Nice work DOsgood! I'm all over this book like lizardmen on a smuggler's ship. I hear they go together quite well.

    Hey, are you the same Darrell who originally made the comment about unearthing the sahuaguin invasion way back?

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