Brutkey

JΓΌrgen Hubert
@juergen_hubert@mementomori.social

I've often been asked if I wanted to produce some #ttrpg material based on my research of German #folklore , and in fact I have often thought of that myself. Considering my time constraints, this is currently nothing more than a fantasy - but it is fun to think about.

One important question is the setting. There are two main opinions:

(a) An entirely fictional "fantasy counterpart" version of Germany - the approach taken by
#Brancalonia and #WFRP .

(b) A real world historical period, but with added fantastical elements.

For (b), I think the aftermath of major wars would be best, since that would offer the most opportunities for stereotypical "roving bands of adventurers" as player characters, with the PCs likely being war veterans (the war themselves would likely be too bleak for much of the folkloric whimsy).

The best periods I can think of are the aftermaths of the Thirty Years' War and the Napoleonic Wars. The latter would be more authentic to the folk tales, since most of the folk tales were written down in the 19th century. The former, on the other hand, would allow for more fantastic stories, since they were set longer ago. But I do think the setting should be within the Modern Era, and not the Middle Ages, since the folklore would have been too different back then.

What are your thoughts on this? How would you conceptualize a setting based on German folklore?

Bratapfel
@Bratapfel@unvernunft.social

@juergen_hubert@mementomori.social A few people went the roving adventurers after a war route before. HeXXen 1733 starts with the gates of hell opening during the 30 years war and diverges from there, using regional legends sometimes.
The 30 years war is also a pretty established setting in the OSR, I think Gazer Press did a few modules around it.
So it would not seem as something completely new going that way.

I would go VormΓ€rz.


Bratapfel
@Bratapfel@unvernunft.social

@juergen_hubert@mementomori.social If you want to do a "D&D" in Germany I would go fantasy couterpart route.
For a more historical setting there could be different genres and story structures as well. The characters could be the ones investigating folklore and writing it down, the game could be about establishing why folklore happens.
Vaesen is a game we could look at for a folk horror approach.
Questions is if we want all the folklore or a game around certain stories.

JΓΌrgen Hubert
@juergen_hubert@mementomori.social

@Bratapfel@unvernunft.social Definitely "all the folklore". The folk storytellers of old did not limit themselves to particular genres, and neither should we.