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Friday, December 27, 2024

These Bloody Cells

Quickie today because I am three articles away from breaking a personal record again and I had an idea: What if there was a game, in which the Plan had... hit points?


I won't be back.
Bloodmist Infiltrator, by Wild Blue Studios


These Bloody Cells

You are vampires. You are immortal, technically, and you have been imprisoned. You and your buddies decided to escape.

You get Bite, and two of the following abilities of your choice:

  • Animism. Talking to and controlling animals that you could hold in a hand.
  • Transform. Turn into an animal.
  • Charm. Mind control a person.
  • Push. Strength greater than that of the best human.
  • Rush. Speed greater than that of the best human.
  • Sneak. Move around unnoticed.
  • Fly. Soar through the air.
  • Bite. Refill your blood fully by biting a living being, killing it. The killed being becomes a ghoul that follows your commands, but it's visibly undead.

Each player rolls 1d8+4 to determine their starting Blood pool. Everyone also rolls a 1d6 that's contributed to the shared Plan pool.

Whenever you do something, you roll a die and reduce the pools by amounts that add up to the rolled number.

  • Roll 1d8 by default.
  • If you use only the vampiric abilities you chose, roll 1d6.
  • If the vampiric weaknesses are playing a role, change a roll of 1d6 into 1d8, and a roll of 1d8 into 1d12.

If possible, you must reduce both your Blood pool and the shared Plan pool by at least 1.

  • If your Blood Pool is reduced to or below 0, you are killed. You turn into fine red mist, and travel back to your coffin in your prison cell.
  • If your Plan is reduced to or below 0, the reality has diverged too much from your plans, and the guards are now after you, chasing you with guns that shoot silver bullets with wooden stakes imbued in them.

The game ends when every player character either dies or successfully escapes the prison. On every successful escape, you gain one additional vampiric ability. Enjoy your freedom while it lasts, it won't be long until you come back.

The GM side would include a couple of roll tables with foreshadowing and obstacles based on the vampiric weaknesses. As a placeholder for now, let's go with...

  1. Exit is in a building that surrounds the prison (yes, even above), vampires can't enter it without an invitation.
  2. A corridor with laser beams of concentrated sunlight. To a vampire, it's like a lightsaber.
  3. Flowing water moat that no vampire can cross.
  4. An airlock chamber that gets filled with garlic-infused gas.
  5. A human eye scanner that doesn't allow vampires through because they don't show up on digital footage (akin to no reflection in mirrors).
  6. Four corridors meeting at a right angle... they form a cross. A cross road, so to say.

Bonus round: Betrayal.

  • Super easy mode: Nobody has to betray the rest.
  • Easy mode: GM hand-picks one player who is a betrayer.
  • Medium mode: The GM prepares a pouch of black and white stones, deciding which ones stand for betrayers and which ones don't.
  • Hard mode: Everyone flips a coin and keeps it under a cup until the very end of the game.

Betrayer's goal is to hinder the group. The betrayers win if they are the only ones who successfully escape. They don't have to be all alive for this, if they managed to hinder the rest enough to get it killed before the escape, they all earn their freedom forever.

A vampire can use their Bite on another vampire, draining them of their Blood but not turning them into a ghoul.

Of course, players would catch onto this, so the Betrayer has to be smart about it. Is this Among Us? ... no, Among Us isn't the only social deduction game around, come on.



Lessons: One, it's fun to write around vampiric strengths and weaknesses. Two, Plan as a resource works. Three, ... I forgot about three. Four, I make lots of lists in my games, especially when I'm too lazy to make a table. Let's see if I can write two more articles!

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