WING AND
MILK
Or - How to run a
game without really trying By Jonathan Hicks Before I go any further, can I please thank Andrew Curtis, a
regular player of my games, for the title of this article. We (Andrew Curtis, Mark Newbold and myself) sat in my living room on Monday 25th of
June, 2001, about to start a role-playing session (set in the universe of Buffy and Angel) and we were discussing
where the characters were going to go from here. I said I had a few things designed when
Andrew suddenly said, ‘whatever
happens your games are usually wing and milk, anyway’. Both Mark and myself looked at him quizzically. ‘What
do you mean by wing and milk?’ I asked. Andrew shrugged. ‘This game. You’ll wing it and milk it’. We all laughed. ‘Top line’, Mark said. ‘We’ll
have to put that on the site’. Oh, fine. A funny quip at my expense and they
want to write an article about
it? Okay, then. LESSON 1 – COMPLETELY IGNORE EVERYTHING I
SAID
There are plenty of articles already on this
site that concern preparation, design, ideas and atmosphere. They detail
advice on how to get a game together and how to run it. Because there are a
few things to consider before running a game the articles detailed most
things you can do and, therefore, were quite long. That, in turn, might mean
a lot of work. But what if you simply don’t have the time to
spend designing and preparing a game? You might have a busy work or social
schedule, might be running more than one session for more than one group and
can’t afford the energy and effort. What if you don’t want to prepare in
detail? Hey, you might be laid back or easy-going and think ‘the hell with
it; we’ll just see how the game goes’. If this is the case, then ignore the other articles. They won’t
help you now. What you want to do is get down to it, get the game on and just
let role-playing nature take its course. Isn’t this lazy? Hell, yes! This will mean les work in preparation –
unfortunately, it will mean more work when the game is actually running. LESSON 2 –
YOU’LL NEED SOMEWHERE TO PLAY
The usual thing is to get yourself
a location. Make sure you have a place where the game can take place and then
insert the PC’s. But surely this means you have to design a location, a
planet, a city? Not really, no. Just
take a location you know or have seen and just Star Wars it. If the players go to a busy shopping station
then take your local shopping centre or mall and jazz it up. Escalators
become anti-gravity tubes, computer game shops become speeder showrooms, and
clothes shops become multi-species clothing specialists. People don’t walk
about; they zip along on rolling conveyor walks, or fly about with personal
replulsorchairs. What’s more, you don’t even have to take the effort to
describe in detail what the place is like – tell your players what location you’re basing it on. GM: ‘So, you know the shopping mall down the
road?’ PLAYERS: ‘Yes?’ GM: ‘Well, this place looks like that, except
where the escalators are there’s two discs which send people floating to the
next floor. The roof is polarised glass to keep the sun’s rays at bay and
every species you can imagine is walking about. People fly overhead with jet
belts and repulsorchairs and the noise is deafening.’ Is this cheating? Hell, yes! What’s more it
gives the players an instant visual and they can even interact with it better
if they know the location, too, because they’ll tell you exactly where they
want to go. All you have to do is decide what changes (if any) have happened. The same goes with a city. Take New York,
slap a few starships overhead and roads between the buildings and what do you
get? A city suited for Star Wars.
Need a small town? Grab a town local to you and stick a crashed starship in
the middle, remove the second stories of all the buildings and replace them
with glass domes and there you go – instant Star Wars location. All you have to do is ignore real
world references. Need a Planet? Pick terrain. Rocky, icy,
sandy, windswept, green fields, mountainous – just define the land and you’ve
pretty much defined the planet. Throw in a couple of weird creatures
(six-armed apes, two-headed gazelles, that kind of thing) and job done. LESSON 3 – INSTANT CHARACTERS
So, you’ve got the location, now for the
people who will be there. I’m not even going to insult you GM’s out there
by detailing how to do it, so I’ll just make it simple – what do you think the character templates
are for? Need an NPC who might need to make some rolls? Is he/she a
smuggler? Take the template and there you go – instant stats. Need a bounty
hunter? Same thing. Need a professional? Normal stats and then the extra dice
for their profession – done. That’s it. Unless you don’t have access to
these details (which is highly unlikely, being a GM) then you’ll have to do
that extra work. But isn’t that cheating in character design?
Hell, yes! LESSON 4 –
NAMES AND PLACES
It’s all well and good describing these
places, but what are they called? Look around you. Take an average household
item and do either one of these things – pronounce it backwards, remove a
couple of letters or say it wrong. What’s the planet called? Well, right now I’m
looking at a calendar, so I’m calling it Calend or Radnelac. Or I could have
looked at stapler, and called it Stapeel or Relpats. Or I could have looked
at a picture on my wall, and called it Pikchoor. Doesn’t just need to be a planet. A city
could be called Pikchoor. An alien could be called Pikchoor. A bar could be
called Pikchoor’s Place. It’s all the same market. Isn’t this cheating a little, not putting
much thought into the creation? Hell, yes! LESSON 5 –
SO, WHAT HAPPENS IN THE GAME?
This is probably the only part of the game
where you’ll have to do at least a little work but even then you can get away
with limiting how long you take designing stuff. It’s a simple case of this –
watch some telly, or a movie or listen to the radio,
or read a book, or a magazine. As in the ‘Ping! What A Great Idea’ article
on this website you can refresh games by taking ideas and plot threads from
popular media. But, in this case to minimise work, you actually take the
story and re-create it in a Star
Wars setting. All you have to do is change a couple of the plot
threads (like who it was who actually committed the
murder, or stole the jewel, or whatever the program deals with) and just change
it all for Star Wars.
Fair enough, the players may have seen the same program but when you do
introduce that plot change they won’t be able to second-guess you. Word of
warning, though; don’t re-create the program scene-for-scene, changing the
New York Cop for a Imperial Security Bureau agent or
a London taxi driver for Speeder Taxi pilot. That would be dull. All you need is the elements of the story. Is this theft of other people’s ideas? Hell,
yes! But you’re not making money out of it and it’s for personal not public
use, so it’s legal. CONCLUSION – YOU LAZY, LAZY PEOPLE
Let’s face it – there’s not much to this
article, is there? All I’ve done is make you all very lazy creators and GM’s,
relaxing in front of the video an hour before the game, looking at stuff in
your room and twisting the words and thinking of someplace you’ve been to or
know of and adding a couple of aliens. It’ll be game time soon but you’ll
just take another sip of your drink, shrug, and say ‘I’m ready’. How lazy of you. |