Friday, May 13, 2016

Review: GURPS Conan and the Queen of the Black Coast

This is my third review of four looking at the GURPS Conan solo adventures. For the two previous ones done so far, see these posts:

Conan the Wyrmslayer
Conan Beyond Thunder River

For all of my reviews, please click the review tag or see the reviews page.




by Robert Traynor
Steve Jackson Games 1989
32 pages
$5.99 in PDF

This GURPS solo adventure is based on the REH story Queen of the Black Coast. All you need to play is the adventure and the GURPS 3rd edition Basic Set. You don't need GURPS Conan, but it wouldn't hurt to be familiar with it, either.



This is a 270 entry solo adventure with three battle maps, four new monsters, and stats for Conan and Belit.

This solo adventure shares a number of traits with the other Conan solo adventures:

- there is a time limit. Or at least, time of day affects your options and affects play.

- there are Plot Words, which when garnered affect your options and your rolls going forward.

- the rules are almost entirely straight-up GURPS (but see Morale, below)

- the better your non-combat skills, the better you'll do - don't blow your Leadership or sense rolls.

- You get to be Conan, or generate your own character.

- You get to earn character points at the end, and find out how Conan did in the story (not well, like in most of the more interesting Conan stories.)

There is a new mechanic in this solo adventure - Morale. You've got a loyal but superstitious crew, and they read omens and signs in your successes, failures, and encounters. This pushes a "Morale" rating up and down. It starts at zero. It doesn't really do that much, but if you get it too low, it'll sabotage your Leadership rolls and effectively take away some of your options. It's not something that would be easy to port to a different situation, though - too much is tied to the specific adventure and actions the Suba would approve of or be frightened by.

At this point, Conan is a 500-point character. He'd be more except he's got a pile of disadvantages. You also get stats for Belit (at 235 points), and a one-page roster of the other 88 members of the crew of Belit's Tigress. Like in the story, Belit is the captain, but Conan drives a lot of decisions . . . subject to his Sense of Duty (Belit) and Fanaticism (Love for Belit). Basically, if she says, "Come over here and kill this snake" you don't get to say no. But you, the reader, and Conan the character, get to drive most of the action.

Like in the story, the Tigress takes an upriver trip into a jungle to loot a lost city. The river has dangers to face, you can interact with the crew, there are dangers in the jungle and city, and there is plenty of loot. The loot ranges from tarnished coins up to a staggering amount of gemstones.

Just like in the story, if Belit is killed, it's quite possible she'll come back and help you from beyond the grave. You get a plot word you can use in any combat, once, and she'll turn up and help. It's a nice touch and well-executed.

This adventure shows off an interesting aspect of Conan adventures - Conan as leader of warriors. While you can pick up a companion and a small squad in Thunder River, here you have one companion and 88 warriors and leaders of the Suba. You can get those allies whittled away, too, if you aren't careful. And GURPS being GURPS and Conan adventures being dangerous, that can happen even if you are careful.

Notes:

Just as a point of interest, this is the only one of the four Conan solo adventures not written by W.G. Armintrout - a prolific adventure writer for GURPS.

One thing I really like about this adventure is that you get a one-page check-off roster of the entire crew of the Tigress, so you can track all damage, losses, etc. on one sheet.

Looking back on my copy I can't tell how it went, because by 1989 I had access to a photocopier and the money to afford copies so I stopped writing directly in all of my books. I wouldn't normally keep post-adventure sheets or notes, either. Even so, I know I played this twice. Once I did really well, getting home with lots of loot. The second I deliberately angled for a more Conan-like ending and I got it - I made choices that I was pretty sure held more danger.

It's a good adventure. It's tight and interesting, and the foes are the right kind of scary - you can cut them down, but you cringe as the consequences of a blown defense or getting swarmed. I've used several of the monsters repeatedly in my own games - hell hyenas, the giant venomous constrictor snake (fantasy is like that), and the jungle lizard.

And just as an aside, reading Conan's description was interesting. "Belying his bulk, he moves like a hunting cat and is nearly as fast." The place where I do my training is full of professional athletes, just like I'm not. "Big strong guy means slow" is a real impression people have . . . but it's totally not true. It's a descriptive line that makes me think, "Yeah . . . no." Lots of muscle doesn't mean slow; you can be strong and slow but big, strong, and fast all on the same person isn't unusual. Like I said, an aside.

5 comments:

  1. Frequently in Howard's writing, he describes Conan (and Kull) as Panther-like, lithe, lean, and other high speed, low drag words. More than once his muscles are referred to as closing "like a steel trap". The bulky, muscle-heavy Conan is more a Frazettaism and, later, an Arnold contribution.

    This adventure sounds like a blast; will need to get it sometime. How did they handle combat with 88 allies back then?

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    Replies
    1. That's interesting about the descriptions. It's a common perception - "He moves well for a big man." Because big means slow. Which is sort-of true, in that, say, linebackers aren't as fast as running backs, but that's like saying NASCAR races are slow compared to Indy races. :)

      How did they do it? With a battle map. And a recommendation for Basic Combat, unless you specifically like long combats.

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    2. Not up to speed for Basic Combat; is it just a group of them vs a group of us determining the outcome? Surely we're not rolling 88 attacks!

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    3. Basic Combat just means a few less options on the table. And yes, if you somehow had Conan and 88 of the 89 crew on the map and facing enemies, you'd need to potentially make 88 rolls for them. Very unlikely, though.

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  2. Bob Traynor here, and however belated, thanks for the kind words! Truth be told, writing QotBC was a rush job; SJG had a hole in the production schedule, it *had* to be filled and on time, and they offered me triple the usual fee if I could get it to them in four weeks flat.

    As far as the 88 crewmen go, there wasn't a playtest battle where they ALL came into play, and honestly I don't see any foe in the book that such a force wouldn't curbstomp them, if they didn't give a damn about morale or casualties. Why that large of a total's simply because there's plenty to do: some are going to be with Belit, some might be following the PC around, and if the player is smart, he's keeping a bunch on the ship to man a watch.

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