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Moderator: FFG DanielCGeckomauglirThe Spaniardynnen Topics: 1105 | Posts: 8197
So What's the story of the new Enemy Within?
Published on 13 December 2012 - 10:03:39

Players:

 

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… So what is going on in the new Enemy Within? Is it linked to the original TEW or is it completely a new kind of thing? What were the "I can't believe they included this!"-moments?

Come on! It give us the sugar or it gets from the hose.

WFRP stuff

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Reply #1 | Published on 14 December 2012 - 07:36:37

SPOILER INDEED!!!!  Keep your noses out Players or you spoil your own fun!

 

It's a new plot using different NPC's.

There are nods to the old plot and the cults involved, Purple Hand, Red Crown, but locations/adventure events are different.  It mentions that the groups above were frustrated in a plan some years ago by a group of heros - e.g., without delving into it if you want to say the original adventure happened in the past you can - though perhaps not through to the Empire in Flames parts.

I am digesting and figuring out the "big moments".  One is - the play may end very badly (and we're not just talking about reviews).  There's another that is more "emotional" which is not "on the page" but pretty much called for (people you met went missing, at least one of them being likeable and sweet, and now you find what's left of them - well that is tragic and calls for a Stressful check in my book).  The finale scenes are intended to be huge/over the top as well - epic fights.

I need to read it again, couple of times really - it's well integrated across its chapters (unlike some earlier edition campaigns) so that NPC X turns up here, here and here etc. (as GM you want to know that plan first time they appear).  There are some bits that may be a bit complex to run (parallel events unfolding).  That happens "just a bit" in first part and "a whole lot more later on" (perhaps so GM and group get hang of it).

Interesting points (well interested me):

The Emperor makes an appearnce (you get a card and actions for him and in passing learn he does have a son, Luitpold - there's a blast from the past - doesn't factor in adventure though).

Surtha Lenk appears off stage and indeed Wolfenburg is not a healthy place to live in any edition it seems.  We stop short of Archaeon appearing but "that storyline is not invalidated".

For those who follow the wargame version, a Luminark appears (who says Light wizards are not use in a battle).

The high level epilogue has Chaos Waste rules for the not-faint-of-heart.

There's a trip to Middenheim and the Sacred Flame - Dr. von Oppenheimer has a plan (is it a surprise to say it ends explosively?)

Some GM-comforting canon on warpstone confirmed (it's very very very hard to dispose of the stuff - oh we're in spoiler territory let's be clear - it's confirmed the silly humans think they can at times but the high elves aren't even sure of how to).

My Thoughts of Tinkering:

I don't think plot line needs it.  Unlike gathering storm (schulmann is just way too obvious, come on!) this one has any number of suspects any no more likely or tragic a choice for the villain.

I think my prep work will be just fleshing out what it provides and doing table top aids to help it in play.  For example it starts with investigation in a district of city sort of like the Winds of Magic adventure in Altdorf and I will probably use similar approach as I did there of creating little cards with the descriptions of the neighbourhood NPCs to scatter on table so heroes choose who to go up to and chat.

The fact villain is "tragic" is mentioned in a sense and something that can be developed and that means they can be presented sympathetically earlier on before their villainy is revealed.  Very much like your typical Batman villain (by the end they are very probably best played like your typical Batman villain).  This applies whichever of the candidates you select for villain.  There are a lot of "flawed but struggling to do right thing as they see it and admirable in their way" people of whom one turns out to be "really flawed with a very bad idea of right thing".

The "great conspircacy" , which the vilain is leading-twisting, can really be seen as a simply bourgeois class chaffing at the Empire's restrictive nobility and official cults and wanting more liberty and freedom.  It's very easy to see it (like the secret societies Lure of Power introduced) having lots of "unIlluminated members" who support it'.  Its ideas can presented in a way  that is "friendly to a 21st Century view of things".  There are a couple of secret societies from Lure of Power that would make sense to reflect it (the campaign does use not that concept/those cards).  I definitely won't have it be calling itself, "The Great Conspiracy".

 

 

Reply #2 | Published on 14 December 2012 - 07:42:53

Thanks for a in-depth answer. Seems to me that this offers much more than many of previous supplements. And can actually be bough as a pdf withou a problem? Gets my juice running for WFRP again!

WFRP stuff

Reply #3 | Published on 14 December 2012 - 10:31:38

This all sounds great, I just hope it turns up in the UK before christmas so I can read it though the holidays. I was wondering if you could give more details on the enemies in the campagin and for the purposes of my work on 'Evil' magic, if any new spell action cards have been included and if there are any above rank 3.

I guess the Enemy Below features Skaven in some form? While the enemy without is either beastmen or greenskins? and the Enemy within is cults and daemons? Are the Undead featured at all? What is the nature of the enemies thoughout; and how combat heavy is the adventure?

 

Many Thanks. Crimsonsun

A God named khaine, a God of murderdeathbloodshed, only the wilfully blind could not see that this is the Blood Lord himself, cloaked in one of his many guises to beguiletrick those who might otherwise repel him."

-Liber Chaotica

 

 

Reply #4 | Published on 16 December 2012 - 09:41:37

doc_cthulhu said:

Thanks for a in-depth answer. Seems to me that this offers much more than many of previous supplements. And can actually be bough as a pdf withou a problem? Gets my juice running for WFRP again!

If they offer the pdf alone it would give you the story, the 4 location/city district maps are in the pdf too. 

However, you don't get 2 condition cards that are unique to this set, "Filthy" (others are duplicates from others), Clue Cards to emphasize key points in investigation (if you have good investigative players in Call of Cthulhu sense not necessary but for less attentive groups, useful), and more significantly the 6 Backgrounds with special abilities etc - the book has some information on them BUT NOT the unique character creation variant and ongoing special ability each has, and though the book as a list of creatures with stat lines etc., you won't get the monster action cards like "Villainous Monologue" (a reason mastermind villains make cheesy speeches revealing their plots).

Reply #5 | Published on 16 December 2012 - 11:49:19
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1

Hi,

Heh heh "Filthy" sure to get plenty of use with my lot!

Thanks for the run down Valvorik. Can we assume that the four cities featured are Altdorf, Averheim, Middenheim and Wolfburg?

Another quick question if I may, are the featured noble houses connected with those listed in previous supplements?

Cheers for the teasers..

Without Signature
Reply #6 | Published on 16 December 2012 - 15:28:37

Perhaps a pointless question, but what are the requirements for each of the background cards? Race/Traits etc?

My copy got shipped on Friday but has a long way to travel, so in the meantime I'm sitting in my chair and pulling my hair out in anticipation.

Without Signature
Reply #7 | Published on 17 December 2012 - 09:54:36

Wolfburg is not featured, rather mentioned in general background.  The adventure features Averheim, Middenburg and Altdorf with a "district of city" map for each and bit fo more info.

The adventure text makes clear that though there is a war going on at one point (starts and still going on really when adventure ends) and heroes might want to rush off and fight it "that's not the story of the Enemy Within…." and they should be worried enough about the plot within the Empire to pursue that rather than enlisting.

There is no connection I can see to previous noble families from Lure of Power etc - though there is reference to using LoP's noble rules etc.  There is a "tying to other adventures" section that goes through how if you played other adventures you can tie that in, e.g., had become von Aschaffenberg agents etc.

The families contending for Elector position in Averheim are 'canon' (Leitforf, von Alptraum).  The situation is not quite the same in detail or "evil plot" as in the novel (forget if that is Sword of Justice or Vengeance) though you get a Schwatzhelm stat card too. 

The Elector issue is a bit of a red herring - it's not resolved in the adventure - though that is kept open with a fun twist, the conspiracy targetting it changes its plans when war breaks out in north and "gets more ambitious" (which is why we end up in Altdorf).  You can see a very "Tzeentch pulling strings" plotline there in which the plotters themselves are pawns whose ambitions really having nothing to do with the purpose they are being used to serve in the end.

The 6 backgrounds all have 4 or more traits on them.  There is no hard and fast rule about using them though suggestions as in - if doing draw 3 and pick one for careers, and choosing background first, then discard any drawn that don't share at least one trait with background.   There's a sidebar with several suggestions for how to use backgrounds (pre-career choice, post-career choice etc.).  Two have racial traits and are obvious choices for non-humans, some others hard to justity (a non-human can't be a Gently Born local), but others without racial traits could be explained as being non-humans.

Averheim by its background fluff etc is most friendly to choice of dwarf of halfling to start (look at map, makes sense), ogres actually do appear as bodyguards at times (the adventure actually notes at one point, "an ogre PC will have to ride on the coach buckboard, if there are 2 ogre PC's the heroes have to walk".  Elves are a rarity in Averheim.

 

Reply #8 | Published on 17 December 2012 - 10:56:21

valvorik said:

The 6 backgrounds all have 4 or more traits on them.  There is no hard and fast rule about using them though suggestions as in - if doing draw 3 and pick one for careers, and choosing background first, then discard any drawn that don't share at least one trait with background.   There's a sidebar with several suggestions for how to use backgrounds (pre-career choice, post-career choice etc.).  Two have racial traits and are obvious choices for non-humans, some others hard to justity (a non-human can't be a Gently Born local), but others without racial traits could be explained as being non-humans.

Averheim by its background fluff etc is most friendly to choice of dwarf of halfling to start (look at map, makes sense), ogres actually do appear as bodyguards at times (the adventure actually notes at one point, "an ogre PC will have to ride on the coach buckboard, if there are 2 ogre PC's the heroes have to walk".  Elves are a rarity in Averheim.

 

That's awesome, thanks :)  Nice to see that they are taking all the races into account. I'm really hoping one of my players opts for an ogre since I've never seen one played before, but I suspect it won't happen.

Without Signature
Reply #9 | Published on 18 December 2012 - 14:25:43

I've started to read it, I'm halfway. It's pretty good ! Nice characters, nice detail.

 
Reply #10 | Published on 19 December 2012 - 03:28:54

War? Is this the begining of Storm of Chaos or something else entierly?

-Devout Badger

Reply #11 | Published on 19 December 2012 - 07:30:14

The opening of the war is definitely in line with the Storm of Chaos timeline, Surtha Lenk comes romping down etc.  It's not called "storm of chaos" and you arent obligated to go with any of the rest of that story line by it and the story line is not itself "storm of chaos" oriented but could easily be seen as "part of a grand associated plan" by "your Old World Specialist in Grand Plans".

Reply #12 | Published on 25 December 2012 - 10:07:58

Thanks for the info!

As I understand it the campaign is designed to take newly made characters well into the higher tiers. Is this correct and if so, how difficult would it be to play through the campaign starting with relatively experienced characters?

It takes only a small amount of charitable reading to make the internet dramatically more palatable.

Reply #13 | Published on 25 December 2012 - 18:53:46

Yes, the campaign is designed to start with beginning characters - including having "character background options" that give some advantages and have narrative connections (each has questions to answer that connect PC into various aspects of the adventure).

It also has suggested ways to transition from Eye for an Eye/Edge of Night/Mirror of Desire (connections to Lord Rickard), Witch's Song, Horror of Hugeldal, Gathering Storm and Crimson Rain (which it notes could also be used as an interlude adventure in it).

I find generally once you have a bit of familiarity with the system, stepping up difficulty is not usually a problem (add a squad of henchmen, throw a template on the lead foe or just give training to more foes, create some more environmental difficulty etc.).  The variability of groups means sometimes adjusting written material anyway.  However if characters are over Rank 2 at the start (have status in the campaign world) it may not "feel right" for them to be "doing errands" for nobles and looking into vanishing brass tier nobodies etc and more work on explaining "why they are involved in the way they are" might be needed (less because 30 shillings is big money or because you want to impress a Rank 4 wizard, more because it's my duty, I owe a debt of honour, I seek some payback etc.).  If willing to do that, then I don't see a problem.  The background questions mentioned are really ways of doing that for any level character so finding ways to still use them would be key.  Even a Rank 4 character might in the past have had his life saved by Jurgen or been given an alibi by Frederick.

Speaking as someone who is running a game now with Epic tier PC's, I think the issue is more that if heroes start more experienced they will be really accomplished by the end - then again the Epilogue for Heroic Tier is (intentionally) pretty over the top anyway.

All comes down to how much work you are interested in doing.  

 

Reply #14 | Published on 26 December 2012 - 02:32:22

Thanks Valvorik! Then I'll probably start elsewhere but make sure to throw out hooks that help the campaign make sense. 

It takes only a small amount of charitable reading to make the internet dramatically more palatable.

Reply #15 | Published on 26 December 2012 - 07:27:47

valvorik said:

[…]ogres actually do appear as bodyguards at times (the adventure actually notes at one point, "an ogre PC will have to ride on the coach buckboard, if there are 2 ogre PC's the heroes have to walk".  […]
The text mentions am abundance of ogre mercenaries in town, especially after the last battle in the Black Fire Pass. Their is even the ingame excuse of playing one: The cattle industry of Averheim is to the liking of the ogres. Halflings suffer from some bad stigm due to the halfling rebellion.

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