Double, Double, toil and trouble...

Note 2018-06-05: Eldritch Realms has been renamed to Magonomia

When I posted the 2016 year-end update on Eldritch Realms, I mentioned we were working on the magic rules and they were "firming up." Frankly, I thought writing the magic rules would be a two or three-month job. It's hasn't been. If one thing has been consistent, it that's the design of the magic system has been one step backward followed by two steps forward. That's the "toil."

The "trouble" has been Real Life affecting the development team. I chose to find a new job and that took quite a lot of my time and energy in the springtime. Two developers had real-life concerns pressing enough that they've had to leave the project entirely. (We're still on excellent terms and we hope they'll have the time to contribute as playtesters.) There have been other personal emergencies of lesser magnitude.

Where that leaves us is at least four months behind the schedule I had planned for 2017. We'll be working on the rough draft of the rules through the end of the calendar year. I'll take about a month to collate and lightly edit that rough draft, and then the first round of external playtesting will begin in February 2018. Beyond that, I am reluctant to speculate, but I will say we will be ready for a broader playtest in the summer and I'll be running some playtest sessions at GenCon 2018.

As to the Kickstarter, that will go live when the rules are finished, tested, and I am confident of their quality. I'm managing the project in such a way that the biggest risks of delays is before the Kickstarter goes live. Before I ask backers to contribute money to publishing this game, we at Shewstone Publishing have to convince ourselves that it will be the best game we can make.

Nothing worthwhile comes without difficulty. Thanks for following us through our early ups and downs.

 

Varieties of Magic in Eldritch Realms

Note 2018-06-05: Eldritch Realms has been renamed to Magonomia. Also, the varieties of magic have been changed somewhat as a result of playtesting, so this article no longer accurately describes Magonomia but is preserved as a development update that was accurate when it was written.

Big news today! My co-authors and I have settled on the sorts of magic that will be in the Eldritch Realms core book. Eldritch Realms is set in Renaissance England, so our priority is to include magic that one encounters in history books about the period. (If you are not familiar with Eldritch Realms yet, it's the roleplaying game of Elizabethan fantasy that we're developing -- check out the introduction).

Without further ado, here is what the rules will cover:

Alchemy

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Alchemy is the magic of transforming things to a higher state: of purification, refinement, and transcendence. While alchemy employs the paraphernalia of what a modern person would call “chemistry,”  in Eldritch Realms, it is definitely magic. Alchemy is capable of wondrous effects: potions of flight and of invisibility, enchanted armor and weapons, and prophecy through symbolic visions. The ultimate goal of alchemy is to transform the alchemist himself into a a physically, mentally, and spiritually superior person. Alchemy is strongest at spells of health and healing, at making various enchanted tools and weapons, and at granting people extraordinary abilities.

Astrology

The stars influence the fates of men and women, but Renaissance thinkers also strongly believed in individual free will. The predictions of astrology are therefore never perfect, but they can reveal hidden forces at work in the world or foreshadow that a seemingly unremarkable person has a great destiny. In addition to forecasting the future, a magician-astrologer knows how to imbue the power of the stars and planets into talismans that can help a person find fame, wealth, even love; and can protect against both earthly enemies and supernatural curses.

Conjuration

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The world teems with invisible spirits, but whether these are angels, demons, faeries, or something else altogether, no mortal can tell. Conjuration is the science of binding and commanding these spirits and thereby harnessing their powers. Through the spirits, a conjurer can levitate into the air, scry on distant places, deflect musket-balls, or summon a tempest. Yet the spirits obey mysterious rules of their own, so every spell has a weakness that can be used to block or unravel it. A conjurer has a close relationship with a familiar spirit, who acts as the magician’s servant and sometime advisor.

Druidism

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The magic of the ancient Celtic magicians known as druids still echoes throughout the British Isles. Their magic combines elements of alchemy, astrology, sigils, and conjuration into a hybrid science with a distinctive cultural identity. This is the magic of Merlin from the legend of King Arthur. It excels at shapechanging, illusion, and commanding the elements of nature.

Sigils

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From the heirogylphic burial spells on ancient Egyptian scrolls, to the runes of the Anglo-Saxons and Danes who settled in early medieval England, to the theurgic inscriptions of medieval Kabbalah and Dr. John Dee’s “angelic language,” magical writing, diagrams, and glyphs have carried power in many lands and cultures. The science of sigils excels all others at creating protective wards. It is also strong at creating long-lasting blessings

Folk Magic

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Magic is not just for learned experts. Practically every village in Eldritch England has a cunning-man or woman, who tells fortunes, makes charms, finds lost property, and cures sick cattle. Folk magic is a hodgepodge of weak but practical spells derived from more formal kinds of magic, imperfectly copied and then mingled with the lore of local herbs and spirits. Folk magic is too weak weak to be playable on its own (unless you like the idea of playing a more limited wizard), but it can be easily combined with any of the sciences of high magic to broaden a wizard’s powers.

2016 Year-End Update on Eldritch Realms

Note 2018-06-05: Eldritch Realms has been renamed to Magonomia. Also, the production schedule hasn't kept pace with this optimistic early plan, but I'm preserving the article as a snapshot of development that accurately represented our expectations at the time it was written.

Eldritch Realms has taken enough shape that I can start to talk about the production schedule.

The magic rules are firming up. Designing a new magic system out of whole cloth takes time -- especially since magic is the centerpiece of this game. I am confident we have a solid foundation in place. Since I have a background with the classic RPG Ars Magica, I want to emphasize that Eldritch Realms' magic system is not like Ars Magica. It's based on the period writings of Renaissance magicians, about whom we know quite a lot (thank you, Mr. Gutenberg!). There are several different styles of magic, which I call "sciences" -- used in the archaic sense to mean any organized field of study, not necessarily one as rigorous and formal as what we today call "science." The three primary sciences are astrology, alchemy, and conjuration. If you want an idea of what a powerful wizard (not a beginning player character!) can do in Eldritch Realms, take a look at Prospero in Shakespeare's The Tempest.

A Scene from Act I, Scene 2 (Ferdinand courting Miranda) of Shakespeare's

The whole year of 2017 will be devoted to development. We're aiming for a closed, invitation-only alpha playtest in the fall of 2017. After that we will revise, hold more public playtests, and repeat for at least half of 2018. Since I am eager to get a paycheck from this game before I have kids and send them to college, I will do my level best to make sure the Kickstarter to produce this game launches before the end of 2018.

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