Difference between revisions of "Grudge Mansion"

From Ludocity
(drop the narrative section, add play history)
 
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Additionally, make it clear to players that if they want to stop playing or leave early, they ''must'' (if they're still alive) give their card and sticker to someone else. The game will break (or, at least, someone will get an easy win) if a player leaves taking their murder card with them.
 
Additionally, make it clear to players that if they want to stop playing or leave early, they ''must'' (if they're still alive) give their card and sticker to someone else. The game will break (or, at least, someone will get an easy win) if a player leaves taking their murder card with them.
  
==Narrative==
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==Play history==
  
If you've got time to write a bit of narrative, you can add a "motive" to each murder card, giving some reason why the victim might be a problem for the player who holds the card (in a way that would still make sense when the murder card gets passed to someone else).
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Brendan Adkins ran the game in July 2011, and it seemed to work. [http://yfrog.com/kimlsopj This guy won].
 
 
What might start out as a personal vendetta ("someone has been blackmailing everyone here, and you've proof that it's Professor Blue") would uncover more and more clues and reasons for murder as the game progressed - having killed Professor Blue, you find some notes in his pocket that describe how Miss Taupe plans to set fire to the building, so clearly she must be stopped...
 

Latest revision as of 17:22, 11 July 2011

Grudge Mansion
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Designer: Kevan Davis
Year: unknown
Players: 10+
Stuff required: Pre-prepared cards and stickers. Envelopes. A "murder board".
Crew required: One moderator.
Preparation: Cards and stickers need to be prepared in advance.
Time required: Half an hour to unlimited.
Place required: Any large public space that can be divided into unambiguous areas.
Activities: Sneaking, deduction, ambient.
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This is an untested game. Its rules are written, but it hasn't been tested out yet.
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This game is made available under an Attribution-Noncommercial Creative Commons licence. (What does this mean?)

An isolated country mansion, with the telephone lines down, the fog closing in, and each and every guest having a well-founded grudge against another. Who will survive the night?

Setup

An example murder card.

For each player, prepare two props:-

  • A name sticker with a character's name in large print. (Colonel Beige, Mrs Puce, Reverend Black, etc. Each name must be unique.) Players will wear these to show their identities.
  • A "murder card" with that character's name, an (entirely arbitrary) weapon, and a random location. This will end up in a different player's hands, and tells them that they have to kill this character.

For the locations, you should scout out the area you're intending to run the game in, and pick at least three large, easily-described areas. (If you were running the game in a two-level building with a bar, you might divide it into "Upper Floor", "Lower Floor", "Bar", "Outside".) The areas should be unambiguous, and should be parts of the venue that players are likely to spend at least some of their time passing through in the course of events.

Optionally, you can summarise the instructions of the game on the back of each murder card, for players' reference.

Pair up the stickers and cards so that the list is offset by one - the sticker for Colonel Beige has the murder card for Mrs Puce, the sticker for Mrs Puce has the murder card for Reverend Black, and so on until the last character has Colonel Beige's murder card. This puts the players into a "circle", where each is trying to kill the next one.

Put each new sticker/card pair into an envelope.

Make a "murder board" - a sheet of paper or card large enough to accommodate all of the murder cards. It should have a card-sized rectangle for each character, with their name printed inside, but you can just use a blank sheet of paper if you don't have time. Keep a wodge of blu-tack or some pins next to it, either way.

Gameplay

Assemble the players and give each of them an envelope (either at random, or write character names on the outside and let people pick their own). They can open them straight away.

Each player now has a name sticker, and a "murder card" that specifies a player they have a grudge against. The sticker should be worn openly on the player's clothing, from the start of the game, but the murder card should be kept secret.

To kill the target given on their murder card, a player simply has to approach that player in the location specified on the murder card, and greet the player by their character name, revealing the card as they do so. This kills the target instantly.

When a target has been killed, both players swap murder cards. The dead player must return to the murder board and blu-tack their card to it, to show that they have been killed; the murderer now has a new target, and a shiny new weapon to kill them with.

Players are free to show their cards to one another, but may not trade cards outside of a murder situation. (Swapping cards could result in a player getting hold of the murder card with their name on it, and becoming invulnerable.)

The game doesn't start immediately - give the players a time at which the murdering may commence, to give them a chance to spread out and split up. (If you're running the game as part of a larger event, this cooling off period can be as long as you like - making it half an hour to an hour will give people long enough to forget the game a little and become careless.)

The game continues until only one player survives, or until a pre-agreed "end of game" time limit is reached (in which case all surviving players share the victory).

Ambient play

This game can also be run ambiently, by gradually handing out envelopes over the course of the evening, with an instruction sheet inside. Try to make sure that all of the envelopes have been given out before the time at which players can start killing one another.

Additionally, make it clear to players that if they want to stop playing or leave early, they must (if they're still alive) give their card and sticker to someone else. The game will break (or, at least, someone will get an easy win) if a player leaves taking their murder card with them.

Play history

Brendan Adkins ran the game in July 2011, and it seemed to work. This guy won.