A
couple of years ago, Paizo released We Be Goblins! for the 2011
Free RPG Day. It is a short adventure in which players get to take on
the roles of goblins (traditionally a villainous monster race). It is
fun and comical, and good for a one-off session or just a break from
the norm. It would also seem to have been a popular adventure since
this year, Paizo has released a sequel, We Be Goblins Too!, in which
players continue the adventures of the goblin heroes they played in
We Be Goblins!
Although Free RPG Day came and went last month, those who didn’t
manage to acquire a free copy of the adventure then (and even those who
did) can download a free pdf of the adventure from Paizo. The print
version of the adventure is also available for $5.
SPOILERS
FOLLOW
We
Be Goblins Too! follows pretty
much the same format as We Be Goblins!
It is divided into two main sections just like its precursor, with
each section following the same pattern as the earlier adventure. In
fact, it’s pretty much the exact same adventure, just with more
difficult challenges and encounters. As such, while I think We
Be Goblins Too! is a good
adventure and will be fun to run, it’s not as good as We
Be Goblins! I also wouldn’t
recommend playing the two adventures back-to-back as the repetition
will be all the more apparent. However, if it has been a while since
people have played the first adventure, this one can be another great
change from the usual adventures. Played as a one-off, it should work
great.
The
adventure uses the same pregenerated characters as We Be
Goblins!, only advanced to third
level. Of course, just like with the earlier adventure, it’s easy
for players substitute characters of their own creation. The
adventure opens with the Licktoad tribe (to which the PCs belong)
having been destroyed and the PCs are the only survivors, now in
search of a new tribe. (The Licktoads were wiped out in The Brinewall Legacy.
However, that adventure also claims the heroes of We Be
Goblins! died as well. We
Be Gobins Too! retcons that.)
They come to the Birdcruncher tribe, which is having problems of its
own. An ogre druid and his daughter have moved into the area along
with their fire-breathing pigs, and they are causing much trouble for
the Birdcrunchers. The Birdcrunchers’ chieftain went to face the
ogre, and so did his successor and that one’s successor. None have
returned. The Birdcrunchers now need a new chieftain who can go and
remove the ogre for them. They offer the PCs the chance to become
chieftain and subchieftains.
First,
however, the PCs must take part in a chieftain moot to prove their
suitability for the role of chieftain (and subchieftains). This takes
the form of several contests that they must succeed at (just like in
the first part of We Be Goblins!).
Once they have proven their worth, the tribe awards them with the
Crunchy Crown. The PC who has earned the most points becomes
chieftain and the other PCs become subchieftains. The Birdcrunchers
then expect the PCs to head off the very next morning to deal with
the ogre threat.
Tracking
down the ogre is a quick exercise. The PCs must then deal with the
ogre’s boar animal companion (named Piggy), as well as several
other pigs, the ogre’s daughter, her giant ferret pet, and the
ogre, Pa Munchmeat, himself. Much like We Be Goblins!,
this second part of We Be Goblins Too!
is mostly a succession of combat encounters with somewhat comical
nemeses.
There
are some very nice touches to the second half of the adventure. The
ogre’s pigs, including Piggy, can “breathe fire”. This is
because Pa Munchmeat has trained them to eat a magical item called a
gourd of fire burping,
which is like a weaker version of an elixir of fire breath.
Another very nice touch is the inclusion of Squealy Nord, a
distempered pig that the PCs ran afoul of in We Be Goblins!
Squealy Nord escaped from the Licktoads, but was later caught by Pa
Munchmeat.
Overall,
I do like We Be Goblins Too!
quite a bit. While it’s very much a retread of We Be
Goblins!, with enough of a gap
between playing the two adventures, it should still prove a fun a
humorous diversion—a nice change of pace from an ongoing campaign.
No comments:
Post a Comment