Do
Do
Do
1. (noun) A path of life. An undiscovered, but inescapable destiny. 2. (exclamation) The sound pilgrims make when they get into trouble.
Dedicated to Megan
Designed by
Daniel Solis
Edited by
Ryan Macklin Lillian Cohen-Moore
Art by
Liz Radtke Kristin Rakochy Josh Roby Dale Horstman
Playtesting
Ralf Achenbach Jen Armstrong Lenny Balsera Chris Box Jeffrey Collyer Myles Corcoran John Cottongim DeWitt Davis Jonathan Davis Rob Donoghue Adam Dray Haggai Elkayam Alex Ferguson
Matt Gandy Kaylee Goyer Brett Grimes Rory Grimes Shannon Haggard Jesse Harlin Fred Hicks Liz Hooper Shane Jackson Marie Lane Peter MacHale Ryan Macklin Samantha Mullaney Megan Raley Shreyas Sampat Kate Sheehy Greg Stolze Remi Treuer
Kirk Mitchell Dev Purkayastha Jared Sorensen Nick Wedig John Wick
Super-thanks
To all of the letter-writers. I hope this game does your contributions justice. To all the backers who contributed to the Kickstarter. Especially to those who helped proofread. Look for your . To Annie Rush for teaming up way back in the day. To Dev Purkayastha and Shreyas Sampat for introducing me to Avatar: the Last Airbender. To Dan Cetorelli for binding the ultra-fancy edition of the book. To Lyndsay Peters for making the gorgeous custom pouches. To Ian Cunningham, Quentin Hudspeth, Justin D. Jacobson, and Jared Sorensen for helping gure out Dos do. To Mark Sherry and Adam Dray for getting the math just right. To Jessica and Amanda Cetorelli for your great handwritten letter and drawing on page 25. And ultra-special thanks for everyone whos asked So, whens Do coming out? Thank you.
Handwriting
Joanna Charambura Brett Gilbert Amy Houser Quentin Hudspeth Chris Kirkman Chiara Marchesi Lyndsay Peters Renato Ramonda Josh Roby Craig Wayling Matt Widmann
Letters by
Peter Aronson Myles Corcoran Richard DiTullio Evan Franke Colin Fredericks Sophie Lagac Ben Lehman Ryan Macklin
Thanks to
Jonathan Walton Kynn Bartlett Doug Pirko Peter Aronson Jen Armstrong Ben Woerner Patrick Shulz
Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple is copyright 2011 by Daniel Solis. Most illustrations Copyright 2011 Liz Radtke unless otherwise noted. Letter illustration on page 25 Copyright 2009 Jessica and Amanda Cetorelli. Critter doodles on page 12, 39, and 51 Copyright 2009 Kristin Rakochy. Pilgrims on page 79 Copyright 2009 Jake Richmond. Clouds on page 79 Copyright 2009 Dale Horstman. Doodles on page 76 Copyright 2009 Megan Raley. Handwriting on page 93 Copyright 2009 kasumisukimix (http://community.livejournal.com/kasustyle/). Each letter is copyright its respective author. All rights reserved. If you would like to create your own Do-related content, Id love to help. Contact me at gobi81@gmail.com. ISBN 978-1-61317-000-7 First Printing June 2011 Printed in the U.S.A.
Contents
CHAPTER 3
Overview
CHAPTER 1
Page 6
How to Play
CHAPTER 4
Page 42
Read this if youre just taking a peek at the worlds of Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple.
This is actually how to play the game of Do. How to make your own pilgrim, write the story of the pilgrims journey and how to discover each pilgrims ultimate destiny.
Introduction
Page 10
Advice
Page 68
If this sort of game is new to you, you can start here and read all the way through. Do is played differently than many games, so even if youre an ancient master, youll want to give the whole book a read-through starting with this chapter.
CHAPTER 2
This is advice for playing the game after you learn the basics. It offers tips to help your long-term strategy and inspire your imagination.
Page 20
Reference
Page 94
The universe is a silly place. Here you nd troubles aplenty around the worlds, from giant whales to colliding planets. Use these letters as the seed for your pilgrims adventure.
Heres a cheat sheet for playing Do, for the experienced regulars who just need some quick reference.
Overview
Overview
o: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple is a collaborative storytelling game where each player helps create a story, makes trouble for their character and tries to get a happy ending. You write the story of pilgrims ying from one world to the next, helping people they meet and getting in plenty of shenanigans along the way. Misunderstandings will happen. Good intentions will lead to unexpected consequences. Depending on your choices, each leg of the journey will end with your characters hailed as heroes or chased away by an angry mob. Its a silly universe out there and it only gets sillier the farther pilgrims travel. To play, you need three to ve players, about two hours, pencils, a journal, and a bag containing twenty black and twenty white stones. You need a letter for the pilgrims to answer, from Chapter 2. Each player should have a trouble token. (A trouble token can be any small trinket.) If this is your rst time playing, you will rst make a pilgrim youll control as the story unfolds. You create a fun name for that pilgrim like Pilgrim Green Tree, Pilgrim Sleeping Cat or Pilgrim Cloudy Window. These names arent just for show, they actually describe how the pilgrim helps people and gets in trouble. Pilgrim Green Tree gets in trouble by being naive about worldly affairs and helps people by nurturing their talents. Pilgrim Sleeping Cat gets in trouble by taking naps at inappropriate times and helps people by suddenly freaking out without warning. Pilgrim Cloudy Window gets in trouble by having his intentions misunderstood and helps people by opening opportunities. Once you have your pilgrim, you can begin the story of her pilgrimage across the skies. To begin, the players pick a letter for their pilgrims to answer. That letter describes a new world, with a peculiar set of troubles described by a semi-reliable letter-writer. Things are not always what they seem, so the nature of the problem might be quite different once the pilgrims get involved. The pilgrims do their best to help and will nd a solution to any dilemma, but theyre also going to cause many headaches
OVERVIEW
in the process. Pilgrims get the job done, regardless of how many worlds get eaten, kingdoms overthrown, or romances tangled. The people who write letters to the temple asking for help are well theyre desperate. They gure, Hey, it cant get much crazier than this. Then the pilgrims show up. At the end of each game, the pilgrims will move on, either honored with parades worthy of saviors or booted out for causing mischief. The events that happen on this world will force each pilgrim to grow up and change a little bit, either changing how they help people or how they get into trouble. As the pilgrims grow, their names change to reect their changing behavior. At the end of the pilgrimage, your pilgrim discovers her true destiny, either to remain out in these crazy worlds or to return to the temple where things make some kind of sense. Her destiny is a mystery to her, but you know it quite well. You decide the details of what happens after she grows up. Your decisions guide her path all the way to the end of the pilgrimage.
OVERVIEW
CH 01
Introduction
Introduction
his chapter details the premise of the game. You will nd a description of the universe, the people and the worlds they live on, and the pilgrims who travel to them. At the end, youll see some basic themes of the stories youll play.
CH 01
versions of our own Earth. Instead of a forest, a world might have a few trees. Instead of a mountain range, they might have one mountain jutting rudely from the landscape. Many worlds are so small they can only support a few houses. This makes each world a little island, a selfcontained culture with its own peculiar customs. Animals Around the Worlds The universe holds many wonders for the errant zoologist. Some animals and plants arent too different than what youd nd outside your own window. They may be a little smaller, given the small worlds they live on, but a dog looks like a dog. Flying or oating animals nd a comfortable life drifting between worlds. Lack of gravity does strange things to animals compared to their land-loving cousins. Free from weight, animals may grow to many times the size of an average world. Your pilgrims may visit a large city on the back of a turtle or a symbiotic tribe living inside a jellysh. Animals can be big enough to swallow up a whole world and not even notice.
10
CHAPTER 1
By far, birds are most at home in the open skies. If a ock of gulls becomes fatigued during a long ight, they can sleep and drift for a few hours until their strength is restored. A tiny sparrow can perch on a oating branch. With nothing but air at their disposal, bird species take two divergent paths. If they stay small, they will gather in great migrating swarms. If they dont ock with other birds, they grow to the size (and spherical shape) of a world. Without gravity to pull their droppings away, migratory ocks leave great guano roads through the air. Whole industries are built around these roads. Peddlers collect the remains and sell them as watered-down ointments for nobles seeking youth. Gross. Because of the lack of gravity, creatures you might normally nd underwater nd a very comfortable environment in the sky That is, once they learn to breathe air. Travelers can spot whales idly oating along in loose pods, turtles laying eggs in clumps of sky moss, and deadly anglersh living in dense clouds. A word of warning: If youve been ying a long time without sight of land and suddenly come across a gleaming blue world, watch out for tentacles. Plants deserve a mention, since rootless life has dramatic changes on their physiology. Air-faring plants look more like jellysh. Their roots trail for many languid miles behind a thick clump of sail-like leaves. Villagers live among these roots, tending to their plants illnesses and making sure its roots dont get tangled.
As for trees, they become quasi-planets, divided into two hemispheres. One hemisphere faces templeward, absorbing the temples great light, while the other hemisphere is made of sponge-like roots absorbing any ambient moisture. Many animals live on these worlds, too, some unique among the whole universe. Some of these trees release enormous seeds. Those seeds collect a shell of debris, rocks, and other matter over time. Only after centuries of layered soil around it, does the seed germinate, destroying the loamy shell. This comes as a great surprise to anyone who doesnt know their world is about to sprout.
RAVITY , partly A NOTE On G atter of physics e is partly a m rs ive un call is th Gravity in for a person to is big enough ld or w a me sa If . e psychology orlds have th ity. All home w av gr s ha it en s. or mas home, th ss of their size r avity, regardle ain in the air fo strength of gr m re to , you just have ity , av es gr ut pe in m ca To es ually a few time. This is us of h nt uc ou to t am must no a certain the trick. You ping wont do ected to solid nn so simply jum co touch anything or nd ou gr the vast any solid tures thrive in her ying crea ot d an s want rd ho Bi ground. lar people w lds. Alas, regu or w n ets, ee ck tw ro be expanse on balloons, orlds must rely w n ee and s tw te be ki l to trave utes, sails, opters, parach th ni or or s, ct al re im di ying an r to come in designed neve s ce an riv nt other co ound. t with solid gr e pilgrims they indirect contac Temple, and th g in Fly e th of ks on otional m y Onl the subtle em d. They know de ai un y er over w n train, ca comforting po ve gravity its gi at th ts en attachm art. the human he
OVERVIEW
11
teems UnIVERSE d every surface A WInDPUnK share, each an to nd nd, ou n gr solid surface they ca With so little do with what e ak m le op ldly pe s. with life. wor for themselve nological make a living to t an w affects the tech o if they als nd ou gr lid so of m of nt ou strange amalga The limited am aking each a m , ld or w s coch be of ea er-gatherer tri advancement vations. Hunt no in e ag s. A g on at d sailin den autom Stone Age an d clicking woo an s ip sh s. r ar ai ge nced ears as with exist with adva fought with sp be to d y el ne lik oo st as just rships, are fe worldly war is devices, like ai e ad by -m d an pe m m bellows pu Any advanced propellers and ils are ils, dervish-like sa g in w important. Sa llo t bi with ork? Eh, its no w l al it es do How strong beasts. e roads, . ol co chnologies, lik just ve familiar te ha ht ig m herwise le ot , and unless worldly peop . If it comes up on isi lev el and te lev en ev wind at some automatons or all powered by e ar e es th e m an metal. noted, just assu erials other th e most of natural mat e ad m tly iverse. Even th os m are le all over the un ab lu va d cted an tru re ns es, instead co Metal is very ra few metal piec ry ve hen ve W ha s r. ip sh nes and leathe resplendent air ood, cloth, bo w e et lik an ls pl ia a er ar mat will literally te from natural ing operations in m , ld or w a on avity. metal is found any kind of gr wing o small to have to is it til Pilgrims wear o un . t gy apar s the technolo ct e and re s g in ve ar th Windpunk clo l long strap. Sc the occasiona by ed en st fa , ns shes. silks and cotto s, cloaks and sa on, as are cape m m co e ar ts ha
12
CHAPTER 1
A Fool of pilgrim pilgrims rims An Apology of A Gasp of pilg s rim lg pi of er ck A Bi of pilgrims A Mayower rims lg pi of s as Cl lgrims A A Meddle of pi rims lg pi of d ou Cl lgrims A A Mission of pi lgrims pi of ch ut Cl lgrims A A Missive of pi of pilgrims n io ss pa m Co pilgrims A A Miyazaki of rims lg pi of h as Cr lgrims A A Momo of pi s rim lg pi of Do lgrims A A Nimbus of pi pilgrims of ny ha ip Ep pilgrims An A Paragraph of pilgrims of ip sh w llo Fe rims A A Party of pilg rims lg pi of e dl Fid rims A A Passel of pilg rims lg pi of t gh Fli rims A A Peck of pilg rims lg pi of ck Flo A
lgrims A Prayer of pi pilgrims A Procession of pilgrims A Progress of lgrims A School of pi lgrims A Stamp of pi rims A Table of pilg lgrims A Trouble of pi lgrims A Troupe of pi rims A Wisp of pilg lgrims A Wreck of pi
OVERVIEW
13
What Pilgrims Do
As she travels from world to world, a pilgrim will do a few things with great regularity. A Pilgrim Helps People One, she helps people, above all else. She doesnt just try to help. Whatever a pilgrim sets out to do, she does. Such is the excellent training and ability gifted by the temple. Each pilgrim has their own way of helping, through humble skills, odd personality traits or strange powers. A pilgrim helps. A pilgrim solves problems and gets people out of trouble. Its a messy business, being traveling diplomats and peacemakers at such a young age. Most recipients of the pilgrims help eventually come away satised with the results. Well, eventually. Theres just one problem... A Pilgrim Gets into Trouble Okay, yes, a pilgrim does help people with an inexplicable rate of success, but this usually comes at the price of getting herself into trouble instead. Just as each pilgrim has a unique way of helping, she also has a unique style of getting into trouble. Some pilgrims attract physical dangers through their clumsiness, while others raise worldly ire with rude discourtesy. With this in mind, its very common for pilgrims to nd themselves rescuing each other more often than the worldly people who asked for their help in the rst place. A Pilgrim Grows Up and Changes Names A pilgrim is in the process of self-discovery during her journey. She comes away from each world either learning new ways to solve problems, or picking up new ways to get into trouble. A pilgrims name reects these two aspects of her personality. A pilgrims name consists of two words. The rst word is a descriptor, acting as a metaphor for how a pilgrim gets in trouble. The second word is a thing or concept, acting as a metaphor for how she helps people. So, for example, pilgrim Devout Bird gets in trouble by stubbornly holding to her traditions and helps people with her skillful ying prowess. After leaving a world, her name changes because of the lessons of that experience. Pilgrim Devout Bird got in trouble when her traditional manner of eating (using her face, without hands) greatly offended this worlds royal family. After that experience, she becomes pilgrim Revolutionary Bird, who gets in trouble by trying to incite revolt against any established dogma. A Pilgrim Finds Her Do So it goes until the pilgrim nally becomes the person she is meant to be. Each world offers new experiences, new dangers, and new ways to help people and get into trouble. At the end of her journey, each pilgrim learns her Do, or path. Destiny, in other words. She knows in her heart whether she will stay out in the worlds and give up her power of ight or return to the temples safe connes to live in monastic solitude. In other words, she will nd her Do.
InSPIRATIOn acter SOURCES OF , the title char e Little Prince ing liv In the novel Th ch people, ea r of different n ow visits a numbe r ei with th orld and each on a little w ms. p unique proble features a grou Stand By Me ie ov The m ds oo w the back urney through of kids on a jo danger along g in dg own, do of their homet s Avatar: the animated serie the way. The children on a r also features Last Airbende a fantasy world ey travel across journey, but th ouch grownts and out-of-t of magic, spiri her animated urney is anot a ups. Kinos Jo aracter visits ch the title ch d an series, in whi al rre ore su doms, each m series of king than the last. metaphorical tion share ces of inspira All these sour ng -age and getti vel, coming-of themes of tra into trouble.
14
CHAPTER 1
OVERVIEW
15
A Few Assumptions
Now that you know a bit about the setting for your stories, here are a few assumptions to keep in mind. Pilgrims Help: Pilgrims dont simply try to help; they actually accomplish anything they set out to do. This is usually done through simple deeds that any normal person could do, though often with the strength of the temples authority backing it up. Then again, pilgrims are not always a subtle bunch when given such power, thus leading us to our next conceit. Pilgrims Get into Trouble: The price of sure success is sure consequence, often of a troublesome nature for the meddling pilgrim. Those troubles are in proportion to the act that caused them. Thus, a pilgrim who wants to keep her troubles well away from the cosmic scope would do well to keep spectacular feats of supernatural power limited to special occasions. Troubles Dont Last: Regardless of what happens, there is no trouble from which a pilgrim wont eventually escape. Then, she and her companions can continue on the pilgrimage. That being the case, the stories told in this game are often very light in tone. Even the direst of events ends up being a minor inconvenience. Troubles are bothersome enough to be a nuisance, but never so serious that a pilgrim is in true mortal danger. Epic Meddle: Each story in Do is about meddlesome kids solving the problems in a world of grown-ups. That interference in worldly affairs can have effects that spread across whole worlds. Still, its that intervention that drives the story forward a constant urge to create a new status quo that is better than the current norm. Trust Each Other: This game says yes to each players contribution to the story. It says yes to the Storyteller describing how her pilgrim helps people. It says yes to the Troublemakers describing how that pilgrim suddenly gets in trouble. This creative freedom is supported by the structure of the story. Acts have consequences (as the Troublemakers will attest), you have particular goals youre trying to achieve as a group and you have your pilgrims name as inspiration at all times. But more fundamentally, the freedom is supported by each players trust in each other. Youre all pilgrims.
16
CHAPTER 1
OVERVIEW
17
CH 02
CH 02
he letters are the beginning of each story in the pilgrimage. Whenever there is a problem that cant be solved or a situation too tenuous to touch, a worldly person can call in the pilgrims. She must write a letter that explains the situation, like that her planet just got swallowed by an air whale or that she suspects shes been bitten by a werewolf. Then she must hide it somewhere special or dispose of the letter in some other ritual. A short while later, the letter disappears from its hiding spot and re-appears uttering above the temple. (Early pilgrim ying lessons actually involve trying to catch the most letters from the sky and deliver them to the temple elders.) Instead of giving you pages and pages of setting details for you to digest before playing, you pick and choose which parts of the setting you nd important. You do this by choosing the letters that your pilgrims will answer throughout their pilgrimage. The letters allow you to choose which parts of the universe you want to include
20
CHAPTER 2
in your stories. You can ignore the letters you dont like, thereby ignoring that part of the universe. You can respond to the letters you do like, thereby making those aspects of the setting more important. A letter is kind of like a level in a video game. Its a selfcontained set of problems and puzzles for your character to deal with, but just one in a series. Pilgrims Answer Letters and Help Worldly People When pilgrims are ready for their journey, the elders give them a stack of letters. worldly people are always writing letters to the temple asking for help. The letterwriters each have a problem that they just cant handle on their own. Pilgrims respond to these letters in-person as representatives of the temple. Though the people and their worlds may be strange, someone out there needs help only the Pilgrims of the Flying Temple can provide. Just as worlds come in many shapes and sizes, the worldly people do as well. Your pilgrim will travel to high noble kingdoms and grungy pauper towns. Shell have divine audiences with deities and trade jokes with nature spirits.A pilgrim may visit a forest moon full of friendly sprites, and then visit a tiny asteroid where a grumpy troll lives. Later, she dines with a colony of ghosts haunting an abandoned home, then a clockwork city of dgety automatons. All these and stranger peoples may be met in the open skies. The temple elders do not hand these letters out randomly. They have known these pilgrims for a long time and know the issues the pilgrims need to outgrow. A pilgrim who gets into trouble by being too shy may face an antagonist who compels her to get out of her shell. A pilgrim who rushes to ght may face an antagonist unswayed by foolish bravado. Whatever their nature, they often reect something about a pilgrims hang-ups and areas where she needs to grow.
Letter-Writers are Unreliable Narrators Each letter reflects the particular, sometimes skewed worldview of the writer. Some letter-writers may come from worlds whose cultures dont even believe the temple exists. That certainly makes it awkward when pilgrims y in from out of nowhere. Other letter-writers are all too aware of the temple, but overestimate how much a pilgrim can accomplish, thinking them to be angelic beings of divine omnipotence. Imagine the disappointment when pilgrims turn out to be just a bunch of teenagers with too much authority. Sometimes two letter-writers descriptions of the universe may even contradict each other. Either way, the pilgrims know whats really real... or at least theyre sure enough. The elders teach pilgrims to abide by the local customs as far as they are comfortable. So, if the letter-writer believes the universe really is an inky black void and that the pilgrims are aliens from another planet, a pilgrim will act the part if it makes it easier for her to solve the letter-writers problems. If shes on a world where no one even knows the temple exists or that the universe is full of intelligent life, a pilgrim wont mention it if it will cause more trouble than it will solve. That being said, theres a limit to every pilgrims pragmatism. When faced with prejudice, injustice or something that just gets on the nerves, a pilgrim or two has been known to, well, break out of cultural norms. This usually involves pilgrims introducing alien elements to the world, like magic in a science-driven culture, or kung fu dinosaurs on a world where dinosaurs only practice karate. Pilgrims can easily cause more trouble than they resolve. So, for the most part, do as the Romans do, even if it stinks.
21
Letters are Story Seeds This chapter presents many different letters written by all sorts of people from around the universe. (Actually, theyre written by real people who were kind enough to contribute their creativity to this game.) Each letter offers you a fruitful beginning for a fun adventure and plenty of opportunities for your pilgrims to get into trouble. By picking a letter, you decide how a story will begin, but neither you nor the other players know how the story will end. You will have a letter written by someone on a distant world asking for help, but that only sets the stage for your adventures there. From that starting point, you and your friends will create your own story together. You could even play the same letter with different groups of players and it would result in a different story.
22
CHAPTER 2
Book represents affairs of tradition, law and custom. There may be times when your pilgrim acts against accepted norms, either by defying a cultural taboo or outright criminal intent. Expect encounters with local authorities. Arrest is the most common and immediate trouble.
Example: Fed up with the local governors, Pilgrim Anointed Tree steals the sh-crown and declares himself new emperor of this world. Suddenly, royal guards whisk away pilgrim Anointed Tree for deling the crown.
Flag represents troubles involving relationships and politics between nations, towns or whole worlds and empires. worldly diplomacy impacts large groups of people, usually ruled by some kind of noble. Pilgrims meddlesome irreverence makes them quite infamous among the ruling elite. Pilgrims are only tolerated if their unorthodox methods work in the nobles favor. Well-intentioned pilgrims may accidentally instigate border disputes, break treaties, and spread rumors.
Example: In the dark of night, Pilgrim Electric Glass ies to the demilitarized zone between Cobar Province and Five-Peak City to parley between the generals. Unfortunately, both sides mistake her ashing static charge as a signal-are for surrender.
Heart represents troubles in which your pilgrim is in love or is involved in worldly love-lives. Love is a delicious problem. Sometimes the trouble with love is that it is forbidden by some cultural taboo. More often, the trouble is the other emotions that may come with the romance, including jealousy, attachment, and vulnerability. Your pilgrim might nd herself falling in love with a worldly person, or vice versa, which is denitely a distraction from her duties.
Example: Struck by Prince Shus thorough understanding of ancient horticulture, Pilgrim Flirting Rose falls in love with him. The feeling is mutual, but the problem is hes already betrothed to the princess of another world.
Knot represents troubles involving families and their peculiar manner of getting on each other's nerves. Family connects people across the universe, like invisible strings waiting to ensnare an errant pilgrim. Tread lightly around family affairs. A cunning word can't erase years of bad blood between rival heirs. A swift kick can't sweep away tension between a stepparent and her new child. Pilgrims sometimes get personally involved in family troubles when they are mistaken for long-lost sons, daughters and uncles.
Example: Pilgrim Witty Pen cheers up a sick child by writing a funny poem about a girl raised by foxes. Rumor spreads that Pilgrim Witty Pen belongs to the long-lost fox-people who left this world long ago, promising to return with new medicines.
23
Pen represents academic and investigative troubles, which are fairly common along the pilgrimage. These troubles are a challenge to the mind, testing a pilgrims ability to deduce the root of a worldly problem. Sometimes your pilgrim nds herself wrapped up in a labyrinthine mystery, uncovering dangerous secrets. A pilgrim might be forced to hide a secret from prying eyes. Pen troubles can also be distracting tests of mental agility, like puzzle rooms, riddles, or insidious traps.
Example: Pilgrim Diving Banister discovers a conspiracy is afoot when she notices a false bookcase along the wall. The bookcase falls forward and a rush of wind sucks her into a room full of mathematical puzzles.
Sword represents troubles of warfare, violence and weaponry. Perhaps the most straightforward type of trouble, it carries the worst consequences. When punches are thrown, a pilgrim failed to keep the peace. A pilgrim should solve problems without violence, but all are trained to use their ying talents to defend themselves and escape danger if necessary. Still, sky ships, nets, weights or other contraptions may overcome the best yers. Even the threat of violence may be troublesome enough.
Example: Pilgrim Limber Brush deftly strides into battle, acrobatically dodging the hundreds of spears lobbed at her. That is, until she realizes those spears actually formed a cage, leaving her trapped and unable to y away.
Lotus represents troubles in which the pilgrims interact with gods or their followers. The gods embody aspects of the human condition, yet are endowed with superhuman abilities. This is a volatile mixture of insecurity and power. Gods break promises. They demand devotion, can cause wars, and strike famines. Their moods are ckle and they can be enraged at impropriety. Unfortunate pilgrims have been cursed, turned into toads and otherwise just messed up.
Example: Pilgrim Glorious Throne assumes the title, duties, and crown as gurehead of the local religion. Angry at the pilgrims insolence, Thaderelius, local god of vengeance and sea, turns the pilgrims crown into a brain-sucking sh.
Tree represents troubles in which the environment is the challenge. A pilgrim could be caught in a dangerous storm, hunted by wild animals or disoriented after being puffed at by a strange mushroom. These troubles also manifest as spirits, embodying aspects of the natural world. Using nature spirits in your story lets you turn the environment into a worldly character with whom your pilgrim can interact.
Example: Pilgrim Bookish Scroll is uent in a dozen different river spirit languages and condently enters into negotiations with the local spirits. Unfortunately, these are technically spirits of tributaries and they are offended by the association with those degenerate river spirits.
Now that you know what each symbol means, take a tour through the letters! Start with an example, Swallowed Whole by Ben Lehman. This is a great letter to use in your rst session because the premise is simple, introduces several aspects of Dos setting, and is easy to complete. It is by far the most popular letter to begin a pilgrimage.
24
CHAPTER 2
Hi how are you! My name is Melanie. I come from a very small planet. There is me, my house, my cat, and two trees (see drawing). I am not so good, because my planet has been eaten by a whale. It is a very small planet. I woke up and I was inside a whale. I dont want to get (more) eaten. Please help! your friend Melanie (age 8) P.S. Drawing is on other side. P.P.S. I will make you cookies.
EET SHORT n Sw run a quick If you want to : demo of Do one-shot or , e pl m Te g in Fly Pilgrims of the e. us to r tte le this is a great , n goal words te s ha ly on It ty. en tw ve ha rs while the othe
NSLATION UNIVERSAL TRA d because enience an For your conv for their are not known worldly citizens the ying the monks of penmanship rs in this nscribed lette temple have tra ndwriting eir original ha chapter from th resembling to something and context in ect. your local dial
25
I am charged by the people of Falling Mountain to write this letter. We suffer and are in chains of our own making. Please free us. Falling Mountain is caught, bound by shackles of iron to a passing behemoth and dragged out into the deeps far from light and warmth. We cannot break free. Each day our world grows colder, the crops fail and our children grow hungry. Please free us. I must explain. Our world was a pleasant sphere, dotted with farms, garlanded with blossoming trees, ringed by gurgling streams. We lived a simple life, traded what little surplus we made with neighboring worlds and counted ourselves content. Misfortune cast its shadow on us the day the behemoth came. A great beast of heaven, larger than imagining, it swam through the clouds impervious to man and his concerns. Some of our folk heard tell of its coming from a traveling band of tellers and jugglers. The sweetest talking of the foreigners, one Song-Bao, confronted our elders, encouraging the young to abandon our old ways and take up the travelers life, sharing the riches of the beast and leaving Falling Mountain forever. Our young men were swayed by tales of prowess and the glory of the hunt. Fools! As it grew nearer, our youths set out in oats to snare it, carrying nets and harpoons, chains and billhooks. The foreigners egged them on. Poor Li Foon the Oldest tried in vain to stop them but was laughed down by the hotblooded boys.
Like gnats they were, eager for blood from the giant, afraid to let it escape, taking its unimaginable wealth away from Falling Mountain. Unhappily, they succeeded. We are now chained to the beast. The rst few harpoons provoked no reaction from it, but eventually it shrugged, doubtless irritated by the parasites who bit at its esh. The chains held, and our world was dragged crazily out of its orbit. Those villagers who managed to stay conscious tell me that we spun three, possibly four times around the behemoth before slamming into it. Merciful gods, but we stuck to it, lodged in its skin and held fast. Our world is trapped, the chains that bind us buried in the body of the beast. This letter holds the hope of our world. Each day that passes takes us further from the holy light of the temple, deeper into the dark. Please free us. We have tried everything we know to break the chains, but it is hopeless. The skin of the beast overgrows the chains and our world is slowly being absorbed into the living esh of the creature. Our village has fallen apart. The young men side with the foreigners, the foul Song-Bao promises great things when the behemoth reaches its destination. The elders call his words lies, and tell us that were headed into the dark, a dark without hope. I send this letter with the last of our boats. Please return it if at all possible, as Li Foon will never let me hear the end of it if it is lost. Please free us. Zheng
26
CHAPTER 2
Youve just been CALLED OUT by Momentum Sixteen! We are the most elite free jump freestyle dance squad in all the worlds. When we hit the ground running, the whole city is our course. Stairs, skyscrapers, ladders, light poles, walls, trucks, scaffolds and even airships we free jump it all and bounce back for more. There simply isnt any other dance squad that can compete with our unstoppable rhythm. Im Shei Six, and Im captain of this crew because Im just the very best of all. Watch out for my dad, crusty old Commissar Six. He only sees the spray-paint and broken windows. (Its called ART, dad.) Hed just love to close down the dance squads for good - not that hed ever catch us! And then this new free jumper Zanzy is starting to talk trash about our squad, just because were selling so many t-shirts and magazines. (Shes gotta just be jealous.) So enough is enough: Im declaring a free jump competition, with every dance squad on the planet... and one team of you pilgrims. The house rules are: (1) You dont stop dancing until all 10 tracks are done. (2) If you stay in the same place for too long, youre out. (3) Bonus points for creative property damage. (4) When youve been outclassed, do the right thing: take a bow and step out. (5) NO FLYING. (This goes double for you pilgrims!) (6) Last dance team standing wins it all! You hear that? No ying! I dont think youd last for 2 songs if you didnt have your precious ying abilities. How about it - are you ready to put it on the line? Are you ready to free jump with us? YOU HAVE BEEN CHALLENGED.
27
My name is Cam, and I am Listener of my village. We live upon the rocky outcroppings of the Forest, looking out over the Ocean towards the Spires over the horizon, clinging like limpets to the rock Face. We do not fare well here, for the Ocean and the Forest are at war. For an Age we have slept in our beds and listened to the Ocean speak in our dreams. We have shed and taken clams shattered on the rocks at the base of the cliff. The Forest has always sheltered us from above, and kept us good company in the daylight times.
But now the Ocean crashes against the Face and tears against the trees above, and the Trees scream and send barbs hurtling back. We see legions of dead sh and shattered branches on either side of the battleeld. And now the Spires are silent. My friends and family are all turning against one another, searching to lay blame. Three boys have left. The rst boy climbing up in hopes to reach the heart of the Forest. The second boy, my son, took his clam knife and dove into the Ocean. The third boy took his boat and left for the Spires. We have seen none of them for nearly a month, and the quarrels are growing ercer. My dreams are gray and indistinct, and they are lled with the sounds of the world screaming. I am afraid. Please help us. Cam the Listener world of Sam
28
CHAPTER 2
29
me r goblin me r naym sil me r in dunjun me r help grob he da ork he help rit leter is party is da hurt thay da kill thay da tayk elf he withe bow he kill chief he da tayk coper peeses we no da coper peeces we no da food we r starv dwarf he with hammer he kil shaman he take majik stik no da majik stik we no stop trol trol him hungree eat him plenty goblin eat him me mum
i mis me mum we is da help we see ganom he with shinee jem him say old temple on top of dunjun me put them leter on altur i am get da help from monk pleez da monk help da goblin we am hungree and troll am hungree and shaman he be ded and cheef he be ded and mom she be ded and al left be grob he da ork
Sorry to disturb you, Your High and Mighty Monkness, but I just dont know who else to turn to. You see, I and several of my mates tend the garden in the Queens palace. Her Majesty is very particular about her garden and very proud about showing it off. Shes having a tea and croquet party to show off the red rose border we planted last season. They just started blooming today and the ipping roses are white! We mustve gotten the seeds mixed up! Its been raining so she hasnt seen the garden yet but the moment the sun comes out, were all for the chop. I hope this reaches you quickly. I had to bury it beneath a rose bush. Yours in Desperation, Three of Spades
Goal Words: garden rose garden rose garden rose palace red palace Her Majesty seeds Her Majesty seeds Her Majesty bury red rose border plant Tea and Croquet Party white Your High and Mighty Monkness
30
CHAPTER 2
31
Once upon a time, there was a kingdom terrorized by a giant silver rat. The silver rat could travel faster even than bad news and gossip, and would icker from one end of the kingdom to another; grabbing food from the peoples hands and mouths and gulping it down before they could swallow even a crumb. Everyone was soon faint from hunger, even the childless old king and his nobles. So the king made an announcement: anyone who could slay the rat would be adopted as his son and heir, and rule the kingdom when he was gone. Many heroes came to slay the rat, but they all failed, and the rat swallowed them all down (Snap! Gulp!). The kingdom was starving and all hope seemed gone when the most unlikely of heroes walked into the palace. It was a calico cat, and she wore tall boots and a three cornered hat all of red leather, and at her side was the Sword of Swiftness. The battle between the cat and the rat was terrible! Back and forth across the kingdom they fought, until at last the silver rat was exhausted
and turned to ee. But the cat slew the rat, and cut off his head and took it before the king. And there, amidst great feasting, the king adopted the cat. And then, in the fullness of time, the old king died and the cat put aside her three-cornered hat of red leather for the crown of the kingdom. And the people, remembering the rat, cheered. But the cat remained a cat, and soon found she had no desire to rule a kingdom. However, unknown to the cat, the crown of that kingdom was magic and could only be put down at death or by the will of the people. And the people loved her for saving them from the rat. Then one day the cat had a wonderful idea! She would write to the monks of The Flying Temple, and they would send pilgrims to free her from her burden. So she wrote them a message, and tied it with ribbons in three different colors, and threw it over her shoulder at sunset. The End
32
CHAPTER 2
It was not three turns of the sun ago that I was like you will be a pilgrim, ying from land to land, bringing harmony and aid to those who ask. Now the tables have turned, and I must ask for assistance. When I came to this world, I answered a letter written by a young woman named Chunmei. She wrote to our glorious temple with great sorrow, asking why she was still on her little world when everyone else had already left it behind. As an orphan, my heart went out to her. I understand what it is like to be abandoned and alone, and I vowed to take her from her world to any place she desired. (My master snickered at my impetus, naturally.) When we arrived, I of course found that the problem was not as simple or easy as I originally envisioned. Forgive me; I am now rambling and I apologize. I remember wishing, when I was on my own pilgrimage, that the letter writers would get to the point sooner in their letters. Im impatient, and yet cursed with verbosity. Life is full of amusement. Allow me to get back to the point. The woman, who is now my beloved, is a ghost. Her family and friends have been dead for many years now. They have been able to move on to their afterlives while she has been stuck here for several months before I arrived. It took some time, but I nally unlocked her problem, allowing her to freely leave this earthly realm.
You must understand that we spent a great deal of time together while I worked to free her of her bonds. In that time, we created another bond: we fell in love. There was a moment where she was free to move on, to be with her family and one with the spirits. She rejected it; the pull of our hearts was too strong for her to deny. I must say that the selsh feelings within me were glad she did, and I happily ended my pilgrimage to stay with her. These last few months have been truly amazing, and though having a lover you cannot touch presents yearnings I do not wish upon anyone else, our love is deeper than any that I have ever seen or known because of it. Alas, I fear Im not getting to the point. Allow me to try to be blunt. This little world is dying, crumbling away. This started well before I came, but was slow before. We have perhaps three months before there is nothing left to stand on. This would not have been a serious problem for me in the past, but something truly frightening has revealed itself. I can no longer y. It appears that I am as bound to this world as my beloved is. Please help me, my brothers and sisters. I am afraid. I do not have the power over the winds and sky I once had, nor do I have power over my own heart. Respective, humbly, and graciously, Liu, formerly pilgrim Passionate Flower
33
Normally I wouldnt be writing a letter to you as my folk can take care of our own problems. But something happened to me and Im not sure what to do, if I can do anything at all. My wife Claire is imprisoned in the Dulac Penitentiary. She stole some money from her employers and shes serving out her sentence while the kids and I await her return. Mercifully, the sentence is short but there is a worse problem. The other inmates are dangerous and I fear for Claires safety, both her physical well-being and her emotional health. Its worse when you consider the criminals that are lockedinside with her.
They offered to place her in protective custody and she almost accepted, but I fear the isolation could do her even more harm. That and theres no guarantee that she is safe in her solitude. Someone might be hired to hurt her. Please, oh monks of the air, save my wife. She isnt a bad person, just someone who made a mistake. But she shouldnt have to pay withher life. Should she? Sincerely, Henry Clarkson
Goal Words: Claire Claire Claire Claires employers Claires employers Dulac Penitentiary Dulac Penitentiary Dulac Penitentiary Henry Henry Henry Protective Custody inmates inmates inmates isolation money money warden warden
Goal Words: orbit Desert Planet deluge Great Sages of Juku ood Great Sages of Juku gravity Water Planet Rova Water Planet Shift Water Planet Ishta Will of Nature Ishta Phloerals Phloerals Yotta Yotta Yotta
34
CHAPTER 2
Benevolent guardians of celestial harmony, I reluctantly put pen to paper to beseech you for assistance in saving my grandfathers lifework perhaps even his life from those who would use his precious automatons for evil ends. My grandfather Lord Graymist is a renowned and gifted creator of clockworks. Since my parents died when I was a child, he has taken me into his house and, discovering that I inherited a small fraction of his genius, taught me some of his art and science. But he has recently become very ill, and I fear my cruel uncle, Sir Victor, will nally succeed in gaining control over Grandfathers creations. My uncle is a forceful and vindictive man; he has been here several times, once managing to bully his way to Grandfathers bedside and the adjoining study where the most precious of the automatons are kept. The servants helped me convince him to leave, but he has threatened to obtain legal control over the estate. He does not believe me when I assure him that Grandfather sometimes wakes enough to speak, and is able to understand me. At rst when Grandfather took sick, I sent for reputed doctors, but I now fear my uncle has bribed them to keep Grandfather incapacitated. At the very least, Grandfather seemed to become more ill rather than better under their ministrations. Now I let no one tend to him without my supervision. I suspect that Sir Victor cares little for his own father, and much for the secrets of the precious automatons. No one has ever been able to duplicate
the complexity and renement of my grandfathers work. I know it is widely rumored that they are... dangerous. You must understand, Grandfather was is a good man; but nevertheless he has sometimes undertaken work of a delicate nature for the sake of the kingdom. Although I would not have thought it possible a few weeks ago, I discovered that some of them do in fact exhibit features that suggest sophisticated weaponry. Alas, a decade as his assistant was not enough for me to pierce my grandfathers secrets. He wastes away, and his automatons remain silent except for the occasional twitch which my probing may provoke. Any day now, my uncle may succeed in having Grandfather declared incompetent, and walk in with the legal means of becoming the trustee of my grandfathers fate and mine. He will take the automatons and wrest their secret from them, or at least cause great damage trying to do so. I fear he may even try to take further advantage of my grandfathers illness to try to force him to reveal his secrets. As for my own fate, I have no doubt it will be bleak once I am in Sir Victors power. I beg of you, good monks, please help me. If you cannot help my grandfather to return to health, then please take the automatons away to the temple in the Centre of the Sky, the only place I know where they would be safe from men like my uncle, who would use my grandfathers genius for evil ends. Respectfully yours and awaiting your kind assistance, Amber Carnelian
35
Hope you guys can help us here at Houkala temple National Park. Old Houkalas acting off his nut of late, the tourists are staying away in droves, and its getting kind of hard to make ends meet. Now usually, Houkala aint a bad guy oh, he was kind of wild when he was a kid, but hey, who wasnt? Besides, that was ve hundred years ago, and aside from some long-haired history profs, nobody much remembers that stuff. As I was saying, Houkala is normally a pretty stand up guy for an authentic Volcano God. He normally just hangs out in his big temple up in the caldera, with bunches of priests in these crazy robes and priestesses in these real skimpy silk things. And sometimes he even comes down from his throne and talks to the tourists. Normally this is great for business, cause who doesnt want to be able to say they shook the hand of a real volcano god? But the thing you got to remember is, no matter how much hes like a regular guy, old Houks still a volcano god, and he could just snap his ngers and bury three counties in ash and lava. Hes done this before, too, just not for hundreds of years. So usually, the priests and priestesses keep a sharp eye on who they let into the divine presence, so Houkala doesnt get too annoyed. But those guys are only human, and when faced with a bunch of famous movie stars who wanted to talk to a real, live volcano god, they had a bit of trouble saying no, even though the movie guys were all drunker than skunks. (It didnt hurt the way they were waving large wads of cash around, either.)
One thing that isnt well known about Houk, is that while he loves to drink, he cant handle hard liquor worth a darn. These movie guys had Houk higher than a kite faster than you could say cataclysmic eruption. Soon, Houkala was talking about the good old days, which werent very good for most people if you catch my drift. And those movie guys were just egging him on! It wasnt long before Houk was going on about how no one made human sacrices to him anymore. Well, thinking it was all a big joke, those movie guys told him that he ought to go on strike until someone made a human sacrice. Then they all piled into their cabs and left. Well, next morning Houkala had a hangover that would kill a rhino. But he still remembered that he wanted a human sacrice. And now hes just sitting in his temple threatening to blast anyone who sets foot inside unless they bring him his sacrice. Business has gone completely down the tubes. So, could you send us some pilgrims to talk Houk out of this dumb idea? Hes really not a bad guy at heart, just not too swift in the brains department, if you get my drift. Ill leave this letter under a pile of rocks at Scenic Outlook #3 that always works. Benny McCollum, Owner, McCollums Cab Service
36
CHAPTER 2
Astute and judicious masters, I write from the glorious city of Visdaya. I thought our troubles were solved. Did we not cast out the baleful sorcerers? Were not our leaders inspired to pass just laws? Did not our people trust in the wisdom of our citys ways? Alas, rather than amity, afuence, and accord, our lives are full of distrust, dearth and discord. Here is the problem. Visdaya is a city of laws, and we had ve wise judges. Now, just one seems to do what is right. The others have aws one believes any lie told, another accepts bribes, the next decides only on the letter of the law, the last decides based only on feelings. If our judges cannot be trusted, then we are on the brink of chaos! It gets worse. As time passes, the judges seem to exchange their personalities, even in the middle of cases. Before you can x this, there is another problem. Because of the judges, people prayed for help from the gods. Jumoi prayed the hardest. Jumoi became infused with power and became the force people prayed for: justice. At least we thought so. Now, Visdaya had a superhero. Jumoi took on the worst crime family. They were the best at telling lies, bribing, twisting the law and pulling on the heartstrings. Jumoi landed the leader in front of the good judge, and that gangster, Kaung Suun, is making big rocks into little rocks. However, the rest of his family all got off. The gang started to get away
with worse crimes than ever. Scared people prayed for vengeance. Kaung Suuns family and gang started to disappear. Now people are afraid of Jumoi. Before you can x this, there is another problem. Some of Kaung Suuns relatives got onto the Elder Council. The worst is Mwarg Rhu. Mwarg Rhu has told the people that everything is really the fault of our visitors. Visitors are very important to us in Visdaya. We invite visitors to come from all over. We keep them in our homes. Some we invite to visit and then to be citizens. Others we invite to stay and then go home. Visitors are not supposed to overstay. Some visitors forget or ignore this. We like to visit and so we usually dont use the law to throw people out. But Mwarg Rhu says that visitors who overstay are criminals and are dangerous. Some people are listening and saying something must happen. Some visitors are being taken to the judges, with some crazy results. Other people are praying that visitors start disappearing like criminals. The rest of us are afraid they will. This letter is stamped with the chop of each of the Celestial Bureaucrats from the temple of All Heavens. I pray that when I burn it with a piece of my mothers chocolate pie it will reach you.
E A TOUGH ON letter larly difcult cu rti pa This is a than ds or w al more go because it has ty; en tw ve others ha the rest. The . enty-ve this one has tw
37
You Can Cage the Singer, but not the Song by Nick Wedig Goal Words:
Chrelm Chrelm Haracca Haracca Haracca singer song taboo Dean Harpold Dean Harpold High Priest Acceba High Priest Acceba Holy Law Professor Culverton Soames Professor Culverton Soames Professor Culverton Soames Union Leader Secha Union Leader Secha University of Dravosburg windship captains
Salutations, dear friends. That is, I hope that you might be my dear friends, and pray that I am not presuming too much in addressing you thusly. If you are able to assist me with my situation, then I am sure we will be very good friends indeed. I am a xeno-anthropology professor at the University of Dravosburg. In that role, I study the cultures and lifestyles of non-human sentient beings. Dravosburg is something of a trading hub for a variety of species, which aids my research greatly and makes it quite rewarding. It is not at all uncommon to nd a sentient unknown to our science, walking mere blocks from our university. As part of my studies I had been looking into the behaviors of the Chrelm, who make up a signicant minority of the citys population. Popular opinion of the Chrelm casts them in a very negative light; they are stereotyped as ugly, lazy, stupid, unfriendly and amazingly close-minded. Until recently, I had argued against these negative depictions, but recent events increasingly convince me that the Chrelm can be quite close-minded. Being somewhat insectile in appearance, the Chrelm are indeed hideous to look at or, worse, to observe while they are eating. Nonetheless, I was recently traveling through the Chrelmish neighborhoods of our city, when I heard the most amazing music. One Chrelm just on the cusp of adulthood was singing, which I never before had a chance to hear. The Chrelm are strictly religious, and one of their religious tenets prohibits any song except one dirge sung on the holiest of their holidays. Thus, I was fascinated by the singing and sought out the musician, who went by the name of Haracca.
Haracca wants nothing more than to be a singer, and obligingly I organized a few concerts at which Haracca demonstrated his talents for the university faculty and related academics. This is when my troubles began, as the Chrelm society somehow learned of my Chrelmish friends musical performances. Quickly, their high priest Acceba issued a birza an order to kill on sight against Haracca and myself. Haraccas bud mother disowned him. Haracca broke one of their holy laws, and it was apparently a more serious taboo than I predicted. The Chrelm shut down the Dockworkers Union, of which they compose a large percentage (including the Unions leader, Secha). They boycott any human trade as long as the University continues to harbor Haracca or myself. This has shut down the city, leaving many windship captains very angry with us. Dean Harpold is suggesting that I return Haracca to the Chrelm and stay out of their business, but I know that will mean innocent Haraccas death, and I dont have any guarantee it would save my own skin. I do not know how to resolve this situation peaceably and still keep Haracca alive. One of my associates in the philosophy department suggested I contact your temple, though I am uncertain whether I even believe in its existence. We will see, I suppose. If you do exist and can clear up this problem I will be most grateful. Your Humble Servant, Professor Culverton Soames
38
CHAPTER 2
Summary
nt I just RITIng YOUR Hey, why do When a worldly person has a difcult problem, she will W ng to yourself, ki in th ly ab You can! ob Youre pr Guess what? for my group? r write to the Flying Temple for assistance. The temple elders tte le n tive writing, ow ea y write m exercise in cr r Do is a fun fo rs tte le beginning hand these letters to the pilgrims as a to-do list for their g e in th Writ come up with u have to do is yo all e will have s us ca rim pilgrimage. The letter-writers are unreliable narrators, only partly be es that the pilg up all the piec t se u lusion. Yo nc y. co or g telling one side of the story. Its up to the pilgrims to gure of the st ory to its thrillin to bring the st r de r. or tte in le n at to poke riting your ow out how to help people when they visit each world. quick tips on w w , fe on a as e re ar r re He For whateve These letters reveal small parts of the strange universe their Depth: of ut le O ab s nt en ou rm Citiz uation so insu that your pilgrims explore. By picking a letter, you are is stuck in an sit s. (Not to rim lg pi the letter-writer m fro lled to get help pe m co els deciding to focus your story on this world, its inhabitants ) fe e that sh s to resolve it. r for the pilgrim sie ea y worlds an ur be and their problems. say itll sure that yo Always make : ts is re) with on tu ag ea cr Ant Each letter has a set of symbols that represent different person (or ented by a real es pr re e ar s m proble types of trouble that your pilgrim might encounter: n interact. es that the pilgrims ca rs are the on
Own LETTER
Book represents affairs of tradition, law, and custom. Flag represents affairs of property, nations, and borders. Heart represents affairs of love, passion, and jealousy. Knot represents affairs of family, marriage, and ancestry. Lotus represents affairs of the gods, their followers, and faith. Pen represents affairs of curiosity, secrets, and discovery. Sword represents affairs of violence, war, and weaponry. Tree represents affairs of nature, animals, and resources. Use these symbols as a kind of rating system, so you can tell whether a story would introduce subject matter or content you feel is appropriate or fun for the group.
whom resting lette hed: The inte us and Strings Attac ch has obvio ns tio , but ea lu so le ib ss po offer multiple some equences. ns co le ab sir this book for unde the back of at ok Lo ch at : . Pull one of ea Mix n Match g on page 88 tin ar st s, re eate tu cr crea ms they might characters and kind of proble t ha w t ou ab ink random and th e Book r. he ot ch tter, see Do: Th for ea g your own le in rit w on mple. e Te of the Flying For more advic r Do: Pilgrims fo n io ns pa ex rst of Letters, the
39
CH 03
How to Play
How to Play
his chapter will guide you and the other players through playing Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple for the rst time.
CH 03
end. The basic steps are simple to follow and there are plenty of examples of how to play. These examples show you how players just like you have played the game. With all this, you can play the game once and have fun making a story with your friends. When you play again, you discover even more, building up uency with each game. If you want advice on long-term strategy or some tips to spur your creativity, you can nd them in the Chapter 4. You can also nd a short overview of the steps of play in the back of this book on page 94. And lastly, key game terms are always highlighted in blue like this. This lets you know that game term is listed in the glossary at the end of this chapter. Now that you know all that, lets get started!
, you, the player HEY, YOU! ions between ct in st di ar ys cle sa e ntence that The rules mak you see a se acter. When ar ch ur yo never refers d an a player. You as u yo to ur rs fe mething for yo you, this re xt describes so te e th If g r. in te uble, or help to your charac getting into tro g, in y e r lik ou , ies or, y character to do se, your pilgrim ra ph e th e se ill people, you w to trouble. in ts ge rim lg pi
42
CHAPTER 3
x20
x20
HOW TO PLAY
43
Creating a Pilgrim
If this is your rst time playing Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple, or if you are starting a new pilgrimage, then you need to create a pilgrim. That pilgrim will be your character when its your turn to help someone on this world. If you already have a pilgrim, proceed to Playing Do on page 46 to learn how to play.
Setup
Get a blank passport from the back of this book on page 96 or online at danielsolis.com. Get your pencil ready. There are some blank spaces on the passport that youll ll in as you create your pilgrim character.
Ryan writes Pilgrim on his pilgrims passport. He reminds himself of what that title means and what his pilgrim will be doing during the story: Helping people, getting into trouble, ying away and growing up.
Pilgrim
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CHAPTER 3
Step2: Write Your pilgrims Banner And How She Gets Into Trouble
In the designated space, write a single word an adjective or a descriptive word. This is your pilgrims banner. Then describe how she gets into trouble in six words or less. Write this in the space after gets into trouble by. This banner is a metaphor for how your pilgrim gets in trouble. This is what the other players will use whenever they create a new trouble for your pilgrim. Sometimes its caused by what she does, sometimes a personality aw, and sometimes just an unfortunate string of bad fortune. Continue to Step 3.
EXAMPLE:
Step 3: Write Your pilgrims Avatar And How She Helps People
In the designated space, write a single word a noun, an object, animal, or even a concept. This is your pilgrims avatar. Then describe how she helps people in six words or less. Write this in the space after helps people by. This avatar is a metaphor for how your pilgrim helps people. It is what you will use whenever your pilgrim is called to help someone during her journey, whether that is a worldly person, one of her fellow pilgrims, or even herself. Think about what skills, tools or other abilities avor her particular style of helping people. Your pilgrim is complete. Youre ready to play Do: Pilgrims of the Flying Temple!
EXAMPLE:
Ryan looks around the room again for inspiration. He sees a clear window, so he writes Clear in the banner space of the sentence. Ryan then interprets Clear to mean that his pilgrim speaks plainly too plainly than is polite in most situations. He writes that his pilgrim gets in trouble by speaking only the truth.
Ryan looks around the room and sees his pet kitten. He writes Beast in the avatar space. Ryan then interprets Beast to mean that his pilgrim gets in trouble because she is an incorrigible animallover. She cant stand to see a living creature caged. So Ryan writes that his pilgrim helps people by releasing animals.
Clear
speaking only the truth
Beast
releasing animals
AR? FOR An AVAT InSPIRATIOn NEED SOME e: e thes 69 for ideas lik Check out page ring a cape ea w by les helps people through cand Cape oning ghosts nse ople by summ se pe n s io lp sh he fa Flame g avant garde sin es pr ex by helps people Scarf ? R A BAnnER SPIRATIOn FO In E M SO D NEE e these: 71 for ideas lik a great leader Check out page pearing to be ap by le ub tro in ts akes Ascendant ge causing earthqu ts in trouble by ge angle ng tri pi ve m Ju being in a lo ts in trouble by ge d le ng Ta
Ryans pilgrim is now complete! Throughout the examples in this chapter, youll see a condensed version of the passport like the one below.
Pilgrim
Clear
Beast
releasing animals.
HOW TO PLAY
45
Playing Do
First, a player reads the letter aloud to the group. Then the oldest player takes the bag and the rst turn. Turns continue clockwise around the table, as the bag is handed to the person on the left at the end of each turn.
Goals of Play
You, both as a group and as individual players, have a number of goals youre trying to achieve. You want your pilgrim to help people, without getting into too much trouble. You want to use all the goal words from the letter in your story before your time is up, to ensure a parades ending. You want to inuence how your pilgrim grows up and what her destiny is after the pilgrimage. These three goals are sometimes at odds. Figuring out how to get the best endings is all part of the game.
A trouble is something that keeps your pilgrim from helping other people. One trouble could be something that traps your pilgrim or puts her in danger. Whatever the details, trouble gets in your pilgrims way. Your storytelling options depend on whether your pilgrim is in trouble. You each have a trouble token for your pilgrim. When shes in trouble, that token goes on e F A TURn top of your passport. 3: Make th OVERVIEw O P. 48: Step e GAME re E th TH e F w Th O ra y: D w 1: the Stor OVERVIE Good thing pilgrims begin a P. 47: Step Next Part of e game th em t th ar s st te er u ra ak yo m , pa trouble P. 47: First stones and se story out of trouble! When out of storyteller and the bag ill g w r kin le ta xt el er yt ne ay or e st pl write th with one by color: The is will make and trouble, your pilgrim is free to help e r rst turn. Th ones from th st e t how her re ou th and doing he ab aw dr sentence play. d of an d anyone. You are also free to use any te un hi ro w st e r th e ople and what starts the bag, and divid pilgrim helps pe , ds goal word, which is pretty important un r pilgrim. a few ro black stones. happens to he P. 59: You play ed us (see goals of play below). : words are Choose the End Your Turn until all goal P. 47 Step 2: P. 59: Step 4: s eight k ha ac bl on e e rs th th When your pilgrim is in trouble, pe e ss or s) r will pa or until on white stone( The storytelle at the end of oryteller will st e your pilgrim can only help herself. Th : letting the next s) or more stones ft, e( le e ston bag to th es on st of p ou gr a round. And that means you, as a storyteller, choose which person start. hich will affect ilogue, w ep , e ep th ke ay ll pl u yo cannot use goal words. P. 60: You eryone
what happens where we nd s. d your pilgrim to the world an e story ev the part of th e. is about to mak
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Playing Do: Step 1: Draw Three Stones And Separate Them By Color
Storyteller, do this: Take the bag of stones. Without looking inside, put your hand in the bag and draw three stones. Reveal them to the whole group. Separate the stones by color. Here are the four possible draws you can get: Zero black and three white stones. One black and two white stones. Two black and one white stone. Three black and zero white stones. Continue to Step 2.
EXAMPLE:
Ada takes the bag of stones because she is now the storyteller. She reaches inside the bag. She pulls out three stones and places them out in front of her for Everett, Lily and Jane to see, too.
Playing Do: Step 2: Keep Either The White Stones Or The Black Stones
Storyteller, do this: Keep either the white stones or the black stones. Keep the stones for the rest of the game. Put the unkept stones back in the bag. Your choice is always between a larger or smaller number of stones either one or two stones, or three or zero stones. How many stones you keep determines: Who will write the next sentences of the ongoing story How many goal words get used Whether your pilgrim will end the turn in trouble. Continue to Step 3.
EXAMPLE:
Ada decides to keep the two black stones. She puts the one white stone back in the bag.
nES MATTER? R OF THE STO LO CO E TH DOES ! in the long term keep Yep, but only aying through, pl e tim st r arn If this is your ones. Youll le r has most st lo co er ev ch whi ns as we play. each color mea at th t ou n ab e mor ht now, you ca ant to know rig If you really w page 62. jump ahead to
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OR
OR
...and you kept two stones: Go to page 50. Youll write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim helping someone, using one goal word. Then the troublemakers will write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim getting into trouble, using one goal word.
Storyteller, do this: Look at the number of stones you kept in the previous step. Also note whether or not your pilgrim is in trouble. Based on these two variables, your story will take different paths. Continue to the page noted in the following the summary on the right.
LLIng ORYTE FOR ST E IC V D ? nEED A MAKIng OUBLE R T LER OR D An ORYTEL T S D O O ING A G ge 72. See BE R on pa E K A M LE TROUB ou story, y ALL CAPS in the rd . o w a oal all c ps use a g rite it in w u to As you o l y lpfu where nd it he en and might rline, ious wh v b o it o unde kes can als u o This ma Y . . ord red pen goal w lly colo ia c e used a p s se a ht or u highlig
OR
...and you kept one stone: Go to page 52. The troublemakers will write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim getting into trouble, using a goal word. Then you will write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble, but you may not use a goal word. ...and you kept zero stones: Go to page 54. The troublemakers will write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim getting into trouble, using a goal word.
...and you kept zero stones: Go to page 54. The troublemakers will write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrims ongoing trouble getting worse, using a goal word.
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Clumsy
Bell
Pilgrim
Star
Storyteller, do this: Write a sentence about your pilgrim helping someone. Your pilgrim may help a worldly citizen or another pilgrim who is in trouble. If rescuing a pilgrim, remove their trouble token from their passport after you write the sentence. That pilgrim is now out of trouble. Whether helping a worldly person or a pilgrim, you may use a goal word in this sentence. When you use it, cross it off the list. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
E O wRIT HOw T n O E DVIC RY? nEED A HE STO T OF T R A P THIS 78. n page L HIT o A IC IT R See C
Pilgrim Clumsy Bell makes the DOCTORS flee the estate by suddenly appearing in the window shouting that lawyers are on their way.
Dorothy crosses doctors from goal words.
Pilgrim Rolling Star teaches YOTTA his special Pilgrim Fu techniques and together they manage to rescue Yellow Moon.
David crosses YOTTA from the goal words...
...then removes the trouble token from pilgrim Yellow Moons passport. Dorothy then proceeds to Step 4.
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Brick
Storyteller, do this: Write a sentence about your pilgrim helping someone. Your pilgrim may help a worldly citizen or another pilgrim who is in trouble. If rescuing a pilgrim, remove their trouble token from their passport after you write the sentence. That pilgrim is now out of trouble. Whether helping a worldly person or a pilgrim, you may use a goal word in this sentence. When you use it, cross it off the list. Next, the troublemakers act.
Troublemakers, do this: Write a sentence about the storytellers pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use a goal word. When you use it, cross it off the list. Then, put the storytellers trouble token on her passport. The storytellers pilgrim is now in trouble. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
wRITE Ow TO H n O DVICE ORY? nEED A THE ST RT OF A P IS e 78. H T on pag TIONS N E T IN T See BES
Pilgrim Delicate Brick uses his great size to clear a path through the WHALEs blowhole straight into the whales mouth.
Maria crosses WHALE off the goal word list.
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Then the troublemakers... Pilgrim Delicate Brick is going to get into trouble because of what he just did. The troublemakers (Jim, Alex, and Sara) step in. They look at Delicate Bricks banner. Delicate means her pilgrim gets into trouble by being sensitive. Jim suggests that his banner could be taken literally, with an allergic reaction to the whales mouth. Alex suggests that there be some digestive enzymes that cause some sort of rash. Sara puts these ideas together and goes one step further into grossness, saying the blowhole should have thick layers of mucus. Together, they decide to use the goal word WHALE again.
Efficient
Diplomat
Then the Troublemakers... Now, because Shane kept two stones, his pilgrim will get into trouble. The troublemakers (Ray and Charles) discuss what could possibly go wrong and check what goal words are still available. SECRET WEAPON is listed. Interesting! Ray points out that Shane established the cockpit, but no ones said how big the robot is or how much room is in that cockpit. Charles reminds Ray that pilgrim Efcient Diplomat gets into trouble by being too effective. They write this trouble:
Pilgrim Delicate Brick emerges from the WHALEs blowhole coated in briny mucus that covers him in an itchy rash.
The troublemakers cross off another WHALE from the list of goal words...
Pilgrim Efficient Diplomats logic triggers the robots secret weapoN: cramming people into a tiny cockpit, starting with Efficient Diplomat himself!
The troublemakers cross off secret weapon from the list of goal words...
Pilgrim Efficient Diplomat convinces the robot that it is more LOGICal for Pilgrim Fancy Voice to ride in the cockpit as its pilot, not flailing about outside.
Shane crosses off the word LOGIC from the list of goal words...
: NIQUE NT FORMS CED TECH IN DIFFERE oal word ADVAN ORDS g W e GOAL s used th l. That USING Shane , G le p O L ICa m a rd x o e w creative In this as the e story ur own o th y d in n to LOGIC el free ords. cool. Fe goal w e totally th te a g ju con ways to
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Clumsy
Con
Troublemakers, do this: Write a sentence about the storytellers pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use a goal word. When you use it, cross it off the list. Then put the storytellers trouble token on her passport. The storytellers pilgrim is now in trouble, but not for long. Next, the storyteller acts.
Storyteller, do this: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. You may not use this sentence to help anyone else. Using goal words in this sentence does not count. Even if you use one, do not cross it off the list. Then move your trouble token off your passport. Your pilgrim is out of trouble, but not for long. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
ITE TO wR n HOw O E IC DV RY? nEED A HE STO T OF T R A P THIS e 78. on pag IAS RES D E M See IN
Pilgrim Clumsy Con fetches the cat kings SWORD OF SWIFTNESS, but trips and drops it out the window, shattering it against the stones below, making it seem as if she is in league with the rat.
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The troublemakers cross off SWORD OF SWIFTNESS from the list of goal words.
Then the Storyteller... Kel now describes her pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. Her avatar says she helps people by telling convincing lies. In this case, those lies are going to be used for her own benet. Since Kels Pilgrim is in trouble, she cannot use a goal word. Still, she looks over the list of goal words to see if she can make it easier for other players to use them on their turn. She sees spell in the list. She decides her Pilgrim will make it appear that breaking the sword was a ploy in the kings favor.
Pilgrim Clumsy Con says to the king, Your highness, your sword caused the rat to come back as a zombie, so I broke that spell by breaking your blade, thus giving you the power to defeat him mano y mano!
Kel moves her trouble token off her passport.
NIQUE: ADVANCED TECH O w RDS AS USIng gOAL InSPIRATIOn makers rst e, the trouble In the exampl what was al words to see looked at the go ORD OF SW f. They found left to cross of resting. te in hich sounded SWIFTNESS, w ord of sw a n you turn dow I mean, would . so k , didnt thin swiftness? Yeah iration, is point of insp m Starting fro th ther a ge to akers wore the troublem ld be ou w d re that swor situation whe itself r tte le e reviewed th relevant. They ords sw e th emselves of to remind th the to nt rta it was impo context, why cts fa l ra he rip d what pe letter-writer an rt pa xt ne e th ul for making would be usef
Pilgrim Clumsy Con is now out of trouble. Kel then proceeds to Step 4.
of the story. d was that the swor They found ished er ch A portant. historically im thing of rt so ly. Just the artifact, actual eate cr to s er ak r troublem that is useful fo e pilgrim. problems for th
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Pugnacious
Cookie
baking treats
The story so far... The pilgrims nd themselves in the middle of an epic cooking challenge. The chairman of Planet Kitchen wrote to the temple for help in judging the skills of rival chefs. So far, there has only been one re and one case of food poisoning. Good news so far, but now pilgrim Pugnacious Cookie is going to get into trouble.
The troublemakers can use a goal word. Chris reviews the list and nds CHEF SLAY. Bebe reads the letter to nd out more about this Chef. It turns out he has a reputation for having a vicious temper. Jara suggests Pugnacious Cookie may anger Chef Slay by appearance alone. Chris likes the idea that the Pilgrim would be put in charge of inspecting kitchens. Bebe writes up the trouble.
When Pugnacious Cookie inspects the cleanliness of Chef Slays kitchen, the chef brandishes a rolling pin, offended at the insinuation that his kitchen might not be clean!
The troublemakers crosses off Chef Slay from the list of goal words.
Troublemakers, do this: Write a sentence about the storytellers pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use a goal word. When you use it, cross it off the list. Then put the storytellers trouble token on her passport. The storytellers pilgrim is now in trouble. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
And now... Marc kept no stones, so pilgrim Pugnacious Cookie will get in trouble. The troublemakers (Bebe, Chris, and Jara) huddle up. Because he didnt keep any stones, he will not be able to immediately respond to this situation. Only the troublemakers will be writing this turn, so they try to come up with a trouble that is particularly... well, troublesome.
The troublemakers move Marcs trouble token onto his Pilgrims passport.
ITE TO wR n HOw O E IC DV RY? nEED A HE STO T OF T R A P e 78. THIS on pag R STEP U O Y TCH See WA
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Plan
And now... Martin kept one stone, so he may get his own pilgrim out of trouble, but may not cross off a goal word. He considers the situation. This is a city occupied by the Lightning Army. Theyre all foreigners in this land and probably dont know much about the local diseases. He turns his pilgrims conspicuous appearance into a tool for his defense.
As he is hauled off in a net, Pilgrim Freckled Plan moans as if hes dying of the plague, which makes the thugs abandon him out of fear of catching the disease.
Martin moves his trouble token off his passport.
Storyteller, do this: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. You may not use this sentence to help anyone else. Using a goal word in this sentence does not count. Even if you use one, do not cross it off the list. Then move your trouble token off your passport. Your pilgrim is now out of trouble. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
Pilgrim Freckled Plan is now out of trouble. Martin then proceeds to Step 4.
E O wRIT HOw T n O E DVIC RY? nEED A HE STO T OF T R A P THIS ge 79. S on pa P A R T S BOOT See BY
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Bouncing
Boot
Storyteller, do this: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. You may not use this sentence to help anyone else. Using a goal word in this sentence does not count. Even if you use one, do not cross it off the list. Then move your trouble token off your passport. Your pilgrim is out of trouble, but not for long. Next, the troublemakers act.
Troublemakers, do this: Write a sentence about the storytellers pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use a goal word. When you use it, cross it off the list. Then put the storytellers trouble token on her passport. The storytellers pilgrim is now in trouble. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
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And now... Donna kept two stones. Shell describe her pilgrim getting out of trouble. Alas, she will not be able to use a goal word, so she focuses on setting up a goal word for the future. POTIONS is on the list, and that gives her an idea. The troublemakers are immediately going to get her Pilgrim back into trouble, no matter what she writes next. So she writes her sentence so that it prompts a fun reaction from the troublemakers.
Pilgrim Bouncing Boot pounds his shoe on the table, demanding an audience with the leader of the nature spirits to warn him about far more powerful potions polluting the world next door.
Donna used the goal word POTIONS, but because her Pilgrim was getting herself out of trouble, it doesnt count. She may not cross it off the list of goal words. Donna moves her trouble token off her passport.
Then the troublemakers... Because Donna kept two stones, the troublemakers (Scott and Ruth) collaborate to create a new trouble for Bouncing Boot. Scott notices that she gets into trouble by bouncing around. Thanks to Donna, potions are relevant in the story right now. Ruth thinks of a way to use POTIONS in this sentence. Scott suggests that Bouncing Boot does indeed get her audience with the nature spirit leader, but it is a shocking surprise. Ruth likes this idea. She is reminded of scenes from cheesy movies where an evil conspirators face is revealed at a crucial climax. She begins writing.
The leader turns out to be the letter-writer Mayor Shin, who demands Pilgrim Bouncing Boot say more about these powerful POTIONS or else hell propel the whole world into an asteroid field like a pinball game.
Thats a roundabout way of using the Pilgrims banner in the trouble, but its enough to satisfy Scott and Ruth. The troublemakers cross off POTIONS from the list of goal words...
: NIQUE CED TECH N DS R ADVA AL wO UP gO Ing T SET TER used a FOR LA Donna , le p m gh exa en thou In the ION) ev T O (P elf ord g hers goal w s gettin a w m ross gri uldnt c her pil thus co , le b list. u o m the out of tr ord fro w l a o tg is? off tha e do th ross ould sh w y cant c h W gh she u o th cing Even introdu ord, by w l a o g kes it he ma off the story, s e th use it ers to it into er play th o r work ne the easier fo eady do lr a s goal e r the later. Sh ntext fo o c can g rs of givin r playe e othe th o s r. late word, orate it reincorp simply
Pilgrim Bouncing Boot is now out of trouble. ...and put her trouble token onto her passport.
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Chosen
Ancestor
Troublemakers, do this: Write a sentence about this pilgrim getting into even worse trouble. You may use a goal word. When you use it, cross it off the list. Keep the storytellers trouble token on her passport to note that her pilgrim is still in trouble. The storytellers pilgrim remains in trouble. Continue to Step 4, on page 59.
The story so far The pilgrims are called to a world to help celebrate pilgrim Day. The people welcome pilgrim Chosen Ancestor in particular and put him on a pedestal in the town square. After a series of discoveries by the other pilgrims, they nd the holiday is not what they imagined. The local air eet suddenly surrounds the square and the king announces the highlight of pilgrim Day: The trial of pilgrim Chosen Ancestor for his famous general uncles war crimes. Pilgrim Chosen Ancestor is in trouble! The other players were not able to rescue Megans Pilgrim, so she is still in trouble when her turn begins. Since she kept zero stones, the troublemakers (Adam and Marc) now describe Pilgrim Chosen Ancestors trouble getting worse.
sentence, so they review the remaining list to see what is left. They see WHEEL OF PUNISHMENT. Perfect. Adam suggests that the natural progression of trouble from the trial would be a conviction. Marc reads the letter again to see more about WHEEL OF PUNISHMENT. It isnt described in much detail, simply listed as a special event at the conclusion of the holiday. So Marc suggests that it is a wheel of possible punishments that a convict will face. Adam writes the sentence.
We find Pilgrim Chosen Ancestor Guilty! shouts the king, adding, and now for our main event: Pilgrim Chosen Ancestor will face the Wheel of PUNishmeNt for his sentencing!
Adam crosses off Wheel of Punishment from the list of goal words.
Her Pilgrim remains in trouble, and its gotten that much worse!
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Lily nishes her turn. There are still more goal words to cross out and Everett hasnt gone yet this round. She passes the bag to Everett. Hell now start his turn with Step 1.
EXAMPLE OF GOING TO THE EPILOGUE:
Sheena nishes her turn. She just crossed out the last goal word on the list.
Now that her turn is over and there are no more goal words to cross out, the group begins the Epilogue.
After a few rounds of play, Bill has ve stones. Donna has six stones. Erica has seven stones. The next round begins with Bill, who takes his turn and keeps two stones, giving him a total of seven stones. Donna takes her turn and keeps two stones, which puts her at eight stones. That means this will be the last round of normal play, but the round continues until its completion. Erica takes her turn next. She keeps three, giving her a total of ten stones. The round is now complete, and at least one player has eight stones. Together, they begin the Epilogue.
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Epilogue
Everyone, do this: Check if all the goal words are crossed out. This determines the kind of ending your story will have. If all the goal words are crossed out, you get a parades ending. Write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrims being appreciated and praised for their efforts. Even if your pilgrim was in trouble at the end of the story, all is forgiven. If even a single goal word is not crossed out, you get a pitchforks ending. Write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrims being chastised and driven away for their meddling. Even if your pilgrim never got into trouble during the story, shes guilty by association. Continue to Step 2.
Danny, Paul, and Shannon are starting the epilogue. They crossed off all the goal words from the list, so they each get to describe their pilgrims getting a parades ending to the story. The story centered on the Pilgrims escorting feuding nomads through The Living Storm, an eternally roiling thunderstorm that stretches for thousands of miles across the sky. A variety of troubles ensued for the Pilgrims and their wards, including run-ins with lightning spirits and several near-misses with hurricane force winds. Dannys Pilgrim, Skilled Quilt, ended the story out of trouble. He thinks back to some particular highlights of this trip. There was a moment where Skilled Quilt had the bright idea to turn one of his fantastic tapestries into a sail. The most sick and injured of the nomads attached it to their skiff and speedily made their way through the storm unharmed. Danny decides to make his sentence about how his Pilgrim changed the culture of these nomads.
Shannons Pilgrim, Charming Card, ended the story not in trouble. Shannon would like to focus her sentence on a friendship her Pilgrim formed with one of the worldly people she met. Earlier in the story, she teamed up with the aged patriarch of the feuding nomads. He was upset that his numerous children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren were treating each other so poorly. Charming Card sat the old man down for a card reading and told him that once theyre clear of the great tempest the family would be whole again. This pleased the old man greatly, so Shannon describes the familys relationship after their dangerous journey.
Pilgrim Charming Card is happy to see her prophecy come true as she departs, as the old man and his large family all come together in a group hug.
Veras Pilgrim, Cool Rooster, ended the story in trouble. Her Pilgrim became separated from the group after guiding a herd of ying buffalo back to their shepherd. Cool Rooster was stranded in a freezing cold patch of air in the middle of the storm, buffeted by sudden gusts of wind. Since shell somehow make it out okay, Vera thinks about how this might have happened. Cool Rooster helps people by acting cocky and self-reliant, so Vera decides to focus less on how she gets out of this trouble and more on how she acts when she does.
Pilgrim Skilled Quilt is remembered for ages as the Sail Father, he who taught the nomads the art of making the finest sails in all the universe.
Pauls Pilgrim, Imposing Burst, ended the story in trouble. His Pilgrim was knocked unconscious by a bolt of lightning after rescuing a kitten from falling into the void. He likes the idea of his Pilgrim recovering while also doing something epic. He also wants to mention the kitten in his sentence.
Pilgrim Imposing Burst is woken when the concerned kitten licks his nose, causing him to sneeze and rocket away to the next world on the Pilgrimage.
Pilgrim Cool Rooster floats free from the storm clouds as if nothing has happened, saying, Wait, that was the Living Storm? Ha!
And so ends their story. They close the journal for this session and move on to Step 2.
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Lawrence, Robyn, George, and Ben are starting the epilogue. They did not cross out all of their goal words. Each player must now write a sentence about their pilgrim getting a pitchforks ending to the story. The story began, as usual, with the letter-writer asking the Pilgrims for help. Amber Carnelians grandfather is on his deathbed and he might take the secret blueprints for his robots with him. Her nefarious Uncle Victor wants those plans so he can use the robots as weapons of war, selling them to the highest bidder. She even suspects that the doctors he hired are keeping him sick. Amber asks the Pilgrims for help, either to get grandfather to sign over the inheritance to her or to take the robots away from this world. Lawrences Pilgrim, Reckless Syllogism, ended the story in trouble. Uncle Victor, pursued by the Graymist robots, defended himself with a clockwork ray gun, ring it all over the place. Reckless Syllogism pointed out to Victor that he might not want to shoot up the very robots he wants so desperately to control. Victor agreed, tossing Reckless Syllogism the gun, making it seem to the automatons that he is the sole threat to security in the lab. They concentrate re on him, putting him in trouble at the end of the story. Lawrence sees how this would naturally ow into his Pilgrims departure from this world.
Georges Pilgrim, Favorite Shirt, ended the story not in trouble. His main heroic act was posing as the chief of medicine for the local hospital, convincing the doctors to obey his commands. The doctors were helpful minions for most of the story, until they refused to leave their patient even as the estate shook apart. That nally lead to him shouting, This whole place is collapsing and youre concerned about a physical? I revoke your licenses! Good day! George considers the doctors reaction when they nd out about the disguise. He thinks of a good way to end his Pilgrims part of the story.
Realizing they were duped, the real chief of medicine and all the local doctors quarantine the world to prevent any further temple meddling, especially by the master of disguise, Pilgrim Favorite Shirt.
Robyns Pilgrim, Marvelous Cat, ended the story in trouble. Earlier, Marvelous Cat walked across a control panel and accidentally ipped a switch, causing the entire estate to shake. Her trouble only got worse after that. The control room was actually a cockpit for the largest robot in the grandfathers army, preparing for lift off and taking everyone in the estate with it. Robyn decides that as long as the estate is evacuated (as has been established by George) then theres no problem letting the robot proceed with its programming.
Bens Pilgrim, Bright Artifact, ended the story out of trouble. His last act was to revive Grandfather Graymist from his coma long enough to sign over his inheritance to Amber. Ben wonders what it means for the epilogue that he technically achieved the letter-writers mission, but the Pilgrims were still booted from this world. George suggests that perhaps Amber is simply ungrateful for the help the Pilgrims offered. Lawrence points out that their help effectively destroyed the estate, created a medical quarantine around the planet and left the world with an army of sentient robots. Ben thinks this is the right focus for his epilogue, highlighting the costs of their victory.
Pilgrim Bright Artifact bids farewell to Amber, but where once was warmth, she now regards him with a royal aloofness befitting the newly crowned Queen of Clockworks.
And so ends their story. They close the journal for this session and move on to Step 2.
Pilgrim Reckless Syllogism fails to persuade the defense automatons chasing him that their pursuit is illogical, and finally flies away to the safety of the skies.
A giant robotic hand picks up Pilgrim Marvelous Cat by the scruff of her neck, tossing her hundreds of miles away.
IS ITE TH TO wR w O H On DVICE nEED A TORY? S E e 80. H FT on pag PART O ILOGUE P E E H RT VICE FO See AD
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At the beginning of the story, Jens pilgrim Clumsy Glass had World Destiny: 2 and Temple Destiny: 2. She was very careful throughout the game to maintain this balance. She kept two black stones and two white stones during the story. The black stones raise her World Destiny to 4 and Temple Destiny to 4.
+ =
Everyone, do this: Count how many black and white stones you kept during this story. For each black stone you kept, add one point to your pilgrims World Destiny. For each white stone you kept, add one point to your pilgrims Temple Destiny. Your choices influence the direction of your pilgrims destiny, represented as World Destiny and Temple Destiny. These represent how much your pilgrim is compelled to leave or return to the temple afterthe pilgrimage. Continue to Step 3.
2 4
2 4
Kals Pilgrim began the story with World Destiny: 2 and Temple Destiny: 2. Like Jen, he liked the idea of his Pilgrim closing the story with a balance between the two destinies. However, some short-term concerns took precedence and he had to make a critical decision at the end of the game. That decision tipped the balance. He has ve black stones and four white stones. His Pilgrim now has World Destiny: 7 and Temple Destiny: 6.
Marks Pilgrim had World Destiny: 1 and Temple Destiny: 3 at the beginning of the story. He didnt follow any particular strategy as he chose which stones to keep. In the end, he nds he kept four black stones and three white stones. That gives his Pilgrim a total of World Destiny: 5 and Temple Destiny: 6.
+ =
2 7
2 6
+ =
1 5
3 6
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Epilogue: Step 3: Your pilgrim Gets a New Name or Ends Her pilgrimage and Finds Her Do.
If you plan to play with this pilgrim again, give her a new name. Either her banner or her avatar will change depending on the stones you kept. If you kept more black stones, change your pilgrims banner. Write a new way she gets into trouble in the space labeled gets into trouble by. If you kept more white stones, change your pilgrims avatar. Write a new way she helps people in the space labeled helps people by. If you kept an equal number of black and white stones, you may choose to change either of the above. Then put away your passport until the next time you play. If this is the last world of the pilgrimage, write your pilgrims destiny. Either she will have a World Destiny, Temple Destiny or Transcendent Destiny, depending whether you accumulated more World Destiny points or Temple Destiny points, or equal amounts as either. If you have more World Destiny points, your pilgrim gets a World Destiny. Write a sentence on your passport about what your pilgrim does after she loses the title of pilgrim and takes on a worldly life. If you have more Temple Destiny points, your pilgrim gets a Temple Destiny. Write a sentence on your passport about what your pilgrim does after she becomes a monk and leaves behind worldly concerns. If you have a tie between World Destiny points and Temple Destiny points, your pilgrim transcends. Write a sentence on your passport about your pilgrim choosing her own destiny. Then put away your passport. Youve just told the complete story of your pilgrims coming-of-age.
Everyone, do this: Put the stones back in the bag. Then decide whether you plan to play with this pilgrim again, or if this is the last world for her pilgrimage.
n : have a NIQUE seem to u TECH o L y U A CED H where uble. ADVAN E LOng casions t of tro es FOR TH any oc le or ou m b u Ing e o Y b s chang tr A l n PL be in ere wil decisio to th ll g a at y, in m h s s la o p tely, w f those een cho As you , ultima each o d e betw n ic w a o o h h le c s ee troub obviou , you s ets into pilogue ple ople, g e p lete. In the e t a Tem s p lp or to ge rim he e is com r g g il a ta in p a m v r ri m a u g r pilgri ge her the pil how yo to chan put you er after t h m a ri to th g il s s p ul. hoice happen nt your long ha make c ally wa for the you to g e If you re in ir y u la q ay re ost of p that m -term c Destiny, a short t s E THIS ju s . That O wRIT T w O trouble On H DVICE nEED A TORY? S INY F THE r DEST e 82 o PART O g a p n UP o OWING See GR e 84. on pag
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Marks pilgrim, Loquacious Cookie, gets into trouble by talking too much and helps people using his wide variety of baked goods. Mark kept more black stones during the story, meaning his pilgrims banner will now change. Mark takes a moment to think about how his pilgrim got into trouble during the story and what lessons he would take from that experience. Mark decides that from now on, his pilgrim will be less inclined to talk things out and more inclined to go straight into an accusatory argument.
Lulu decides that her pilgrim will no longer hide herself, no matter how people react. This, in turn, inspires others to believe in themselves.
Pilgrim
Fluttering
Hat
Fluttering
Pride
Pilgrim
Loquacious
Cookie
Kenyas pilgrim, Clumsy Decoy, ended the pilgrimage with more Temple Destiny points than World Destiny. That means her pilgrim will return to the temple and leave behind worldly concerns. Given all the troubles her pilgrim has been in over the course of her journey, its easy to understand why she would feel compelled to leave the worlds to their own problems. Still, she feels enough compassion that she knows the pilgrimage is still necessary for those extreme situations where pilgrims are the solution of last resort. So Kenya writes her pilgrims destiny.
Monk Clumsy Decoy equips all Pilgrims with thick padding, warm coats, and plenty of chicken soup for their long journey.
EXAMPLE OF TRANSCENDENT DESTInY:
Pugnacious
Cookie
Lulus pilgrim, Fluttering Hat, gets into trouble by ying in the wrong direction and helps people by wearing a giant hat. Lulu kept more white stones than black stones, so that means her avatar will change. Lulu is reluctant to lose her hat since its been such a source of comedy for the story, but she thinks the joke has worn thin. She imagines why her pilgrim wore a hat in the rst place, perhaps to hide a birthmark or a bald spot Perhaps both!
Lances pilgrim, Twisting Voice, ended the pilgrimage with more World Destiny points than Temple Destiny points. That means his pilgrim will stay out in the worlds, leaving behind the temple and the title pilgrim. Lance thinks back along the entire series of stories he helped create with the other players. His pilgrim began as awkward, young Confusing Odor. By the end, he grew to become Twisting Voice, with such oratory powers that he turned an entire legion of animal spirits away with but a single word. That happened in a story where a vegetable world was besieged by encroaching herbivorous animals. Lance now has an idea for what would compel Twisting Voice to leave the temple, so he writes his pilgrims destiny.
Melisas pilgrim, Marble Dragon, ended the pilgrimage with an equal amount of Temple Destiny and World Destiny. That means Marble Dragons destiny is in her hands, free from the choice between temple and worlds. This is a rare achievement and shes made many troublesome decisions to keep her destiny balanced. Melisa decides to get cosmic with her pilgrims destiny.
Marble Dragon meditates in a cave until she becomes a white dragon to help the Flying Temple whenever it needs worldly help.
Twisting Voice lives with the vegetable-people, keeping them safe from herds of herbivorous animal spirits.
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Glossary
Avatar: The part of your pilgrims name that describes how she helps people. Keeping more white stones as you play means your pilgrim will change her avatar and thus change how she helps people. Banner: The part of your pilgrims name that describes how she gets into trouble. Keeping more black stones as you play means your pilgrim will change her banner and thus change how she gets into trouble. Destiny: Whether your pilgrim returns to the temple after her pilgrimage (Temple Destiny), leaves the temple for worldly concerns (World Destiny), or nds her own middle ground between these two options (Transcendent Destiny). Also known as your pilgrims Do, or path. Goal Words: The list of important key phrases beside each letter. To get a parades ending, your group must incorporate each goal word into your story before any player has eight stones. Otherwise, you get the pitchforks ending. Journal: The book where you and the other players write the story of your pilgrims visit to a world. Parades and Pitchforks: The two possible endings for each visit to a world. In a parades ending, the pilgrims are thanked and praised. This is what you might call a happy ending. In a pitchforks ending, the pilgrims are unceremoniously kicked off the world. This is not a happy ending. Passport: The sheet where you record your pilgrims current name, her destiny points and where you put your pilgrims trouble token when she is in trouble. Storyteller: When its your turn, this means you. Your pilgrim is the star during your turn. You will describe her helping people: a worldly citizen, another pilgrim or herself. If she is rescuing another person, you may use a goal word. If she rescues herself, you may not use a goal word. Trouble: An inconvenient problem or distraction that keeps your pilgrim from helping anyone but herself. Being in trouble also means you will not be able to use a goal word on your turn, though the troublemakers still may. Trouble Token: Any object you can put on your passport to signal to the other players that your pilgrim is in trouble. Troublemaker: The other players who are not the storyteller. You may be asked to come up with a trouble for the storytellers pilgrim. When you do so, you will always be able to use a goal word.
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personality (like a strong will) or unique skills (like the ability to follow a target silently). It does not mean she helps people by slicing them to bits with retractable claws. Slicing doesnt help anyone. Look Below the Surface Even an avatar that seems limited at rst glance can be very adaptable, if you spend a few moments looking at your pilgrims motivation. Say you want shout as an avatar. Using that as a metaphor for helping people by arguing may be inconvenient. Youd have to contrive an argument whenever you want to help someone. It may be easier to expand the metaphor with some detail, like motive. You might say your pilgrim helps people by arguing on behalf of the underdog. This gives you a new hook into the story, since youll search for and defend underdog characters. You Can Make it Practical The way your pilgrim helps people should be different from how the others do. This ensures that your pilgrim contributes unique talents to the group and that you are contributing unique avor to the story. Skills like a knack for languages, having a trustworthy demeanor or a commanding presence are always useful.
This chapter gives you some advice and strategy for playing Do. It elaborates different aspects of the game and offers tools for playing with them. By reading the previous chapters, you already know how to play the game. What follows are supplementary ideas and toys that can spice up play once youre comfortable with the basic rules.
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You Can Make It a Superpower If you want a more supernatural avor, you may describe your pilgrim as having superhuman powers like the ability to control the ow of water or to magically heal wounds. But keep in mind thats no more important than a nonsupernatural avatar. The range of abilities within a group of pilgrims can vary, but theyre all equally useful. You Can Tie It to a Particular Tool Sometimes it can be fun to take your avatar literally, especially if it is an object like pen, rope, scarf or shoe. In these cases, youd simply write that your pilgrim helps people by using a calligraphy pen. This can be an interesting challenge to your creativity, as you work to nd practical uses for a calligraphic pen in different situations.
The Test of a Good Avatar The trick to having a fun and interesting avatar is if you can describe a number of different ways you help people with it. Can you answer the following?
Theres a kitty trapped in a well. How does your Pilgrims avatar help the kitty? Two people are arguing over who gets their fathers inheritance. How does your Pilgrims avatar help them? A ood is about to wipe out a friendly village! How does your Pilgrims avatar help them?
If you get too stumped coming up with ideas, you can ask others at the table for help.
: ht help people IRATIOn that avatar mig ith w AVATAR InSP rim lg pi wa growing grass avatars and ho spontaneously Here is a list of et Grass t en em structible helm rc earing an inde local law enfo w be to g lm in ar He appe ake Badge st canopy having a pet sn Hiss g tall as a fore hear only truth em Bamboo bein ving horns that by sitting by th ha le op pe rn ble g Ho in calm of a relevant fa le staff Bench ing reminded itely extendab be n in nd an rs ge g pe in Le ca carry otions piracies and Bo stigating cons that inspire em in ns tio k po g as in M ht choice Bubble brew knowing the rig Path wearing a cape to speak ng Cape wing anythi a wolf Podium allo behaving like in love ll fa Claw helping people re of any rock Ring seeing the futu als in any room se l Coal creating magica language y an om ng Ro n sense ki ea sp t garde fashio Code eir temper expressing avan s known for th nt re f pa ar g Sc vin ha Crater weapon h ritual dance disabling any Shield blessing throug with a touch gs Dance in freezing things s intense feel le op pe ow g Sn in ent ry bu Dust t ideas by accid inspiring grea dly face en k fri a ar g water Sp vin of ha ndles Face w and shape controlling o osts through ca gh g in am re on St m m su h things ople Flame chewing throug s that inspire pe Tooth painting mural s ct je ob Fresco n crets of woode hearing the se Grain
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69
...or describe the effect You can describe the type of trouble your pilgrim gets into, but leave open what she does to get into those situations.
Your Pilgrim gets into trouble by being detained by local authorities. That is a very specic type of trouble, but you left it up to the players to come up with ways your Pilgrim gets detained by local authorities. Your Pilgrim may be a pickpocket. She might be the victim of mistaken identity with a wanted fugitive. Whatever the cause, the effect is the same.
...but dont describe both. If you describe the cause and effect for how your pilgrim gets into trouble, then you leave little for the players to contribute. During the game, there will be long pauses while they think of something that could just barely t the situation. And everyone, including you, will grow quite bored with your pilgrim always getting into trouble the same way. So describe either the cause or effect.
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t into trouble: nner might ge IRATIOn ba SP In at th ER ith nn w BA w a pilgrim ly fortunate banners and ho being improbab Here is a list of Lucky enta the color mag eat leader agenta spilling aring to be a gr M pe ap t an nd Asce g chosen the gods Marked bein ing blessed by cetic lifestyle es Blessed be iti or th au following an as oral too jokey with g M in be t ky Chee lithe and agile proper conduc mble being ing a code of w Ni llo fo us elry lro Chiva g beautiful jew ng hearts rnate wearin ki O ea br st Cold g a perfectioni nded Precise bein ing easily offe Delicate be re su po m co creating rashes Red ntaining calm r w teachers Dignied mai ro pe em an seeking out ne ge namesake of g Sa in be d te Exal g suspicious aled lookin ng loyalty gi Se ed pl l fu Faith iating nature birds date apprec ing a ock of Se nd te d re er he Feat ing rainy weath wntrodden Stormy caus fending the do de gle e an rc Fie g in a love tri people Tangled bein aping praise on he g rin tte Fla attitude g burly ing a haughty Titanic bein Flippant carry exercising g gifts Trim e love Generous givin ne ro th l ya believing in tru Warm ing heir to a ro be l ria pe Im es ing earthquak Jumping caus
The Test of a Good Banner The trick to having a fun and interesting banner is if the others can describe a number of different ways you get into trouble with it. Can they answer the following?
Your pilgrim rescued the kitty from the well, but got into trouble! How did her banner get her into trouble? Your pilgrim helped the two people decide who gets the inheritance, but got into trouble! How did her banner get her into trouble? Your pilgrim saved the friendly village from the ood, but got into trouble! How did her banner get her into trouble?
If they arent too stumped coming up with ideas, then youve got a banner ready for play!
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Being a Good Storyteller or Troublemaker Invite Each Other: Be courteous and respectful to the other players. If someone is quiet, allow them a moment to speak up. If you have thoughts to share, dont be shy. Tips in this book help you all discuss your ideas for the story together. Use a Goal Word When You Can: The goal words do more than just help lead you to a happy ending for your story. They also offer a seed of inspiration for when youre stuck in a creative block. They offer you locations, antagonists and concepts that keep your story from drifting from the mission at hand.
Even if you are unable to use a goal word because your pilgrim is in trouble, you can still use your turn to help a goal word make sense for the next person. Use that as an opportunity to set someone else up. Focus on Results: What you say happens, happens. There is no try or maybe. The question isnt whether an event comes to pass. Know your intent and then describe your pilgrim making that happen. Lets say a citizen named Melanie spilled a vial of magic dust that transformed her into a cat. Your pilgrim is Pilgrim Trembling Quake and youre here to rescue her. At rst, you write, Pilgrim Trembling Quake tries
to shake the dust loose from Melanies fur to change her back into a human. Instead of trying to shake off the dust, your
pilgrim should immediately succeed. You could instead write that sentence Pilgrim Trembling Quake shakes the dust from Melanies fur, turning her back into a human. Keep it Moving: Be sure to not spend so much time
on writing your brilliant sentence that you slow down the game, Writey McWriterpants. Get into a ow where you say what it is youre going to write, then write it while the next player takes their turn. By the time she states her pilgrims action, youll be done writing and you can pass the journal to her.
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Example: Pilgrim Blind Owl convinces the ring that he would be a superior host, then traps the ring in a jar just as it flies off of Red Lanterns finger.
your sentence, theres no need to feel like your turn is a solitary affair. Discuss your ideas with the rest of the group. You have a lot of creative license to extend the scope and mood of your story into different directions. Discuss your ideas with the group if you worry that youre steering the story in an unwelcome direction. Voice your concerns with other players when they do the same. Youre all together to have fun, so trust each other and respect each others creativity. You can play with Dialogue and Punctuation: If your character is speaking to help someone, then that may be an opportunity to use the rst-person tense.
Example: Pilgrim Stirring Speech approaches the podium and declares, You are free to choose your own flavor of tea! You dont have to listen to the kings demands!
pilgrim solves problems and helps people. If you chose an avatar wisely, you can stretch that to suit the task at hand.
Example: Pilgrim Great Leader is in trouble. Lord Vangar chooses him to coach the Airball team comprised of asthmatic nerds, just as they begin the nal game of the playoff season. Now its up to your Pilgrim to rescue Pilgrim Great Leader. If your Pilgrims avatar is Mane, then you might ask yourself how a lion would solve this problem. So you write, Pilgrim Ruffled Mane dresses up as a lion
mascot, rousing the audience to cheer for the underdog Airball team and giving them enough confidence to win the game.
In that example, you can also see how you can embed a sentence within another sentence. Its a neat trick, but use it sparingly. It can be harder to describe how your pilgrim helps people when shes just talking. It also takes longer to write that kind of sentence, which can disrupt the pace of play. Build On a Trouble When Resolving It: When you
Maintain the Light Mood: Typically, Do stories have a big scope and light mood. Maintain that carefree sense of adventure and shenanigans. Strange worlds, weird beings and magical events are all taken for granted. Pilgrims work together in a friendly, mutually supportive manner. Avatars can be interpreted very loosely, possibly including superhuman abilities to solve problems. Pop culture references are acceptable, even in the story itself. Antagonists are cartoonishly villainous, with loosely dened motivations beyond simply villainy for villainys sake. Sometimes people get a little hurt, but it never goes far, even if people threaten worse.
rescue a pilgrim, its tempting to negate that trouble. Lets say Pilgrim Red Lantern is possessed by the power of a magic ring, obeying its will to conquer the universe. A negative sentence would be something like Pilgrim Blind Owl bops Red Lantern upside the head, revealing that it was all a dream. That would violate the principle of What you say happens, happens. The troublemakers created this situation. Disregarding it moves the story backwards. Instead, your pilgrim should help in a way that accepts the trouble, then moves on from there.
ADVICE 73
suitably epic is by making it affect a large area, a long time or a lot of people, but not all threeideally, only one. So if your pilgrim controls clouds and you wanted to make her action epic, she could cover a whole world with thick fog, but it wouldnt inconvenience many people and it wouldnt last a long time. If it were epic in time, then she could create a fog that lasts for many days, but only in a small area. If it were epic in population, she could create rainy clouds that follow a large number of people who pass through a small area for only a short time. Following this will create epic events that are still somewhat grounded. Tone it Down Sometimes: When every moment is epic, nothing stands out as special. So, sometimes a simple solution is best. Instead of being a mythic hero, let your pilgrim be a regular kid whose only
superhuman ability is ight. Its all about simple ingenuity and relatively modest resolutions to peoples problems. Pilgrims still work together in a friendly fashion, but are allowed to quibble and argue if it makes a funny story. Any antagonists are still only thinly veiled plot devices, but with more modest goals. Theyre less likely to want to take over the universe than they are to just want to make your characters life a pain in the butt. Your Pilgrim can Succeed Despite Herself: Nobodys perfect, especially pilgrims. A perfectly executed rescue might not lead to a lot of interesting outcomes either. So, you can describe how deus ex machina conspired to have your pilgrim resolve the trouble, regardless of her actions. This is appropriate if your pilgrim is a bumbling buffoon.
Example: Lets say your Pilgrim is a nervous, twitchy kid named Pilgrim Hiding Squirrel. You look around the table for a Pilgrim to rescue and nd: Pilgrim Shattered Boat is lost in a berry maze, where
the red and blue berries can tell him the way out, but hate each other and will poison anyone that the other tries to help.
Oof. Wow, thats a tough one, but you come up with a solution. The bright lights of the garden are too much for Pilgrim Hiding
Squirrel, so she douses the lanterns, which in turn plunges the maze into darkness allowing Shattered Boat to listen to the berries without them knowing who he is listening to. In this resolution, you didnt even have the
Pilgrims interacting, but you still managed to have your introverted Pilgrim come to the rescue.
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ourishes to your story beyond describing a simple event. Try describing how your character resolves this trouble in terms of one of the ve senses. Simmer on the scintillating sensation of lightning slithering through Summer skies. Create the cacophonous clopping of a clutch of clams. Meditate on the aroma of Monk Mossy Musks mashed mango marmalade. Witness the wonders of a world wider than the weirdest, wildest warriors worries. Tango with the tingling tastes of ten thousand types of trees. Dont Solve the Problems Too Quickly: As you write your sentence, it can be tempting to simply write away the central problem of the letter right away. In fact, you can do just that. You actually can resolve a problem very quickly. However, keep in mind that among other goals, youre trying to use all the Goal Words. That being the case, you could write, Pilgrim Scary Boar chases off the BANDITS from the village and they never return. Thats a ne way to solve a problem, unless BANDITS is listed two more times as a Goal Word. Now that youve single-handedly defeated the bandits in one sentence, it is a little harder for the rest of the group to gure out how to work in the last two BANDITS into the story. But there are ways you could incorporate them into the story indirectly. Goal Words may be used in a sentence even if the characters, places or things themselves do not appear in the sentence. A later Troublemaker might write, Mayor
Fizzle reveals that he was funding the BANDITS misdeeds all along and blasts Pilgrim Secret Scroll with a magic missile.
Then a later Storyteller might rescue pilgrim Secret Scroll by writing, Pilgrim Damp Sponge absorbs the damage from
the magic missile and utters the anti-magic password he learned from the BANDITS.
By following these guidelines, you will make it easier for the Storyteller to build on your trouble and easier for troublemakers to plan out the direction of the story. Collaborate, but Decide Quickly: As troublemakers, you all create the trouble together. It is natural to have a short period of open brainstorming as you gure out what is the best trouble for the pilgrim. Sometimes you have a lot of options available. When that happens, just follow the rest of these guidelines to craft an interesting trouble. If a consensus cant be reached, then the player to the storytellers right gets the nal say. (If you prefer to give the nal say to the youngest player, the oldest player, or the player with the biggest feet, those are all ne, too. Just be sure everyone knows who among you will make the nal decision.) Use the Banner: Take inspiration from the pilgrims banner. It tells you how the player thinks her pilgrim should get into trouble. If the banner says she is very curious, create a situation where her curiosity leads to danger. If shes headstrong and proud, put her face to face with someone who would challenge her honor. If shes nervous around boys, maybe she has to ask a boy out on a date. Dont contradict the banner, but feel free to stretch its meaning from time to time. You Can Always Use Goal Words: You can incorporate the goal words into a trouble, just like a storyteller. Even if youre causing problems for a pilgrim, you can still help bring the whole story closer to a happy ending if you can think of a way to include even one goal word in that sentence.
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Make a Circle-Shaped Trouble: Be careful about making a trouble so concrete that there is absolutely no solution. Its one thing to create a dilemma. Its another to create a dead-end. Such a trouble would be something like A gang of thugs beats up Pilgrim Calm Muscle. That trouble is a squareinert and immovable. In the other extreme, avoid a problem that is too yes-or-no. Pilgrim Calm Muscle is ambushed
by a gang threatening to beat him up if he doesnt join their ranks, knowing his peaceful nature will keep him from fighting back. This trouble is a difcult
situation, but doesnt suggest risks or possible consequences for joining the gang. That trouble is like a triangle, balanced on one point. It may be wobbly now, but once the storyteller makes a choice, the triangle lands and becomes just as immobile as the square. The best kind of trouble is circle-shaped. It is inherently dynamic and unstable. It rolls into the next trouble, which rolls into the next trouble, and so on. A way to do that with the troubles above would be, Pilgrim Calm Muscle is
confronted by rival gangs and each will beat him up if he doesnt pick a side so their feud can continue.
that would be useful for the story later on, if you want to create a Jackie Chan-style scene in a cluttered warehouse, for example. Referencing the time of day or year can help create a sense of epic scope as seasons change or months pass by. Endanger Worldly People along with the Pilgrim: The pilgrim should always be the focus of the trouble, but any worldly people can accompany her as well. The goal words in your letter list the key characters your pilgrims will interact with to resolve the troubles on this world. These include people who will come to their aid or antagonists who get in the way. As you introduce new characters, ask if it would be better to just add new details to an existing character. Recurring characters might be a persistent villain, a well-remembered mentor, or a hapless cabbage vendor regularly caught in pilgrims antics. Push It Until a Critical Moment: Sometimes youll initially make a trouble that doesnt have any clear momentum. Theres no anticipation to see what happens next. Lets say you made a trouble that went something like this: Marc gets
frustrated with Pilgrim Rising Diploma being the teachers pet and blames her for his bad grades.
A good circle-shaped trouble is so unstable that it will roll along with a slight poke. When you create an unstable situation, you create an interesting story regardless of the outcome. Set the Scene (if its Relevant): Say when and where the trouble is happening. Your letters goal words call out any places and times that are most relevant. Think of a personality quirk the pilgrim has, then put her in a place and a time when those quirks would get her into trouble. You may also consider a location for this trouble
That certainly establishes a conict, but it doesnt really introduce a trouble. Theres a motivation for trouble, but no actual trouble yet. If you push this a little farther, Frustrated
with his own bad grades and Pilgrim Rising Diploma being the teachers pet, Marc frames Diploma by breaking into the principals office to steal the answers from the big test next week.
Thats better! Still, the pilgrim isnt in trouble just yet. He is close, though. We just
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need to add one little twist that puts him in a moment where the pilgrim could face disciplinary action. Pilgrim
Rising Diploma is called into the principals office to face charges of breaking and entering.
You may notice that in this trouble, Marcs frame job is not even mentioned. Thats okay! You can leave it to the storyteller for that explanation. All you needed to do was push the trouble to the point where any decision moves the story along. Create a Problem Thats Too Much of a Good Thing: Its possible to have too much of a good thing. Think of a problem that wouldnt sound like much of problem otherwise, like, I have too many cookies! or I am way too rich! or Too many people love me! The key word in all of these is too. Too much, too soon, too fast, too awesome. Think of good news, then add an unfortunate twist to make it bad news. Some good news might be Elder Sweet Cane baked a cake just for Pilgrim Running Nose! Then, with a slight twist: Pilgrim Running Nose
has an embarrassing allergic reaction from Elder Sweet Canes cake.
Example: Pilgrim Wilted Kale is in trouble: At the SevenHundredth Annual Dance of Dancing, Pilgrim Wilted Kale stammers as he asks Princess Huranshi to join him for a waltz, insulting her dress (and the whole royal family) instead. Then the storyteller resolves this trouble by writing: Pilgrim Bubbly Soap explains to the Princess what Wilted Kale is trying to say, thus clearing up any confusion. So now you have to think of a trouble that comes out of that action. You write: Her highness is now more offended at Bubbly Soap, for
implying that her highness could not distinguish adolescent awkwardness from a true insult and orders the guards to arrest her.
Either way, this simple moment could have a lot of consequences down the road.
Consider What Success Costs: If youre writing a trouble as a follow-up to a pilgrims action, then remember what that pilgrim did is always successful. The question in this game is never Did this happen? Its What happens next? Think of what may not have gone perfectly. Describe any new snags that the pilgrim left open despite resolving the trouble. What did the pilgrim overlook in order to achieve her desired ends?
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OR
The group will get to cross out two goal words in one turn. That can be handy, especially if youre near the epilogue and still have goal words left. In Medias Res: You kept one stone and your pilgrim is not in trouble Troublemakers kick things off here. When you choose this option, your pilgrim starts the turn in the middle of things, in media res. The troublemakers present a straightforward problem and let your pilgrim react.
How has a letters antagonist entrapped this Pilgrim? How did this Pilgrim make a bad rst impression? What did this Pilgrim break and who is mad about it?
Since you get to use one goal word, make sure to work that into your sentence. Best Intentions: You kept two stones and your pilgrim is not in trouble This is a fairly common occurrence in the game and drives the story forward. Keep your pilgrims best intentions at heart. Though your pilgrim may not realize it, you know shell get in trouble for whatever it is shes about to do. So, if you decide to make this action epic, know that the trouble will be epic, too. Tip: Keep your pilgrims actions at a moderate scale, just enough to move the story forward a step.
Is there a Pilgrim I can rescue? What obstacles can I get out of the way? How can I make myself useful?
OR
OR
The nice thing about this scenario is that you can respond immediately. This is your chance to show off how your pilgrim can get herself out of a jam.
How does your Pilgrim escape from the trap? How does your Pilgrim recover from a bad rst impression? How does your Pilgrim get forgiven?
Only the troublemakers get to use one goal word, so make sure to work that into their sentence. Watch Your Step: You kept zero stones and your pilgrim is not in trouble By not keeping any stones, you turned down the opportunity for the Critical Hit. So instead of a competent moment, this an oblivious and ridiculous turn of events. Through no action of her own at least none obvious at the time your pilgrim steps into a trouble thick enough that she cant escape immediately. Its a problem bad enough that she needs another pilgrim to rescue her later in the story.
Then the troublemakers take those good intentions and subvert them in unexpected ways. Take cues from the pilgrims banner and the ongoing story for what happens next. Also take note of the scope of the pilgrims action so the trouble is commensurate with that scope. Lastly, trouble may sound like a bad thing, but its really an easy entry point for another pilgrim to step into the story by coming to a companions rescue.
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Troublemakers, make sure to work your goal word into the sentence. By Bootstraps: You kept one or three stones and your pilgrim is in trouble When this situation comes up, its usually because other players didnt rescue your pilgrim possibly because their pilgrims were also in trouble, or they couldnt think of a way to rescue her. No worries, though! Your pilgrim is self-reliant and perfectly able to take care of herself. This is an opportunity to write your pilgrim being competentor at least lucky enough to get out of trouble without help from her friends.
What new discovery reveals the solution to this trouble? How has time helped resolve this trouble? What gifts allow only your Pilgrim to resolve the trouble?
OR
The pilgrim is struggling, thrashing, and fumbling against troubles strong winds. She does get out of immediate danger, but lands in a new trouble in the end.
How does the antagonist better distract the Pilgrim? How did escaping indirectly cause another trouble? What compels a Pilgrim to return to a dangerous situation?
OR
Since troublemakers get to use one goal word, work that into the sentence. You could have her get and stay out of trouble by picking By Bootstraps, but then you dont get to cross out goal words. Out of the Pan: You kept zero stones and your pilgrim is in trouble Instead taking this opportunity to pull your pilgrim out of the quagmire, youre letting her sink deeper. The troublemakers get to escalate the stakes and you dont get a chance to respond. Some may be reluctant to get your pilgrim in even worse trouble, for fear of truly creating an inescapable problem. Just remember that no matter how bad things get, the other pilgrims can come to the rescue (or you can free yourself on a later turn).
What worldly citizen can join this Pilgrim in her trouble? How does the location become more troublesome? What new, more powerful antagonists arrive?
Unfortunately, no one will get to use a goal word. If youre worried about the epilogue coming up, you might want to keep two or zero stones instead, so at least the troublemakers get a goal world. Making Lemonade: You kept two stones and your pilgrim is in trouble With your pilgrim in trouble, youre in a tight spot. If you pick this option, shell get back into trouble, but the group will be closer to a parades ending. So, this is like a change of scenery your pilgrim will still be in trouble at the end, but its a different trouble. Keep that in mind as you describe her action.
How does your Pilgrim resolve only part of her trouble? What changes about the location or time of the trouble? If escaping from this trouble, how far does your Pilgrim get?
OR
The troublemakers get to use one goal word. Make sure to work that into the sentence. You might choose this over By Bootstraps to bring your group closer to a parades ending.
ADVICE
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Pitchforks Out of Trouble Even if your pilgrim is not in trouble, your story may still get a pitchforks ending. When that happens, you can use this sentence to describe your pilgrims good deeds going unappreciated. Your pilgrim may have done something cool trying to be helpful, but it backred. She may have defeated the monster, but that just released a bigger one. She solved the last riddle in the dungeon, but that triggered its self-destruct sequence. Whatever happened was ultimately a disaster and made the world worse.
happy ending in which your pilgrim could befriend the park owner or a particularly noteworthy attendee. Friends from Pitchforks: It can be interesting to describe a pilgrims new friend even if you got a pitchforks ending. Lets say your pilgrims visited a world where the water was being polluted by a local factory. At the end of the story, your pilgrims managed to shut down the factory and clean up the water, only to have the factorys thugs accuse the local townspeople of hiring foreign goons (the pilgrims, in other words). The pilgrims are chased out of town by the overwhelming force of the factorys thugs, but you may still write a sentence mentioning the downtrodden townspeople your pilgrim befriended.
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Making Enemies Making friends is great when you can, but more than likely, your pilgrim caused a lot of problems for a lot of people on this world. There is no shortage of reasons why worldly people would be annoyed with pilgrims meddling in their affairs. Lets talk about the real enemies: The people so inconvenienced, bothered, and angered by the pilgrims that they become a nemesis down the line. These enemies usually come from pitchforks endings. In any case, these characters may pop up again in a later world next time your pilgrim gets into trouble. Enemies from Pitchforks: In a story where your pilgrims cleaned up a towns water by shutting down the local factory, the new enemy could be the factory owner. But if you want a real twist, choose a less obvious option. A new enemy might come from among the townspeople, too, especially if the factory owner sent henchmen to harrass the town as retribution for the pilgrims meddling. After all, they called your pilgrims in to help clean up the place, but they only caused more harsh treatment by the factory. With all the trouble the pilgrims caused, its understandable why some of the townspeople would be just a wee bit peeved. Enemies from Parades: In the story where your pilgrims rescued the little girls world from the whale, your pilgrim also encountered the girls cat, which was subjected to a number of indignities during the story. (Lets just say its hard to comb whale snot out of cat fur.) So, in your last sentence, you could write about your pilgrim being chased away by an angry housecat. In the story about the amusement park with rambunctious attendees, your pilgrims drew the ire of the parks janitor because of the calamitous wreck your pilgrims left behind. Thus, you could write a sentence in which the janitor is chasing away your pilgrim.
Growing Up
Changing the Banner Throughout play, the troublemakers used your pilgrims banner to come up with problems. When it comes time to change your banner, think about what your pilgrim went through in the story. Something happened that taught her whatever caused these problems is too much of a hassle. However, she has a different source of problems. There are two main ways you can evolve a banner: by reversing it or by changing its scope. Reversing the Banner: Whatever problem your pilgrim had, it is now reversed. So if her problem was speaking too loudly, she now speaks too quietly. If she was curious, now she is oblivious. If she was clumsy, now she is too graceful. More than likely, she is simply overcompensating for the problems she had in the previous story. Changing the Banners Scope: A more subtle way to change a banner is by expanding or narrowing its scope. The problem is the same, but the magnitude of the problem is now expanded to be greater or narrowed to affect a more specic part of the story. Lets say your pilgrims problem was speaking too loudly. A wider scope would mean your pilgrim now shatters objects with her voice. A narrower scope would mean your pilgrim loudly speaks the truth, or causes other people to speak loudly, or simply creates a bunch of noise. If being curious was her problem before, then she might now get into
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trouble by being easily distracted by noise or perhaps her curiosity is now focused so shes obsessed with the color red. If her problem was being clumsy, then that might spread to supernatural proportions, so now she breaks things by looking at them, or she is more focused in her clumsiness, only stepping on peoples feet. Whatever the specics of how your banner changes, refer again to the advice on making a good banner. Changing the Avatar You used your avatar when coming up with things your pilgrim does to help people. Because of the events of the story, your pilgrims avatar is changing. There are two general ways your pilgrims avatar might change: by its scope changing or by its abilities growing more powerful. Changing the Scope of the Avatar: Lets say your pilgrim had a practical skill as her avatar. You might expand the scope of the skill to include a periphery of related abilities. So being a persuasive speaker grows to an ability to speak any language which later grows to reading minds. A talent for baking sweet treats expands to include a whole host of worldly cuisine. Where your pilgrim was once merely smart, your pilgrim may now have a wealth of knowledge about worldly sciences. Alternately, you could focus the practical avatar into heightened specialties with a smaller scope, but a more profound effect in that limited eld. Being a persuasive speaker becomes a more specialized persuading rocks to help. A pilgrim who bakes sweet treats can now specically bake muffins that grant people powers. A pilgrim who was once helped people simply by being smart now helps people by specializing in medicine and healing. What was once shifting earth and rocks is now bending solid metal. Upgrading the Avatar: If your pilgrim helps people by using a particular tool or prop, she might be ready for an upgrade. Its especially understandable in a parades ending if a worldly person offers to upgrade your pilgrims gear. ADVICE 83
Lets say your pilgrims avatar says she helps by carrying around a giant key. Your pilgrim might now help people by unlocking any doors. Whether or not she literally carries that key is beside the point, but she could still keep it around if thats how you envision her. In the case of your pilgrims avatar being tied to a physical attribute, you can use the change in avatar to show how she visibly grows up in a sense, upgrading herself. In a pitchforks ending where she got into a lot of trouble, its understandable that she might come away with a scar or other physical remnant of those misadventures, like a tattoo or drastic change of hair styles. Some pilgrims leave a world with bizarre changes, like being turned into a giant sh or getting extra limbs. How exactly does being a sh or having an extra limb help anyone? Thats up to you, Storyteller. The point is, no matter what tools or talents she has at her disposal, your pilgrim nds some way to make herself helpful to the worlds. Whatever the specics of how your avatar changes, refer again to the advice for making a good avatar on Page 68.
Destiny
One day, your pilgrim will end her pilgrimage. The many little decisions along the way will culminate in her fully realized destiny. Youll write in a sentence what she does for the rest of her life. Think of it like graduation day. Its the closing of a very interesting chapter in her life, and the beginning of her adulthood. Yeah, she might become queen of the universe or transcend into the spirit realm, but thats just the beginning of a different story. This is at the end of a coming-of-age lm, when the characters get a little epilogue during the closing credits. Sometimes that epilogue is a natural, unsurprising outcome for that character. The tidy, straight-laced kid grows up to be a kind-hearted schoolteacher. The bully who tormented her winds up in jail. Sometimes the epilogue is a humorously incongruous. The lowly sidekick becomes a celebrated political leader in her old age. The bickering rivals grow up, fall in love and get married. Heres some specic advice for a World Destiny, Temple Destiny, or transcendent destiny.
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World Destiny A World Destiny means you kept more black stones over the course of the pilgrimage, which also means your pilgrims banner probably changed quite a bit. Whatever she did that got her into trouble at the beginning of her journey is more than likely quite different at the end. Look to that as a source of inspiration for your pilgrims destiny. The simplest reason for a worldly destiny is unnished business. This makes a lot of sense if there was a story that ended in pitchforks. Thats a blemish on a pilgrims record, and might compel her to make up for her misadventures.
Example: Pilgrim Green Onion feels terrible about destroying Lord Cardamoms royal kitchen, so she returns to become his new royal chef.
Instead of focusing on what keeps her among the worlds, your pilgrim may be more compelled to just stay away from the temple. Your pilgrim likely caused problems, yet the temple keeps up pilgrimage despite its costs. Your pilgrim may nd herself disagreeing with that tradition, let alone the idea of sitting high at the temple, cut off from worldly events.
Example: Pilgrim Soft Heart couldnt live with herself knowing that there were so many problems on the worlds while the temple floats so distantly, so she leaves the temple behind.
Your pilgrim could be compelled to stay on one world in particular, with long-term responsibilities that last the rest of her life. She might become the patron protector of her favorite world. She might fall in love with a worldly person. She could become enmeshed in local politics, eventually rising to a high stature. Its not uncommon for pilgrims with a worldly destiny to become well-respected gures of note in whatever eld they choose.
Example: Pilgrim Resplendent Robe fell in love with the queen of the Five-Planet Federation, so he leaves the temple to become her king.
Temple Destiny If your pilgrim got a Temple Destiny, you kept mostly white stones. That means the way she solves problems changed a lot, settling into a style that suits her into adulthood. Review how her avatar grew and what motivated each stage of its growth. Was your pilgrim driven by a sense of justice? Did she try to nd a middle path in conicts? Did she follow gut instinct or a contemplative intellect? Either way, she learned something she might want to share. Your pilgrim may return to the temple to share worldly knowledge with the monks and future pilgrims. If your pilgrim encountered a spectacular new technology, style of magic, or some other unique skill, shed want to bring that back to the temple to preserve the knowledge. There are many other roles your pilgrim could ll at the temple, but the fun ones are a humorous reection to how she acted during her journey. A pilgrim who expressed curiosity nds her calling as the head librarian. A pilgrim who got into trouble by eating may become the temples gardener. Trainers, groundskeepers, doctors, scholars, mailroom attendants, saints, chefs, coaches, teachers, magicians and diplomats all have a role to play in the temples day-to-day life. Your pilgrims Temple Destiny may put her in one of these coveted positions.
ADVICE
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Many positions focus on training and preparation for each new class of pilgrims. Your pilgrims destiny could be to offer specic precautions for the new class, based mostly on the troubles and successes she experienced.
Example: Monk Rising Gear encountered many mechanical marvels and monsters in her time, so she makes sure all Pilgrims carry an allpurpose toolbox in case of emergencies. Example: After a brief brush with medicine and counterfeiting, Monk Favorite Shirt brands a new line of healing outerwear (Favorite Shirts Favorite Shirts) designed to protect the Pilgrims from worldly dangers.
Lastly, instead of changing the world, a transcendent destiny might physically transform the pilgrim herself. Your pilgrim could literally become her pilgrim name.
Example: Pilgrim Hungry Pen spent most of his Pilgrimage eager to find more new knowledge. When he transcends, he makes all books anywhere able to access any information from any other book. Example: Upon ending her Pilgrimage, Pilgrim Fiery Bird bursts into glowing light and soars around the universe, ensuring night never falls on any world. Example: Pilgrim Reaching Root sat under a banyan tree until he merged with it, spreading his consciousness to any world where plants grow.
And, of course, it is possible that your pilgrim returns to the temple simply because the worlds are too troublesome. The worlds are silly places. Transcendent Destiny This is a highly unusual destiny, only possible if youre lucky with your draws and very specically try to keep your black stones and white stones balanced. The vast majority of pilgrims nd themselves at the temple and apart from the worlds, or among the worlds and apart from the temple. Your pilgrim maintains connections to both the temple and the worlds, unbound by any sense of separation between the two. In a transcendent destiny, feel free to write a sentence that has a sense of scope commensurate with the rarity of this outcome. Think about this destiny as the origin story for some cosmic entity with an enormous impact on the worlds and temple alike. A transcendent pilgrim can change major aspects of the universe, like uniting all the worlds under one ag or, more literally, merging them into one large planet. Your pilgrim could be responsible for revolutions and other sweeping social changes, perhaps bringing the temple monks out of isolation or inviting the worlds to visit the temples grounds. Oh, and who says there can only be one temple? Your pilgrim might found a new one.
These are all ways your pilgrim might transform in a transcendent destiny. In the end, your pilgrim changes the universe as easily as she changed the worlds. And we all know how well that turned out.
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If the new player has fun, invite her to the next pilgrimage you play or let her borrow your book so she can play with her friends. She may be particularly interested in joining your current, ongoing pilgrimage. This is as easy as handing over a new character sheet and guiding the new player through the three steps of character creation on page 44.
Example: John wants to start playing right away though, since hes already heard about the style of game Amandas group is playing as well as some of their past adventures. He comes prepared with a photocopied passport and pencil. Its time to play!
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James Gabrielsen owns a permanent seat at the cafe. A seat that was there before the cafe existed. Miss Hammerlily is the best ower-attener in all the skies.
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Grizzled, aging sky pirate Tim Ryan is the respected mentor of the Dread Skypirate Robot McGee. Always a seeker of some kind, Peej Saad gets into and out of trouble by helping his fellow travelers.
David Walker doesnt actually walk that much. More of a stroll, really. Euan Walker says riding dragons isnt very difcult. Landings are a bit delicate. His limp is barely noticeable now. Dah Dub is a sarcastic schoolboy who wants everyone to get along. Jonathan Walton just wants to be free, but cant shake these chains of love.
Cheryl Trooskin-Zoller is
the temples ofcial turbine pharmacist, concocting medicines for distressed engines. Bruce Turner makes furniture, like his father and grandfather before him. Phooey! Hes going to see the jungles!
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Hendrake is just happy youre here. Or there. Or anywhere, really. Hendrake is a happy guy. Tanjams noms all the pixie sticks. If you have a problem with that, talk to the battlestaff. The vigilante known only as A Terrible Idea roams the streets of the City of Crystal Spoons.
A marcelofaria takes exactly the same amount of time to walk anywhere, no matter the distance. Dont feed scottfavre after midnight. Oh wait, its technically always after midnight. Okay, no more tofu for you. A svenfolkesson can y faster than the fastest pilgrims! Jack Fractal is a cheerful robot designed for science who only wants to make pies. A daryl gubler won the past seven annual gubler competitions. The reptilian rickh basks in the glow of a supernova, storing photons in its dermal cavities. The gameraspinning is an amiable ying, re-breathing turtle, loved by children everywhere. The blue-crested fredhicks peers at you maniacally and may perch on your head. A cedricjeanneret, you say? I dont believe it exists, no matter how vigorously you point at whats on my head! The slightly unfortunate timjensen has probuscular eyes, comprehensile feet and a prestidigital tail. ericBjohnsons have huge phosphorescent phytoplankton ltering proboscises that glow in the night sky. The ignatiusjopy is a tiny treedwelling kangaroo that feeds on ripe pomegranates. The re-breathing joshjordan lives in deserts that used to be forests. The jeremykeller is a small, furry frog. Its primary defense mechanism is that it doesnt taste very good. The Kerkdyk is a bird often found near theatres using his beak to applaud after performances. The synthetic brain is a storytelling robot sent out into the world in search of new tales to tell. The bilious kostiew is a shaggy thing, highly critical of other creatures interests. The wild eloylasanta hunts the grass meadows for butteries, to suck the color from their wings.
Ah, the noralast, the most patient variety of dragon known. Were standing on one now.
Mattlogan is a bright
turquoise and silver dragon who often masquerades as a kindly wandering monk. The dain is a mysterious subterranean beast, visible only to cats, and often stalked by them. The MayChell is a small, curious infovore, eating books and spouting back factoids at inappropriate moments. If you say amichaimargolis three times, an amichaimargolis will appear. Consider this a warning. The tiagomarinho swims in large glowing groups, skimming the ocean surface for plankton.
...these creatures
Scott Acker is the Yang Twin Dragon of the Cosmos. He thirsts for Amber. The brenkin masquerades as a coy sh, but has two small vestigial legs and wishes it could dance. Ah, the reneeaubuchon such plumage! What a ne beak! What beady little eyes! Every question a lu-keba-iley answers gives birth to three more. Keep it away from cats!
Seth is an over-worked
artist with a hyper active wife, named Rachael, who tends to get him into a lot of trouble. The tdrahcrobnai is a nastylooking little rodent with a pom-pom on the end of its tail. Scholars believe that ericjboyds are completely imaginary animals; ericjboyds return the favor. The lazy brightbill has a luminous bill; a stocky, coarse-haired body; and stows away on airships.
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John Neff, the shadow dragon, never shows himself, never steals and never misses. Never turn your back on a mikeolson: these ying rabbits will bite you on the butt. They think its funny. Do NOT look at mauriziopaoluzi in the eyes. You WILL turn purple. The Jasopitre is a burrowing creature with a fondness for raiding farms for livestock. The yanprado is considered a delicacy on many planets, but is always poisonous... eventually.
The edwyntiong is an armadillo in a penguin suit holding up a sign that says moo. Dont ask. The todoroff is a slightly insane creature sought out for its sparkly purple pelt. The michaeltree grows the nest apples the Red Michael in the world. Beware the sunderwood, destroyer of forests, whose appetite for cellulose is unmatched.
A herd of temoore approach from the west. Kitt the beagle helps wrangle snooks on the farm. Rocha is a many ngered beast with breath of ame. His toasted marshmallows are the best. The wordman is a shadowy creature rumored to haunt collections of unread books. Legend says that whoever lays eyes upon the ShamZam can y like the pilgrims. The Emelyn is a slinky, manylimbed furry creature rather like a multi-limbed ferret. An albert is a type of mountain goat that has a ducks bill and a monkeys tail. A jasper is a small but fast and dangerous! dinosaur that eats other animals shins. Only shins. Kynnin can climb rainbows using the opalescent suckerpads on their paws. The Rassen is a sand-colored feline who shows affection by biting toes, and he likes everyone. The sebastian is a porcine, velvet furred biped, feared for its lolling, leprous tongue. Xavids swarm at noon, make beautiful patterns in the air for 23 minutes, then they all y off separately. The aufrank is a tiny hedgehog with the horns of a ram a erce defender of loyal friends. The reclusive jazzsh has rainbow scales and a deep, melodious voice. Zencore is a type of fruit: tiny, blue, and tastes like how summer rain on hot pavement smells. Winged foxes of Allistuar soar the clouds enshrouding the Isle of Chri. Their lambent eyes can see for miles. The Lars is the lovechild of an angry ogre and a boulder.
The mendel is a skittish badger-like creature. It leaves mandala mosaics to distract from its burrow.
Omar Ahmed is the nest martial artist for worlds around. He once punched out a cloud!
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Samuel Briggson is an amiable sorcerer living on borrowed time. Vasco A. Brown is actually twenty crows in a man-suit. They take turns each day being the brain. One wants blood. Sam Browns magic belt lets him y. He pretends to be a pilgrim to make troubles worse. Emperor Harry William Bullen IV is known as the sticky emperor for his insatiable desire for honey. Laura Burns is the worlds strongest astronaut. She has a trail of defeated astronauts in her wake. Tom C is the only re elemental on the ice planet Brrr. Robert W. Calfee is the crowned king of crispy kumquats. Nelson Cambata didnt mean to break that mirror. Who knew it was magic? Who knew it would release a monster?
Doug Dalton thinks Neal Dalton is on to his plans. Time to go to plan B. You take the high road, Ill take the low road, and Jonathan Davis will take the Middle Path.
Bryan Gerding is a pegasus chariot racer known for underhanded tactics, like polymorphed dragons. No, your honor. Kobal Girardey does not know the whereabouts of that planet.
Jonathan Jordan is a journeyman in the Aquatic Reanimators Guild. He brings dead seas to life.
Shoppers at Jonathan
Campbells Maps know theyll be lead astray by his maps, but they keep coming anyway. Geoff Carr is a bard who steals pilgrims dreams when they sing along with him and his lute. Ancient booksmith Daniel Cetorelli supplies spellbooks for wizards, secretly binding all their magic together. Bay Chang smuggles ocarinas past the western sphinx. Brendan Conway is a calligraphist whose characters leap off the page...literally.
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Famed playwright Awie McG hums a strange tune whenever he sees triangles. He heard it from a pilgrim once. John Mehrholz is a former pilgrim who now seeks to put an end to their worldly meddling. Duncan Merkert has the second piece of the gonzometer. He got it from hamsters who used it as a running wheel. Lucias Meyer stole someones heart. Now, hes offering it up to the highest bidder.
M.Tip Phaovibul bargains with the ghosts of buildings to achieve nefarious goals.
Robert Slaughter will stop at nothing until he has put the gonzometer back together.
Zack Walters is the ringmaster of a oating circus that serves as a cover for a gang of thieves. Jesse David Wan has the fourth piece of the gonzometer. He made it with his own two ns.
David Miessler-Kubanek
sails the Sea of Creativity, serenading storms and stars. Diego Minuti can read the minds of goldsh. Nicky Moore roams the open skies in search of the Planet of Innite Tacos. Beware Nickys arch-rival Keith Fannin.
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Step 1: Draw three stones and separate them by color. (P. 47)
Storyteller: Take the bag of stones. Without looking inside, put your hand in the bag and draw three stones. Reveal them to the whole group. Separate the stones by color.
Step 2: Choose the white stones or the black stones. (P. 47)
Storyteller: Keep either the white stones or the black stones. Youll keep the stones you chose for the rest of the game. Put the unkept stones back in the bag.
If in trouble and...
...you kept three stones. (P. 55) Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. Using a goal word does not count. Remove your trouble token. ...you kept two stones. (P. 56) Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. Remove your trouble token. Using a goal word does not count. Troublemakers: Write a sentence about this pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use one goal word. Put the storytellers trouble token back on her passport. ...you kept one stone. (P. 55) Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. Using a goal word does not count. Remove your trouble token.
OR
...you kept three stones. (P. 49) Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim helping someone. You may use one goal word.
A bag with... 20 black stones 20 white stones A letter for the whole group. For quick play, we suggest the letter Swallowed Whole
OR
...you kept two stones. (P. 50) Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim helping someone. You may use one goal word. Troublemakers: Write a sentence about this pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use one goal word. Put the storytellers trouble token on her passport.
OR
...you kept one stone. (P. 52) Troublemakers: Write a sentence about this pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use one goal word. Put the storytellers trouble token on her passport. Storyteller: Write a sentence about your pilgrim getting herself out of trouble. Using a goal word does not count. Remove your trouble token. ...you kept zero stones (P. 54) Troublemakers: Write a sentence about this pilgrim getting into trouble. You may use one goal word. Put the storytellers trouble token on her passport.
OR
...you kept zero stones. (P. 58) Troublemakers: Write a sentence about the trouble getting worse. You may use one goal word. Keep the storytellers trouble token on her passport.
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Epilogue
Step 1: Each player ends the story. (P. 60)
Everyone: If all the goal words are crossed out, you get a parades ending. Write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrims being appreciated and praised for their efforts. Even if your pilgrim was in trouble at the end of the story, all is forgiven. If even a single goal word is not crossed out, you get a pitchforks ending. Write a sentence in the journal about your pilgrim being chastised and driven away for their meddling. Even if your pilgrim never got into trouble during the story, shes guilty by association.
Step 3: Your pilgrim gets a new name or ends her pilgrimage and nds her Do. (P. 63)
Everyone: Put all the stones back in the bag. Then decide whether you plan to play with this pilgrim again or if this is the last world of her pilgrimage.
Hi how are you! My name is Melanie. I come from a very small planet. There is me, my house, my cat, and two trees (see drawing).
Temple: of the Flying Do: Pilgrims by Daniel e nc re fe Re d Quick Play an tive ea d under a Cr Solis is license mercialom nC No ntio bu Commons Attri . se en ported Lic NoDerivs 3.0 Un t this py and print ou Feel free to co handout a as ce ren fe Re Quick Play and games n tio en ots, conv for your one-sh and demos.
I am not so good, because my planet has been eaten by a whale. It is a very small planet. I woke up and I was inside a whale. I dont want to get (more) eaten. Please help! your friend Melanie (age 8) P.S. Drawing is on other side. P.P.S. I will make you cookies.
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Starting Name
Write Pilgrim here (P. 44)
New Names
Pilgrim gets into trouble by and helps people by Pilgrim gets into trouble by and helps people by Pilgrim gets into trouble by and helps people by
World Destiny
Trouble
Place trouble token here if your pilgrim is in trouble.
Temple Destiny
For each black stone at the end of a game, add one point to World Destiny. (P.62) If you have more black stones than white stones at the end of a game, change the banner. (P.63, 82) If you have more World Destiny points than Temple Destiny points at the end of the pilgrimage, your pilgrim leaves the temple for the worlds. (P.63, 85)
For each white stone at the end of a game, add one point to Temple Destiny. (P.62) If you have more white stones than black stones at the end of a game, change the avatar. (P.63, 83) If you have more Temple Destiny points than World Destiny points at the end of the pilgrimage, your pilgrim returns to the temple. (P.63, 85) If world and Temple Destiny are tied at the end of the pilgrimage, your pilgrim transcends. (P.63,86)
This passport confers upon the pilgrim all rights, privileges, diplomatic immunity, free passage, acceptance of apology, health insurance, liability coverage, and waivers against toll charges, property damage, ecological impact, romantic tension, political unrest, and cosmic calamity commensurate with a representative of the Flying Temple in the Center of the Sky.