June Update: The Ragged Ringmaster and Gone Solo: Troika Finale!

Tarot of the Trunk

The GameCrafter divination sale for Tarot of the Trunk has come and gone. I sold a good number of decks and expansions, and I’m pleased! My total profit is miniscule in comparison to the amount of time I’ve spent on this project, but I’m glad that decks and cards are going out to people. This was also the first time I tried advertising, on both Facebook and Reddit. There is a lot to learn on that front, but I was glad to get my feet wet and get an idea of how that process goes.

The Ragged Ringmaster

I also did my first live readings at a local market last weekend! It was circus themed, so I came up with a ringmaster character. The plan was to do one card readings from my patchwork deck to engage with people and talk about Tarot of the Trunk, and also to sell full readings, Multiverse of Magic cards, and loose tarot and oracle cards from my patchwork collection. While I didn’t make enough to cover what I spent on my table fee, I did sell a couple readings, and I got to talk to a lot of people about Tarot of the Trunk. I also sold quite a few Multiverse of Magic cards, and it was fun to see people responding to the card even if they weren’t particularly interested in patchwork tarot.

I’m not sure what the way forward is on this, for both Tarot of the Trunk and for reading tarot for others. While I did enjoy doing readings for people, the weekend was very draining overall. For now, I’m going to redirect energy away from tarot-related projects for a while and focus more on Science Fantasy Awesome (see below). Then when I’m feeling fresher I’ll decide where I want to go next.

Science Fantasy Awesome

My unbroken streak of weekly solo RPG videos continues! This last Wednesday, I released the final episode for Gone Solo: Troika! which wraps up that series for now. I’ll talk about what’s coming next for the channel in next week’s video, and I don’t want to spoil it here, but rest assured that weekly videos will continue!

I also recently had a request to share the tables I used for solo play for Troika so I made a blog post here.

I’ve also had a request for a video for general tips for solo play, but I’m still gathering my thoughts about that topic.

I’m really please with how the Troika campaign turned out and I’m really excited about what’s coming next!

Troika Tables for Solo Play

I was asked via comment on one of my Gone Solo: Troika videos to share the tables I use to assist with solo play for Troika. While they are designed with solo play in mind, they could certainly be a resource for GMs who want to come up with things on the fly at the table.

Here’s the link to the Google Drive folder.

Some explanatory notes:

Some of these tables assume the use of an additional oracle to come up with ideas. I used story cubes, but you could easily use Mythic Tables, tarot cards, or anything else that you know works for you to help inspire new ideas.

01 Troika Cheatsheet

This is just a one-page rules reference.

02 Troika Book Monsters

This has several random tables. One is for rolling up a random monster from the book with associated page numbers (from the hardback numinous edition). There are 66, so that made it easy.

The next is for rolling up stats for a new monster or NPC. This is not balanced at all, so get ready for some wacky fun!

The custom damage generator works like this. Make a blank damage table with slots 1 through 7+, just like the others in the book. You roll a d6 to determine the amount of damage for the 1 slot, which will give you either 1, 2 or 4. Then for the next slots roll a d6, which tells you how much to increase the damage for the next slot. You might increase by 0, 2, or double the previous number. Repeat for each slot through 6. Then the 7+ slot will either increase damage by 1, 2, or 4. Then roll one more d6 to determine if the damage has a special property, like ranged or ignoring 1 point of armor.

Then there is a random weapon table with all damage numbers.

03 Troika NPCs

This has two d366 tables for coming up with NPCs. The first table is a list of miens curated from the book, and the second is a list of nouns curated from the book. There is a blank space on the character table. You can fill in to seed your table with ideas for your setting, or you can use your oracle to come up with new ideas if you roll one of those numbers.

04 More Troika Tables

The environment type table is meant to describe an area. This could be an entire sphere or a particular area of a sphere. You can also use your oracle in conjunction with this table to flavor it.

The point of interest table is a list of locations that assumes some degree of civilization. You can also use your oracle in conjunction with this table to flavor the points of interest.

In my campaign, the characters never left the sphere of Troika, but my original intent was for the campaign to be sphere-hopping. The How Far table tells you how far your destination is. The Travel Between Spheres table tells you how you might get there. The Landing Place tables tells you what the initial landing area is like when you arrive on a new sphere. If you are traveling by Golden Sail Barge, there is a random encounter table. Roll d66 and if you roll doubles, consult the table.

The Event table is the one I used the most in my campaign. After setting up each scene, I would roll on this table to figure out what complication happened. If you don’t want that much randomness, you could come up with a method to decide when you roll on the table and when you don’t.

05 Troika Random Spells

I was disappointed that the table in the book did not actually include all the spells, so here is a table that has all the spells in the book.

06 d66 Tables

These are blank tables to track Threads and NPCs, just like in Mythic. You don’t roll d66 each time. Simply roll d6 if you have six or fewer, d26 for twelve or fewer, d36 for eighteen or fewer, etc. If you roll a blank, use an oracle to come up with something new or choose the thread or character of your choice.

I hope you find these helpful!