Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Megadungeon Lessons from the Pyramids

When I'm not writing about games or being a trainer, I'm also an ESL teacher. Recently I had a couple students come to me with projects on the pyramids.* Pyramids are a good example of how megadungeons can come about.

I'll skip Why, because Why influences the game very heavily. Let's look at a bit of how, and what that can give you in terms of detail.

How did they build it? Usually the explanation involves magical stone-shaping, strange subterranean races, and mystical gobbledegook. However, like the pyramids, a megadungeon can simply be a straight up application of a magical formula: manpower + a guiding intent + time = lots of work completed. If someone with enough resources and enough will to apply them gets folks digging, you can get a pretty big hole. Looking at a megadungeon from the perspective a long-term project.

It's how Stonehell got built - stick enough people in a small set of tunnels and tell them to dig, and you'll get a big set of tunnels.

If your dungeon was dug out as a big project, you're likely to find some these little bits:

Dungeon Graffiti - Dungeon builders will not just leave mystic marks of their passing, but also marks about who built it. You'll get work crews signing their names, leaving their marks - they find a lot of this stuff in pyramids. Why not in megadungeons, stuck behind some door or on top of a lintel, or behind that giant idol that was put in at the end? Not all "kilroy" marks will be adventurers or monsters - some can be from its initial construction days.

Dungeon Construction Marks - You may even find official marks - an "Inspected by 34" note or a stamp or seal to denote when a section was considered done. Faded paint or ink marks to show what's behind something (like road workers leave when finished doing sewer work.) Doors on man-made levels might have specific marks or types to show you what's in the room beyond. My own Felltower has some storerooms, and near one set there were still wall sections marked with cryptic content marks, for easy inspection. The marks were wrong, by the by, but it made it clear what the rooms were originally.

Incidentally you won't find a lot of "finished" marks near a partially done section - so if PCs learn these they can tell a collapsed area from a never-finished area.

Builder Trash - Broken pottery from packed lunches and drinks shows up near pyramids, but not in them. Fair enough, you won't leave trash behind in a sacred tomb. Nearby is fine - and megadungeons are often presented as a complex of sections. So you might find disused staging areas with broken bits of trash, odd bits of what seem like useless materials, etc. meant for digging. It might even show up on the surface, in trash heaps used when disposing of talus and debris and corpses (if the workers were unvalued slaves instead of volunteers or paid workers). Not much loot, there, perhaps, but good color for "how was this done?" Nothing says hard work like centuries of piled up beer bottles near the dungeon.

9 comments:

  1. The gothic cathedral in Koln (Cologne), Germany took 630 YEARS to build overall, with over 200 years of initial build, followed by a long hiatus. The willingness of properly motivated people to drive centuries of work is well established!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice - I like the real-world details of including some builder marks.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I once almost ran a dungeon crawl where a ruined temple was haunted by the ghost of one of its builders. He was killed when he was crushed by a falling block of stone during a pay dispute, and his disembodied spirit was furious at being shortchanged. One of the ways of dispelling him was to go around and chip out all of the "Khet the Peon made this" marks, whereupon he could no longer document his claims to the Celestial Court and would be banished to the afterworld. I ended up not doing it when I realized that I'd be the only one at the table who would understand what was going on, let alone find it amusing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If it makes you feel better, some puzzles in Felltower are like that. Some have a few ways to solve them, but yeah, some of the solutions are pretty obscure.

      An amusing variant on that would be if the PCs could validate his work on a supervisor's tablet somewhere, so the ghost could finally be exorcised by having finished getting his work logged. ;)

      Delete
    2. That's a much better idea. I must steal it.

      Delete
  4. If there was a book for DF on cool historical things for dungeon design or furnisjings I would g ladly buy it.

    ReplyDelete

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...