Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Old Dog Says...People It With People

WQRobb of Graph Paper Games is apparently quite impressed with me over I claim I made some time ago which stated that I statted out nearly the entire crew of a Miranda Class Cruiser for an old Star Trek campaign I ran. A TOS Movie Era Miranda Class has a crew compliment of 336 to 352 personnel according to the original FASA Federation Ship Recognition Manual. I believe I said I settled at 300. 

The truth is, yes, I did this.

There are 50-75 members of the Order of the Winghorn Guard statted out for my D&D-But-Not campaign world of Aerth...per era of the campaign history. A little quick math places that at roughly 240 NPCs. That does not include shopkeepers, innkeepers, knights or captains of the guards of any cities, no rulers or royalty and certainly not the villains or their henchpersons. That would place the total NPCs for that campaign universe in the order of 500 at least.

My Superhero games are similar though there are actually less non-player characters statted on average than in other genres.

Am I insane. Perhaps.

***

I love NPCs and it's not about generating lots and lots of them but about creating ones that the characters will remember, want to see return and (hopefully) miss if they should they perish.

I once had a PC Chief Engineer in a Star Trek campaign over his Asst. Chief out of the Engine Room so he could perform an operation with the Matter/Anti-Matter system that would have saved the ship and surely killed him. The NPC said he would do it and the player said, "You have a wife and a child Lieutenant. Get out of here and up to the bridge and that's an order!" The two actually wrestled for a bit before the NPC tossed the PC out of the room as a blast door locked shut. "I am sorry sir, you will have to put me on report." The player was nearly in tears when the poor guy died. It was epic.

Damn I love running Star Trek. Where was I? Oh yeah, NPCs...

Here are some of my tricks to generating cool NPCs:

Naming

I have a knack for naming but I have picked up so great tricks over the years. WQRobb's post has some cool ideas as well.

Your first best friend...the Phone Book. Mix and match the names and your have thousands of potential PC names for Modern or Science-Fiction settings. I also highly recommend Gary Gygax's Extraordinary Book of Names. Awesome resource for Modern, Future or Medieval names of a variety of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds.

Naming conventions help me a lot. My Vulcan males always start with an 'S' (sorry Tuvok) and I try to utilize the 'L', 'P', 'V' and 'K' consonants as much as I can. By placing this limitation on myself I get more creative with the names while keeping the proper feel. So off the top of my head: Solvock, Slevek, Sukel, Stevalek, Stolop and Spovol.

For Superhero and Supervillain names (as well as Fantasy Elf and Dwarf and Starship names), the Thesaurus is your friend. So is typing in, 'Synonym for...' whatever word you're looking for into Google.

Personality

I usually develop the personalities of my NPCs by starting with a character cliche or familiar type in my mind or by thinking of a similar character already in existance and modifying them. My Superhero Black Emerald's persona is a thinly veiled parody on all the Black Superheroes of the 70's, especially Luke Cage, while Mr. Spaceman is both the Martian Manhunter and David Bowie from The Man Who Fell To Earth.

Over time, that is, with each additional appearance of the NPC, more and more of an actual three-dimensional personality is constructed. It doesn't happen all at once. It takes time. One must be sure to give them that time.

The problem, as I understand it, for many a GM (most notably DMs specifically) is that their NPCs never get the chance to develop as they are often killed by the PCs. This is an issue I will not directly address here as, to be honest, I haven't the faintest clue how to avoid that if your players are that bloodthirsty. I've never experienced it myself.

One way to ensure this development time is...

Purpose

Give your NPCs a purpose. Noisms noted as part of the post that started my GM advice series...

"My NPCs tend to blend together, unless I put on a funny voice or accent, being universally sarcastic, cynical, mean-spirited, and rather unhelpful."

If the only purpose for the NPC you've created is to be unhelpful than I am not especially surprised if the PCs don't care for them, don't want to encounter them again or try to off them in pursuit of a less aggravating work environment.

Some of my NPCs are local color, like the Baugh the barkeep, his wife Bera, who makes the mutton soup that has those mild though massive onions, their daughter Bini, the barmaid, who loves to hear tales of dungeon delving and their niece, the odd girl, Helg, who talks to squirrels and raccoons.

Some are sources of information, such as Jimmy 'Jitters' McIntyre, an informant in the Superhero team's home city. Jimmy shakes a lot, sometimes so much that he visually blurs and is virtually impossible to see in the dark or in the rain. He can see and hear pretty well during these moments though and he, ya'know, notices stuff. Jimmy is a Mutant but with a power he can't control which has limited uses. Between that and his drug habit the heroes feel back for Jimmy and want to help him but how?

Some are employers like Lars Reinholden, snappy dresser and lover of coffee liqueurs. There are the neighborhood street kids like Big Gus, Little Gus and that kid who insists you call him DJ Hyperjump. Don't forget the local law on the space station at Gamma Plesiades II. Sgt. Cho'Glick is a real ass (I think he doesn't like Humans) but Corporal Kenner really is trying her best.

***

Another trick I love to use, usually checking player approval when at all possible, is to have old PCs act as NPCs in a later campaign. My entire world of Aerth sort of revolves around this. Any PC that has ever walked the face of the world and did not clearly die has the distinct chance of returning as an NPC. I do this in Star Trek to sometimes but in D&D it's a mainstay. It gives the world a cohesive feel as well.

***

Now, I still haven't revealed how I generate so many so quickly have I? Hmm. No, I haven't. Well than the secret is...

Sorry. We've run out of time. Tune in again soon won't you?

AD
Barking Alien








7 comments:

  1. NPCs need a name at the very least. A script writing book I read put it succinctly (when describing featured extras in films), "if the writer can't be bothered giving the extra's character a name, even though they are in the scene for a reason, then why should either the actor or the audience care about the character?"

    I forgot this rule in a Traveller game I ran recently (to be fair, my first GMed game in about four years), and one of the first things the PCs did was capture an NPC and then question her. They wanted to know who her companions and she were and where they had come from. I knew part of the answer, but then had to scramble to come up with three names.

    Moral of the story: Even the lowliest mook is there for a reason. If the only name you can think of is "Bob" then you, as GM, aren't doing your job.

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    1. Or you can roll with it. I once named an NPC "Ensign Bobson" in a superhero game to signify that the characters should ignore him and go ahead, since he had no authority an could lend little help. Thing is, the name stuck with the players and they kept remembering the guy when they needed something, so he ended becoming a liaison officer and a pilot for the group.

      I tend to improvise a lot as I explain in this article: http://arcano13.com/fanzine/spip.php?article231 (in spanish, I'm afraid)

      Finally, keep writing this articles. I just happen to read them offline, so I almost never comment, but they are appreciated.

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  2. Great Article A+!

    I do not have your dedication but I have a pocketful of beloved NPCs that resurface from time to time.

    ERIC!

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  3. Thanks gang! I hope it helps. More to come.

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    1. Sadly I did the same for the crew of a Constitution class ship. I fully statted out all of the senior officers, complete with character sheet and then listed every single other member of the crew, broken down into department and shift. I've started hosting them on the web but nowhere near finshed yet. Those were the days.

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  4. My approach is usually index cards - a name, a location, a one-line description of personality, class/level/rank/race whatever, outstanding physical trait if any, and, possibly the actor they are played by in my head.

    Tip for easy names in a pinch: If you watch a particular sport or are a fan of a particular team then there are names in your head, possibly with physical descriptions or personality traits already associated with them. Don't be afraid to tap this resource. It tends to work better in modern or futuristic games but its a handy thing to have regardless.

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