For every Ptolus: City by the Spire or Zweihander: Grim & Perilous Roleplaying or World’s Largest Dungeon or Invisible Sun—the desire to make the biggest or most compressive roleplaying game, campaign, or adventure, there is the opposite desire—to make the smallest roleplaying game or adventure. Reindeer Games’ TWERPS (The World's Easiest Role-Playing System) is perhaps one of the earliest examples of this, but more recent examples might include the Micro Chapbook series or the Tiny D6 series. Yet even these are not small enough and there is the drive to make roleplaying games smaller, often in order to answer the question, “Can I fit a roleplaying game on a postcard?” or “Can I fit a roleplaying game on a business card?” And just as with roleplaying games, this ever-shrinking format has been used for scenarios as well, to see just how much adventure can be packed into as little space as possible. Recent examples of these include The Isle of Glaslyn, The God With No Name, and Bastard King of Thraxford Castle, all published by Leyline Press.The Pocket Sized Perils series uses the same A4 sheet folded down to A6 as the titles from Leyline Press, or rather the titles from Leyline Press use the same A4 sheet folded down to A6 sheet as Pocket Sized Perils series. Funded via a Kickstarter campaign as part of the inaugural ZineQuest—although it debatable whether the one sheet of paper folded down counts as an actual fanzine—this is a series of six mini-scenarios designed for use with Dungeons & Dragons, Fifth Edition, but actually rules light enough to be used with any retroclone, whether that is the Dungeon Crawl Classics Roleplaying Game or Old School Essentials. Just because it says ‘5e’ on the cover, do not let that dissuade you from taking a look at this series and see whether individual entries can be added to your game. The mechanics are kept to a minimum, the emphasis is on the Player Characters and their decisions, and the actual adventures are fully drawn and sketched out rather than being all text and maps.
Death in Dinglebrook is the fourth entry in the Pocket Sized Perils series following on from An Ambush in Avenwood,
The Beast of Bleakmarsh, and Call of the Catacombs. Designed for Fourth Level Player Characters, the scenario is a gothic mini-mystery, much in the style of the Hammer Horror films or Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay. Although written for use with Dungeons & Dragons, its theme and tone make the scenario easy to adapt to other fantasy roleplaying games or even to the Victorian era. It does have some set-up requirements which limit its usefulness, in that it suggests that each of the Player Characters is ill at the beginning of the scenario, but these can be worked around. Perhaps an NPC is ill or one of the characters whose player is present is ill, and so on. Whichever of the Player Characters (or not) is ill, they are all travelling into the mountains to the isolated vale of Dinglebrook. Here, it is rumoured that a gifted healer named ‘Sirona’ can be found, one who is capable of curing whatever rare disease it is that ails them.
Upon arrival, it seems bar the local tavern, ‘Thin Fat Jim’s’, Dinglebrook is deserted and when the Player Characters do discover the locals, it turns out that they are all skeletons, although going about their normal lives, just as they did before their undeaths. After realising that the skeletons are not actually evil and do not want a fight, probably after the bones have knitted themselves back in order and the correct place, probably after the bones have knitted themselves back in order and the correct place—ideally to the sound of ‘Dem Bones Dem Bones Dem Dry Bones’—the Player Characters are going to be wondering quite what is going on in Dinglebrook. Which is when three stone golems, dressed as orderlies turn up and attempt to take them away... So, what has happened to the inhabitants of Dinglebrook? Who are the stone orderlies working for and where are they taking their captives? And lastly, where is ‘Sirona’ and why has she not cured all of this?
Flip through the few, but heavily illustrated pages of Death in Dinglebrook and the story will take the Game Master and her players and their characters to the village and the local tavern, ‘Thin Fat Jim’s’, and from there outside to look up the Abbey that looms over the village from the mountainside. To reach this the Player Characters will need to climb the mountain, but all the Game Master has to do is open up the pages of the scenario, flip it over, and pull it open. This reveals the abbey in all its glory, fantastically drawn in isometric style, with room descriptions round the edge and Sirona’s stats and roleplaying hints below. The abbey is no longer a place of worship, but part-hospital gone wrong and part-alchemical laboratory gone awry, overseen by stone, golem-like orderlies, and Sirona, would be healer driven to madness and monstrousness by her failure to heal the sick.
Death in Dinglebrook is straightforward enough, but its set-up is all for a standup, knockdown fight, without any scope for roleplaying. This is a pity, since there is the fun earlier of interacting and roleplaying with tongue-less and therefore speechless skeletons in the tavern, whereas Sirona is only given a motivation. Given the genre and tone of the scenario, she deserves more, and the Game Master should really seize the opportunity to let her explain her actions and motivations, and have her chew some scenery!Physically, Death in Dinglebrook is very nicely presented, being more drawn than actually written. It has a cartoonish sensibility to it, that although it plays up the scenario’s tone and genre, lacks the humour of the previous releases in the Pocket Perils series. The combination of having been drawn and the cartoonish artwork with the high quality of the paper stock also gives Death in Dinglebrook a physical feel which feels genuinely good in the hand. Its small size means that it is very easy to transport.
Ultimately, the plot of Death in Dinglebrook is short, simple, and the whole thing can be run and played in a single session. It is not as sophisticated or as engaging as previous entries in the Pocket Perils series, and its set-up requirements are quite strict, which in combination, does limit its usefulness. That said, if the Game Master can meet the requirements for its set-up and is prepared to develop her portrayal of its villain, then Death in Dinglebrook is easy to prepare and run for a single session’s worth of play.
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