Friday, 2 August 2024

Hordes & Haven

Road to Haven
is a campaign for
Zombicide Chronicles: The Roleplaying Game, which is based upon the collaborative board game, Zombicide: 2nd Edition. Published by CoolMiniOrNot and Guillotine Games, this introduces a new mode of play for the roleplaying game—‘Campaign Mode’. This introduces the concept of missions connected by a one or more plots and by recurring NPS—‘Non-Player Survivors’. In the case of Road to Haven, the number of missions is short, just ten, and the plots are not complex. Ultimately, what Road to Haven does is provide a continuing motivation for the Survivors—as the Player Characters are called in Zombicide Chronicles—to do more than roam the city in search of food and supplies to scavenge. The main plot concerns the location of a secret military base called ‘Haven 3’, which might be located somewhere in the city. If the Survivors can deduce its location, they can hopefully find it, open it up, and once inside determine if is safe from the zombie hordes outside. That truly would be a haven! However, discovering this information will not be easy. A secret military base is secret for a reason and even before the apocalypse, very few people knew of its existence. Of course, since the apocalypse and the rise of the corpse cortège, even fewer people know! Can the Survivors get lucky and find the one person surviving who does know? This is not the only problem that the Survivor will have to deal with in their quest for answers. There is also something causing the zombies to mutate weirdly and if it spreads, it is going to make life for everyone still alive in the city—let alone anywhere else—a whole lot harder. Plus, there are other Survivors, and Survivors being Survivors, they often come with their issues, some of them left over from before the apocalypse.

The Road to Haven: Campaign Book actually does a bit more than just present a campaign. It introduces a total of eight new Survivor Archetypes. Of these, four are ready to play, meaning that the players can pick from these or those from the core rulebook and that they also serve as replacement Survivors or NPS. These four are the School Teacher, the Mortician, the Surfer, and the Firefighter. The other four are first encountered as NPS in the course of the campaign and once the scenarios where they first appear have been resolved, they are ‘unlocked’ and can be played as Survivors. These four are the Conspiracy Theorist, the Urban Climber Girl, the Social Worker, and the Exotic Dancer. The other thing aspect about the campaign that is ‘unlockable’ is knowledge about the Zombies. Early on in the campaign, the Survivors will discover a dossier of notes about the zombies called, ‘Anatomical Guide to Zombies’. This depicts the various types of zombies and their potential weak points. As a Shelter Action carried out between missions, a Survivor can attempt a new training action, ‘Compile the Anatomical Guide’. This requires a Survivor to consider the zombies fought by the group in the previous mission. His player then rolls an Education Check and for every success, the Survivor identifies a ‘weakness point’ in particular type of zombies. Once all of the weakness points have been identified, the Survivors can replace ordinary dice with Mastery dice they attack that type of zombie.

The campaign will also have the Survivors facing off against some nasty zombified monsters in addition to those found in Zombicide Chronicles: The Roleplaying Game. They include several twisted animals and a zombie centipede that splits apart! Many of the new zombie threats are connected to the campaign’s secondary plot about the
mutant zombies. In addition, the campaign can also be modified by ‘Campaign Events’. These can be used by the Game Master to modify individual missions with seemingly random events. Some are helpful, such as an unexpected cargo drop by a military aeroplane, or weird, such as an eclipse, but others are also tied to the main plot of the campaign itself. All of them are optional, but a lot of them are fun—the idea of fighting zombie hordes in the middle of an eclipse is never going to be less than memorable.

The campaign opens with a standard Supply Run-style mission. When the Survivors rescue an NPS called ‘Tinfoil’, he tells them about a secret he has discovered—a radio broadcast! This, he thinks, is coming from a secret bunker and if it is still intact, it means it will have supplies and it will be safe. However, he does not know where it is, and since there is no Internet anymore, there is no easy way of finding out! Confirming the existence of the bunker and determining its location form the main strand of the campaign. It will take the Survivors to various locations across the city, including a library, the old city zoo, and an ‘exotic’ nightclub… In the process, the Survivors will also encounter some oddly mutated and much deadlier zombies. The question is, is there something affecting the zombies and twisting them into much nastier versions? Of course there is, and investigating this forms the basis of the second of the three plot strands in Road to Haven. Both this and the third strand are much, much shorter than the campaign’s main plot to find the hidden bunker. When the Survivors do find the hidden bunker, they will also discover secrets so dangerous that they could destroy the world and the campaign with it...

All ten missions in Road to Haven are presented in the same format. This begins with an introduction and a detailed description of the locations, a set of floorplans, details of the events that will be triggered during the mission, and descriptions of the adversaries and NPS who will be encountered during the mission. Objectives are also outlined and what happens next is discussed in the in the aftermath. The event descriptions can be quite detailed, but it does feel slightly out of order to have them after the location descriptions rather than before.

In terms of setting, the city in Road to Haven can be a generic city as in the core rulebook for Zombicide Chronicles: The Roleplaying Game or it can be set in the city of the Game Master’s choice. With its preponderance of guns, it is not as easy to adapt to anywhere outside of the USA.

Physically, Road to Haven is big, bold, and in your face. It is heavily illustrated with lots and lots of cartoon style artwork, decent maps and floorplans, and fully painted shots of the city. The book is well written and easy to read.

As a campaign, Road to Haven is short and uncomplicated, the latter meaning that it is relatively easy to run for the Game Master and the former that it can played through in as little as ten sessions (though it will probably take a few more). As the first campaign for Zombicide Chronicles: The Roleplaying Game, it completely suits the big, bold cartoon world of the roleplaying game and the board game it is based on.

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