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Saturday, 10 August 2024

Solitaire: Dragon Dowser

The world of Praelar dying. It was driven to the point of collapse by climate change and then exacerbated by colossal poisonous tornados called ‘spore storms’. It was then that dragons appeared. They came from a world parallel to us to save us. They drew Dragon Essence extracted from their unhatched eggs and used it to power machines long-buried under the spore fields that cleared the poisons from the air and the water, and even began to abate the spores storms. Yet humanity took advantage of them. The Mecharch leaders took the power of the dragon yolk and reprogrammed the machines as devices of war before sending them out to slay dragons and take their eggs. As one dragon after dragon died, the Mecharch leaders gained power and many eggs were lost or abandoned, or broken. There are those who see this as an injustice and have rallied around to rescue the remaining eggs and not only save them, but raise the hatchlings. Their hope is that the newborn dragons would heal Praelar and restore the communities to what they once were.

This is the background for Dragon Dowser: A Journalling Game for One Player, in which the player will use his dowsing crystal to overcome the elements, uncover ancient secrets, battle long-buried machinery, and in the process, save the last of the dragon eggs. It is published by Hatchlings Games, best known for Inspirisles, the Deaf-aware, sign-language as magic, Arthurian roleplaying game. In comparison, Dragon Dowser is more anime-inspired, though not heavily so and leaves much of its setting to be interpreted, created, and written down by the player. It is a solo journalling game in which the aim is to locate abandoned dragon eggs and return to a Sanctuary. However, this requires the expenditure of resources. If the Dowser succeeds before all of his resources are expended, the hatchling can be reared to adulthood and together change the world. It requires a standard deck of playing cards, a six-sided die, a set of tokens, and a journal for the Dowser to record his story. As an alternative to the deck of playing cards, the game has its own deck of cards. These have their art and text, so that the player does not have to refer to the book for the card descriptions.

The game requires some set-up before play begins. The first is choose one of four Dowsings. These correspond to the Ace cards of the four card suits and determine the story’s element, season, and theme, which all together suggests where the dragon egg might be. For example, the Hearts dowsing is associated with water, spring, and community, and the egg is lost to the currents of a river and washed away downstream from the chasing soldiers. The player chooses one of the four and draws twenty-three cards from the deck. Together with the selected Dowsing, these are placed face down in a six by four grid. Two Sanctuary cards are placed either side. The player’s die is put on one of these Sanctuary. Together, this forms the play area.

On a turn, the player moves from one card in the play area to another. A card can give the dowser more Resources or force him to expend them. Cards also have a Description and a Prompt. For example, the ‘3 of Hearts’ has the Card details, “I should trust my instincts… and my crystal more!”; the Description, “A stranger you meet at a crossroads says there are a clutch of dragon eggs to the north. You follow the path to straight into an ambush.”; and the Prompt of, “Describe the fight. How do you survive the ambush?”. Lastly, its Effect of -4 deducts Resources from the dowser’s pool. It is possible for the dowser to move in any direction, including returning to a card that has already been flipped over. Doing so will trigger the effect upon the Dowser’s Resources, but not the Description and the Prompt. The likelihood is that this will cost the Dowser in times of Resources, so it is better to keep moving forward and continue the search. At each stage the player describes what happens to his Dowser, taking inspiration from the Description and the Prompt. Both are written to be open-ended rather than proscriptive, allowing the player to engage his imagination.

If the Dowser finds the Dowsing he drew at the start of the game, he has found the egg. It is then his objective to return the egg to one of the Sanctuary cards. In doing so, he has succeeded and the game is over. There are still years of nurturing and training of the hatchling to come, but those are outside the scope of Dragon Dowser: A Journalling Game for One Player (though there is potential in a sequel to the game here). If the Dowser runs out of Resources before then, the play comes to an end, the Dowser has not succeeded, but he has not died. This does not mean that the Dowser cannot try again, whether from a rearrangement of the current spread of cards or from a completely fresh spread. It is also possible to discover other Dowsing cards or Aces in the grid of cards. This a definite moment of sadness for the Dowser as he has discovered the site of broken eggs. At this moment, he has the opportunity to offer a eulogy or a ritual to the lost hatchling.

The rules to Dragon Dowser are simple and easy to learn and play. This makes it suitable for younger players and this is helped by an extended example of a Dowsing that shows how the game is played in just a quick read through. The fact that the Dowser cannot die—just try again—also makes it suitable for younger players.

Physically, Dragon Dowser is well presented. It is a small, landscape format book with some excellent artwork, much of it replicated from the game’s cards. The writing is clean and simple, making the game easy to pick up and play. With only half of the deck being used at any one time, there is plenty of replay value in the game.

Dragon Dowser: A Journalling Game for One Player is both a solo journalling game and a map game, both of which require some Resource management. Proper handling of the latter will keep Dowser exploring, but the random nature of turning over cards and exploring means that the Dowser and his player is going to be constantly challenged, constantly weighing which up card to move to next. There is a high degree of luck in that the Dowser’s objective card—the Ace or Dowsing card—might be flipped over early in the game or much later. (One way to offset that might be to place it in the lower half of the cards drawn to form the grid.) Overall, Dragon Dowser: A Journalling Game for One Player is a charming journalling game that leaves a lot of room in how the player interprets the game’s prompts and how he tells his Dowser’s story.

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