Every Week It's Wibbley-Wobbley Timey-Wimey Pookie-Reviewery...

Saturday 7 September 2024

Spatial Situations

Doctor Who: Adventures in Space is a supplement for the Doctor Who: The Roleplaying Game – Second Edition published by Cubicle 7 Entertainment. Doctor Who is all about ‘Adventures in Time and Space’ and as the title suggests, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space, is all about the ‘Space’ of Adventures in Time and Space’. This is a guide to the new worlds, new life, and the ways to get there and what might found there once the travellers do, along with the rules to create all four for the Game Master (or Game Missy) creating his or her own content. That is not all though, for Doctor Who: Adventures in Space includes a traveller’s guide to some of the most interesting planets that the Doctor has visited in the course of thirteen generations, drawn from both Classic Who and NuWho, and all given the same attention to detail. Lastly, there is a complete adventure which is easy to drop into an easy into an ongoing campaign. As with other supplements for Doctor Who: The Roleplaying Game – Second Edition, this one is compatible with the first edition, Doctor Who: Adventures in Time and Space – The Roleplaying Game.

Doctor Who: Adventures in Space begins with a discussion of the whys and wherefores of the Doctor’s travels in time and space, looking at some of the types of stories that have been told in Doctor Who on various types of planets. There is the satire on pollution and traffic congestion on New earth in Gridlock, the fears of joining a Galactic Federation in The Curse of Peladon at a time when Britain was joining the European Common Market, and of bureaucracy and taxation in The Sun Makers. The Doctor is often cast as rebel such as in The Happiness Patrol against a totalitarian regime or a solver of mysteries as in The Ark in Space, the very pointedly titled, Mummy on the Orient Express, or Earth that is actually not Earth, as in The Android Invasion. What is being suggested here is that Game Master look to the real world for themes, they are contemporary or not, but another source of inspiration is fiction. Examples given include The Brain of Morbius and Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein and Paradise Towers and J.G. Ballard’s High Rise. Planets are not the only places to adventure, of course, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space providing a briefer look at space as a location before providing an overview of humanity’s ventures into space from the British Army on Mars in 1881 in Empress of Mars all way to the end of the Earth in The End of the World. Overall, the advice is solid rather than spectacular, along with a good set of pointers and episodes to take inspirations from as classics of their various types.

In terms of new mechanics, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space begins with spaceships. Spaceship design is matter of deciding a concept and focus, and then assigning Attributes and Distinctions—much like Player Character generation. Concept and focus, such as a scout, freighter, command, or ark, will influence the choice of Attributes and Distinctions. Particular ship types favour particular Attributes, like Co-ordination for a scout or racing ship, Presence for luxury liner and command ship. When operating a spaceship, any roll will a combination of the ship’s Attribute and the character’s Skill. Doctor Who: The Roleplaying Game – Second Edition is a not a roleplaying game which focuses on combat, favouring ‘Talkers’ followed by ‘Movers’ and ‘Doers’ before it gets to ‘Fighters’. This applies space combat as much as it does personal combat. Distinctions, such as Advanced Sensors or having a Fate, all reduce the spaceship’s own pool of Story Points, whilst the Game Master answers questions such as “Who built the ship?”, “Are there any other ships like it?”, and so on, as finishing touches. The ‘Spaceship Recognition Guide’ in gives the details of various vessels from Doctor Who, including the Cyberships of the Cybermen, the Saucers of the Daleks, a Judoon Enforcer, Sontaran Scout Spheres, and more, all the way up to Ark Ships and Space Stations.

Doctor Who: Adventures in Space then does the same for worlds, starting with a concept and focus, and then assigning an Attribute and Distinctions. The options for focus—meeting place, battlefield, contested ground, place of beauty, and more—provide interesting starting points, and unlike spaceships or alien races, they only have the one attribute. This is a favoured Attribute on the world itself, for example awareness where there are lots of traps or deception, or Ingenuity for a world with lots of puzzles. Planets have few Distinctions, for example, Seasonal Shift or Renowned Structure, essentially to make them stand out, but not overwhelm the setting. Finishing touches include deciding upon many suns or planets there is in the system, what the planetary environment is, and more. There is also a discussion of deadly environments, accompanied by a surprisingly lengthy section on poisons!

Where there are no examples of planets per se, there are several given for various plants and creatures, prior to creating various forms of life—monsters, constructs, aliens, and celestials. Again, this starts with the Focus before moving onto Favoured Attributes—positive and negative, Favoured Skilled, Society, and Distinctions. The Focus, like Informant, Fighter, Mystery, Villain, and Foil, is primarily an individual alien’s role in the story. Overall, the options given for creating aliens of all types are excellent and when combined with the questions asked should spur the Game Master to create some interesting species.

Instead of giving sample planets created using the given rules and guidelines, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space presents ‘A Guide to Known Worlds’. This details twenty-four worlds visited by the Doctor over the course of his adventures, some of them more than once. From Akhaten, Androzani Major and minor, and Argolis to Skaro, Telos, and Trenzalore, these are all given two-page spreads, and list its location, environment, inhabitants, and background. They also include a scenario hook or three as well, so that the Game Master can take her group back to any one of these familiar worlds. There are some great choices included here, such as The Library, Metebellis III, and Karn. There are also some classics such as the aforementioned Skaro, Telos, and Mondas, so that the Player Characters can go back to the home worlds of the Daleks and the Cybermen.

Doctor Who: Adventures in Space comes to close with ‘The Terror of Elbonia-2’. This opens with the Doctor—or Player Characters—receiving a distress signal. A nearby, newly settled colony has suffered a number of disasters and is in danger of failing. Coming to the colony’s aid sets up the traditional scenes of distrust between the Player Characters and the colonists, but once trust is established and the situation begun to be fixed, the scenario shifts to investigating the cause of the accidents and the mysteries of the world. This brings the attention of outside interests and tensions between the colonists and the outside authorities who are surprisingly militaristic for archaeologists! The scenario is nicely detailed and fairly open-ended. It should provide the Game Master and her players with several sessions’ worth of game play. Lastly, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space ends with some fifteen or so adventure hooks that the Game Master can develop into full scenarios.

Physically, Doctor Who: Adventures in Space is another decent book from Cubicle 7 Entertainment. The cover is good, though not necessarily representative of the book’s contents, suggesting its focus is particular characters or species from Doctor Who when it very much not that. That said, the book is well written, pleasing to read, and decently illustrated with images from throughout the series’ sixty-year history.

Doctor Who: Adventures in Space keeps its mechanics simple and easy to use, meaning that they better serve the story rather than getting in the way of it. The descriptions of the various alien planets and spaceships are excellent, adding to the wider setting of Doctor Who: The Roleplaying Game – Second Edition, as does the history of mankind’s progress into space. Combine this with good advice on creating planetary or spaceship set adventures, and Doctor Who: Adventures in Space is a solid guide to creating planets, spaceships, and aliens and using them in adventures.

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