Since 2008 with the publication of Fight On #1, the Old School Renaissance has had its own fanzines. The advantage of the Old School Renaissance is that the various Retroclones draw from the same source and thus one Dungeons & Dragons-style RPG is compatible with another. This means that the contents of one fanzine will compatible with the Retroclone that you already run and play even if not specifically written for it. Labyrinth Lord and Lamentations of the Flame Princess Weird Fantasy Roleplay have proved to be popular choices to base fanzines around, as has Swords & Wizardry. Another popular choice of system for fanzines, is Goodman Games’ Dungeon Crawl Classics Roleplaying Game, but then there are outliers, fanzines for genres, let alone roleplaying games, which you would never expect to receive support in this format.
Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap is a fanzine for ICONS Superpowered Roleplaying. Published by VX2 following a successful Kickstarter campaign, this is a product which is very different in many ways. It is a fanzine for the superhero genre, it is a fanzine for ICONS Superpowered Roleplaying, and as superhero fanzine, it actually presents a post-apocalyptic setting. All three factors make it standout as different. As the name suggests, Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap is the first in the series for the fanzine, but there is only a total of four issues.Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap presents an overview of its setting, gives a timeline that runs from antiquity to now, and makes a few additions and changes to the ICONS system. The setting is the North American continent, its society ripped apart in 1986 by an event known as the Shock. This occurred when the mysterious Omegas attacked a project to build a psionic computer network powered by extradimensional energy. The Omegas stopped it, but the Aftershock swept round the world, killing millions and making millions disappear, substituting familiar landscape with alien ones, turning the sky violet, and causing stars to occasionally be replaced by unknown ones. Almost none of the superheroes who fought the Omegas survived and those that did are missing. In the chaos of the Aftershock that saw government collapse, the world’s supervillains and their allies seized control and each established their own fiefdoms or sectors that as a whole became known as the Supremacy. Each Sector is different in terms of its leader’s vision. For example, Sunrise Sector on the west coast is a corporate-controlled kleptocracy and the Sanction is a wasteland of oil fields dominated by a daemoniac narcissist, but all are dystopias of one kind or another!
The Shock also disrupted the Grid which underlies the whole of reality and weakened it, enabling links called ‘Gridgates’ to be established to other worlds, enabling aliens to visit the Earth. Reality storms imperil travel so that long term travel in in convoys and all forms of broadcast media act as vessels for a necrocosmic plague. Only the wealthy has access to any form of direct communication, whilst messages and recorded media are delivered directly. Long distance travel is via the Thunder Road, a continental network of highways and fuel stations controlled by Lord Thunder, the leader of the Sanction.
In the world of Gridshock 20XX, the Player Characters are Vectors. They possess the ability to warp the Grid and thus reality, manipulating it in their favour. Vectorisation means that this is accompanied by visual displays that means that it is never subtle. Vectors are typically human, but can also be gatecrashers from other realities or hybroids—one of the genetically engineered labour force. Whilst Vectors have superpowers, they do not operate as the superheroes of old. They do not wear spandex and they do not patrol looking for crime. That, combined with the flashiness of their powers, would make it easier for the Supremacy to find them. Instead, they travel the Thunder Road, looking for work and when they can, attempting to strike a blow for justice and freedom. Vectors are meant to be proactive and fight for what is right, forge new alliances, push their powers to the limits of reality—and perhaps beyond, reclaim hope and rebuild civilisation, and explore the secrets of old world and the new.
Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap makes some chances to ICONS Superpowered Roleplaying. The Game Master is replaced by the Grid Master and Vectors possess Vector Potential instead of Determination and Vector Points instead Determination Points. The attributes Prowess and Willpower are replaced by Fighting and Willpower. Some Powers are renamed, such as Attribute Boost instead of Ability Boost; others are replaced, such as Fabrication for gadgets; and still others are shifted from being Powers to being Extras of Powers, such as Force Field being made an Extra of Force Control. In addition, there are several new Powers. These include Fabrication, Geist Control, Gridjockeying, Protection, and Signature Vehicle. Limits and Extras are provided for all. Of these, Geist Control gives a Vector control of daemons, Ultra-Geists, and Liminals when they enter the Realspace of Earth, working like a Mind Control Power, whilst Gridjockeying enables a Vector to use a ‘Grid Intrusion Neural Interface’ to duplicate the effects of another Power! However, it is limited to the basic effect of a Power without mastering one via the ‘Routine’ Extra.
Optional rules in Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap allow for the Vectors to share and detail a motorrig, suggests some Qualities for Vectors, and offers a list of Specialities to reflect the action-orientated setting of Gridshock 20XX. There are some changes to how damage is handled, but notably this is not a setting in which there is ready access to armour. Unless it is a specific Power, armour simply reduces lethal damage to blunt damage.
Physically, Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap is very nicely presented in swathes of yellow and black. The artwork is reasonable, but the cartography is slightly difficult to read. The layout does switch in places between portrait and landscape format, not always to easy effect.
Gridshock 20XX ’Zine 1: Roadmap sets everything up for the three parts of the Gridshock 20XX quartet with a lot of intriguing content that suggests a very different style of superhero setting and a very different style of post-apocalyptic setting. Perhaps a combination of Mad Max meets the Thunder Lord?
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