What initially stands out about Deadline – A Clockwork Press: A News-Chronicling & Map-Making TTRPG is its physical presence. It consists of what appears to be a tabloid newspaper that comes in an envelope of its own. So, it has a slightly rough feel to it, even a cheapness to it. However, because what that quality hides is a rather engaging storytelling in which the players get together and create a city and tell its story—or at least the stories that are reported in its newspapers. This is the simple set-up for Deadline – A Clockwork Press, a map-making and storytelling—or rather story reporting—game. In a single session, the players create a city whose origins are medieval and propel it forward into an age of steam-powered industry, corruption, and rebellion, plus a pinch of the arcane. Once that is done, they take it in turns to develop and report stories that explore the city, investigate the benefits and detriments of the new industries, uncover that corruption, and perhaps get a little ensorcelled along the way. It is published by The Wanderer’s Tome, best known for Flabbergasted!A Comedy Roleplaying Game inspired by Jeeves and Wooster and Fawlty Towers, and perhaps could be used to create a city for that roleplaying game as an alternate setting. Deadline – A Clockwork Press is inspired by cities such as Pratchett’s Ankh-Morpork and Lovecraft’s Arkham, and Dunwall and Midgar from the Dishonoured and Final Fantasy VII computer games respectively. It designed to be played by up to four players, but can be played solo. It can also be used to create cities where steampunk and magic is rife for other roleplaying games, to create a city that can have stories written about it, or it can simply be an exercise in creativity and storytelling with geography for a single afternoon.
Deadline – A Clockwork Press: A News-Chronicling & Map-Making TTRPG comes as a twenty-four page newspaper. The players will need one twelve-sided, two six-sided dice, and a twenty-sided die as well as pens and pencils in a variety of colours. In addition, the players will need a City Record (broad)sheet upon which they can record its political climate, power source, primary industry, and arcane influence along with its districts and factions. Plus, a sheet upon which they can draw the map of the city. It is played in two phases, the Establishment Phase and the Chronicling Phase.
In the Establishment Phase, the players discuss what elements of the city interest them and the tone that they want to set. Then they take it in turn to roll for the city environment, its eight districts, political climate, power source, primary industry, arcane influence, notable features, and lastly, they name it. Some prompt a player to draw another element on the map. For example, a crater city is located in the crater formed by an ancient meteor impact with the crater’s wall forming a natural defence and then the player is directed to draw the crater’s edge as the limits of the city. Others prompt a player to answer questions, such as for the city’s primary and trade being arcane research, explaining what areas of arcane research are conducted in the city. The arcane influence is where it begins to get a bit weird, with entries such as ‘Echoes of Past Lives’, ‘Eternal Fog’, and ‘Eldritch Horrors’. Possible notable features include gardens, bridges, fighting arenas, clock towers, and more, and the players add two of these. At the last step of process, there is a helpful table for naming the city. By the end of the Establishment Phase, the players will have created a fully fashioned city with notable buildings and geographical features and more, but none of this is set in stone, the players being free to adjust their creation to their satisfaction.
Then, in the Chronicling Phase, the players get to play with their city. They work as journalists, writing the headlines for events which occur in the city. They need to decide what type of newspaper they work for and what its outlook is and which group in society it usually aligns with. (This also lends itself to the possibility that each player could be writing headlines for a different newspaper rather than the same one, though this is not explored in Deadline – A Clockwork Press.) The Chronicling Phase consists of a series of News Cycles, typically one, two, or three on a playthrough. Each News Cycle consists of six headlines, beginning with an Arcane Headline, followed by four Minor Headlines, and finished with a Major Headline. The Minor Headlines can be political, environmental, unrest, culture & society, infrastructure & innovation, and outsider influence. For example, an Arcane Headline might be ‘Magic Users Hunted’, followed by the Minor Headlines of ‘Civic Protest’, ‘Aberrant Weather’, ‘Masked Vigilante’, and ‘World Showcase’, before ending with the Major Headline of ‘Public Execution’. At each stage, the players come up with headlines and sub-headlines for their newspapers and even though there is a table of suggested headline formats, this is actually not that easy. After all, this is normally the purview of professional journalists and editors, not someone sitting down to play a game and tell a story. This does not mean that it cannot be fun though.
Physically, Deadline – A Clockwork Press is very nicely, thematically presented as if it was a newspaper. Alongside the multiple tables of prompts there are engaging adverts that definitely feel as if they should be in an actual nineteenth century newspaper. The only issue with Deadline – A Clockwork Press is its physical nature. In newspaper format, it cannot avoid feeling flimsy.
What is interesting about Deadline – A Clockwork Press is that although by the end of a playthrough of its two phases, the result is twofold, one of which is not what you would expect. The obvious one is the creation of a city and its geography; the less obvious one is its history. The city has a history because it is being generated during the play, but only in the broadest of strokes and instead of the history being recorded as is, it is being reported upon and an opinion being formed on each and every incident. The play is not to create history so much as reportage. There is still room to create that history in detail, though perhaps away from the game itself, because that is not what the players are creating in play. Plus, more reportage in the game if the players want to continue with more playthroughs of the Chronicalling phase as many times as they want.
Deadline – A Clockwork Press: A News-Chronicling & Map-Making TTRPG combines an utterly charming physical presence with an intriguingly different approach to map-making and storytelling. It is an entertaining process and the results have potential to be explored beyond the confines of the roleplaying game’s headlines.






