X
Xaosseed
Guest
A daft name for the process I have been following of zooming back out to super-hexes pick up broader threads and presences about the map before zooming back in to populate sub-hexes.
So far I am operating at three scales - 40 mile super hexes, 10 mile hexes and 2.5 mile sub-hexes - this is partly due to a very old screw up in my mapping and lots of sunk cost. Use 3, 12 and 48 if you are doing this from scratch; it will mesh better with what most folk do.
My last write up was about zooming out to the neighbouring super-hexes because my party were dashing for the edges of their starting super-hex and I wanted to figure out what was likely to be found in bleed-over at the edges. It turned out to be very timely to do it in a systemic way because the next session they turned around and chased a quest they made up for themselves all the way across to the far side of the super-hex and threatened to head off the edge of that - happily I had also worked out what was off those edges.
From being pointed west from the red splotch, they decided to head for the high terrain at the southern edge of the super-hex (yellow tags) so I decided to run another cycle of:
Setting hex themes and factions
Faction hex-sites
Hex-stocking by bleed-over
So here I had hexes AD (Baron), A11 (Rift Ruins), AE (Great Rise), D13 (Hissing Valley Miners), E9 (Jungle Marches) and E2 (Dead Mines) which I expanded a little to get a sense of what might be there.
AD - the Baron, outpost of the regional authority, nominally defending and taxing the mines and metalworkers around
A11 - the rift ruins - a broken open and corrupted insectfolk vault; bad insectfolk to contrast reasonable ones elsewhere
D13 - Hissing Valley Mines - iron mines feeding that super-hexes industry, run by traditionalist goliaths
E2 - the dead mines - undead-using mines run by Kirianshalee worshiping goliaths
E9 - Jungle marshes - border between the two goliath groups; lots of ore caravan raiding
AE - Great Rise - foothills to the mountains east/south east, home to cunning human traders
Each of these got a turn for a set of faction hex-sites for sub-hexes within their hex; each got
home base - a camp, tower, lair, whatever
'field activities' site with them actively doing something
'source of their power' location - herds, plants, etc.
minor outpost where they passively manage something
'goal' site in some other hex
The two goliath groups and the baron I had some notion of what they were up to but the cunning humans of the Great Rise were a bit of a mystery. Pondering on what they might be up to in the middle of a rainforest I decided their thing was birds; hunting them, falconing and making things from feathers.
For their sites I came up with:
Home Base - their overly welcoming raionforest village where they work hard to keep all their neighbours friendly
'field activities' - their eagle-falconing scouts keeping an eye on their surroundings
'source of their power' - feather-weaving artificers
minor outpost - canopy hides in their rainforest for bird-trapping
'goal' site elsewhere - a bird-hunting ground
Then I did a grid of who would bleed-over into where; columns for the 'affected' hex and rows for the neighbour having an influence. Each cell then gave me a sub-hex. It also provided a good frame for 'who of that faction would be found abroad' which was a good prompt for what might be in encounter tables.
For those same humans I figured that their neighbours were
A12 - the shadowed swamps
A11 - the rift ruins
E9 - the Jungle Marches
A5 - Foothills/backcountry
E2 - the Dead Mines
E8 - Plateau Rainforest
These provide another block of things to fill sub-hexes with and then zoom down to the remaining empty sub-hexes.
Asking who all the neighbours are allows us to zoom out for another set of hexes which have been thought about, looking at the terrain, religious and cultural boundaries sparks ideas, factions can be picked and then we can zoom back in and run the cycle again.
I am finding myself more inclined to run this 'accordion' approach without fully populating all the sub-hexes, to leave some room for further ideas to be placed.
Continue reading...
So far I am operating at three scales - 40 mile super hexes, 10 mile hexes and 2.5 mile sub-hexes - this is partly due to a very old screw up in my mapping and lots of sunk cost. Use 3, 12 and 48 if you are doing this from scratch; it will mesh better with what most folk do.
My last write up was about zooming out to the neighbouring super-hexes because my party were dashing for the edges of their starting super-hex and I wanted to figure out what was likely to be found in bleed-over at the edges. It turned out to be very timely to do it in a systemic way because the next session they turned around and chased a quest they made up for themselves all the way across to the far side of the super-hex and threatened to head off the edge of that - happily I had also worked out what was off those edges.
From being pointed west from the red splotch, they decided to head for the high terrain at the southern edge of the super-hex (yellow tags) so I decided to run another cycle of:
Setting hex themes and factions
Faction hex-sites
Hex-stocking by bleed-over
So here I had hexes AD (Baron), A11 (Rift Ruins), AE (Great Rise), D13 (Hissing Valley Miners), E9 (Jungle Marches) and E2 (Dead Mines) which I expanded a little to get a sense of what might be there.
AD - the Baron, outpost of the regional authority, nominally defending and taxing the mines and metalworkers around
A11 - the rift ruins - a broken open and corrupted insectfolk vault; bad insectfolk to contrast reasonable ones elsewhere
D13 - Hissing Valley Mines - iron mines feeding that super-hexes industry, run by traditionalist goliaths
E2 - the dead mines - undead-using mines run by Kirianshalee worshiping goliaths
E9 - Jungle marshes - border between the two goliath groups; lots of ore caravan raiding
AE - Great Rise - foothills to the mountains east/south east, home to cunning human traders
Each of these got a turn for a set of faction hex-sites for sub-hexes within their hex; each got
home base - a camp, tower, lair, whatever
'field activities' site with them actively doing something
'source of their power' location - herds, plants, etc.
minor outpost where they passively manage something
'goal' site in some other hex
The two goliath groups and the baron I had some notion of what they were up to but the cunning humans of the Great Rise were a bit of a mystery. Pondering on what they might be up to in the middle of a rainforest I decided their thing was birds; hunting them, falconing and making things from feathers.
For their sites I came up with:
Home Base - their overly welcoming raionforest village where they work hard to keep all their neighbours friendly
'field activities' - their eagle-falconing scouts keeping an eye on their surroundings
'source of their power' - feather-weaving artificers
minor outpost - canopy hides in their rainforest for bird-trapping
'goal' site elsewhere - a bird-hunting ground
Then I did a grid of who would bleed-over into where; columns for the 'affected' hex and rows for the neighbour having an influence. Each cell then gave me a sub-hex. It also provided a good frame for 'who of that faction would be found abroad' which was a good prompt for what might be in encounter tables.
For those same humans I figured that their neighbours were
A12 - the shadowed swamps
A11 - the rift ruins
E9 - the Jungle Marches
A5 - Foothills/backcountry
E2 - the Dead Mines
E8 - Plateau Rainforest
These provide another block of things to fill sub-hexes with and then zoom down to the remaining empty sub-hexes.
Asking who all the neighbours are allows us to zoom out for another set of hexes which have been thought about, looking at the terrain, religious and cultural boundaries sparks ideas, factions can be picked and then we can zoom back in and run the cycle again.
I am finding myself more inclined to run this 'accordion' approach without fully populating all the sub-hexes, to leave some room for further ideas to be placed.
Continue reading...