ReallyBadTalk

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 4 May 2012

The Help

Posted on 00:05 by Unknown
Servants sharing their masters' adventures are a fixture of many cape-and-sword tales. The Musketeers have their lackeys - Planchet, Grimaud, Bazin, and Mousqueton. Garnache, from Rafael Sabatini's Saint Martin's Summer, has Rabecque. Valmont, from Choderlos de Laclos' Les Liaisons dangereuses, has Azolan, and Bardelys, from Mr Sabatini's Bardelys the Magnificent, has Ganymede. And Íñigo, the narrator of the Alatriste saga, is the captain's mochilero during the campaign in Flanders in 1625.

Some cape-and-sword roleplaying games include the option of having a servant for a player character. Honor + Intrigue's Boons, for example, include the Trusted Companion, while Flashing Blades characters may take a Gentleman's Lackey (or Lady's Maid, for women swashbucklers) as an Advantage. Both games also offer the opportunity for players' characters to be servants - H+I characters may choose the Servant/Housekeeper career; FB characters simply take jobs as such, provided they have the requisite skills or attribute scores.

So while the cape-and-sword trope of the servant sidekick is covered in these games, what about servants who are not an extension of the player character? Servants are ubiquitous in the society of the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries, and many characters who do not take a Trusted Companion or Gentleman's Lackey should arguably have servants as well, albeit not quite so loyal.

My curent house rule for my Flashing Blades campaign is that a player character has a number of servants equal to his Social Rank - 1D6; the cost of these servants is subsumed as part of the character's monthly expenses. These servants are associated with the character's place of residence and are typically unavailable for adventuring.

But I'm not wildly satisfied with this rule for a couple of reasons. First, various servants and their wages are listed in the aforementioned section on jobs for characters, and they're a poor fit for what the player characters are paying in monthly upkeep.

For example, here's what servants make, in livres (silver coins) per month, in Flashing Blades.

Job Pay
Laborer 4 £
Body Servant 10 £
Coachman 8 £
Cook 10 £
Herald 20 £

A player character with Social Rank 7 - the upper end of commoners in the setting - pays 21 £ each month for upkeep. Under my current house rule, that character could have as many as six servants; assuming two coachmen and four body servants, that's 56 £ worth of servants out of a budget of 21 £, which also covers housing and subsistence!

However, one of my assumptions is that the SR - 1D6 rule doesn't represent the player character's personal servants, but rather servants associated with the character's place of residence. The four body servants and two coachman available to the player character might represent valets, maids, and stablehands at an auberge or hôtel the character calls home, for example - their upkeep is spread among the various guests and residents, rather than borne by the player character alone. It's also why these servants aren't available for adventuring alongside the player character - a stablehand will keep your horse fed and brushed, and he might deliver a message for you across Paris, with a few extra sous for his trouble, but he won't be your equerry on campaign in Spain or drive your coach on a diplomatic mission to Venice.

So, with a little additional consideration, I think the house rule works tolerably well. On the other hand, if a player character wants a servant who will accompany him during his adventures, then the character needs to pay the servant's wages, out of his annual allowance - annuities, inheritance, sinecure, pension, or the like - or wages earned from a career or job, at the rates specified above.

The decision to keep a servant is then shuffled off to the player, but given their prevalence and significance in the historical setting of the campaign, should the game-world also incentivise keeping servants? For example, a servant, or better still a staff of servants, is both a sign, and an expectation, of status in the society of the game-world; remember that one of the first things d'Artagnan is urged to do once he has a little money in his pocket is hire a lackey, for a gentleman without a valet is scarcely a gentleman at all.

Flashing Blades hints at this in a different rule. Player characters with a noble title of baron or greater may visit court, but they must have a carriage and team to do so. Since a nobleman visiting court is unlikely to drive his own carriage, this suggests the character must pay for at least one coachman as a driver, and should probably hire a second as footman as well. That's one or two servants implied right there. It's a reasonable extension from this to say that a character at court must be attended by, at a bare minimum, one body servant as well; in fact, a more appropriate number might be equal to one-half of one's Social Rank, or risk penalties to reactions from other nobles at court.

Incentives in the game-world need not come attached to rules, however. Soft pressure in the form of snide or pitying comments from non-player characters on a player character's 'lack of means' may lead a player to choose to engage servants in order to present an appearance more appropriate to his character's station.

All of this assumes that a character does not own property - a townhouse, a villa, an estate, or a chateau - of his own. With property comes servants, per the rules in Flashing Blades, so the question of how many and what kinds of servants, and how they are supported, becomes more involved. I'll dive into this in part two.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Flashing Blades, Honor + Intrigue, npcs, refereeing | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Carte de Cassini
    In a post at Built by Gods Long Forgotten describing a clever approach to designing a megadungeon , Lum includes a link to an interactive ve...
  • Everyone Talks About the Weather
    Now someone's finally done something about it. Friend of the blog Bren at RPG Net created a nifty weather table for use with his Hono...
  • Stupid Dice Tricks
    I have mixed feelings about novelty randomisers. Novelty randomisers aren't new to roleplaying games - Crimson Cutlass , for example, u...
  • The Pen and the Sword: The Cavalier in the Yellow Doublet
    He decided to finish the business, although not so hastily that it might work against him. Besides, there was no point in complicating his l...
  • DVR Alert
    If Monday night's The Adventures of Don Juan whetted your appetite for more Errol Flynn, on Thursday Friday see him in his prime when ...
  • Upstairs, Downstairs: The Help, Continued
    Previously I wrote about servants in a cape-and-sword campaign, as seen in the source literature and the rules of a couple of swashbuckling...
  • A Very Special DVR Alert
    On Sunday, 2 December, TCM is showing King Vidor's long-lost 1926 silent classic, Bardelys the Magnificent . This is perhaps the best c...
  • As Promised On This Very Blog
    Sean B at Wine and Savages reviews the All for One: Régime Diabolique setting book for Savage Worlds . And on the strength of his review, I...
  • Meditation on a Visit to a Game Store
    Last Sunday I stopped at Game Empire in Pasadena. First, let me say that Game Empire is what other gaming stores should aspire to be. The r...
  • Graphic Novels Challenge: Belladone
    An assassin takes a shot at Louis XIV, but the ball is deflected by the iron fan of a nearby nun, who with a winsome smile leaps over the s...

Categories

  • -C
  • 1602
  • 1612 (movie)
  • 1650 (game)
  • 7RPGS
  • 7th Sea
  • A Field in England
  • A to Z 2012
  • actual play
  • adventure path
  • Adventure Time
  • Against All Flags
  • Age of Ravens
  • Alain Delon
  • Alatriste
  • Alexander Macris
  • Alexandre Dumas
  • Alice B Woodward
  • All for One Régime Diabolique
  • alt history
  • Amanda Heitler
  • ancien régime
  • Andy Murray. meta
  • animal
  • animation
  • Anthony Hope
  • Arabian Nights
  • art
  • Arturo Pérez-Reverte
  • At Sword's Point (movie)
  • award
  • background
  • Backswords and Bucklers
  • bandwagon jumping
  • baragei
  • Barbaric Frontier
  • Barbie
  • Bardelys the Magnificent
  • Barry Lyndon
  • baseball
  • Batman
  • Bayuca
  • BBC America
  • Beedo
  • Belladone
  • BH 1 Mad Mesa
  • Big Purple
  • Black Vulmea
  • Black Vulmea's Vengeance
  • Blog of Holding
  • blogfest
  • Blogger
  • Blunders on the Danube
  • board game
  • Bob Anderson
  • Bold Pueblo Games
  • Bombshell Miniatures
  • Book Scorpion's Lair
  • books
  • Boot Hill
  • Bren at RPG Net
  • British Isles Traveller Support
  • BryanMD
  • Bushido
  • Caoimhe Ora Snow
  • cape-and-sword
  • Capitan
  • Capitán Alatriste (game)
  • Captain Alatriste
  • Captain Blood (movie)
  • Captain Blood (novel)
  • Captain from Castile
  • Captain Hook
  • Captain Horatio Hornblower
  • Captain Morgan
  • Cara King
  • card game
  • cartography
  • cartoon
  • Cassini map
  • catacombs
  • Catan Junior
  • Cesare Borgia
  • character
  • charity
  • Charles Perrault
  • chase
  • chateau
  • Chill
  • Christopher Columbus
  • Chronicles of Shadow Valley
  • Cinematic
  • comics
  • commercial
  • Condottieri Conflicts
  • conquistadors
  • ConTtessa
  • corsairs
  • cosplay
  • Crimson Cutlass
  • Crossbones
  • CS Forester
  • Cutthroat Island
  • cycling
  • Cyrano de Bergerac
  • d'Artagnan
  • d20
  • d20 Modern
  • d20 Past
  • d20 Pirates
  • Daffy Duck
  • Dangerous Beauty
  • Dangerous Liasons
  • Danny Kaye
  • Dark Dimension
  • David Balfour
  • DC Comics
  • De cape et d'épée
  • DeviantArt
  • Die Another Day
  • disability
  • Disneyland
  • diversity
  • Douglas Fairbanks Sr
  • Dr Rotwang
  • Drama Dice and Damsons
  • Dreams of the Lich House
  • DriveThruRPG
  • duel
  • Duelist (prestige class)
  • Dungeons and Dragons
  • Dynamite Entertainment
  • Dynasties and Demagogues
  • ECW
  • El Cazador
  • Ellen Kushner
  • Emmy Rossum
  • en français
  • En Garde (game)
  • EN World
  • endgame
  • Eric Treasure
  • errata
  • Errol Flynn
  • Ethan Skemp
  • Exchange of Realities
  • Fabled Lands
  • fantasy
  • festival
  • Fist Full of Seamen
  • Flashing Blades
  • Flashman
  • FLGS
  • Flying Swordsmen
  • Frank C Papé
  • Frank Frazetta
  • Frank Schoonover
  • Frankenstein
  • Fred Funcken
  • FXR
  • Game Empire
  • game fiction
  • game style quiz
  • games
  • Gary Gygax
  • George Waymouth
  • Gloire
  • Gonsalvo
  • gospel
  • Graham Bottley
  • Graphic Novels Challenge
  • grognard
  • gun control
  • GURPS
  • Hack and Slash
  • Hamlet (1996 movie)
  • Han shot first
  • Harold Lamb
  • heads up
  • Hearts
  • Heidi Brühl
  • Helen Hunt Jackson
  • Hendybadger
  • hero points
  • HeroPress
  • Hidden in Shadows
  • High Seas
  • historical roleplaying
  • history
  • hobby
  • holiday
  • Honor + Intrigue
  • Horatio Hornblower
  • Horrible Histories
  • horror
  • house rules
  • Howard Pyle
  • Howling Tower
  • humor
  • I Waste the Buddha With My Crossbow
  • ice hockey
  • Iceland
  • immersion
  • improv
  • Inca
  • Infernal Sorceress
  • International Catacomb Society
  • interview
  • IntWisCha
  • Ivanhoe
  • Jack Sparrow
  • James Bone 007 Roleplaying Game
  • James Fenimore Cooper
  • James Mason
  • Jean Laffite
  • Jedediah
  • Jeff Black
  • Jeff Rients
  • Jeffrey Catherine Jones
  • jeu de palme
  • JF
  • John Gilbert
  • John Paul Jones
  • John Sayles
  • Jules Verne
  • Khlit the Cossack
  • Kickstarter
  • Kingdom of Saguenay
  • komradebob
  • La Fille de d'Artagnan
  • lazy git
  • Le Ballet de l'Acier
  • Le Bossu
  • Legends of the High Seas
  • LEGO
  • linear adventure
  • literature
  • location
  • Lone Star
  • Long John Silver (novel)
  • Lord Dunsany
  • Lord Gwydion
  • Lord Nelson
  • Los Nikis
  • Lowell Francis
  • M.P.
  • magic
  • magic items
  • map
  • maritime
  • Mark Twain
  • martial arts
  • Marvel Comics
  • Masks
  • Maureen O'Hara
  • Mayan non-Apocalypse
  • Mead Schaeffer
  • Mediterranean
  • Melan
  • meta
  • Michael Crichton
  • Mike Mornard
  • milestone
  • miniatures
  • Mitch Williamson
  • Mithril Wisdom
  • Molière
  • Moonfleet
  • movie
  • music
  • musketeer
  • Mysterious Island
  • Mythic Game Master Emulator
  • Mythic Role Playing
  • names
  • Nasruddin
  • Natalie Dormer
  • Nate Christen
  • navel gazing
  • nc wyeth
  • NC Wyeth's Pilgrims
  • New France
  • Nick
  • npcs
  • NPS
  • Obsidian Portal
  • Odie
  • OEF
  • off the shelf
  • off-hand weapon
  • old man is old
  • Old Stuff Day
  • Order of the d30
  • Oriental
  • Osprey Publishing
  • OSR
  • Ottavia Piccolo
  • Paris
  • Pathfinder
  • Paul
  • PDQ#
  • perdustin
  • personal
  • Peter and Wendy
  • phoning it in
  • Pierre Alary
  • pike-and-shot
  • pilgrims
  • pirate
  • Pirate Latitudes
  • Pirates of the Caribbean Curse of the Black Peal
  • Pirates of the Caribbean On Stranger Tides
  • Pirates of Tripoli
  • playstyle
  • poetry
  • points of light
  • politics
  • pulps
  • Puss in Boots
  • QUAGS
  • Quickly Quietly Carefully
  • Rafael Sabatini
  • Raiders of the Seven Seas
  • Ramona
  • random
  • random. Mediterranean
  • rant
  • Raphael Sabatini
  • Ravyn
  • Ray Harryhausen
  • real life can be a pain in the ass
  • reenactors
  • refereeing
  • Regency
  • REH
  • reply
  • resolutions
  • Restoration
  • review
  • rewards
  • Richard the Lionheart
  • Rip Van Winkle
  • Rob Roy
  • Robert E Howard
  • Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Robert Newton
  • Robert Taylor
  • Robin Hood
  • Robin Laws
  • Robinson Crusoe
  • Robots and Rapiers
  • Rochefort
  • roleplaying
  • roleplaying games
  • Rome
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Rory's Story Cubes
  • Royal Flash
  • RPG Blog Carnival
  • rpg history
  • RPG Stuff (blog)
  • RPGBA
  • rules
  • Ruritania
  • Saint Patrick's Day
  • sale
  • samurai
  • Samurai Heaven and Earth
  • sandbox
  • Sandy Hook shooting
  • Santa Claus
  • Sanxesta
  • SAR
  • Savage Worlds
  • save or die
  • Save Vs. Dragon
  • Scallywags
  • Scaramouche
  • Sean B
  • Semper Initiativus Unum
  • setting
  • sexism
  • shields
  • ship
  • siegecraft
  • Sinbad
  • SirJarva
  • social contract
  • social sandbox
  • social standing
  • solo
  • Solo Nexus
  • Solomon Kane
  • Sophie Marceau
  • Source of the Nile
  • Spacejacking
  • Spanish Fury
  • stage fighting
  • Stanley J Weyman
  • Star Wars
  • Steve Winter
  • Stewart Granger
  • story games
  • Super-Team Family
  • Swashbuckler (Jolly Roger game)
  • Swashbuckler (Yaquinto game)
  • swashbuckling
  • swashbuckling and sorcery
  • sword
  • Swords of the Red Brotherhood
  • Swordspoint
  • Swordswomen of the Silver Screen
  • Talk Like a Pirate Day
  • Taras Bulba
  • Tartuffe
  • Tavern Cards
  • TCM
  • Te Deum pour un massacre
  • Telecanter
  • Telecanter's Receding Rules
  • television
  • Tenkar's Tavern
  • tennis
  • Tercio Creativo
  • The 13th Warrior
  • The 9Qs
  • The Admiral's Ghost
  • The Adventures of Don Juan
  • The Adventures of Robin Hood
  • The Adventures of Sindbad
  • the Batman
  • The Black Arrow
  • The Black Buccaneer
  • The Black Swan
  • The Borgias
  • The Boy's King Arthur
  • The Buccaneer
  • The Business of War
  • The Cavalier in the Yellow Doublet
  • The Court Jester
  • The Courtship of Miles Standish
  • The Crimson Pirate
  • The Crown and the Ring
  • The Deerslayer
  • The Deluge
  • The Dragon's Flagon
  • The Duelists
  • The Dungeon Dozen
  • The Escapist
  • The Golden Voyage of Sinbad
  • The Isle of Pirate's Doom
  • The Justice of the Duke
  • The Lady and the Bandit
  • The Lion in Winter
  • The Mark of Zorro (1920)
  • The Mark of Zorro (1940)
  • The Mask of Zorro
  • The Master of Ballantrae (movie)
  • The Master of Ballantrae (novel)
  • The Mysterious Stranger
  • The Other Side
  • The Pen and the Sword
  • The Perfect Captain
  • The Phantom of the Opera
  • The Princess Bride
  • The Prisoner of Zenda
  • The Queen's Cavaliers
  • The Russian Storybook
  • The Savage AfterWorld
  • The Scarlet Cockerel
  • The Scarlet Pimpernel (1982 movie)
  • The Scarlet Pumpernickel
  • The Scottish Chiefs
  • The Sea Hawk
  • The Sea-Hawk
  • The Shadow of the Vulture
  • The Spanish Main
  • The Swordsman of Siena
  • The Thief of Bagdad
  • The Three Musketeers
  • The Three Musketeers (novel)
  • The Three Musketeers (Paul WS Andersen)
  • The Three Musketeers (RIchard Lester)
  • The Three Musketeers (Rowland Lee)
  • The Tudors
  • The Usual Suspects
  • The White Company
  • The World of Music
  • theatre
  • theRPGsite
  • Thoul's Paradise
  • Tim Brannan
  • Tim Snider
  • Tiny Solitary Soldiers
  • Top Secret
  • Toshiro Mifune
  • Tour de France
  • Traveller
  • Treasure Island
  • Treasure Island (1934)
  • Troll in the Corner
  • Trollsmyth
  • ttfn
  • TV Tropes
  • Twenty Years After
  • Twitter
  • Tyrone Power
  • Under the Red Robe
  • Universal Studios
  • Vaesen
  • Valley of the Giants
  • vanity
  • Vatel
  • veil of ignorance
  • Very Civile Actions
  • video
  • video game
  • Vikings
  • W Heath Robinson
  • Walter Paget
  • War and Game (blog)
  • wargames
  • Warren W Baumgartner
  • Warrior Pursuits
  • Wars of Louis Quatorze (blog)
  • Wayne R
  • Westward Ho
  • what shite
  • wiki
  • William Hobbs
  • Wimbledon
  • Wine and Savages
  • World of Music
  • world-building
  • Zak S
  • Zorro
  • Zorro (1974)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (157)
    • ►  September (15)
    • ►  August (13)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ►  June (24)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  March (18)
    • ►  February (22)
    • ►  January (29)
  • ▼  2012 (343)
    • ►  December (32)
    • ►  November (34)
    • ►  October (27)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (33)
    • ►  July (29)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ▼  May (31)
      • Skallywaggs
      • Wednesday Wyeth
      • Endgame
      • Cinematic: The Tudors
      • DVR Alert
      • Wednesday Wyeth
      • Into the Wild
      • Cinematic: La Fille de d'Artagnan
      • Dueling Among Le Bon Ton
      • Synthesizers at Dawn?
      • I Can Haz Award?
      • DVR Alert
      • Let Me Tell You About My Character
      • Wednesday Wyeth
      • Off the Shelf: Plays
      • The Cat Out of the Bag
      • Cinematic: The Three Musketeers
      • Fifteen Goblins on a Dead Goblin's Chest
      • Upstairs, Downstairs: The Help, Continued
      • Blast of the (d20) Past
      • Wednesday Wyeth
      • Yet Another Field of Honor
      • Pirates of the Middle Sea
      • R is for Reflections
      • All I Ever Get Is Ren Fair
      • Cinematic: The Mark of Zorro
      • I Write Like. . .
      • The Help
      • Los Zorros
      • Wednesday Wyeth
      • "You are using Bonetti's Defense against me, ah?"
    • ►  April (34)
    • ►  March (39)
    • ►  February (29)
    • ►  January (6)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile