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Itās awesome when a dungeon module knows to be terse, knows when to be quiet, knows to leave things out.
But the elided material has to be wallpaper. A dungeon that doesnāt provide stats and numbers is beyond useless.
Scarlet Citadel is an example of a really bad book with pages and pages of wallpaper (I guess good if you really love Northlands but then the layout formatting is still bad) you have to sit through (here are five pages about why this door went missing three hundred years ago) but extremely vague about whatās actually there (half a sentence saying āsend some undead after themā).
Date of Expiration, which weāre doing now in #boatmodeās S -team, is a perfect example of a really good and usable book. We dislike the fluff (robots & naked chicks) but this guy gets UX and gets the blorb principles and gets varied and interesting room design, so weāre having a fantastic time.
You wanna how how many golden wires they can pull loose in a room? Thereās a rule for it. They find a witch? Sheās described in like two sentences and a picture.
Well, sheās a witch (which in our campaign means sheās a shaāir), she hands out blood pacts like theyāre candy (which in our campaign means that she is pacted to the blood moth), she looks a liāl bit weird in the picture (which in our campaign means sheās got efreeti heritageāhow did a genasi of the plane of fire end up pacting herself to a being from the elemental plane of blood?āand idea of an āelemental plane of bloodā is itself an artifact from how The Temple of the Blood Moth, another, similarly skeletal module, got adapted to #boatmodeās focus on the elemental planes), she uses a ring to defend herself (which in our campaign means that wielding it probably looks similarly to the circulatory sword from Temple Of The Blood Moth) and so on and so on. Everything gets braided together.
The villages on The Isle of Dread? Theyāre commected to specific animalsājust like the al-Badia houses in our setting, so thatās what they are.
Iāve complained about the āleave blanksā principle in Dungeon World but Iām realizing that itās all about leaving the right kind of blanks.
Dyson's Delve became such a rich experience because of our settingās deep connection to the Gods of the Cold Elements. We donāt have tribe-bashing but since itās so light on backgrounds, itās easier to swap goblins for pirates than something like Scarlet Citadelās dwarves where it very specifically needs to be dwarves which really stood out weirdly in our gameās more āall followers of the Loregiver ultimately get alongā setting.
And, when a book is skeletal and usable, like Dyson's Delve, Date of Expiration, Temple of the Blood Moth, and some of the fantastic stuff from the appendixes of Ghosts of Saltmarsh (where Dyson strikes again), the players (maybe subconsciously) notice how well the game flows, how little āumm let me just read this pageā downtime there is, and how easily it can be skinned to tightly connect to the actual setting. That crate of āCommon Sense with Hakiyahā books aboard the Sea Ghost kept showing up again and again. Whereas stuff from Ghosts of Saltmarsh proper (vaguely described sauhagin fortress run, kinda railroady octopus fight) or from an all wallpaper, no salience book like Scarlet Citadel, itās just not fun for them to be there. They can tell without even looking at the books! Good UX helps everyone at the table.
āIn a cloud, bones of steelā is the way, as Charles Reznikoff put it in his poem.
You need bones for the characters to actually interact with. Stats, number appearing, traps, how secret doors work, if itās light or dark.
You also need a little bit of detail. A few sentences. That circulatory sword did come from Temple Of The Blood Moth, that endless bag of gold did come from Hot Springs Island, that magical sword of the God of Cold Air did come from Dyson's Delve. And stuff from Date of Expiration will in turn have an impact on future stuff in and around our version of the Crowded Sea.
The rest can be much more suggestively and sparse. A cloud. Mist from our game will drift in there and settle and become very real dew drops.
Blorb Principles, including the Wallpaper Salience principle