I’ve got a little story for you today, it came from my last game session and it centers around the kinds of rewards we, as GMs, give to players. Sure there are rewards of straight in-game currency, there are rewards of items that boost the characters’ stats and abilities, and there are rewards of plot relevant items or information that help move the story along. There are also rewards that are fluffier and have less effect on the mechanical aspects of the game while increasing player enjoyment. These rewards are fairly intangible to the game as a set of mechanics, but they are relevant to the game as a story that is occurring.
The Story
The last game session I ran had two very interesting moments in it. The first moment was when the players were debating where to sell off some loot they had acquired from a dungeon. After much debate they chose a religious college that is very reminiscent of Cambridge. In bartering with the Deans of the college, they had the chance to take 15,000 Saren (currency in the world setting) or 13,000 Saren and receive honorary degrees. As if they were working with one group mind, they all perked up and said hell yeah the honorary degrees.
A good 10 minutes was spent discussing what these would entail and that they would have no game effect. Another 5 minutes was spent with them deciding what their degrees would be. One character chose to have a doctorate in inter-dimensional relations, another chose to have a doctorate in “conflict management”(i.e. Assassination) , while the final character chose a degree in Hoplology, the study of combative behavior and performance. These degrees gave them no extra skills or in-game powers or abilities. Just honorary degrees for cutting their prices. Still, it was one of the highlights of the game and one of the most enjoyed moments.
The second moment in this game that featured an “intangible” reward was when the players decided to pool some of their experience to purchase a special power called Homebase. It gave them an unstatted, non game affecting “Place” of their own design. The power states that the players work out details of the base with the Game Master, but that it doesn’t grant any kind of mechanical bonuses and only acts as a location that the players own and can make use of. The players decided that the base was going to be a floating island (an island that floats high in the stratosphere) since they had an airship (which can take them from place to place) as a reward from another adventure. Once the base was acquired in-game, through a short-formed encounter with an old man looking for the resting place of his son, a good hour was spent determining the exact details of the homebase.
Though it involved no real gameplay, and the night had many great moments, this was the most engrossed I saw the players all night. While there were things we could have gotten to if we had left the details of the island abstract, it was more fun for the players to work out their holdings. The interesting twist, most of what they set up on the island were future expansions, such as the village for the support staff, the farm so they could be self-sufficient, and the magic items that would keep the river flowing and create waterfalls. The level they purchased the homebase at granted them very little, just access to the island and accommodations for 3 to 4 people. They were prepping for the time when they could purchase the upgrade and make nifty, completely thematic elements. While they did eventually brainstorm ways they could use the land to turn a profit (outside of the power’s stipulation that the base would sustain itself without constant PC upkeep) the elements they focused most on were completely without tangible, in-game, mechanical reward. This is a picture of their final drawing of the island as it will be in the future.
The Moral?
While there was loot of a more standard variety (+1 swords, cash in the pocket, etc.) it was obtained and quickly forgotten. Even the more story-driven, fluff based rewards that had a mechanical effect (a magical library that granted them 1 free skill level each, once) from earlier sessions were not received with nearly as much enthusiasm. Why were the honorary degrees and the homebase so much more fun? Character development. The rewards were more about adding something fun to the characters in terms of building the story of the characters up. The honorary degrees had no effect, but they gave the players a different sense of their characters. The homebase radically changed the feel of the game for the players. Their adventures for the night continued without paying another visit to, or use of, the homebase, but it kept getting brought up. Both of these elements added something to the characters that enabled new growth and goals. A skill, a more game affecting power, or an item that granted a new ability per the rules might have affected the game more, but the intangible rewards that added to the characters affected the “play” more.
Jeff Tidball put a great article up on gameplaywright about how a story placed behind a minor worth item increases its value exponentially. It is a perfect example of this effect. Think about the rewards that you are giving out as a Game Master and their effects on character development and the story. I’m willing to bet that rewards focusing more on the character development and story will be more fun for the players than just plain mechanical game affecting rewards.
So, what do you think? What are some of the coolest rewards that you’ve given or gotten in a game? Were they more based on mechanics and loot or where they more character centric?
As a player I had an experience similar to your players’, even though I was saving GPs to build one ever since we were level 5 (D&D 4E game). The DM, however, granted the homebase through in-game reward (instead of just “I use XGP to buy a fort) and linked the act of building the homebase itself to some deeds we had done in the past. It. Was. AWESOME! He even handed some titles to us (which was also very very VERY awesome).
I spent the rest of the time thinking about what we could add to make the place more awesome and the DM enticed me. But then college hit even harder and we had to put the game on hold.
Since that day I have been trying to include something like that in the game I DM, and your article inspired me to try even more.
Some great ideas here. In a D&D game 3.5 game I’m in our DM is very good at giving these intangible character rewards. I play as a Half-Orc Brewmaster, and over the course of the campaign he’s extended wide influence in the world of ale – people trade him recipes, sell his beer at various bars, know him by name and have heard of his expertise. All of this amounts to little “number crunching” benefit but makes the story much more enjoyable and entertaining.
I think in general, “appreciation” by NPCs in the game world is a great intangible reward to use, because many people like RPGs because it lets you be a hero for a while!
I totally agree. In the game I’m playing in (a solo Burning Wheel game), gaining Reputations and building Relationships is sometimes a lot more fun than the core interests (Beliefs) of the character. Of course, they’re often driven by the character’s Beliefs, but I love it when the GM says, “That was an awesome scene. Given all you’ve done, you get a 1D Reputation with the Wolves of the Whispering Woods.” Those are the great little moments.
The best loot that an group I have been with was a tavern. Well we put the paladin in charge of the town while looking for a suitable replacement but that tavern was what mattered. The dwarf cleric jumped for joy and we had a good time talking about it. Later on when the town was besieged and a rogue catapulted bolder crushed the stockpiled ale, mead, beer, wine, and more half the PCs were about to charge to their deaths in vengeance for our little tavern.
I’ve never been able to get my players to buy into something like this, but I may have been setting it up wrong. I need to give this a try and do it in a smaller but realistic way. Great point today!
Our characters got a land grant and titles, and we obsessed over the borders, developing the region and making it safe… it was very similar to your homebase example.
In my current D&D campaign, the players prize the Defenders of the Homeland medals they were provided for saving the kingdom.
The respect of NPCs and incorporation of character story bits are often the most prized rewards. Thanks for reminding me!
I remember running Werewolf: the Noun for my player group. They had decided that they would play up most of the Werewolfy aspects, they took trophies from their exploits. I had them find a Disco ball from an abandoned roller-rink when they stormed a rival pack that was gunning for their territory once and it was their prized possession. Sometimes it is the little things that make a game worth while and worth talking about.
In their very first adventure, as children aged 11, my wife’s character used a rock to strike the killing blow on a dangerous raptor. She carried that rock around with her thereafter. It took on more significant meaning when the character’s mentor, a wizard, made a magical flail with the rock as the head of the flail. Better magic weapons have come, but she prefers to still use the rock.
My blog- http://bigballofnofun.blogspot.com/
Good article, John. Sounds like a great game session, so much so that I just had to tell others about it with over at Spes Magna Games.
🙂
I once rolled up some random treasure off of a band brigands who were terrorizing a small town and one of the pieces was a small brass necklace. It was worth 35gp and was only intended to be a some loot other than coins. But one of my characters started asking questions about it and, through the course of events, it wound up belonging to a woman of the town who was extremely grateful to get the necklace back. So grateful that, months later in the campaign, she showed up again with that player’s child, if you catch my drift. 😉