Friday, December 29, 2023

Putting Things Together at the end of 2023

For some reason, I decided to finally put together at least one of the sprues from the Dungeons & Lasers stretch goals. I now have 3 more harpies, some frog men, a bunch of mushrooms and a few other bits and pieces at least (badly) glued together. It reminds me that I have fat fingers and some of the pieces were very tiny. Good thing I am not into WH40K - think that would make me go crazy!

Anyway, I've even started to paint some of them, so I plan on completing at least the harpies by the end of this 3 day weekend. Plan to at any rate...





These are close to traditional 28mm scale minis, so smaller than the Reaper ones I believe. Though with harpies, that is probably okay.

And building things is a nice segway into what I plan on building in the coming year. Yeah, you didn't see an end of the year post with that coming, did you? 

Game-wise, I plan on having several more OSE sessions but will be raising the stakes a bit in the next couple of sessions. I am bringing in a couple of the things we did way back in October for our personal game group RPG challenge. I am hoping to have an exciting few sessions more, then depending on where that ends up, we'll switch games but hopefully they will want to get back into those characters and further explore the world around Windemere Crossing.

Speaking of challenges, the traditional January character a day challenge is about to start. I'll have to pre-build a few posts as I tend to get busy during the week. I'll have to email Carl over there and see if I can get on his list again. I've not decided what my sub-challenge will be: last year was adding characters to the towns I was building mostly, the year before I linked all the Traveller characters to a single space station where they were at by the end. If anyone has any ideas, please let me know!

I've stalled again on the personal software front. My Traveller world explainer basically works, but I got stuck when trying to add it to the Google app store. I really need to see if I can sideload it on my phone  - while it works on an android simulator, not sure how well it will work on an actual phone. And of course, I can run it in Windows as well. I may go ahead and add speculative trade and link it to the TravellerMap APIs. But it seems silly to write something that no one else can use. I can make a Windows installer again, or, hmm, wonder if I can make a Docker container for people? On a side note, I started attempting to update it to .NET 8 and broke everything. I've since installed an updater packager that I will test. But I had to delete the entire directory and restore from Github. Which I have done for a lot of projects over the years: get too screwed up, the only way to be sure is to nuke it from orbit!

Why Docker? Because at work I think I am planning on making our new rewrite of the main system I work on use Docker for deployment. I got it all working locally, including the NestJS prototype we have a consultant working on. Basically, a Docker image is a self-contained application you run through some sort of Docker management system. It is very popular for cloud stuff, which is where the application needs to live. Just not sure we can make a Windows program a docker image...Yes, I have to build a LOT this year at work as well.

What else am I going to build? I am really hoping to build a couple good Fantasy Trip games. Both my Sunday small game group and my regular Monday game group meet face to face. And as I did buy a 6x3' folding table for our Saturday skirmishes, that also works great for mats and scenery for RPGs! My Sunday group may rise from dead: we've been playing Zombicide on our game days (we alternate games and lifting weights at his gym, which is, BTW, where I met the huge guy who loves playing runty goblins. The dichotomy is really funny sometimes!) His nephew has joined us for the Zombicide games we play, and it turns out he runs a D&D game. I am hoping he will want to play in TFT so that he can play and not always GM the game. And the Monday group has mostly switched from skirmish games to TTRPGs and want to get to a Fantasy Trip game. I am also hoping to run another Traveller game, or continue the one we started and left at a cliffhanger basically. 

I am not going to build an end of the year review. Though I suppose I could have one of the LLM (aka ChatGPT) bots review my blog for this year to see what it thinks. Well, I tried but could not get the 2 I tried to actually summarize the site. Though one attempt thought it was written by Marc Miller.

I hope everyone has a happy and safe New Years! Happy Traveller Holiday! And 2024 is a Leap Year!

Saturday, December 23, 2023

OSE Session 10: At the Fairy Circle

Evening of the 25th day of Haelhold. 

With the fire behind them, our adventurers, along with Sharn and Petal, move to the fairy circle as the half moon rises. Crossing the river, Petal tells the mischievous fey wanting to trip Baldur and Enoki back in the pond to behave. As they come out from the trees, in the darkness comes a deep, rumbling voice: "Give us the food."

the scene on Owlbear.rodeo

Quinby attempts to rush through the gurh in front of him, and Petal follows him, mostly to make sure he does not fall into the circle. Enoki moves close and sprays his spores to calm the two down in front of him. Rolling a natural 20, we decide he had enough spore to effect both the gurh. One made his saving roll, the other did not. Seeing a battle about to start, Baldur, Sharn and Enoki move to deal with the other two mishappen dwarves. There is a tussle for the moon stone as the non-sleepy gurh manages the snatch it from Quinby. Baldur deals a lethal blow to one of the gurh, with Sharn behind him, ready with her dagger. They both frog-walk the sleepy gurh into the circle as Quinby and Petal battle the other. Petal lowered her haed to ram it with her horns, but she being so tall and he being so short, managed to miss. Quinby managed to snag the moonstone back and then throw it into the circle, where it disappeared, sort of fading out of existence. They also get the other subterranean dwarves pushed into the circle after Quinby rustles through what little clothes they had, and they manage to get 7000 gold. 

And that was the entire evening: we started a bit late and talked more than played. I actually have a couple things in store shortly that will drive up the stakes for our characters. And yes, that 7000 gold really made no sense, but I was using a creature from Creature Feature Compendium, and it used one of the random treasure tables so I used that as-is. Really should have thought that part out a bit more as it gave everyone a bit more experience really than the encounter should have I think. But it is what it is.

Creature Feature Compendium
And it turns out after I did a screen shot, that there are actually VTT tokens with that book! So I should have used the one below!
the gurh

Some of the lore from that very fat book fit in with the moonstone: they needed that for energy, the food they were talking about. And it would have opened a portal to the hell-like demon plane they are worshiping. However, our characters have never met them before so the lore will be hidden lore until they try & possibly seek it out.

Pretty much where we left things. Amazingly this was the 10th session, so I am holding it together. As previously mentioned, the stakes are going to get a bit higher now that two of the characters have leveled up at least once. I need to look at those stats for Sharn as well to see how much this may help er level up. I think she has a good distance to go.

Characters in this scene

Petal Elmstrong, glaistig. Think this is a possible good image of how I see her:
ArtStation - Lookout

4 Gurh, thrown into the fairy circle. What could go wrong? Lore from the book:

These nasty creatures are known as Gurh. The name is drawn from their own debased tongue. They are indeed an offshoot of Dwarves that delved too deeply and became corrupted by the weird radiations they encountered in the bowels of the earth. While they may appear feral at first, they are not. However, their culture has mutated as much as their bodies. Although they still work metal and mine as their cousins do, these endeavors do not fill their lives as they do those of their mundane kin. The Gurh have long ago traded the pursuit of gold and honor for demon worship and dark magic.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

OSE Session 9: The Earth Stone

25th day of Haelhold. I will have to come up with some sort of year, though could do something more regional such as the 17th year of King Axehold's reign. Or get sort today's date (12/15/2023) converted to the Mayan calendar:

Long Count Date: 13.0.11.2.11

13 baktun; 13 X 144,000 days = 1,872,000 days

0 katun; 0 X 7,200 days = 0 days

11 tun; 11 X 360 days = 3,960 days

2 uinal; 2 X 20 days = 40 days

11 k'in; 11 X 1 day = 11 days

Tzolk'in Date: 11 Chuwen

Haab Date: 19 Mak

Lord of the Night: G6

Which is an interesting way to tell the day based on the number of days past some point in the past. Sort of like Unix time, which is the number of seconds since January 1, 1970. All dates have some sort of starting point. Well, everything has some sort of starting point really! I just need to figure out what I want as a starting point. Though it may change from kingdom to kingdom.

Game Recap

Continuing their exploration of the cave, Enoki finds a few gems stashed in one of the smaller caves leading off of the main area. The ancient remains of the boxes and desiccated remains of food, along with old mouse and rat droppings, appear to be all that remain of what was once used as a cold room. 

Sharn is harvesting parts of the dead ants while Enoki is exploring, and Baldur is keeping watch on what is going on. Quinby, getting bored, manages to cut off one of the mandibles, determined to make some sort of a weapon from it. He straps that to his back, and it is almost as long as he is tall.

Taking the lead, Quinby continues deeper into the cave. Where the ants came from, he notices something gleaming next to the candle he had thrown at the giant ants. There was various nuggets of gold, worth about 3000 gold pieces! Yes, there was a 30% chance and the players made that roll and the roll for the amount. And I cannot find where I had those ants described! I will have to go through the various books but it was not any at my desk (although thinking it may be one of the adventures that came with the OSE Kickstarter).

Even distributed out, that is a lot of gold. And it managed to get a second character to level up at the end of the session. Enoki, being a mushroom person, still has a way to go. But it will slow them down a bit as they move forward as I do need to re-read those encumbrance rules.

Seeing some glittering light, the adventurers see flickering blue lights in another cave. They are surrounding what looks to be a large, rough-cut ruby. About the size of a human fist, it seems as if it is glowing from its own inner light, but it could be the bluecaps surrounding it. A few of the dozen or so move towards the halfling, and a couple drop through the walls to look at Baldur, Enoki and Sharn. Other than their flickering light, they do not communicate.

Rembrandt style!

Think this halfling is too young but I liked the flames

Quinby, charismatic and clueless, starts to talk with the bluecaps. They seem to be sniffing around the pouch with the silver in it, and he first offers 50 silver pieces. The small fey huddle and guard the gem closer, apparently miffed at the offer. Quinby throws the entire bag of 1000 silver pieces to the ground, and the bluecaps leave the rock to hover about the silver. Seeing as the bluecaps seemed happy, Quinby takes up the moonstone and they start to leave the cave.

Seeing another side branch, but it is too small for anyone to fit through, Quinby decides that there must be something worthwhile on the other side. Fortunately, Baldur is prepared and does have a shovel. About an hour later they manage to wide it far enough for Quinby, with the rope around him again, to squeeze in. Getting partway into the next cave, he in confronted by a giant ant. Apparently, there is a nest of them here. The ant seems very guarded but not aggressive. After a few minutes of trying to get through, they decide to just leave the cave and head back to the clearing where their camp was.

Along the way, they spy two Kobolds to the north, the direction of their camp. Almost 200 yards off, they can see that the two lizard-folk did not want to be bothered and they seemed to dart off into the mountain scrub. Getting to where the pair of Kobolds disappeared, they could follow the trail for a bit before it petered out. None of the characters have any tracking skills. 

Deciding to move on, they get back to their campsite. The cows are mooing, and they can hear some soft humming or singing from the fields. While Sharn collects more of the mushrooms and plants, Enoki goes back to the pool and is again guided by small, cold hands to some rich pond mud. This will give him a +1 on healing the next week or so. The others see a beautiful woman in a long dress and a large hat moving in the cow fields. Quinby jumps over the fence to pet the cows, and Petal Elmstrong introduces herself. Baldur starts to speak with the cows, and while everyone else just hears moos, he finds that Petal is a good caretaker and they have not seen anything untoward. But they mostly concentrate on eating so rarely see a lot other than the grass in front of them. Quinby notices the small holes from the glaistig feeding on her cows, and pours over some of the water from his waterskin, and the holes cure right up.

Petal recognizes water enchanted by Verey Ambervale, and now feeling that these adventurers are good people, tells them a bit more about herself, and reveals herself as a glaistig. She also lets them know Verey is a naiad, not a goddess. Petal has wandered this realm for almost 200 years now. Enoki asks about the ley lines, and when Petal points out where they are and that two cross at the magic circle, he sets up roots on one of the lines. When asked if she has seen any elves, she gives a bit of an info dump about how my fantasy world works (and that of course is always subject to change).

The Elves are fey who have lived here for generations. Fey like Petal, who was originally from the Old World from the Fairy Circle, hold on to most of their innate magic and power. Elves are slowly losing their magic and immortality the longer they live in this mortal realm. Each generation is a bit weaker and shorter-lived. The wild fey that only visit this world may still be innately made of magic but return to their home to keep up their magic. The Old World, like this, is made up of many kingdoms, some wonderful, others cruel places. Most of the Elves who have moved here are from cruel places and are willing to trade an immortal life of cruelty and pain for a life where there may be joy and hope, even if not forever. And fey from the Old World live by their own rules and magics that may often seem cruel or capricious, but those that live forever will think differently. 

Finally, the moon starts to rise, and the group gets ready to place the moonstone into the fairy circle. When they hear a loud noise coming from near the mushrooms...

And yes, a lot of this is cribbed from various fantasy I have read over the years. I felt I needed to reconcile the High Elves of high fantasy with those that can be played in various RPGs. The Fantasy Trip makes Elves just people with pointy ears for the most part, and I feel that there must be a reason for the disconnect between the more ethereal Elves of various books and these. The same sort of thing applies to a lot of the various fantasy races in my world. 

Characters Met This Session

Bluecaps, fey described in the Professor Gilroy book and in the Wikipedia here.

Petal Armstrong, glaistig. Stats are available from Professor Gilroy's Guide to the Fey (and possible a few other places, including the guide to the Fey I expect next year)

2 Kobold travellers. The distance was too far to tell if they wer ethe same two met earlier. 

A large noise from near the magic circle. Which I need to figure out what I want to use...

Saturday, December 09, 2023

Spelunking My Library Part 4: Post College To Now

And post-college to now covers almost 40 years - 1986 is when I graduated. Yes, I am old. And cranky - get off my lawn! Alas, most of the Traveller players are old as most RPG gamers seem to gravitate to D&D and fantasy games. But that's okay - everyone should play what they want and there is new stuff all the time to try if you want to. But in my diving into my collection, I've come to realize I have enough and need to use and enjoy what I have now. Though I still may get the occasional new thing...

After college it was a couple of years before I found my way back to gaming. I was perusing a bookstore and found the big book reprint for the Alien Races.

So, I bought that, and my cardboard box of Traveller (and a few other games) started growing again. I then found the Asheville Gaming Club and got back into gaming with a like-minded group of people. I only had a motorcycle then, but my apartment was about 3 miles away, so I walked which was nice. I also started the liberal arts program at UNCA, as well as joining the YMCA's volleyball team. I did get a car not long after, and in fact I am still driving that red 1991 Toyota MR-2. T-Tops do come off in the summer!
Not my car, but what it looks like. Mine does have 270K miles on it and may be a bit rough riding but is still a lot of fun. Apparently, I like the stuff I got early in life and manage to hold on to them!

And as time went on, and I was gainfully employed, I started getting more Traveller stuff. I found the GURPS books and bought a lot directly from Steve Jackson Games (Far Trader was the first and my favorite, then I ended up getting the Nobles, Cutter and first alien book. Then a couple of the planetary guides: Glisten and Toberak). Somehow, I found BITS and managed to get four books: 101 Cargos had some really interesting and super-detailed cargo container rules which I started to implement in my cargo trade program, 101 Governments, 101 Corporations and 101 Rendezvous). 

Not that I really used a lot of this, but I enjoy reading and at least dreaming I could use it. And in fact, I have used a few bits and pieces of many of these books. Though the cutter book is a lot of fun to look over, even if that 6m payload is a lot like the Tardis, and bigger on the inside than the outside (sorry - that lower deck is going to be tiny at the bottom and wide at the top, and the upper deck the opposite. No way those plans really fit a 6m diameter tube! But still fun to imagine being in them).

Mongoose got the Traveller license, so I bought a lot of the Mongoose Traveller 1E books. I liked the updated rules and also that they were still mostly pretty close to Classic. And the cheap books reminded me of those early days as well. When 2E came out, while I bought that, I was not as impressed. It was a slightly better set of rules for some things, though still confusing. But they were also infusing a bit of the British ideas of SF in there, and if I want to play Judge Dread, I'll get a Judge Dread game. Yes, times have changed but I thought they were straying from what I consider Traveller. Plus the book was a LOT more expensive and started falling apart after only a few readings.

Then the T5 Kickstarter came out and was my first Kickstarter. I backed that Big Black Book and even got more dice as part of that. I was looking forward to that! It finally arrived and, despite being over 800 pages, was not really a playable game. He really needed a professional proofreader as there are a of issues. However - a lot of that is really very useful and I've borrowed parts of it for my games. I started backing way too many Kickstarters (why yes, I am a superbacker!) and backed the 2nd T5 book set. And I am still waiting, a decade or more later, for the promised players guide. While the 2nd revision was a bit better, and slip cased 3 volume set similar to the original 3 books, I just cannot reconcile a dice pool system versus 2d6 for Traveller. But still, there are a lot of interesting and useful mechanics in there that can apply to pretty much any game. And of course, the various makers which I've not spent enough time with.

I also backed several other Mongoose Kickstarter projects: the Great Rift and the Element Cruiser boxed sets. And both JTAS projects though I am also somewhat disappointed in those: mostly reprinting what was already done. The boxed sets are really, really nice in many ways. Why I've placed some of my recent games in the Great Rift - I have maps! However, I still cannot figure out how those pods for the cruiser actually work, and I also hate they just mirrored the sides for the most part. While that makes sense for some of the pods, others not so much. But still cannot see how those pods work exactly. Regardless, they are deck plans and I have spread them out on the floor to walk those various corridors. Though the landing bays and all that are all appear to be a single deck height which makes no sense to me either. I've pretty much stopped getting the Mongoose books: I think they are too expensive for what I am getting, and as evidenced here, I have more than what I need to play Traveller!

And finally, I've found some software that may work to store my library data. Zotera is an open-source library manager, and really not designed for exactly what I want to do but may suffice. Interestingly, despite having a lot of types of media, it was lacking magazines. It does have magazine articles, but not magazines. And it does not seem to have an editor to add more types of things. However - it is a SQLite db and, well, I am a developer. So I added the magazine type and thought it worked until it broke. Then I poked around a bit, and realized we also needed the fields for a type, such as author. I duplicated the book field types and it all seems to be okay. I may also see if I can add a new field type: game version. For Traveller this would be Classic, Megatraveller, Mongoose, T4, T5, Cepheus. However - it does support tags to I'll see if that works. Still not exactly what I want, so I still may end up making up my own at some point. I do like writing software that is fun, though my career has been in writing mostly boring software. But it does help my buy games!

My next delve will be the other games I have. Mostly The Fantasy Trip as I had that on college (well, the box games, and the advanced rules for Melee & Wizard, but never the actual In the Labyrinth rules. And of course, I did back that for the All-In when it was available, but that is a story for the next post!) But also another old-style game, Old School Essentials. Which I've been running and if you're reading my blog, you'll see the game updates. I am also hoping to run a TFT game next year in our face-to-face games so we can bring out the minis and other toys!

Wednesday, December 06, 2023

OSE Session 8: The Wild Hunt

Our group sets in for the evening, with Baldur taking the first shift. About halfway through the evening, he hears the sounds of hunting dogs off in the distance. When the baying seems to be getting closer, he wakens the group. A few moments later a soft glow and the sound of horse hooves comes from the up the mountain. Quinby decides to hide in a tree, ready to pounce, or at least safe amongst the leaves. A few moments later, Thiseas comes in to view for Baldur, Enoki and Sharn.

One version of Thiseas

"Are you all safe and present?" asks the large centaur. "As the great hunt is coming by attracted a bit by you, " he continues, looking over at Baldur. Quinby is quiet in the trees, and despite some broad hints, does not come down. 
"I'll shield you from Hern, the Horned God. He has been on the hunt in these mountains for something these last few weeks, and I think having one of his adherents here has helped drive him in this direction on this eve." With that, he says a few words and the staff he carries grows a bit brighter, casting a light on the adventurers. 
Outside the light, in the trees, Quinby holds tight to the tree as more than a dozen great hunting dogs run through the night airs, followed by a horned god almost 12 feet tall. Three of the dogs look at him, and as they race by, the great horned one also looks down at the halfling hiding in the trees. Inside Quinby's head, the voice of Sir Ignatius speaks with a fervor: "Close your eyes young halfling! Close your heart to those voices calling you to the great hunt!" Somehow Quinby holds on as the hounds and their master race up the mountains and are soon out of sight and hearing. 
from https://www.deviantart.com/velamir/art/Wild-hunt-419009265

When Quinby climbs back down the tree, his once dark hair is now an elegant silver, and there are fine wrinkles around his eyes. Sharn looked up at the halfling thief, and her eyes widened at the sight of changed him. Baldur tried to say something about Quinby's altered appearance, but Quinby managed to avoid listening or paying attention to anything anyone said. 

Thiseas explained he was watching and taking care of the Vele Hory Range, the mountains they are on. While he worships Tonna, he has no issues with a worshipper of Hern, the Horned God. The area they are in sits on a ley line, and that mushroom circle across the creek can be a dangerous place to be. And in fact, if they could do him a small favor, he would appreciate it and possibly help them in their time of need as well.

"There is an abandoned farm a couple miles up the path. There are some mischievous fey hiding in there, with a magic stone that needs to go into the mushroom circle at moonrise to put it back to the few world. I am too large to fit into the caves that were used as a cold storage room for the house that was there." He also told them that the water goddess was actually Verey Ambervale, a river Naiad. And he has twice, in the near decade he has been here, seen what looked to be the Salmon of Knowledge. He leaves soon after that, continuing is walks about the mountains.

The night remains calm, as most creatures are still hiding from the Wild Hunt. Sharn has the last shift, and the other wake up to the smell of pancakes and fried river trout. Eating a good breakfast, they hike up the mountain path and find the remains of the sign post. They manage to find most of what Sharn needs on their hike up the mountain, and the rest she can pick at the campsite when they return. Turning up the trail they see the remains of the house, and next to it a small entrance to the caves.

They do a bit of exploring, and then are attacked by three large ants. Large as in almost 6 feet long large. Not quite Them, but it was quite the battle. And Enoki somehow got hit twice with a natural 20! Fortunately, I did roll low on damage. And sadly, Sharn managed to critically fumble and whacked herself on her arm. She never did any damage! Yet they managed to kill the ants, and Enoki got a little bit of healing from the sole healing potion Sharn had. 
We stopped there for the evening, with the rest of the cave to be explored.

Characters Met

Thiseas of the Gallantos Herds of the Western  Fields, now a druid of Tonna.
Herm the Horned God, of the Wild Hunt
Verey Ambervale (river Naiad), who they actually met earlier but did not get her name
3 giant ants

Miscellaneous Notes

I sort of winged this one: one of the players asked if they could help the Druid, and having nothing really thought out, came up with returning that magic rock to the fairy ring basically. I found a map I had from Dyson and threw that out there. A random roll for the encounter turned out to be those giant ants. Which almost killed the group, and Enoki is almost mortally wounded again. Not sur ewhy those ants managed to do a natural 20 and Sharn kept rolling really low, including that 1 for a critical failure. She will be nursing that arm a few days!

And I really need to prep better if we are going to use Owlbear. I do have a LOT of various creature icons but I can never find the one I want when I need it (partially because they are in a few difference collections. I probably need to figure a better organizational process for this). I also had several books that fed into the adventure and world building, though it took me some time to find some of the passages I wanted.

So for the next session I need to finish that map, and throw in the mischievous fey, and figure a few more things. There is at least one more possible fey encounter in that glade. 

Quinby actually failed his save with the wild hunt, but rather than have him run off with the hunt, I just aged him about a decade. I left his stats alone, so there are no mechanical changes other than he now has silver hair and fine line around his eyes. I could have taken a bit of his level 18 charisma stat away but decided against that. I used the soul of Sir Ignatius to help him keep himself attached to the tree rather than that hunt.

Sunday, December 03, 2023

Holidays

Of course, 'tis the season for a lot of people in the real world. And in my OSE game, there are a few holidays it looks like (and I've not kept up as I planned to, so to recap for myself and my players. they are in the evening of the 24th day of Haelhold at the Glade).

In looking at the Dolmenwood calendar, the next day is the Feast of Gretchen, and in a few more days there will be the Feast of St. Galaunt. Of course, I am just using that calendar to help keep track of time and days for the players. Does it make sense to celebrate the holidays from what is, at least in my game world, a Kingdom far away from the woods? Holidays and celebrations of that ilk are really going to be kingdom-based I would think. And species/race/heritage-based (getting so difficult to name things now!) Possibly wider depending on the pantheon and if the gods and goddesses are revered in more than one kingdom. I've read many fantasy books where the gods are essentially localized: they are tied to some land or kingdom, and rarely go beyond that. Would their holidays, or holy days, extend beyond that? Just like a lot of our holidays are simple re-imaginings of what was pagan to make it fit the current theocracy as you do not want to take away people's celebrations if you want them happy. 

Anyway, sidetracked by the current holiday season and for me what is the normal stress of the season which is severely compounded by my current job that actually makes things, so this is our busy season for a heavily reduced IT work force that is plagued by out-of-date and badly maintained software that drives the business. 

But dragging myself back to what I keep trying to ask: does your RPG include holidays? Traveller of course has Day 0 and the Emperors Birthday (I think...seems to me there was another holiday?) But as there are thousands of worlds, there is probably a holiday every day (probably several!) going on somewhere on some system. Same for a fantasy game - if there are dozens of kingdoms, and if you have any gods, there are probably a lot of holidays. And how would you handle that?

Circling back to my current OSE game, what is the Feast of St. Gretchen? Who is she a saint of? None of the characters will know of this, and the one PC, Sharn, is an Orc. Making the assumption that this St. Gretchen is not an Orc saint, she would not care, even if she knows about it. Same for St. Galaunt. I can, of course, ignore these, but thinking that the group may see something when they get back to town. Though thinking Bellatrix may know something about them for some reason. And of course, with feast in the title, there will be food. Come to think of it, many holidays revolve around food. 

And this also brings up that many holidays are going to also be species-specific: Orcs, Goblins, whatever are going to have their own holidays and celebrations and memorial days. And like humans, it will not be across all groups, so we are opening up a lot of potential holiday confusion.

From Wikipedia:

While the English word saint originated in Christianity, historians of religion tend to use the appellation "in a more general way to refer to the state of special holiness that many religions attribute to certain people", referring to the Jewish ḥasīd or tzadik, the Islamic walī, the Hindu rishi or Sikh Bhagat and guru, the Shintoist kami, the Taoist shengren, and the Buddhist arhat or bodhisattva also as saints. Depending on the religion, saints are recognized either by official ecclesiastical declaration, as in the Catholic faith, or by popular acclamation (see folk saint).

Do I need to care why Gretchen or Galaunt are considered holy? And perhaps others, such as Fey, may consider them evil if their holiness was in driving out the Fey? Everything is relative!

I do have a book that I've used a few times (The Lesser Keys) that randomly generates the holy days. I think I've done that for some of my little pantheon. So, in looking back to the Centaur Druid that the characters are likely to meet, turns out he worships Tonna (from this post). And Tonna has a single holiday: The planting of crops at the end of winter is when Tonna's adherents celebrate. Quiet prayers at the edge of the crops at dawn and pouring out mead from the previous year's harvest. And it turns out I HAVE named this mountain range: Vele Hory Range.

Hopefully I can remember some of this for our game! And welcome to December 2023!