Technology In Your Game - Running RPGs

Ойындар

Characters armed with Cell Phones and the Internet can drastically change an adventure. Many Game Masters find Modern and Sci-Fi Settings intimidating, believing available technology gives the PCs too much of an advantage. Truth is, for every benefit technology gives the Player Characters, it also creates an obstacle. Here's several ideas and suggestions on how to incorporate modern technology into your Tabletop Roleplaying Game.
PATREON (Tip Jar): / sskorkowsky
A heartfelt thank you to my 221 Patrons for their continued support in making this channel possible.
______
CHECK OUT MY NOVELS
If you want to support my channel, or just want to read an action-packed Urban Fantasy about modern-day monster hunters and their sentient weapons, check out my four-novel Valducan series. They feature gun fights, sword fights, chases, monsters, and a smattering of horror. Audio book editions narrated by the badass R.C. Bray: amzn.to/3rehNnJ
I also write pulpy Sword & Sorcery thief adventures in my Tales of the Black Raven series. It's 21 short stories packed with action, intrigue, and daring heroics. Audio editions read by R.C. Bray. amzn.to/3faj4cX
And if you want a kickass and dark revenge story about a modern-day sorceress hunting across the multiverse for lost Carcosa, my novel Ashes of Onyx is available in print, ebook, and audio book: amzn.to/3sfh1IA
If you enjoyed my stories, please leave a rating or review on Amazon, Audible, and/or Goodreads
/ 4088554.seth_skorkowsky
__________
MY PUBLISHED RPG ADVENTURES
A Mother's Love (Call of Cthulhu 7e). This collection of adventures won the 2020 Gold ENnie Award for Best Digital Adventure Book: www.drivethrurpg.com/product/...
Mysteries on Arcturus Station (Mongoose Traveller 2e). This is two adventures. One is written by me, and the other is my update to J. Andrew Keith's brilliant Murder on Arcturus Station: www.drivethrurpg.com/product/...
And while I didn't write it (Marc Miller has that distinction), I did greatly expand and update the classic Traveller adventure Death Station to Mongoose 2e, which is TOTALLY FREE: www.drivethrurpg.com/product/...
__________
GOT DICE?
Check out the Q-Workshop Seth Skorkowsky RPG Icons Dice, a 10-die set that I designed with Q-Workshop: q-workshop.com/en/221-rpg-ico...
For individuals of the 12-sided D6: q-workshop.com/en/single-dice...
__________
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
I mostly ramble about movies, tabletop roleplaying games, and random other things as they occur to me:
/ sskorkowsky
__________
I HAVE A PODCAST
Check out the Modern Mythos Podcast where veteran RPG writer Jon Hook and I discuss horror and gaming, especially Call of Cthulhu: modernmythos.libsyn.com/?fbcl...
You can find the podcast on KZread as well (You should totally subscribe): / @modernmythos5229
__________
Guest starring The Gang
00:00 The Case of the Stolen Scroll
01:06 Intro
04:08 The Internet
09:12 Cell Phones
10:29 Using Technology Against the PCs
13:13 The Hotel Massacre
16:21 Risk of Losing
17:05 Explain Failed Rolls
18:00 Modern Adventure Examples
19:32 Technology Horror Seeds
20:30 Closing

Пікірлер: 489

  • @raynercoslop
    @raynercoslop Жыл бұрын

    one of the greatest moments that i've witnessed in a TTRPG: "hurry! i'm in fake st 123 and there's a monster locked in the other room! please send help!" "don't worry sir, we're sending a patrol car to your location, in the meantime avoid all contact with the fish monster" "oh thank- wait, how do you know it's a fish monster? I never specified that" "..." *dial tone* now he has two problems to worry about

  • @--enyo--

    @--enyo--

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice

  • @100nodog

    @100nodog

    Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic!

  • @Tomyironmane

    @Tomyironmane

    Жыл бұрын

    I love it.

  • @jesternario

    @jesternario

    Жыл бұрын

    Liking and Replying to reference.

  • @cygnia
    @cygnia Жыл бұрын

    Don't forget the sheer joy/danger of the intern running up the producer's credit cards!

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    "Another round of lobsters!"

  • @cygnia

    @cygnia

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky 🤣

  • @bordenfleetwood5773

    @bordenfleetwood5773

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky "Who ordered 23 sandwiches from the deli?!"

  • @Joemantler
    @Joemantler Жыл бұрын

    I like subverting the phone entirely in Horror. "911, what is your emergency?" "There is something killing people! Please send cops!" "Are you safe at the moment?" "Yes, I'm hidden." (voice changes) "Where are you hidden, exactly? Is it the closet on the third floor? Should I look for you there?" "Wait... what?" "I'm coming to get you, Susan! MUAHAHA!"

  • @Xingmey

    @Xingmey

    Жыл бұрын

    that's amazing!

  • @xaptor8685

    @xaptor8685

    Жыл бұрын

    “911, what is your emergency?” “We’ve been robbed, our house is robbed!” “I’ll see what I can do, help is on the wa-“ *disruption* “Hello?” *disruption clears* “…” “Where is Jessica Hyde?”

  • @jamesrickel3814

    @jamesrickel3814

    Жыл бұрын

    Have the call be answered in the future. "What are you talking about? that building burned down 25 years ago. Everyone inside were killed"

  • @Joemantler

    @Joemantler

    Жыл бұрын

    Have the operator stay on the line with them, dropping clues from the very sketchy forensics.

  • @paleposter

    @paleposter

    Жыл бұрын

    There was a scene like this in the recent movie Smile, fun little part

  • @alexbarrett3832
    @alexbarrett3832 Жыл бұрын

    I love the idea that the pc says "I'm going to hack the system" and the GM replies: " sure, you send out a few million phishing emails, role to see how soon somebody falls for it... "

  • @--enyo--

    @--enyo--

    Жыл бұрын

    I liked the real life example of dropping all the USBs outside the office and waiting for someone to plug it into their computer. 😂

  • @dustincameron787
    @dustincameron787 Жыл бұрын

    I love how, on rewatching, you understand why Mike is laughing his ass off during the spy fight 😁

  • @kainthedragon1

    @kainthedragon1

    Жыл бұрын

    The "after credits" bit was amazing!

  • @gbgamer9474
    @gbgamer9474 Жыл бұрын

    I also enjoyed one of the early Buffy episodes where a demon was released into their network due to being scanned into the computer and that scanning counted the same as reading the book out loud.

  • @twitchew

    @twitchew

    Жыл бұрын

    i was thinking about if the file is checked by antivirus software as another option to trigger/read a spell

  • @aubreyackermann8432

    @aubreyackermann8432

    Жыл бұрын

    @@twitchew I wonder if transferring the dormant file being moved to the trash folder would count as mispronouncing it all

  • @MrHullRockers
    @MrHullRockers Жыл бұрын

    If the characters google some really specific information like star alignments 9623 years ago, you could always have the website ask "Star alignment checker wants to use your current location", now that could be entirely innocent but it could also have been triggered by some algorithm that cultists have created to warn of snooping investigators.

  • @--enyo--

    @--enyo--

    24 күн бұрын

    That’s great.

  • @ljmiller96
    @ljmiller96 Жыл бұрын

    On the loss of signal front, I'm in the network biz and other than deep underground or inside a steel ship the worst place to get a cell signal is a multi-storey building with a lot of copper wire in the ceiling connecting PCs and phones, especially if the original Cat4 cable was abandoned in place when Cat5e or Cat6 was pulled to replace it. It forms a partial faraday cage that thoroughly blocks communications. The only way to connect is to be able to connect to the wireless network in the building, and building networks are normally protected with a password and maybe a badge with mag-chip as well. Cheers!

  • @Rubymagicalgirl88

    @Rubymagicalgirl88

    Жыл бұрын

    Or shopping malls which I presume have the same issue?

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Old shopping malls are the perfect storm of being artificial caves of concrete while also the faraday cage of copper wiring.

  • @--enyo--

    @--enyo--

    Жыл бұрын

    My hometown in regional Australia still has issues.

  • @justmutantjed

    @justmutantjed

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Rubymagicalgirl88 Basically yeah. I work in a liquor store inside a mall. It's not *incredibly* old (built 1985, one year younger than I am) but in the store's walk-in beer cave, my phone gets NO service whatsoever. Building's exterior is concrete, there's heavy insulation covered by metal sheeting on the walls and ceiling of the walk-in... yeah.

  • @charlesmclain6558

    @charlesmclain6558

    Жыл бұрын

    Hospitals are notoriously bad in my area, to top it off, the WiFi in those places are generally the weakest in terms of speed I have ever seen.

  • @Jebbis
    @Jebbis Жыл бұрын

    This reminds me a lot of the episode of The Venture Brothers when the clue was “The house that coke built” and they thought it was Studio 54 because they looked it up on the internet. The riddle was however written in the 19th century and Studio 54 didn’t exist and, it actually was in reference to a coal tycoons mansion. Because coke was a byproduct of coal distillation.

  • @andrewlance3898
    @andrewlance3898 Жыл бұрын

    I once played in a Buffy-esque modern campaign. A number of characters got into magic, which required 1) unlikely materials andtime-consuming rituals, and 2) you to have the ritual instructions on your person. To address the second situation, we took pictures of spells on our phones and largely ignored spellbooks afterwards

  • @patrickoshea2525
    @patrickoshea2525 Жыл бұрын

    I think my favourite ‘cameras are a thing’ moment was in a Star Wars RPG where we managed to pull off a successful raid on an Imperial facility, no losses or even serious injury, and as we were headed back to our getaway ship, the GM asked “So…did anyone think to wear a mask or anything?” To our credit, we all admitted that we hadn’t thought of that. And the chase was on! Loved this episode!

  • @zidahya
    @zidahya Жыл бұрын

    "Maybe they burned down a building" *Harry Dresden vibes intesifies*

  • @kxx6626
    @kxx6626 Жыл бұрын

    Seth my only complaint for your channel is the fact that I can not stop watching it. I am starting a traveller campaign rn, and this was extremely helpfull. Keep up the good work!

  • @robinrichardson5243
    @robinrichardson5243 Жыл бұрын

    Other episodes of this series... * Pre-writing age adventures that would have been solved with writing * Bronze age adventures that would have been solved with iron age metallurgy * Renaissance adventures that would have been solved with electricity Etc... (LOL) Regardless, thank you for another thought-provoking & inspirational video essay!

  • @andyraff4465
    @andyraff4465 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. When I'm running a modern game I just let the players use their personal phones to check the internet. Had a great Mage:Awakening campaign in which the PCs knew the *mundane* stuff about what was going on but still needed their skill rolls to know the *magic* stuff that lead into.

  • @luska5522

    @luska5522

    Жыл бұрын

    That's how you do it.

  • @SymmetricalDocking

    @SymmetricalDocking

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends on the year of the campaign. Search engines were allowed to get accurate results pre-2014. But if you're playing in 2022 it's completely fine to let them use their own phones. They're not very likely to find anything useful.

  • @Caitlin_TheGreat

    @Caitlin_TheGreat

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SymmetricalDocking Yeah, that's something that few people would have predicted back in the 00's or early 10's --- the modern internet is very, very difficult to get true information from. You can do it, but it really is a special skillset that has to be developed and it can be very time consuming to comb through a mountain of information that is largely false or half-true to figure out what's actually useful and accurate -- and have to figure out what sort of extreme biases may be at play that also can warp the validity of the info. And paywalls... which themselves are no indication of accurate information, really, just that the information is being monetized.

  • @thevoidcritter

    @thevoidcritter

    Жыл бұрын

    This is more or less how I do things for my Vampire: the Masquerade campaign

  • @midshipman8654
    @midshipman8654 Жыл бұрын

    im impressed you know some if that stuff about older records! I worked at a research library for a bit over covid, and we used that time to digitize a lot of stuff you would think would be already be there. like records from the 1700s and 1800s. there is a lot of stuff that isnt there just because it takes real man hours to translate physical material to digital. and internet literacy and navigation is definitely a learned skill. knowing what forums or subforms are good or bad for x topic, where to even find them, or what to even search for and whats legit.

  • @Tetrahedral-Justin

    @Tetrahedral-Justin

    Жыл бұрын

    I did an internship this summer where I digitized early 20th century medical records. Even with a specialized scanner, it took a *long* time to scan everything properly. Like, a few weeks of work. And even then, the end result was a folder of TIFF files (albeit in order) that someone else had to make searchable. The records weren't even that old, only a century or so, but I still had to be careful not to damage the original.

  • @paleposter

    @paleposter

    Жыл бұрын

    I helped an archivist over a summer or so a few years ago, and even stuff from say 50 years ago needed to be put into the system. Definitely a lot of specific things related to counties and smaller areas that can be googled out there.

  • @l0stndamned
    @l0stndamned Жыл бұрын

    Some very good points there. I've used the DNA after a fight thing in an urban fantasy game a few years ago. The party were breaking into a bank at night to find a relic hidden there only to find a gang of fae working for the Big Bad was also trying to break in at the same time. Much fighting ensued, leading to all bar one of the party taking wounds before the enemy went down. The players thought they'd come up with a plan to make it look like the gang killed each-other due to in-fighting. I later revealed that no-one believed this as not only were some items missing from the vault but there was plenty of forensic evidence that the players hadn't bothered to clear up like blood-stains and shell-casings. This was a problem as one of the PCs had a drawback that meant the FBI had her DNA on file. Oddly the character who didn't get wounded was the one with no blood to leave behind (he was a gargoyle).

  • @JustinAquino
    @JustinAquino Жыл бұрын

    This is more like bringing the GM's research skill up to date. When you mentioned allowing them to use hacking, I realize the GM needs to learn the limits of what is the typical practice.

  • @cadenceclearwater4340
    @cadenceclearwater4340 Жыл бұрын

    Perhaps a critical hit won't kill a player, but the phone in their chest pocket deflects the blow. Saving them, destroying their tech.

  • @luska5522

    @luska5522

    Жыл бұрын

    Why desenpower a player with from a basic stuff like a phone? He can just buy another one

  • @cadenceclearwater4340

    @cadenceclearwater4340

    Жыл бұрын

    @@luska5522 He can. But he may have to wait 2 hours for the initial updates to finish 😏

  • @spacedinosaur8733

    @spacedinosaur8733

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cadenceclearwater4340 Or wait for the store to open. Hopefully they got the full warranty.

  • @cadenceclearwater4340

    @cadenceclearwater4340

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spacedinosaur8733 or they could break in 😬

  • @jaredragland4707

    @jaredragland4707

    Жыл бұрын

    Loss of cat videos entails loss of sanity. Doesn't matter what genre you're playing.

  • @sethtruesdale1848
    @sethtruesdale1848 Жыл бұрын

    I once had a call of cthulhu campaign centered around a mind altering video that had gone viral online and a large chunk of that adventure was avoiding seeing this video as it started even appearing on bilboards and the news as the virus spread further throughout the city, ultimately leading to its victims trying to hold the PCs down and force them to watch

  • @drskelebone
    @drskelebone Жыл бұрын

    That is 100% my first cell phone as well. I lost it when I had to use it wedge a door shut to keep a bunch of Mi-Go trapped in the office building while we escaped via car. I miss that phone, but rest easy knowing those Mi-Go have never escaped that building.

  • @elianisthebrave6988
    @elianisthebrave6988 Жыл бұрын

    My upcoming pathfinder 2e game is set in a 'modern' time of Golarion, so having more advice to run technology is always nice.

  • @Zulk_RS
    @Zulk_RS Жыл бұрын

    I'm planning to run my very first Shadowrun game after years of running only 5E DnD so this video is really helpful.

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Best of luck.

  • @Zulk_RS

    @Zulk_RS

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky Thanks man.

  • @UndeadGirlCyber

    @UndeadGirlCyber

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Zulk_RS If you're running SR 5e and need resources to make prepping easier, let me know. I wrote myself a document that calculates host attributes, spirit attributes and makes balancing the difficulty of character sheets for enemies slightly easier (by tying professionality rating to set attribute and skill points). Love the game, but the rule book is so badly edited and hard to get into ;_;

  • @Zulk_RS

    @Zulk_RS

    Жыл бұрын

    @@UndeadGirlCyber Thank you for the offer. I actually finished running the game by now. It was a very short one-shot where my one player that agreed to play had to figure out who kidnapped an pop singer and then rescue her from the Eye-Fivers. And I agree, the rules are really hard to get into. I think I had to homebrew some rules in and out just to make sure combat doesn't take forever (No more rolling initiative every turn; consecutive attacks don't give the -1 to dodge; groups of enemies of the same stats just act as a group together)

  • @UndeadGirlCyber

    @UndeadGirlCyber

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Zulk_RS Aye, alright :) yeh, good idea with the house rules. And the hook sounds very fun! I hope you had a great time.

  • @jovax0450
    @jovax0450 Жыл бұрын

    Lmao i love how at 13:58 you can see all three of the players swearing at the realization of what they just learned

  • @Dragoon7485
    @Dragoon7485 Жыл бұрын

    This is something I really like about the Dresden system in particular -- exposure to magic tends to break anything more complicated than an old car, so the characters can almost never rely on cell phones or the internet unless they go on a mini-sidequest to talk to someone and get them to do it.

  • @jingbot1071
    @jingbot1071 Жыл бұрын

    This is why Mike Pondsmith's "fragmented internet" idea is genius.

  • @reifuTD

    @reifuTD

    Жыл бұрын

    The makes sense, Now a days what we know as the internet data base, servers are like over seas like in china or something. A world full world war breaks out the internet as we know it is gone and the data base would have to be decentralized specially if wideband commination gets blocked. I like the dystopian idea of like their being a sever in New York and a server in LA and to share data from one to the other someone in a server truck would have to download from New York drive to LA and Upload, redownload and drive back to New York to upload there.

  • @jingbot1071

    @jingbot1071

    Жыл бұрын

    @@reifuTD That's an entire campaign, right there. Thanks.

  • @Wendelvendel

    @Wendelvendel

    Жыл бұрын

    This also works really well for traveller. Good shout

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    I love the idea of PCs trying to intercept the mobile server truck to either install or delete something before it arrives. Difficult part is pulling it off without anyone knowing they were ever there.

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    Жыл бұрын

    @@reifuTD dude read about BBS. I imagine this working in a very similar system! and really, as @aegone said up there, that would work very well for Traveller!!!

  • @starship2277
    @starship2277 Жыл бұрын

    I ran a Delta Green scenario set in July 2016 and my players used Pokemon Go as a bit of social engineering. They got contacts at the NSA to make the town a hot spot of rare Pokemon and posted it on Reddit. This being the peak of the Pokemon go phase hundreds of people flooded the town giving them more cover to do their investigation. It was amazing

  • @bossman4799
    @bossman4799 Жыл бұрын

    This video will be really useful. I just started a modern day Call of Cthulhu game so I’ll have to navigate the players tech use. One player is a hacker, so I plan to place some obstacles for them. They did just finish a scenario where they didn’t have a signal, but they are government agents and were sealed in a facility with some other characters for security purposes so it made sense to everyone.

  • @deboragrenzel5201
    @deboragrenzel5201 Жыл бұрын

    I posted this in another comment, but I want people to see it, so I'm posting it here again: As a GM who has successfully run Intimate Encounters, I have an idea for other GMs (players, look away): in the original scenario, the monster is always looking for victims of the opposite sex, making him kind of heterossexual. This didn't make sense to me, since the creature wasn't even human. So I mixed up the prior victims, making him "kind of" bissexual. Without knowing anything about the scenario, one of my players had decided to have a fat character. So when they figured the bad guy was using a dating app (I also changed it to Tinder, because it's the main one people use in Brazil, or at least where I live), they decided to use him as bate. At first I didn't love the idea, but then they got 1 in the luck roll, and they were in the correct area, and it was soooo much fuuuuuun watching my player try to flirt in a closed motel room with a person he thought was a human serial killer. It was so worth it I would definitely recommend to every GM who runs this adventure!

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much. I've got this comment copied and will be sharing it in my eventual review for the adventure.

  • @TipsyFlipper
    @TipsyFlipper Жыл бұрын

    I love watching Magnum PI but could you imagine how short every episode would have been if Magnum had a cell phone instead of just red Ferrari-ing everywhere.

  • @euansmith3699

    @euansmith3699

    Жыл бұрын

    Magnum on the phone, "Hi, I need to report a crime..." Operator, "I'm sorry, I can't understand you. I can only hear a rustling noise." Magnum, "Darn, foiled, by my luxurious moustache, once more!"

  • @TipsyFlipper

    @TipsyFlipper

    Жыл бұрын

    @@euansmith3699 Yes... the wind blasting through the convertible across the lip bush would probably ruin reception 🤣😂🤣

  • @keithparker1346

    @keithparker1346

    10 ай бұрын

    I'm reminded of MAD magazines parody...Dumbass Magnumb

  • @UnwalledGarden
    @UnwalledGarden Жыл бұрын

    As short format videos infect other KZread channels, I’m grateful for your continued full length and in depth videos. They never fail to both inform and entertain.

  • @captainhuman
    @captainhuman Жыл бұрын

    One of the first games I played with my current group was an urban fantasy game where we played as members of an organization dedicated to keeping the supernatural a secret and containing or destroying hostile monsters and mages. Think SCP Foundation, if you’re familiar. One of the most memorable parts of that game was when, during our investigation of a “miracle healer” in a rural town, we had to deal with a group of reporters who’d come to cover that same story. The modern day setting was what made this encounter interesting: we knew that as soon as the event was over, they’d be able to send their recordings back to the station where we wouldn’t be able to stop them being released. But, if anyone caught us trying to sabotage the footage, we risked being recorded ourselves. So we had a ticking clock for the operation while still needing perfect stealth. I’m actually very proud of how we handled it as players. Once we got access to the news vans, we realized that stopping the recording entirely without the camera operators noticing would be extremely difficult. So, inspired by the infamous blurriness of every real life cryptid photo, we just had our hacker turn the resolution on the recording down from 1440p to 140p. The footage was completely unusable, and it was subtle enough that the reporters had no idea until it was too late to do anything about it.

  • @songsayswhat
    @songsayswhat Жыл бұрын

    Here's a great real world example. I had to get a copy of my high school diploma (don't ask me why since I have a college degree, but workplace wanted it). I went to school out of state. Contacted my old high school only to find out that all records had been sent to the local Department of Education which had a storage fire 10 years ago. All records before that time were lost.

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055
    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055 Жыл бұрын

    at my table we are playing a game that takes place in the present and in the city where i live, one thing i have been doing is using information that my players can search the internet in real life to create my creatures and mysteries, being able to find relevant information or not . another thing I did was create some blogs with stories about the world, with photohop handouts of old newspapers, photos of places and such

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, sorry​ Seth, I understand that you prefer that we don't post links, I won't do it again, sorry by the way, great video!!! using modern technology in game is difficult but very interesting, just in our latest adventures my players checked whatsap conversations to find out who suspects were talking to and what, used a video of a girl singing to identify a ghost, in addition to using some of the blogs I created for our campaign with information about the history of the region, Photoshopped handouts of old newspapers and photos of places

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Did some link of yours not post? Cause I didn't delete anything.

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky no problems, but it was nothing important, it was the blog link I mentioned in the comment above I thought it was you, because the previous comment was gone too, sorry for assuming, but now I think it's youtube itself by the way, nothing to do with it: your content is great!!!

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    No worries. I'd have assumed it, too. Sometimes KZread flags stuff for me to approve. Other times I never know something got deleted unless someone mentions it.

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky anyway, I will avoid links from now on, even if they are broken, it seems, if only to give you less trouble in approving or not a comment!😊 but it's a shame, i was so proud of the journal i made in photoshop, hahahaha anyway, it's always great to have a new video of yours to watch

  • @WoobooRidesAgain
    @WoobooRidesAgain Жыл бұрын

    The first thought I had when it came to your intro was that a lot of people just sort of expect a Google Translate on an ancient language would work flawlessly, when in reality, languages - especially ancient pictographic languages - require additional cultural context to get a full understanding. Many languages even have words and concepts that don't translate clearly. And even if you can, that context may be specific or even completely altered with the passing of centuries. This is why Ancient Egyptian was nigh-indecipherable until the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, because so much of it required understanding the context of images created by a culture that no longer exists, which only became possible once we discovered a translation into extant or more well-documented languages. And the kicker of it is, machine translation is _really_ bad at picking up on this, because even the most advanced modern computers lack cultural or linguistic context for things like slang terms or metaphor. Good example being how early machine translation would take a metaphor like "out of sight, out of mind" and turn them into things like "in the place where it is not visible, from the heart". Modern translators are better, but tend to struggle if the languages aren't directly linguistically related (i.e: Spanish to Italian vs. Spanish to Japanese). So the example in the intro could easily see the player getting a translation result like "The white birds of Set who arrive on the birth of Thoth during the Flood" and either having to roll Ancient Egyptian to get a better idea of the context, or waste potentially valuable time to send that to someone who would know what the context of that means.

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. The reliability of whatever information that technology yields should always be suspect.

  • @FluffyTheGryphon
    @FluffyTheGryphon Жыл бұрын

    This is good stuff. I've got a group of players that like to play the "I hack it" game with every single thing. That was how my Star Wars game went, anyway. I'm prepping a cyberpunk game soon and I need to make sure "I hack it" isn't going to be the go-to solution for every single obstacle.

  • @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    @gabrielcarelidealmeida7055

    Жыл бұрын

    i had this exact problem in a cyberpunk 2020 campaign, the player had made a netrunner very well, and usually, even by my unpreparedness, we were very young too, usually they would stop the van near the place, stand guard and the netrunner would run out to solve 90% of the problem there, what I did was create missions in places with low technology, or more analog technology, like forests or slums, I always left something that the netrunner could do, of course, but I put obstacles for him, so way that the group had to physically go somewhere to solve things, that helped a lot, with star wars and the retrofuturism of the technology of their universe is an idea very capable of working too

  • @AlbertaGeek

    @AlbertaGeek

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey, let them "hack it", but homebrew random time-frames for accomplishing that. Player: "I hack the military-grade mainframe!" GM: "Okay, roll 3d6 to see how many days it takes you."

  • @jshud3
    @jshud3 Жыл бұрын

    This is also why having a time limit in a game/adventure is good... yeah you can go do all the research, fact finding and hacking you want... but in the meantime... things are happening.

  • @SerpenThrope
    @SerpenThrope Жыл бұрын

    I'm kind of shocked that You're Next is the only slasher movie I'm aware of where the villains just outright used a cell phone jammer. It's a logical fix that shows the villains have planned ahead.

  • @rodneykelly8768
    @rodneykelly8768 Жыл бұрын

    There's an "Altered Carbon" play-through on "HyperRPG," that displays using the wireless internet within the confines of a table run. It's more a Cyberpunk type environment, but it does show the players finding information wile avoiding the authorities.

  • @PrinceBoo21
    @PrinceBoo21 Жыл бұрын

    This one is fantastic. This is something I personally struggle with whenever I consider writing a modern day cthulhu scenario, but I always wondered how to deal with tech in an effective way. These methods are not just logical, but very simple and easy to implement

  • @GrimDarkHalfOff
    @GrimDarkHalfOff Жыл бұрын

    Tech is why for anything CoC or WoD I always go with 1990s backward for time period.

  • @Xingmey
    @Xingmey Жыл бұрын

    AKCHUALLY! the sketch at the start is hilarious ;) no worries seth, most of us got it.

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks. I ended up removing that disclaimer comment, as the only thing worse than not being 100% clear on the internet is letting the trolls see how annoyed you're getting with their trollishness.

  • @woobackwednesday2299
    @woobackwednesday2299 Жыл бұрын

    Impeccable timing, Seth. I am planning on running the same scenario Troy from the GCN ran for you guys in that two-shot this weekend

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    Best of luck! Hope you all have as much fun as we did.

  • @katking9574
    @katking9574 Жыл бұрын

    use supernatural as a good example of how to reconcile technology with paranormal stuff.

  • @clayfare9733
    @clayfare9733 Жыл бұрын

    The panicked players during the voice over looked like it took a lot of work to put together for a background joke and I just have to comment to say how great it was. Had me rolling.

  • @rkfm4089
    @rkfm4089 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, great video! In a lot of ways this is really a "how to integrate 'cell phones' into modern/sci-fi settings" which by itself is an amazing GM tip.

  • @justinsinke2088
    @justinsinke2088 Жыл бұрын

    It is amazing how "turnabout is fair play" is something that both sides of the screen can forget; you have players falling into classic fantasy habits of doing things and augmenting that with modern technology, completely forgetting that they're not the only ones with access to that tech, while GMs keep the basic structure of fantasy plots which then get holes poked through them because they too forget that players can do that as well as the NPCs. I think part of it is that there's so much technology we take for granted that people can forget just how much it can affect things outside of boring, mundane uses. It's something you have to be conscientious about as opposed to fantasy or tech beyond our reach which you can't take for granted because it's not something you interact with on a daily basis, making overlooking such mundane things an easy trap to fall into. And yes, research isn't a quick and easy process, at least not when it's something potentially sensitive or relatively private. Any info that you can find in a couple minutes should at best be at the level of a clue pointing players in the right direction as opposed to a smoking gun. Another note on hacking is that isolated networks are a thing as well. It's not like if you have an internet connection you can access any computer in the world if your skills are "leet" enough. Sometimes you have to be on site where that information is stored to access that system, and the process of both getting on location and finding an access point can be notable challenges even before you start the proper "hacking". As for "calling the cavalry", there's also the issue that if the players try to tell the naked truth in a horror or supernatural plot, they might get dismissed as a prank call as well.

  • @scottknudsen6611
    @scottknudsen6611 Жыл бұрын

    This is a very timely video for me personally. By player request we’re about to move our CoC campaign from the 1930s into the modern day and I’ve been fretting over several of the exact points you cover. Helpful stuff as always!

  • @euansmith3699

    @euansmith3699

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure that cults and anti-cult groups would have bots monitoring internet traffic for any comments of interest and tracking them back to their source.

  • @NoFlu
    @NoFlu Жыл бұрын

    About using online communities: I ran The Haunting a few years back with the suggested modern day Ghost Hunter Show, you mentioned in your review, but it was a YT-Ghost hunter show, similar to the setup in Viral. The hook was that all these old newspaper reports about the haunted house were becoming the new hot thing on Reddit and 4chan paranormal communities, with the latter giving them a tip, that the house was located in his old hometown, and it always creeped him out. One of the Newspaper reports was an actual clue from the adventure, the others just random soft-news garbage. It was pretty fun, especially when they filmed themselves killing Corbitt and basically Breaking and Entering (made them roll to see how well their recording was) best shot was when the cameraman got hit by the bed attack and filmed himself falling out of the 1st floor window. Anyway, after they uploaded it, there were a lot of videos giving explanations for the practical/digital effects they used. Additionally, some details in their videos changed, meaning someone had edited the video online, adding signs of photoshopping/editing in it to make it look more fake.

  • @vertigq5126
    @vertigq5126 Жыл бұрын

    These suggestions were fantastic man! Thanks for the great content. Keep it up! :)

  • @ThenameisMarsh
    @ThenameisMarsh Жыл бұрын

    I recently started reading your Valducan series and I gotta say, I see a lot of parallels between your tips in this video and some of the plot points in that series. Very good books btw, I'm loving them.

  • @EzekialRagel
    @EzekialRagel Жыл бұрын

    A horror movie series "V H S" does a great job making tech insidious. Perfect for CoC modern.

  • @TurboWulfe
    @TurboWulfe Жыл бұрын

    Dude, great examples. I can't thank you enough for this. I am always grateful when DM's get info from one another. Take care 😎 🤘 🍻

  • @sirguy6678
    @sirguy6678 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video! Excellent perspective from a master game master on how keepers can modernize their CoC games

  • @perrygrosshans8537
    @perrygrosshans8537 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video! Great ideas, great solutions, just great all around. And I was killing myself laughing with the Traveler elevator meet and shoot story, lol!

  • @Stephen-Fox
    @Stephen-Fox Жыл бұрын

    Fully agree - There are absolutely some story types and adventures that can't be done with modern or future tech, but there are a whole bunch that can only be done with modern or future tech as well. And, well, that's just true of any tech level for a setting.

  • @GryphonDes
    @GryphonDes Жыл бұрын

    Well thought out, insightful and fun -- just what I have come to adore about your vids! Added to my favorites for handy reference in the future too!

  • @tokyobear
    @tokyobear Жыл бұрын

    Really helpful for me Seth, especially as I was wondering whether to start my new mystery campaign in modern day or back in the pre-Net/mobilephone 80s. Your suggestions help me feel more confident now of starting off modern day, which is what I want to do. Loved the anecdote about shooting up the bad guys outside the elevator and then having to hide out in a flophouse. Brilliant video Seth.

  • @mrs.mccoige8257
    @mrs.mccoige8257 Жыл бұрын

    The technology complications are great and all, but they can go overboard quick. I was playing in a "hidden superheroes" game where the DM made life a living hell for doing anything. Everyone has cameras, you can't use any powers or you're caught. Police are called at any suspicious thing. Police helicopters, security cameras, tracking, the works. We literally couldn't do anything without three sessions of trying not to get caught and getting back undercover and trying to cover our tracks. It was soooo tedious. Obviously any DNA left behind would mean we would get immediately disappeared. It made the game completely unplayable. We either had to just say, "screw it" and go loud and just be an out superhero team and extremely public (which would just be a big "haha" to the DM and we didn't want to be player vs DM), or literally say, "Oh well, we have cool powers. Whatever. Let's just go be normal people and not follow any plots because what's the point?"

  • @verityverri6506
    @verityverri6506 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, great content and absolutely great musical taste, Seth.

  • @cvtuttle
    @cvtuttle Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video with tons of great insight. One of your best.

  • @catyear75
    @catyear75 Жыл бұрын

    I keep my COC games set no later than 1970’s , and that was pretty much a one adventure thing. Happily for me my players prefer 1890’s era settings . My fave as well !

  • @keithparker1346

    @keithparker1346

    10 ай бұрын

    Tbh I think technology spoils horror

  • @edpistemic
    @edpistemic Жыл бұрын

    You are endlessly inventive! So many great ideas. Keep up all your great work.

  • @DjigitDaniel
    @DjigitDaniel Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video as always, sir. As for the anoraks in the audience... bless your hearts and may you reap what you sow.

  • @sloefox4065
    @sloefox4065 Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always Seth! This does a great job of highlighting precisely who I love running more modern scenarios, technology opens up so many interesting doors both for the players but also for the GM. And when specifically talking about Call of Cthulhu I personally find the horror far more effective when set in a time period my players can relate to, using something like the 1920s can be fun from a thematic standpoint, but it often just ends up being a caricature that detracts from the immersion.

  • @georgecook83
    @georgecook83 Жыл бұрын

    This is such a great video. Good job man.

  • @quarkbent9165
    @quarkbent9165 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your insight once more, Seth. :) I love the closing remark, sometimes people will only learn by their own mistakes.

  • @medmelancholy
    @medmelancholy Жыл бұрын

    Really great video! Having run D&D for most of my life, even though I've always tried not to let technology in modern settings be an issue, I feel that I definitely still fell for some of these pitfalls with technology before, especially when running WoD or Cthulhu. But you've definitely given me really wonderful ideas I hadn't previously though of, so thanks a bunch. Seeing you talk about the enemies/monsters themselves using technology reminded me of the one Call of Cthulhu adventure I think I managed to do it right. I ran an adapted version of The Music of the Spheres (a scenario from the Stars Are Right book). Basically, an astronomical research station picks up radio signals from an outer god (Ghroth), and since they keep recording and playing these alien frequencies down here, the earth is starting to "resonate" and emit a similar "song". Which is bad news - it leads to strange weather, hallucinations, psychosis, zombielike animals and whatnot. In my scenario I made it so that these signals were actually creating interference and getting mixed with regular radio programming broadcast by radio antennas, resulting in the local stations to occasionally have their broadcast cut off into this warped and hellish "music". I created audio recordings for these and played them for my group when they came across these transmissions, using a mix of recordings of regular broadcasts, number stations and those planet songs recorded by NASA. For that entire scenario, as soon as my players figured out the connection of the supernatural events and the radio, they became absolutely terrified and paranoid of anything that could pick up signals at all. We still have a chuckle remembering one particular moment, when the car's radio began playing one of these when they were traveling. Just between us, it wasn't going to do them any harm, it was just for some exposition and flavor. But the way they freaked out was just something else, so much that after noticing that the radio couldn't be turned off (I'm a bully, I admit) they ended up ripping off the entire radio. Fun times!

  • @squeethemog213
    @squeethemog213 Жыл бұрын

    This video is a godsend. Been running cyberpunk red for my group and this will drastically help my dming. Thanks Seth 😃

  • @potatoalsopotato8378
    @potatoalsopotato8378 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video Seth, it really helps with running modern stuff and raises some points i didn't even think about! As someone currently running my first campaign (COC, near-future sci-fi) and basing most of the adventures on 1920s adventures, remembering technology being a thing was a bit shocking (in spite of it literally being one of the main selling points of the campaign in question) but has been more of a blessing than a curse. my favourite moments (mostly brought about by player ingenuity) so far are: -using cameras and a drone to patrol a supermall overnight. the mall was slowly filling with hallucinogenic gas as the night goes on, meaning the PCs start seeing all sorts of funky stuff the more time they spend outside the hermetically sealed camera room. the cameras were part of the original scenario (wrote it myself, kinda proud) and were supposed to be cheap and rundown, with lacking maintenance over several years, and as such not being completely reliable, but when the players brought in a freshly bought Drone, it made an otherwise simple premise into a tense game of matching and comparing static camera footage with what the drone and a person could see, making every bit of screen interference a race to get to the location and get answers, without knowing if it would be an encounter, an enemy, hallucinations or just a camera malfunctions. having one character see something the other does not, be it on or off camera, and not knowing whether it was camera errors, screen glitches or them slowly going insane was a high point of that session, and is still one of my favourite things i've ran. (granted i've ran like four things so take that with a grain of salt.) -searching for answers and finding yet more mysteries. one of my PCs found a strange symbol in their house and researched it online, leading to one of those classic "posted 4 years ago - no answers" threads on some cursed-looking image board website, leading him deeper into the rabbit hole as he has now essentially taken to cyber-stalking the poster in question on a multitude of equally shady sites in an attempt to find the truth. it is the classic "following the steps of our predecessors" but online and i am completely here for it. -range and obstacles. being a military-centric campaign, having less-than-ideal but still fully functional radio equipment was a must, the handheld modules work great but only at short range, the backpack modules are crappy leftovers from wars gone by that always work poorly but over any range. having interference, jamming and various obstacles (hard to radio through a mountain) whilst not making them entirely unreliable has made all methods of communication ten times better, as everything still works, albeit with the added caveat of time and effort spent to get some cold-war leftover to do what you want. can recommend. -surfing under Influence having mythos creatures interrupt or alter how tech works came in handy during Dead Light, as i made every device within a certain radius sort of Crackle and whisper as the creature drew near. it worked as a proximity alarm without really telling direction or speed, meaning the PCs knew they were in danger but had no idea how much time they had or which way to run, really helped amping up the tension for the chase and climax. -THE NUMBERS. soo there might be number codes (Black ops style) transmitting at random interval to the PCs various pieces of equipment after the mall, and it might be a bit cursed? anyways, same PC with the dead thread has now (after some real-life decryption) found that it might be prophetic, but also interspersed with what seems to be complete gibberish. the addition of having some monitor, car radio or public announcement system suddenly crackle and start spouting number sequences that may or may not be relevant has increased paranoia, tension and mystery while cutting down the amount of idea rolls, as the numbers are often (dubiously) helpful or at least help-ish in nature. all in all, once you get used to having tech in your sessions it becomes less of a drag and more of a tool to do just the sort of things you would do anyways, it just gives you and your players more options to do things. i hope to see what other things will happen in the future, as i have no doubts (nor wish for it to be any other way) about my players finding new ways to pleasantly and unpleasantly surprise me. seeing what they can come up with using the tools they have is half the fun!

  • @erniemiller1953
    @erniemiller1953 Жыл бұрын

    How cool would it be "My character searches KZread for a Seth Skorkowsky video on...BONESAW!"

  • @wacoglee
    @wacoglee Жыл бұрын

    You have some excellent thoughts here! Thank you Seth

  • @GM_Darius
    @GM_Darius11 ай бұрын

    One of the movies I really do like the depiction of hacking is Hackers. Besides having that 90's asthetic of hacking and little gadgets that helps with it, they do show that reading code and actively hacking take time. Cause unless you have a certain virus for a certain job, macking a brand new one that can be used for whatever you're doing at that moment takes more than a few moments.

  • @brentblake3471
    @brentblake3471 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Seth, I'm working on a scenario book where this has been a recurring issue that I've struggled with how to address, and I really appreciate you covering it; couldn't have covered it at a better time!

  • @MaxWriter
    @MaxWriter Жыл бұрын

    Nicely done, as always. I like these suggestions.

  • @treed6038
    @treed6038 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome and useful video, packed with great ideas. Thanks!

  • @Wendelvendel
    @Wendelvendel Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this Seth. I've started traveller and with the setting being so huge and all the tech and trade and everything... Ergh overwhelming. This so handy in ticking off something I've been trying to work out. Especially with all of the 80's modules talking about stealing tapes of data and stuff ahahahha. Ffs also helpful for updating those modules (your notes on cameras on arcturus station are also super valuable - sorry I've got the old one and not yours :( ) Anyway, you're great and thanks for this and so much else.

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic stuff, Seth!

  • @Liveforfilms
    @Liveforfilms Жыл бұрын

    Love this. A most useful video. Also liked the shout out to Archive 81

  • @eypandabear7483
    @eypandabear7483 Жыл бұрын

    3:20 A good example of this is Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It went from 1997 to 2003, and throughout those years, mobile phones became more and more common in the US, but much less so in the show.

  • @juddgoswick2024
    @juddgoswick2024 Жыл бұрын

    I am glad to see this. I have never been that worried about tech in my games because tech usually exacerbates conflict just as quickly as it solves it.

  • @DaMADDNESS13
    @DaMADDNESS13 Жыл бұрын

    God tier video Seth, thank you very much.

  • @vortega472
    @vortega472 Жыл бұрын

    Great video - and helpful - this is why I set a lot of my stories and some games (V:tM) around the early 1990's. Just at the cusp of this technology.

  • @blinddog4288
    @blinddog4288 Жыл бұрын

    Always great content!

  • @citcoin-official2681
    @citcoin-official2681 Жыл бұрын

    Another fine video Seth, I'll see if I can break out a good tale from the vault for this one too.

  • @MarcinEstkowski
    @MarcinEstkowski Жыл бұрын

    That was great. Very helpful. Thanks!

  • @jamespuckett9753
    @jamespuckett9753 Жыл бұрын

    Very helpful. Starting a Delta Green campaign in 3 weeks and I see myself looking at this a few times in the ramp up.

  • @Cammino3
    @Cammino3 Жыл бұрын

    I do love the BBEG spying on the party trope though. Always fun

  • @sinisterthoughts2896
    @sinisterthoughts2896 Жыл бұрын

    fantastic video, and some excellent food for thought.

  • @samleonard2557
    @samleonard2557 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent break down!

  • @ShannonFerguson
    @ShannonFerguson Жыл бұрын

    These are awesome suggestions.

  • @IamKnucks
    @IamKnucks Жыл бұрын

    As always, as soon as I'm done with your videos I'm desperate to start another game. I want to put it all into practice as soon as I can. I want to practice so that it becomes second nature to think outside the box.

  • @williamfawkes8379
    @williamfawkes8379 Жыл бұрын

    Anyone using a Nintendo Power Glove in their hacking attempt, should get some enormous bonuses, because...yes.

  • @SSkorkowsky

    @SSkorkowsky

    Жыл бұрын

    If you haven't seen the fever dream that is Kung Fury, you're in for a treat. That powerglove-sporting character hacks time so Kung Fury can battle Hitler.

  • @williamfawkes8379

    @williamfawkes8379

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SSkorkowsky I cannot pretend that I have not seen such a film, and having seen it, my sanity has been reduced significantly. Two thumbs-up! 👍 👍

  • @christianbraun5426
    @christianbraun5426 Жыл бұрын

    For Viral (which I bought folllowing your review) I made a presentation concerning all sunscriber numbers, patreons, donations and chat-comments/challenges, displaying it during the game and changing slides according to the scenario. Every player was able to see the situation in real time, simulating the characters use of their technology. Took some time preparing, but was working like a treat. There is a lot of potential using the characters technological devices by giving digital handouts on the players devices (mails, messengers, etc.)

  • @Wraithing
    @Wraithing Жыл бұрын

    Excellent vid! - Wonder how much lack of tech integration is due to so many RPGs coming from the 80s, also using pre-cellphone movie and novel plots.

  • @sophialaird6388
    @sophialaird63889 ай бұрын

    All I can think about right now is that time my dad (back when he was in college 20 or so years ago) read through the entirety of the internet in a single day. I’m planning on using that for one of my Industrial Revolution style games

  • @tedgalacci8428
    @tedgalacci8428 Жыл бұрын

    One thing to do is to introduce the common annoyances that technology brings. In one Traveller episode I had a tiny legal disclaimer scroll across the screen during a phone call. The players had to do a routine comm check to capture it.

  • @b3productions974
    @b3productions974 Жыл бұрын

    This video is honestly a godsend

  • @puddel9079
    @puddel9079 Жыл бұрын

    Party forgets about the hotel cameras? Guess it's time to blare Electric Eye as the hackers covers for the group!

Келесі