Category Archives: Basic RolePlaying

Posts about, related to, or featuring content for Chaosium’s Basic RolePlaying system and related games such as Elric! and Stormbringer, Superworld, Call of Cthulhu, and so on.

Quick & Dirty BoL To BRP Conversion

Right, so I love Barbarians of Lemuria. The game feels right to me – I like thinking in the terms and structures laid out by it. But it’s pretty rules light – too light for most of my players, sadly. So what I’ve been doing as I’ve been working on my BRP Arabian Nights game (and planning for other eventual things like a BRP Mythic Russia game) is to think of things in BoL terms and then convert them to Basic RolePlaying, since that system seems to be about right for my players (and, to be honest, I love it too). To date I’ve just been doing this “on the fly” in my big ol’ head. And that’s cool. But I thought I’d go ahead and write down the concepts so that they’re saved somewhere other than said noggin.

Attributes

This one is pretty simple. Just take the BoL attribute value and multiply it by 2, and then add/subtract that to/from 10. So a 0 in BoL is a 10 in BRP, and a 3 in BoL is a 16 in BRP. Seems close enough.

Oh, and we need to map those Attributes, don’t we? It’s pretty obvious, but just in case:

  • BoL Strength = BRP Strength, Constitution, and Size
  • BoL Agility = BRP Dexterity
  • BoL Mind = BRP Intelligence and Power (and Education, if used)
  • BoL Appeal = BRP Appearance

One could, of course, come up with more complicated formulas. Or one might be concerned that doing it this way loses some detail. Dowhutchalike. If you need that strong guy to be sickly, adjust as needed. In fact, that kind of adjusting is probably a good way to take Boons & Flaws into account.

You should calculate the necessary derived stats (Hit Points, Stamina Rolls, etc) from the BRP attributes.

Careers

Each level of a Career, beginning at zero, is equivalent to 20% in the appropriate skills for that career in BRP. So our pal Andrei Ivanovich Denisov has 20% in Sailor skills, 40% in Merchant and Soldier Skills, and 60% in Minstrel skills.

You can comb through and cross-reference the skill and profession lists in BRP to figure out what those skills actually are, or you can just run with it BoL style and view them as overall categories. I’d likely to the former for PCs and the latter for NPCs. But that’s just me. Actually, I probably wouldn’t do any of this for PCs, since they’re probably going to want to build their characters in BRP in the first place.

Oh, and if it turns out there’s some crossover between skills you think two different careers have, and the character in question has different levels, just average them. So in the case of Andrei Ivanovich Denisov, where BRP’s Persuade skill falls under both Performer (a good match for Minstrel) and Merchant (the 1:1 mapping for Merchant) you could decide that his skill level Persuade is 50%.

Combat Abilities

The same concept for Careers applies to Combat Abilities. And that works nicely for BRP since it, too, doesn’t tie your profession to your martial prowess (like, say, D&D does). In general, consider BoL’s Combat Abilities to map to BRP as follows:

  • BoL Brawl = BRP Brawl & Grapple skills
  • BoL Melee = Two or three of the BRP melee weapon skills (the broad kind, like Sword & Axe)
  • BoL Ranged = Two or three of the BRP missile weapon skills (again, go broad here)
  • BoL Defense = BRP Dodge skill & Parry skills (if you want to separate Attacks & Parries from each other, otherwise just use this for Dodge)

And again, each level (starting at zero) is worth 20% here. So the aforementioned Andrei Ivanovich Denisov brawls & grapples at 40%, swings a sword or axe at 60%, fires bows or slings at 20%, and dodges at 40%. I’d probably let him keep his parries equal to his attacks, but I could very easily see not doing so.

BRP Professions sometimes include access to combat skills, but I’d just ignore those in favor of the above, based on the way BoL handles such things.

Boons & Flaws

Boons and Flaws really call for eyeballing. As noted above, they can easily affect Attribute scores. They could also provide a boost or penalty to certain skill rolls. Or they could even go so far as to automatically make certain skill rolls Easy (double skill) or Difficult (half skill). It all depends on how much power you want these aspects to have. Personally, for elegance’s sake, I’d opt for the Easy/Difficult effect on non-combat Boons & Flaws and go for a 15% bonus/penalty on the combat-related Boons & Flaws. Actually, if one really wanted to make this a serious, well-thought-out conversion system, there’d need to be some significant work done here. But that’s not what I’m after here. If you are, well, you’re on your own, kid 🙂

Magic

Oh lord. The bane of all conversion attempts: magic. For a straight BoL to BRP magic conversion I think I’d use the BRP Magic power system, with the Magician’s career level setting the skill level for the spells known. And for spells known I’d opt for six or eight (Heroic or Epic power level). I could also see using BRP’s Sorcery system (but that’s mostly because of the two, I prefer it). Again, this one’s a judgement call.

For Alchemy you’re on your own. But mapping Alchemist career levels to skills is probably a good place to start.

For the Priest/Druid “magic” as seen in BoL Legendary Edition I’d give the character an equivalent number of opportunities to invoke their deity’s power in the form of making an appropriate skill roll Easy or Difficult. Since these are much more one-off and hard to come by than actual Boons & Flaws, I’m ok with these having such a dramatic effect in combat. You could also require a POW vs POW contest for the Priest/Druid to be able to affect the target with this ability.

A Final Note

I haven’t put this process through any rigorous testing, so I don’t know how the final products work out in terms of point levels and such. They might be wildly overpowered or wildly underpowered. Adjust as you need to and it won’t really matter if the NPCs you characters face are “Normal” while the PCs are “Epic” (or whatever). Actually, it quite possibly shades the other way, but that entirely depends on how many skills you assume apply to each BoL Career (and that, of course, will vary by career). This is really just a slightly more advanced version of eyeballing a BoL character into a BRP character, after all 🙂

The Arabian Adventure Continues

Well now. The Basic RolePlaying/Arabian Nights game I’ve been running has proven to be so popular that we’ve got another session scheduled for Saturday and we’re adding in a fourth player. I reckon I’ll take that as high praise (based on my group’s tendencies) and be happy. Unfortunately it means I’m spending the time I could be working on finishing out the last two Standard Order demons focusing on getting myself ready for another magic carpet ride. There are certainly worse things.

Anyway, expect some demony goodness soon. Just maybe not until the weekend. Meanwhile, I’ll point you to the ultimate in Arabian Nights gaming soundtracks: The magic of Mohammed El-Bakkar! (warning: topless belly dancer pics comprise most of the album covers)

El-Aqarat Adventure!

Last night we got in another session of the Arabian Nights style Basic RolePlaying adventure I’ve been running. Everyone had a blast and though there were no flying carpet antics this time, there was some great role-playing as the heroes found themselves in the City of Brass and then some interesting combat against a group of Ghûls that had decided to attack the very bandits that the players we seeking to fight against. Ah, three way combats. They’re fun, but complicated.

In any case, now that this particular adventure is complete, here’s the notes I put together to run it. They’re laid out in PocketMod format (though I put the template together myself in InDesign). So they’re a bit like a One Page Dungeon, but different. Enjoy or ignore, it’s your call.

On A Magic Carpet Ride

So, I ran an Arabian Nights style BRP game for some friends last night. It went well.

Strangely, it turns out that no matter how much (or how little) I prep for a game it is exactly twice as much as we have time for. So that means the adventure isn’t finished. Folks do want to get together and complete it, though, so that’s nice.

The downside to not having finished is that I can’t post the notes I made, compiled together brilliantly by me into the PocketMod format. I’m insanely proud of the work I did (as in, it’s really not that impressive, and yet I’m inordinately pleased with myself) putting pretty near all the notes I needed into a little eight 1/8th page book. It’s kind like the whole 1-page dungeon thing, but cuter and without a map.

Anyway, since there’s a chance that one of the players could stumble across it, I’ll save posting it until after we’re done.

Also, I want to wax rhapsodically for a moment about the player who took the bait and swung down from the party’s flying carpet, high above the desert, to the one that had come up beneath them, whose passengers were trying to cut the party’s carpet. It was very exciting pulpy genre action and the dude gets points for diving right in. Big fun.

Oh, and the good thing about not having finished is that it doesn’t actually impact my ability to work on the blog, since I already did the prep work. Expect more content soon.

Lastly, are any of you folks who read this thing baseball fans? More to the point, are any of you the type to play fantasy baseball? If so, let me know in the comments. I might have a proposition for you.