![]() I’ve tried.“- Karl-Franz and Alberich Haupt-Anderssen discussing the plight of the Sylvanians. But going into Sylvania is a costly offensive. We scoop up the refugees that make it out, of course. They are serfs, enslaved to the Sylvanian nobles, and I cannot vouch who still breathes among them. That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you. “ What of the peasants residing in Sylvania. Why hasn’t Sylvania been razed to the ground? Why does the Empire tolerate this? I usually say this with a straight face, knowing full well that there’s a province nearby full of the blood thirsty feckers. That goes for undead (unless encountered of course) and such. So I am in the habit of telling players that unless there’s a specific reason, they are ignorant of the existance of vampires. It is Warhammer after all, and you gotta have the spooks come in now and again. I generally run my games fairly low-key, and ramp things up when I feel it is appropriate. I’ve ran Warhammer for 7/8 years now, and have only ever introduced 2 vampires into my game, with exception to a fun Halloween oneshot I did that featured a bunch of them. It works, but does it work in a roleplaying environment? This is fine for Warhammer Fantasy Battle and Warhammer Total War. Sylvania became independent, and were largely ruled by the vampire counts, with Mannfred as their ruler. 1st Edition was very much like traditional Bram Stokers’ Transylvania if vampires resided here, they did so in secret.įast forward to later editions, and a retcon was done. Transylvania is a la-… Sylvania is a lawless land shrouded in despair, rife with corruption and generally not a nice place to be in.ġst Edition Sylvania worked far better vampires were a low-key threat, were incredibly rare unless you were looking for trouble with them, and most importantly, Sylvania was part of Stirland the von Carsteins were not in power.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |