Blog

Succor Contest Winners

Hello everyone! I’m Meg, Peat’s new assistant. I will be posting regularly to both the blog and the forum. As one of my first duties, I am pleased to announce the winners for the Succor Contest.

Peat told me to apologize for the delay in announcing the winners. He has been very busy working on The Daylight War.

I really enjoyed judging this contest. I love playing and inventing games, so this was a real treat. I am very impressed by the intricate rules, backstories and various interpretations of succor. Great job everybody!

But still, there must be winners. And what better way to decide to judge games than by playing them?

So, I broke out my very own succor dice and (after admiring them for some time) set about playing each and every one of the games entered. Of course, I needed a little help, so I tested these games with a couple groups of friends.

Playing

Winning!

So, without further ado, the winners:

Succor by Alex Stout

OBJECT: The object of the game is to defend yourself from the demons of the night by preparing the appropriate wards.

PLAYING: Each round, one player assumes the roll of the demon. The demon rolls one die. This determines the type of demon the other players must defend against. Each other player then rolls two dice, if either of these dice match that rolled by the demon then the player has successfully found succor from the demon.

Note: The ‘ward’ symbol counts as a wildcard for the player and may be used to represent any other ward. If the demon player rolls the ‘ward’ when determining the type of demon the other players are to defend against then the defending players may only roll one die while attempting to find succor.

If any player fails to defend themselves against the demon then the defending player gains a demon-point.

After all players have rolled to defend themselves play passes to the player to the left of the current demon player, this player is the new demon and the process is repeated.

LOSING: If a player accumulates three demon-points then that player loses the game and is eliminated from play. They have failed to find succor and have been lost to the night.

WINNING: The game is over when there is only one player left with less than three demon-points. The winning player has successfully found succor against the demons of the night.

Succor by Arthur

Requirements:

-At least 4 succor dice
-A method of recording wards (“official” being a gamecard with 9 ward places on an outer ring and 3 on an inner ring)

Getting Started:

Determine who goes first by rolling a single ward. The person that rolls “ward” goes first and play continues clockwise (to the left). If more than one person rolls “ward,” they roll off a single ward to determine who goes first using the win chart below (which can be its own mini-game like paper-rock-scissor in its own right):

Rock beats flame and wood.
Flame beats wood and wind.
Water beats flame and rock.
Wind beats rock and water.
Wood beats water and wind.
Reroll generic wards.

Gameplay:

The goal of the game is to ward yourself against the night with 4x three different wards.

On each player’s turn, he or she rolls four wards and adds any wards they wish to keep to their circle. A player may only have three types of wards in their circle at any time. “Ward” wards are wildcards and may stand in place of any other type (house rules determine if the type must be chosen when added to the circle, or may change at any time making generic wards highly prized). If the player chooses, they may discard all of the wards of a given type from their circle to be replaced with wards from their roll.

Until a player has three balanced sets of wards (3 wards of 3 types), they may not add a fourth ward of any type to their circle. Once three sets are balanced, they may begin to add the 4th ward of each type to their circle. Completing three sets means a player has achieved succor and is safe (they win). If only one player reaches succor on a turn, they win. If more than one player achieves succor on the same turn, each tests the wards of the player to their left.

Succor by Perry Toyn

1. The warding stage
The players take it in turns to roll the 4 dice in an attempt to get one of the following wardings. They are allowed to re-roll any or all of the dice once per warding.

Four Wards – Full warding – Blocks three Corelings of any types
Three Wards and One Coreling – Minor Full Warding – Blocks one Coreling of any type and one Coreling of the type on the dice.
One Ward and Three matching Corelings – Major Warding against the Coreling Shown – Blocks two Corelings of the type shown (E.g. three flames and a ward would be a Major Warding against fire corelings and would block two fire corelings.)
Two Wards and Two matching Corelings – Minor warding against the Coreling Shown – Blocks One Coreling of the type shown (E.g. Two wards and two rocks would block one rock coreling)
No wards and no matching dice – Broken Circle – All wards previously thrown are removed. (E.g. One rock, one wind, one fire and one water)
Any other roll is a failed ward and the dice are passed to the next player.
(E.g. One ward, two wood and a rock)

The dice are then passed on and if the player rolled one of the wardings listed above then they record its type. All the players roll an agreed number of times to set up wards (e.g 5 or 10) and when they have all rolled that many times phase two begins

2. The rising
The players total how many of each type of coreling their wards will be able to resist Wards that can block any kind of coreling are held in reserve and can be allocated after corelings start to rise.
Each player takes it in turn to roll a dice that represents a coreling rising. The total number of each coreling type is cumulative and if there are more corelings of a particular type than a player has wards for then they are out of the game.
If a ward is rolled then each player can increase the strength of one warding against a coreling type.
The winner is the last player who remains safe behind their wards.

Succor by Matt Gillard

The Simplest Form of Succor as taught to children.

A group of four players roll a single die. Any player that doesn’t cast a ward is immediately eliminated from play. Not very fun, but the morale is imperative.

The man without wards dies.

Succor by Elicius

The game takes place in four stages:

1 – Dawn.
Three linking wards must be rolled to advance. Play continues clockwise, each rolling all four dice, until this happens (see i, ii & vii).

2 – Day.
Once a player has their three Linking Wards they must defend them! Opponents now have two options, they can either attempt to roll their own three link wards, or can play coreling’s advocate, and move to attack!

Once a player has rolled their dice, they can decide whether they will attack or attempt to form their own wards, depending on the outcome (see iv & v). If the defender survives, with any number of intact linking wards, they can move onto the next stage.

3 – Dusk.
During this stage, the defender must roll four of a kind. [Three linking wards can be used either to bolster defence and restore Linking Wards to three, or qualify for a re-roll (see ii)]. If the defender does not successfully roll a four-of-a-kind, his linking wards are still open to attack, and the destruction of all three returns the player to Dawn’s Light. Rolling four coreling-specific Wards completes the Ward-net! Congratulations, you have reached Succor!

4 – Night.
As you curl up to sleep within your Warded Circle, the Night closes in around you. In order to survive this night, which lasts two full turns, you must trust in the magic of your wards, and the succor they provide.

While a player may think they have won once they reach succor, your wards are fickle beasts indeed. Opponents here have the option to attack, working alone or as a pack to destroy the warded defence! If the ward net is broken (see vi), the player is unprotected, the corelings are free to feast, and the player is out of the game entirely.

Note: These rules have been edited for the purpose of this entry.

I would definitely recommend trying some of these games out. You can view all the fantastic entries in their complete length here: Succor Contest Entries

The five winners will all receive their very own set of succor dice.

Next up is the fan art contest! Details to follow.

Posted on November 28, 2011 at 1:55 pm by megelizabeth
Filed under Contests, Fan Art, Fans, Meg, Succor, Warded Art, Warded Man
1 Comment »

Cosplay Contest Grand Prize

I know I haven’t been blogging much lately. Been overwhelmed with work, primarily as I pick up speed writing The Daylight War. I will blog in detail about that one of these days. I also have someone new helping me out in the office, and am pleased to report that all the backed up contest prizes, bookplates, fan art, convention photos, interviews, and the like are beginning to move again.

Some of you may remember the Cosplay Contest. In it, I promised a ton of great prizes, including silver necklaces from Fotini Designs for the first runners up and a grand prize wherein I would commission an original painting by Lauren K Cannon of the winner in a fantasy setting as the character in their cosplay.

There were some AWESOME entries. Frankly, they were all awesome. Picking the first prize winners was almost painful.

Picking the grand prize winner was not.

I thought it would be, but then Margherita sent in her Damajah cosplay, and it was so stunning that none could deny she had it in the bag. Last week in San Diego I was hanging out with Arthur, who I was sure was going to win (dude shaved his head for it), and even he admitted there was only one choice for the grand once M dropped the bomb:

And so, without further ado, the Grand Prize, Margherita as Inevera, strolling through the halls of Sharik Hora, clearly up to no good:

And a closeup of the face:

Margherita, you’ll be   getting a signed print in the mail soon. Thank you again for your amazing entry and all the hard work that you and your friends did to make it happen.

Posted on November 8, 2011 at 2:58 pm by PeatB
Filed under Bookplate, Contests, Cosplay, Craft, Daylight War, Fan Art, Fans, The Daylight War, Warded Art, Writing
5 Comments »

Awesome Is…

My newpaperback cover from premier French SF publisher Bragelonne:

Thanks to the whole production team!

Posted on October 25, 2011 at 6:57 pm by PeatB
Filed under Craft, France, Warded Art, Warded Man
8 Comments »

NYCC Roundup With Video!

Sorry for the lack of posts lately. Busy, busy. I have lots of cool stories from readers, fan art, and pictures to post when I have time, plus the Daylight War update I keep promising, but they will have to wait a bit longer. I did want to throw this up quickly, though.

NY ComicCon went great this year. I did two panels and two signings, got to meet lots of fans, spend time with good friends, gawk at amazing costumes, and generally have a blast:

On Thursday I got to finally meet Jennie from SF blog Fantasy Faction. You can read her own ComicCon report here, complete with tons of pictures, including yours truly. Jennie also recorded and posted my reading of a (very short, as I only had 5 minutes) scene from The Daylight War in the Friday Del Rey/Spectra Panel:

I also did a great panel on Saturday with a lot of great authors. Felicia Day was doing a panel just previous and I tried to go up to her onstage to tell her The Guild is awesome, but she was mobbed:

I would like to note, with no creepy stalkerism, that she is even prettier in person.

Someone recorded and posted part of the panel on Ustream. The angle and sound quality aren’t ideal, but not terrible, either. Please be patient with the short ad you have to watch at first:

Winter Is Here: Epic Fantasy Takes The Throne
Date: Saturday, October 15
6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Location: 1A15

Speakers: Brandon Sanderson, David Chandler, Nils Johnson-Shelton , Peter Brett , Philippa Ballantine , Rae Carson
Description: Long a staple of the SF/F genre, epic fantasy is poised to take a coup over the bestseller lists, thanks in part to HBO’s fantastically popular series based upon George R.R. Martin’s “Game of Thrones” novel. This summer saw signing lines hundreds of readers deep (luckily none with swords in hand) for #1 New York Times bestselling author Patrick Rothfuss’ American appearance. Now, in a special spotlight session exclusive to New York Comic Con, we pair internationally bestselling author Brandon Sanderson with Peter Brett and epic fantasy debut authors Rae Carson, David Chandler and Nils Johnson-Shelton talk about why swords and sorcerers, king-makers and kingslayers; dragons and high drama have renewed resonance in fiction.
Track: Sci-Fi / Fantasy

Posted on October 19, 2011 at 4:56 pm by PeatB
Filed under Appearances, Craft, Daylight War, Events, Fans, The Daylight War, Writing
5 Comments »

Got a Minute?

If so, check out this new interview with yours truly over on Fantasy Faction. It’s really a great one, as Marc the interviewer has read all my stuff and asked pointed, detailed questions. I gossip about characters’  love lives, discuss my writing style,  fans, the movie deal, and talk quite a bit about The Daylight War.

Speaking of Daylight War, I have turned a corner in the writing, switching from Inevera’s story arc, which is more or less done, and on to Leesha and Rojer’s. As I did, I immediately fell back into a comfortable rhythm with the loveable cast of characters around them.

This was a series of tweets I put out the other day which kind of speak for themselves:

No idea how much I’d missed Gared, Wonda, Erny & Elona till I started writing them again. They should have their own sitcom.

Gared enters. [applause] “I just chopped down a dozen trees! With my face!” [Laughter]

Elona: “Your father would have done it with his cock. Isn’t that right, Ernal?” [Laughter/applause]

Erny: “Yes, dear.” [Audience: “Awwww”]

Next week on The Hollowers: Wonda wears a dress to the Solstice dance to impress Callen Cutter. Hilarity ensues.

One more thing to throw on the gigantic pile of fun projects I will never have time for.

Alas.

Speaking of which, I would kind of like to write up the 334 AR International Deliverer Debates:

Ahmann Jadir: “I’d like to take this opportunity to attack Arlen Bales on being a flip-flopper. First he’s for Sharak Ka, the war to end all wars, but then he’s against it. Sure, he calls you greenlanders heroes now, but it wasn’t three years ago he was spitting in the dust and calling you all cowards.”

Arlen Bales: “What my former friend isn’t telling you is that the Damaji are going to raise taxes to support a quagmire ‘Daylight War’, the whole purpose of which is to come and take your spears away. They also want to replace the Herb Gatherer healthcare system our communities depend on with a dama’ting-based “Sharum only” system. It’s bad for our seniors, and bad for Thesa.”

Moderator: “Mr. Bales, some sources are reporting that you lived in Krasia and even attended an Evejan Sharaj for several years. Do you have any comment on this?”

If you enjoyed the interview, check out some of the other awesomeoness Fantasy Faction has under their “Peter V. Brett” article tag.

Posted on October 1, 2011 at 12:48 am by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Daylight War, Desert Spear, Fans, Interviews, Musings, Poland, The Daylight War, Warded Man, Writing
4 Comments »