After a break of a little over a year, we’re finally back to the Family Campaign (which is what I call the D&D campaign that I’ve built around my children’s characters, who happen to be all animal-based). Why so long? Well, a big reason was the return of my eldest child and their partner. You’d think that would make it easier to do a thing called “the Family Campaign,” but not so much, as it turned out. But another reason was that this was the first really big battle that I’d planned for the campaign. Now, if you watch actual play games like Dimension 20 or Critical Role, you might recognize that this is very light in terms of combat: D20 typically has a major (as in, episode-long) combat every other episode; CR is usually a bit less often, but not by much. However, I’m a much more combat-light (and therefore story-heavy) GM. While I pepper in short combats, done using theater of the mind, I save big set-piece combats utilizing fancy battle maps for special occasions that come along maybe once a level.
So, with the arrival of the party in Maztica (a jungle-dominated continent with cultures influenced by Aztec, Incan, and other Mesoamerican cultures), I figured it was time to pull out all the stops. You can see the array of enemies I put up (with apologies for my limited Phtoshop skills); there’s a few evil cultists (always fun to battle, with no pesky moral quandaries to worry about) and then a number of creatures taken straight from Legendary Games’ Latin American Monsters, which I purchased specifically for this purpose. There’s a jaguar in the right foreground, with a werejaguar right behind it, a couple of pumas, and a werecaiman. That red furry thing with the horns is a timbo; the scary horse-headed woman is a sihuanaba, and the big snake with antlers is a mazacoatl.
And, yes, I built a full map for it. Here’s some pics we took to mark our place when we had to pause this mega-combat:
As you can see, I had to use a number of proxy figures: my jaguar is here represented by the tiger (and the werejaguar is a weretiger figure), the timbo is the wrong color (but otherwise surprisingly accurate), the werecaiman is really just a lizardfolk, that “wolf” is actually supposed to be a black panther (one of the good guys), etc etc. But the overall scen
Oh, and you might wonder: what the heck is up with the Bazooka Joe wrapper? Well, I asked my youngest to find a way to mark that space, and that’s what she came up with. We had to mark the space because one of the powers of the timbo is called “Gravedigger”: in a single turn, it digs a grave, pushes you into it, and covers you up so you start suffocating. So that bubble gum wrapper is actually a grave marker, and there’s someone in there buried alive. So that’s fun.
We’ll pick it up here next week, if we can wait that long. It’s a tough battle, but I provided a few allies to help them out, and I think they’ll prevail in the end. I’m anxious to find out how it all comes out!