Sunday, January 15, 2012

Yo Gamma Gamma


My Christmas present to myself this year was a double-shot of the new Gamma World. Me? I'm a big fan of Gamma World, I always have been, having first played it back in the mid to late eighties. I love the gamma-goodness, the fires not born unto serious post-apocalyptic forays but more fanciful romps through the rubble-strewn world after "the event".


I picked up the core box set and the first expansion, another boxed set known as Famine in Far-Go. Some fans of the game may recognize that name because Famine in Far-Go has made an appearance before. From what I can tell, based on sketchy memory of the original and cursory glance of the new one, they're both in the same vein as well.

As for the boxed sets themselves, I'm a simple guy and I don't need all the doo-dads really, and the boxes come doo-dad-a-plenty. Above is shown all I'm asking for; a couple of rulebooks and some cards. The rulebooks are dense, very dense and in full color with plenty of charts, examples, fluff, and more. They're also digest-sized, which is nice too. Surprisingly, the Far-Go expansion book is almost as big as the core book, with a little over half dedicated to the adventure but the rest being supplemental material.

The cards are a new Gamma concept, and I didn't know exactly how they would work. Having read up on the rules now, the cards seem very cool. You don't have one mutation, one psychic power, or one laser rifle...all of these things are constantly fluctuating. When it's time to roll for initiative, everyone at the table draws a new card. You may have had telekinetic mind blasts when you fought the Croc-Men yesterday, but today you've got wings and you're up against rogue robots. It's a weird concept, but for the setting it works. Technology and 'junk' is everywhere, your equipment is always changing, and mutations are always in a state of flux.


Character creation is also gloriously random, again a weird concept usually for an RPG, but one that works perfectly in this setting. We haven't played yet, so I can't speak too much on gameplay (if at all) so I'll just focus on what all you get in the box(es).

Above are all the counters you get. Lots of counters on card sheets that necessitated the size of the boxes themselves. Too many counters; counters for player characters, counters for monsters, counters for NPC's. I'm sure counters have their place, but we don't use them and I'm not a huge fan of them.


You also get some maps. Who doesn't like maps? It's not a roleplaying game if there's not a map somewhere! Gamma World does come with maps, nice stock, full color, double-sided even. The expansion has some maps in it too. I'm all right with some maps.

Somewhere in a box in the garage I've got all of my old Gamma World modules. I also scored the Thundarr the Barbarian boxed set recently as well. Lots of good, fun source material for a new version of the game that equally looks solid and fun.

10 comments:

  1. I really have no experience of Gamma World. I've thought of it kind of like D&D in space/post apocalypse. Is that even remotely close?

    Looks fun anyway, kind of like a non-gritty version of the old Swedish RPG Mutant.

    By the way, what's the in-game explanation for the shifting mutations?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Martin, I think your description of the Gamma World setting is pretty accurate.

    I played the Gamma World boxset at our last Con and found it enjoyable. Our GM explained the shifting mutations as the influence of alternate and shifting realities. The latest version of the game seemed full of gonzo, fun science fantasy potential.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think it's gone a bit too Pokemon for me. :(

    ReplyDelete
  4. @Martin: You're very close. This version strikes me as a fun side diversion, making it a long term campaign might take a little work. Chris is right about the mutations, there's no bomb this time, the end times are brought about by the Hadron Collider, sandwiches a thousand thousand realities in one place at one time.

    @Chris: "Full of gonzo" is very accurate. It might be a while before games start surfacing here however.

    @Stuart: It's definitely over-polished and four-colored, I'll give you that. I guess it comes down to how the group at the table handles it, but that's pretty much true with any game, especially RPG's.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Despite the cards and "shiny bits" I would never associate the WOTC Gamma World with Pokemon and I've got no truck with CCGs.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I got the Legion of Gold expansion but not the Famine one yet. Still have not played a game but have really not played a game of anything other than on my Xbox or a stripped down version of the D&D coop boardgames with my five year old recently.

    ReplyDelete
  7. When are you going to run it?

    ReplyDelete
  8. @Brad: I went with Far-go for no other reason than I had the original, plus it gave twenty new backgrounds for the PC's.

    @Andy: I was thinking after Deathwatch? It seems like it would be fun to run it with the 'big group'.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Sweet-- although I think we're in the 2nd module of a trilogy. Not sure if T-Bone wants to power through or take a break after this one.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I was kind of hoping we would at least wrap up the trilogy, then have a natural close to Deathwatch in general.

    I was going to let him take his time because I didn't want to give the impression, whatsoever, that I was in a hurry for DW to be over sooner than later, I'm having fun with it.

    ReplyDelete