With very few exceptions,such as FASA's Star Trek RPG, every game I have run has been of the horror genre. Even Star Trek took a horrific turn when I ran it. I have always loved horror stories and movies.
My biggest runs have been "Call of Cthulhu" and "Ravenloft". I've ran "My Life With Master", "Unknown Armies","Kult" and "Wraith". Next year sees "Monster of the Week" added to the list. I was thinking over all of these games in a discussion with a friend a few days back, and it was the first time I'd really reflected on how I'd ran them.
On the surface I enjoy weirdness rather than lots of gore, probably why I favor Lovecraftian scenarios over zombie ones. I especially like games that focus on odd, disturbed NPCs. I also tend to play with time and dimensions in my sessions too, one of the reasons why I love Tindalosian Hounds so much.
Thinking back to "Ravenloft" and how well some of those sessions went, I realized that they weren't focused on those areas at all. Granted,it was a different setting and I was a lot less experienced then. It struck me however, that there was something that worked in those games that still works now.
One of the "Ravenloft" sessions was set in a small village in Kartakass, home to wolfweres. They are "inverse" werewolves, wolves that assume the form of humans. The locals are friendly, musical and jovial. The players were at their most paranoid in this session, and it was because they were out of their comfort zone...this was AD&D, a game in which they'd got used to fighting their way through things. Now,they were in a social situation, forced to mix with friendly locals, not knowing who or what the threat was. The paladin, representative of all things lawful and good, simply couldn't start swinging the sword.
That's really the thread I've seen as a GM.Make the players uncertain about reality, their characters capabilities and the world around them. Put the characters in situations where their usual modus operandi simply doesn't work or isn't an option any more. In "Ravenloft", it was fighting characters in a friendly,social situation. In "Call of Cthulhu", it's when the academia are forced to blow up buildings, or cops when realize their bullets don't work.
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