As the title says, I was wondering what’d make for good horror in the medium, and thought I’d try to ask here!

  • Resist the urge to run Pathfinder or Dungeons and Dragons. Those systems empower the PCs to fight evil, and win. That power undermines the horror so completely, it may as well just be a coat of paint. You might think “hey, what if I just make the monster too strong to actually fight?” That’s going to lead to a TPK 80% of the time. The other 20% of the time, the spellcaster will pull a wild move you didn’t anticipate and come out on top anyway.

  • I love a horror game.

    First having a system designed for horror will really help you to build tension. As someone else said D&D etc are bad for horror because you’re supposed to be powerful, it can work but takes more effort.

    Next you need player buy in, everyone needs to want to be a little scared or uncomfortable. You’re also very unlikely to get horror movie levels of scared and trigger that fight or flight response as you’re all sat round a table playing games together.

    Having a good session zero for horror is especially important, to make sure you do it safely, have your lines and veils or your X card available and discuss your boundaries. Some people will be fine with body horror but can’t manage anything with children or whatever.

    Pacing is key to horror, leave the monster in the dark as long as possible, let the players imagine it and what is going on before you show them with a description. Give them downtime to decompress after a particularly tense moment. Let them make jokes but don’t join in during the tense bits, join in during the chill out section.

    If your looking for recommendations: Trail of Cthulhu (gumshoe) was great. I ran a SCP style game, just picked a monster and had the PCs try and work out what was happening.

    Delta Green is a really easy system to intro new people to, it’s d100 roll under and you’re playing X-files so people have a strong base to work from. Has some great modules to get you started.

    Mothership is wonderful and my current obsession. It’s also d100 roll under and it’s basically Alien/s in terms of the setting but you could easily fit in whatever you wanted sci-fi wise. The modules that come with the box set are brilliant.

    It’s easy to inject horror into most settings, my party were really light hearted and jokey in Blades in the dark but I had a few sessions where an automaton was hunting them which they found genuinely scary.

    Honourable mention the Fate horror toolkit mostly for the GM advice.

    Happy to give thoughts on anything horror related if you’ve got more questions.

  • Not a DM / etc but our DM had us all fill in a horror questionnaire to gauge what can and cannot be included in campaigns. We never did run a horror TTRPG (yet) but it was a nice thought.

  •  xuxxun   ( @xuxxun@beehaw.org ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    73 months ago

    Choose a genre of horror first. Choose a system that emulates it well. Choose an intensity. Is horror the main focus, or do you just want a splash of it here and there? Make sure everyone is on board obviously. Resarch works from the specific genre. A psychological horror is gonna play out differently than a slasher movie inspired session.

  • My favourite tip take your time. Start with the boring life. The danger about online dating is to meet a walking soviet-parade of red-flags, not to meet a vampire who want to suck your blood. Spending a night camping in the wood is pretty fun, what you really fear is to be snitched on and get fined for “illegal camping” and an unplanned thunderstorm can definitely turn a fun evening into a bad experience, nobody really fears the witch from the woods, it’s a talefor kids isn’t it ?

    Then once you took the time to play some “normal” elements, slowly put some uncany elements, a_ctually while you’ve feel like you spoke for hours with your date your watch tells you only 5 minutes passed, and your coktails are still full_. The night camping was pretty fun, but why is the forest so silent in the morning.

    This help ensuring that there is a strong link between Player and character, and avoid falling in the comedy horror where fighting Zombie with blood up to knee is the new normal (Note that comedic horror is a genre by itself, and can be pretty fun to play too, but it’s different than real horror)