So What's Next? - Tuluk Version

Started by Culinary Critic, March 25, 2016, 02:34:47 PM

Quote from: Delirium on March 25, 2016, 03:52:24 PM
I actually love the idea of Tuluk as a ghost town. I don't want to take half-measures, either. I think Tuluk should be completely, unequivocally, no death-of-superman Never Coming Back.

Turn Tuluk into a labyrinth of ruins, full of plague, disease, and dead bodies - where Really Spooky Shit happens, especially at night.

You could open up the "rebuild" (aka ruined) areas systematically as a series of RPTs, where groups of players go to loot the remains of the city - and maybe ex-Tuluki patriots take exception to that fact. Groups of ex-soldiers who remained in the city, criminal gangs who took advantage of the chaos to gain in strength, various hostile NPC factions to contend with.

I'm imagining empty, half-burnt mansions, abandoned warehouses, empty taverns, made into the hideouts of criminals, witches, and ex-soldiers, who all fight each other but mostly stick to their areas of the city. There's loot to be found, and places to seize as your own... if you can deal with the terrors that walk in the night, and the gangs who stalk the day.

Build up Morin's into a true village, where Tuluk has lost control - do the merchant Houses let Kadius have it? Do they squabble for control? Do they each put a stake in it?

Meanwhile, the Kryl grow restless...

How does Allanak react to this? Maybe they start eyeing expansion... Luir's Outpost would be a tidy first prize, without Tuluk to protect them.

So, so, so much political and plot-related chaos could result from finally letting Tuluk die that it is insane. Let it happen.

(Yes. It would require a shit ton of building. That's what we recruit builders for, right guys?)

This. I love all of this.

Yes. Read the thread if you want, or skip to page 7 and be dismissive.
-Reiloth

Words I repeat every time I start a post:
Quote from: Rathustra on June 23, 2016, 03:29:08 PM
Stop being shitty to each other.

Quote from: Delirium on March 25, 2016, 03:52:24 PM
I actually love the idea of Tuluk as a ghost town. I don't want to take half-measures, either. I think Tuluk should be completely, unequivocally, no death-of-superman Never Coming Back.

Turn Tuluk into a labyrinth of ruins, full of plague, disease, and dead bodies - where Really Spooky Shit happens, especially at night.

You could open up the "rebuild" (aka ruined) areas systematically as a series of RPTs, where groups of players go to loot the remains of the city - and maybe ex-Tuluki patriots take exception to that fact. Groups of ex-soldiers who remained in the city, criminal gangs who took advantage of the chaos to gain in strength, various hostile NPC factions to contend with.

I'm imagining empty, half-burnt mansions, abandoned warehouses, empty taverns, made into the hideouts of criminals, witches, and ex-soldiers, who all fight each other but mostly stick to their areas of the city. There's loot to be found, and places to seize as your own... if you can deal with the terrors that walk in the night, and the gangs who stalk the day.

Build up Morin's into a true village, where Tuluk has lost control - do the merchant Houses let Kadius have it? Do they squabble for control? Do they each put a stake in it?

Meanwhile, the Kryl grow restless...

How does Allanak react to this? Maybe they start eyeing expansion... Luir's Outpost would be a tidy first prize, without Tuluk to protect them.

So, so, so much political and plot-related chaos could result from finally letting Tuluk die that it is insane. Let it happen.

(Yes. It would require a shit ton of building. That's what we recruit builders for, right guys?)

Like you're reading my mind (and no, you're not That Person),

Internally, a gaggle of bards and minstrels hold the circle against the near feral tribals of the market.  Meanwhile the sharps in the Warrens maintain a tenuous hold over the rough and tumble crowd of humans who stick close to what was once the Tooth.  Roving bands of former Merchant House servants and crafters swarming lone, wandering figures for a sip of water.  Friel's the domain of The Tikki, led by a ruthless, mutliated mul...

Externally, everybody wants something.  A foothold in Morin's or the vast riches of the Heart.  Access to the market of the masses who must have piles of useless sid tucked away.  Kurac looking to expand, Kadius and Salarr at each others throats over such a massive, lucrative prize of an estate.

In Allanak, back room meetings to decide how the spoils will be divided because, of course, we will be the conquers, crushing all between us and what we want.  How do we keep the lowly merchant houses from our just reward?  Where will my noble family build their northern estates?

Hunting contracts, mining contracts, forestry, herbs, fruit, wine....oh my.

Sorry...get carried away.  Enjoy this game a little too much sometimes.

I love pretty much all these ideas, except for the ones where people are like leave it how it is.

I personally think it would be ironic if one day the gates were open and people started wandering into the city for respite, only to find out that the city is ten times more dangerous than the outdoors.
<19:14:06> "Bushranger": Why is it always about sex with animals with you Jihelu?
<19:14:13> "Jihelu": IT's not always /with/ animals

Allanak take over Tuluk, nobles from the south expand into tuluk. Leaves the option of playing an occupied tuluki again which was fun and keeps the staff workload ideally the same (no tuluki clans open for play). Opens the option for more murder, corruption, betrayal from the tuluki loyalists who want to watch the southies burn and opens up a reason to travel once again. Nobles get to brave the wilderness with their wagons and whatnot to check on their northern investments.

Fun had by all.
A staff member sends you:
"Normally we don't see a <redacted> walk into a room full of <redacted> and start indiscriminately killing."

You send to staff:
"Welcome to Armageddon."

Quote from: Majikal on March 26, 2016, 12:16:19 AM
Allanak take over Tuluk, nobles from the south expand into tuluk. Leaves the option of playing an occupied tuluki again which was fun and keeps the staff workload ideally the same (no tuluki clans open for play). Opens the option for more murder, corruption, betrayal from the tuluki loyalists who want to watch the southies burn and opens up a reason to travel once again. Nobles get to brave the wilderness with their wagons and whatnot to check on their northern investments.

Fun had by all.
Majikal for staff, 2016!
<19:14:06> "Bushranger": Why is it always about sex with animals with you Jihelu?
<19:14:13> "Jihelu": IT's not always /with/ animals

Quote from: Asmoth on March 26, 2016, 12:17:28 AM
Quote from: Majikal on March 26, 2016, 12:16:19 AM
Allanak take over Tuluk, nobles from the south expand into tuluk. Leaves the option of playing an occupied tuluki again which was fun and keeps the staff workload ideally the same (no tuluki clans open for play). Opens the option for more murder, corruption, betrayal from the tuluki loyalists who want to watch the southies burn and opens up a reason to travel once again. Nobles get to brave the wilderness with their wagons and whatnot to check on their northern investments.

Fun had by all.
Majikal for staff, 2016!

Sounds very similar to the rebellion era.
She wasn't doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together. --J.D. Salinger

Would love to see Tuluk return, radically altered or not, but we haven't exactly had a population boom since it closed.   :-\

We haven't exactly had highly visible, world-spanning plots that every clan and indie can get their paws in participating, either.

We've had cool plots, don't get me wrong. But they've been relatively inclusive, or prone to being hidden behind closed doors while the rest of us dawdle.

Quote from: Delirium on March 26, 2016, 12:35:01 AM
We haven't exactly had highly visible, world-spanning plots that every clan and indie can get their paws in participating, either.

We've had cool plots, don't get me wrong. But they've been relatively inclusive, or prone to being hidden behind closed doors while the rest of us dawdle.
It's difficult to run a plot or story where Joe Salt-Grebber and Mike Noble are both involved.
<19:14:06> "Bushranger": Why is it always about sex with animals with you Jihelu?
<19:14:13> "Jihelu": IT's not always /with/ animals

See the entire first 3/4 of this thread?

these are cool ideas, but i have to stop reading because if any of it ended up happening or if something like it did, I'd feel spoiled. Use the idea command in game, guys :p
Useful tips: Commands |  |Storytelling:  1  2

Wat? How the hell would you fit any of these ideas in the MUDs limited character buffer? Not like there's any real possibility of any of them happening anytime soon...

I do like the idea of something resistence-esque coming out of it though.
Quote from: musashiengaging in autoerotic asphyxiation is no excuse for sloppy grammer!!!

Armageddon.org

I don't think it should happen until all the tablelands stuff is over. 

I don't think it should be destroyed, either, I like knowing it's there.

I wouldn't mind seeing all the gith players funneled into the Sun Legions or something for a proper, focused, time-limited war with clearly defined objectives.

Nuke it.

Give me the button, I'll push it.
Someone says, out of character:
     "Sorry, was a wolf outside, had to warn someone."

Quote from: Wastrel on July 05, 2013, 04:51:17 AMBUT NEERRRR IM A STEALTHY ASSASSIN HEMOTING. BUTBUTBUTBUTBUT. Shut. Up.

March 26, 2016, 07:32:28 AM #40 Last Edit: March 26, 2016, 02:32:17 PM by hyzhenhok
I like the idea of making Tuluk a lawless, dangerous place. Basically turn it into Raam from Dark Sun. Get rid of Muk Utep (he's is a cool guy, so you can have him disappear mysteriously instead of outright killing him. Maybe he can come back later). In their absence, the faux equality of citizens vanishes as nobles try to seize and maintain power. The lower castes do not appreciate this and rebel, trying to overthrow the nobility. They all splinter into factions, grabbing turf and fighting for power. Shadow Artistry is no longer a tool of the templarate, but elves running wild pilfering wealth and killing important folks. Bonus points because the theme of the new Tuluk would very much provide a contrast to Allanak, instead of just being Allanak's *subtle* cousin of brutal oppression.

You could actually make this the IC reality right now without changing basically anything. Turn Morin's into the stronghold of one of noble families, keep the gates sealed because the factions that control them value having a closed flank over open trade.

Then, if the circumstances call for it, you can open up a transformed Tuluk. Make it a fractured, dangerous place filled with different factions and hostile NPCs. You can re-open it piece by piece, as the various factions in the city gradually warm up to allowing outsiders in again. No pressure to make the place a PC population center right away, but you'd be setting the groundwork to make that happen should it every become warranted.

Quote from: Marauder Moe on March 26, 2016, 12:20:51 AM
Would love to see Tuluk return, radically altered or not, but we haven't exactly had a population boom since it closed.   :-\

I want Tuluk back. It provides balance in the game. Yet if staff hold true to the reason why it was closed, Moe is right, we just don't have the numbers for a full Tuluk come back.

However it could go the way Delirium is suggesting.
At your table, the XXXXXXXX templar says in sirihish, echoing:
     "Everyone is SAFE in His Walls."

My ideal world would be closing Nak and everybody gets to play tribals. Love to see everybody indies or in tribes. Be a blast having tribe on tribe conflict without them being giant ungainly wars between citystates.

Quote from: th3kaiser on March 26, 2016, 08:43:05 PM
My ideal world would be closing Nak and everybody gets to play tribals. Love to see everybody indies or in tribes. Be a blast having tribe on tribe conflict without them being giant ungainly wars between citystates.


<3
Quote from: Twilight on January 22, 2013, 08:17:47 PMGreb - To scavenge, forage, and if Whira is with you, loot the dead.
Grebber - One who grebs.

Can we at least save the cotton?
Quote from: AdamBluewear Inix pelvis
You wear a wood-carved inix strap-on on your pelvis.
etwo wood
You reach down and grasp your wood-carved inix strap-on.
kill booty

Quote from: ChibiTama on March 26, 2016, 09:04:37 PM
Can we at least save the cotton?

I loved the cotton. I loved it so much. I'd love to see a one-room field, maybe.

I've been thinking about this, and a much less resource-intensive way to handle Tuluk could be to just nuke it from orbit, basically.

Have it self-destruct due to civil war and let Allanak capitalize on its weakness, Muk & Tek battle it out, leave it haunted, despoiled rubble where nothing grows.

Have a few rooms describing the ruins which can gradually be built out in subsequent projects and RPT releases, but also include some sort of IC reason why it is just totally empty of civilization and the very idea of trying to live in that place is insane. Disease, plague, horrible otherworldly creatures spilling out of some rift in reality, whatever floats your skimmer and keeps the place entirely uninhabitable.

Then let Morin's be the new northern center of civilization. If it gets built up, it gets built up. If it doesn't it doesn't. Let players decide.

What about the curren state of Tuluk is requiring we blow it up, again?

Heck, it doesn't even impede rogue mages jerking off next to the Harzen gates.

If

1) the current state of limbo is just weird and ill-defined

and

2) staff is unable to devote resources to running two full cities with separate clans,

then it seems to follow that the best solution for IC coherency is to reach closure with Tuluk, but leave Morin's as a (much smaller) center of northern-based roleplay.

I think an answer can be gained for #1, if I wasn't continually too drunk to post an ATS question and ask "What the feck is up with Tuluk? Who can go in, who can go out, what's going on?"

#1 isn't a systemic failing, it's just communication that can be fixed with a single definitive post.