Friday, 17 February 2023

RPG Book Review: Skycrawl

Who are the players and what do they do?

Explorers of a "weird, whimsical, endless sky". The main focus is on exploration and travel.

This is a supplement (setting?) for any roleplaying system, packed with systems and procedures for journeying between mysterious lands floating in an endless azure sky, ship to ship combat, and more.

Skycrawl ttrpg setting book POD
The colours are better in real life!

What's the core mechanic?

The book itself is systemless and provides guidance and examples for how to use it with d20, 2d6, percentile, or FATE mechanics, but could easily be used for dice pool games or other mechanics as well.  The core procedures use standard terms such as "crit", "strong success", "success", "complication" which can be easily defined for any method of generating these outcomes.

What's good?

The procedures here are wonderful; there are systems for:

  • Procedurally generating Lands and the Folk who inhabit them, and the ships that move between them
  • Tracking the movement of those lands as they orbit in the sky
  • Researching, plotting, and executing journeys between these lands
  • Ship-to-ship combat
  • Orcery, which is an interesting alchemy system 
  • Generating and resolving random encounters in the skies
The systems used for play utilise "moves" which will feel familiar to anyone who has played a PBTA game, but these can easily be explained as player procedures at the table if not.

I particularly like the systems for travel; PCs accrue and spend a meta-resource called "tack" to help with navigation and journeys are planned out and executed in several steps (be they days, weeks, or abstract measures of difficulty) which naturally resolve into scenes and encounters as the players spend their tack and decide how best to play out each step.

Lands are mechanically easier to get to if the party have been there before, or if they have discovered three or more rumours about the place - which is something I love as a driver for exploring and interacting with the world.


The lore and art, that there is, is evocative and flavourful too. It's a great book!

What's bad?

Honestly, I'm struggling. Some people might find it a little wordy for their tastes maybe (I really don't) but that's just thinking of something - anything - to put in this section!

Bottom line?

Highly recommended. There's a lot here to mine from and adapt to other games (the systems shared with Downcrawl could just as easily be adapted for overland travel and traditional pointcrawls, and these rules could just as easily be applied to traditional sailing ships with a little tweaking) and it feels like it could be run straight from the book. Looking forward to doing so!

Fans of the depthcrawls generated by The Stygian Library or The Gardens of Ynn, traditional OSR hexcrawl mechanics, or the travel procedures in Ultraviolet Grasslands would probably find a lot to like in this little gem.

If you have any favourite procedure-based RPG resources then I'd love to hear of them, either in the comments or by submitting a link to one of your blog posts on this month's RPG Blog Carnival hub, where the theme is "procedures".

2 comments:

  1. Ooh, now I want to investigate using this to run a game in the world of Michael Reaves' The Shattered World / The Burning Realm. I had an initial scenario sketched but never figured out travel mechanics.

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  2. I'm maybe 6 sessions into Skycrawl (level 3 right now) and really enjoying it. We are finishing up the first floating island this week. It's being run through an OSR, so we had to get used to things like unbalanced encounters. We have an oddly diverse NPC crew but that could just be how the DM works: a giant (he was wedged in the wall of a tavern behind a table for probably months and I freed him with Reduce), a robot (we found the upper half and the specialist fixed him up as we found parts), a crawler (some sort of symbiote we saved twice), a scholar, and an elven navigator.

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