This module
clocks in at 26 pages, 1 page front cover, 1 page editorial/ToC, 1 page SRD, 1
page back cover, leaving us with 22 pages of content, so let's take a look!
This was
moved up on my review-queue as a prioritized review at the behest of my patreons.
I
playtested this module with my group of kids, which spans the ages 4 - 11 since
this is a kid-friendly module and as such needs to be tested regarding its best
age-range - the tabs on my homepage contain the suggested range I'd most
recommend this for.
This being
an adventure-review, the following contains SPOILERS. Potential players should
jump to the conclusion - you see, no one likes cheaters and you'll just make
the module boring for you if you continue reading.
...
..
.
All right,
only GMs here? Great! Every year, the town of Glavnost celebrates a festival
most peculiar, dressing up with wings and the like to honor the fully statted
town's pixie protectors that keep even the most unruly children from being lost
in the forest...failing only very rarely. Alas, one particularly stubborn child
named Edwin, seeking freedom from his parent's commands and wanting a life of
eternal blissful parade with the pixies, slipped through the cracks - and the
Nightmare King, a boogeyman got him, halting his aging process and grooming him
to become the successor, a son...a new boogeyman.
After a
brief introduction of the key-NPCs of Glavnost, the festivities of the town
(which comes with a thoroughly gorgeous map that could come straight out of a
children's book) are in full-blown preparation - here, the kids have some time
to roam, to mingle with the townsfolk and do some research that may hint at the
importance of the pixie parade, the nightmare king and the disbelief regarding
the existence of gremlins, in spite of the little buggers being made
responsible for many a mischief. The prevalence of fey magic allows for a
unique gift here: Imagination magic.
With the
power of imagination, the kids can subtly alter reality, which also represents
e.g. carts coming around in just the right place to catch falling characters
and the like - and yes, if the kids are smart, they'll pick up on this and use
it to their advantage! Speaking of kid-friendly: A handy little sidebar covers
cartoon violence and how to depict it - for while the adults can't see the
gremlins sabotaging the town, the kids can - and thus, the first task is
basically gremlin extermination, with 3 sample sabotages being provided.
Eventually,
the success of the PCs will earn them the attention of fairy godmother Lista,
who fills them in on Edwin's fate - which mirrors a playful way to convey
stranger danger's importance as well as acknowledging something: That parents
don't tell all stories to the children, worrying it might give them bad dreams.
This is something that ultimately, instinctively, all children know - and to
save Edwin, the fairy bestows 6th level (previously gained XP) on the players,
tasking them to redeem Edwin and freeing him from the Nightmare King's
influence.
In order to
do that, though, they have to brave Edwin's dark dreams - first, defeating his
shade in a game of hide and seek and then, braving toy soldier variant wood
golems (the battle featuring a GLORIOUS isometric map!) that are moved around
via a giant, shadowy hand. Edwin's hound would be the next task - and here,
things become interesting: The poor dog, turned hellhound by Edwin's descent
into darkness, just wants to play fetch, but the damn sticks keep burning,
resulting in angry fire blasts into the woods...which may cause a forest fire!
Here, one can teach about being careful with fire...and the encounter rewards
kids thinking and providing a stick that doesn't burn...and reduce the dog back
to a regular, non-hellhound pup.
On the,
again, lavishly mapped isometric map of the path ahead, fairy circle traps and
a tooth fairy await and upon vanquishing the fey, the PCs may get a glitterdust-duplicating Baby Tooth of
Edwin. There is another encounter next that offers yet another means to educate
and slightly shock: Edwin, thinking he can impress the fey with a present,
stole his parent's wedding ring - this item became the symbol his remorse,
transforming into a now chained golden dragon that needs to be freed, filling
in the PCs on Edwin's crime before turning back into the ring, asking them to
present it to Edwin.
...and
then, the ground shakes...trees start toppling...and a ravaging, massive
stuffed bear of colossal proportions breaks through the trees...and yes, this
encounter once again is beautifully rendered in isometric maps of stellar
quality...and yes, the massive, powerful Terror Bear is a powerful adversary
indeed...but vanquishing him provides a return of the creature to Edwin's
teddy-bear of old, which may suppress fear effects.
An then,
it's time for the final boss fight: Edwin, accompanied by corrupted, color-less
pixies, wants to collect all the pixies for his twisted mockery of a
parade...but thankfully, the encounters so far have provided all the components
the PCs need to save him: Each of his erstwhile fragments of innocence
recovered frees a pixie and, together, they may free Edwin, exorcising the
influence of the Nightmare King, freeing raw nightmare power - which is a
thoroughly awesome climax: The Nightmare Avatar has powerful, unique powers
that the kids may know from nightmares: Like being slowed. At the same time,
though, they can use their imagination magic to counter his dread powers in an
excellent showdown that may end with the PCs reuniting Edwin with his overjoyed
parents - happy ends don't happen on their own; one needs to fight for
them...and one needs to do the right thing. This morale, unobtrusively conveyed
throughout these pages, it what really makes this shine above and beyond.
Conclusion:
Editing and
formatting are top-notch, I noticed no glitches. Layout adheres to a beautiful
2-column full-color standard by Daniel Marshall and the pdf comes fully
bookmarked for your convenience. The copious full-color artworks by Jacob
Blackmon are neat indeed. A special shout-out to cartographer Jocelyn Sarvida -
the maps of this books are downright BEAUTIFUL, featuring gorgeous renditions
of the adversaries, which makes them btw. also suitable handouts. Speaking of
which - as the astute reader may have noticed, I did not explicitly state that
there'd be 1-page hand-outs of said maps. Well, never fret - as the final piece
of awesome, this module does feature a PWYW-map-folio for handouts purposes.
Take a look at it if you need any example on how good the maps are...
Stephen
Rowe's Pixies on Parade is, in one word, inspired: Mirroring classic tropes of
the power of imagination and fairy tales, it never crams morality down the
throats of the players, while still teaching what's right and what's wrong. The
idea of imagination magic is brilliant as a tool for GMs. Now, as for the
themes of the module and its suitability for kids: It's pretty much perfect,
mirroring themes of beloved children's tales and not shirking away from
important topics, all presented in a child-friendly manner. I can see some very
young kids that are particularly sensitive consider the themes a bit
frightening, but in my case, the 4-year old enjoyed the module, surprisingly,
more than "A Friend in Need," despite being frightened a bit - that
depends on the kid in question, though and requires the discretion of the
parents - personally, I would have loved this module as a 4-year old, having
always had a penchant for slightly more mature stories, even as a kid...and
yes, I learned to read at a very young age to read some fairy-tales my parents
considered inappropriate...which became my favorites. It is my firm belief that
kids can benefit from topics that are not all sunshine and flowers,
particularly if they feature a didactic and moral component.
As a
reviewer, I think the target age-range for most kids will span the ages of 6+ -
and yes, I did not include a limit for a reason. Why? Because this module not
only is great for kids. It's just as awesome for adults: Seriously, just tweak
the fluff a bit and make it darker and you have a GLORIOUS fairy-tale themed
introductory module that makes for a great starting point of PC careers as a
prologue: Just let the level 6-blessing revert after the module and skip to
adulthood - where you can also add elements appropriate for the process of growing
up and paint a bleaker picture.
Pixies on
Parade is a downright awesome: From the gorgeous maps to the blending of
sandboxing in the beginning and a more linear heroes' journey, this book's
themes are concise...and there is not a single boring encounter in this book, not
a single uninspired critter or problematic scene, nothing I could complain
about. In one sentence: This is a must-have, perfect module for kids, a great
module for adults and a book that should be considered simply inspired in all
the right ways. My final verdict will clock in at 5 stars + seal of approval..and
considering the perfection, the fact that it transcends the intended target
demographic and the map-folio, I will also award this the status as a nominee
for my top ten of 2015.
The PWYW-map-booklet can be found here on OBS!
Endzeitgeist
out.
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