Wraith World

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Wraith World is a homebrew setting originally designed by an anonymous /tg/ poster and his childhood friends. The game, as well as setting has an emphasis on fast and loose rules, ridiculous character tropes and designs, and vague sexual content bordering on magical realm material. Essentially the game was written to entertain a bunch of grade school kids, but when shared or discussed with 4chan it was immediately requested to be rewritten into a playable game to be enjoyed by all.


The Game's Mechanics and Composition

Because of the game's obscure conception, it borrows heavily from other tabletop role playing games, yet was forced to develop several conventions of it's own. Wraith World has two essential books necessary to play, one titled THE WRAITH WORLD BOOK, and the other THE BOOK OF LEGENDS. Each of these books provide different necessary aspects to the game, and in the case of The Book Of Legends, a hard copy, or printed version is recommended for play. The content and use of each of these books were as follows:

WRAITH WORLD has most of the games content and history, as well as a relatively large Gazetteer explaining the layout of the world itself. It, more importantly, contained the entirety of the game's system and rulings on combat and special moves. This book was much larger, and the players were able to look through this for rules and regulations whenever they liked.

THE BOOK OF LEGENDS was a thinner binder that contained all of the games Monsters, Traps, Spells, and Secrets in it. Players were never allowed to look in the book when they were not running the game as a game master, and if your were caught peaking, the penalty for such an offense was INSTANT DEATH OF YOUR CHARACTER. Also, one of the most interesting aspects of Wraith World, was that if your character was strong enough, or interesting enough, when they died or reached level 100, their character sheet was saved in THE BOOK OF LEGENDS, and they may return one day as a boss in later adventures or campaigns.

At it's core, the game is very simple. You have five attributes called Stats; Strength, Resistances, Mindpower, Agility, and Luck. You would have a seperate die associated with each of these attributes which governed your level of competency. At level 1, all of your attributes had 1d4 associated with them, and after growing 5 levels, you could increase one of these die to the next degree. So, at level 5 one of your d4 would become a d6, and at level 10 you could increase it to d8. Stats were also given a bonus based on what kind of equipment you carried. A normal sword, for instance, may give you +1 while using it. So a level 1 character, swinging a normal sword got 1d4+1 to their attacks.

Other mechanics were present, such as critical hits, Magic Spells, and lots of tables for different situations that you would find yourself in. But one of the more prevalent and concerning game mechanics was in creating a new character after death. When your character died, everyone in the game, including the Game Master, could vote whether your character was worthy of being added to THE BOOK OF LEGENDS. Most characters were not, and would be ripped up, and thrown away immediately. In either case you had to make a new character, starting over. Player characters could only be human, unless one of your previous characters had slept with "a maiden of a different species" and had a child worthy to take up your heroic banner.


In Lieu of Classes

Wraith World does not use classes to carry the weight of it's character customization. At low levels, characters must rely on equipment and situational circumstance to gain an advantage. At higher levels, through the acts of adventuring and questing, players can acquire Powers or Spells which modify their character and act like a sort of vocation. These however are never given to a character who has not somehow earned them.

Powers are mostly non-magical gifts or "achievements" that one can earn by performing tasks in their adventures. For instance, One can become a Dragon Slayer, by dealing the killing blow to an evil dragon. Thus, dragons you come to meet in the future will fear and respect you, and you can even obtain their powers for a brief time. The Crystal Swordsman is another power you can acquire by defeating a swordsman in a duel while wielding a legendary Crystal Sword. Crystal Swordsman can send sonic waves through the air by swinging their sword, and hit enemies at range.

Magic is a mysterious and dangerous force that can only be granted by encountering a powerful, and often ancient, arcane force and entering a covenant of some sort with it after committing to a difficult task. Even still, each spell has a heavy price. For example, a demon may grant you the ability to create a sword out of coagulated blood and viscera by offering half of your health in blood. A particularly powerful spell called Hellfire costs half of your remaining Mana, and kills every living thing that cannot jump out of the way within 6 inches of your miniature. Magic should never be taken lightly, and always comes at a heavy cost.


The World, Itself

From A Technical Perspective

Characteristics that the game tends to get right, and that we'd like to emphasize include:

  • There are hard caps on player progression, emphasizing rolling a new character while still encouraging greater character development.
  • It boasts a simplified stat system that doesn't eliminate fail-rolls but still provides ample rewards.
  • It is brutal as fuck and unapologetically "rapey", yet somehow still less "rapey" and stupid than FATAL.
  • It appears to be imbalanced in favor of, of all things, strong melee. And magic is rare, costly, and extremely gratifying.
  • Plot and role-driven character development that is meaningful to mechanics and abilities that require reaching a story goalpost instead of just *leveling up.
  • I has a seemingly successfully executed classless system. Batshit insane clusterfuck of a world to play in. Preserves a sense of things forbidden or arcane.

Hard set mechanics that would like to be in a final draft of the project:

  • Attributes are graded on die size. They are Strength, Resistance, Mindpower, Agility, and Luck. Each stat starts at d4, and assuming a typical RPG polyhedral dice set will go from d4>d6>d8>d10>d12>d20.
  • Characters are classless. Characters that hit certain level thresholds and meet certain achievement requirements will be eligible for "Powers" related to the task they completed.
  • Magical spells are written down on the sheet, but the effects are controlled and arbitrated by the GM (who has the actual spell description in his book). Spells can generally only be gained at the discretion of the GM via some encounter with an arcane force. Spells generally involve some sort of involved, occultic ritual that levies some significant cost.
  • Characters may retire after reaching maximum level and be inducted as Wraiths into the Book of Legends. Wraiths may be used by the DM in lieu of a typical monster encounter.
  • Overall the genre suggests a low fantasy sword and sorcery world, very Moorcock or Howard.

To codify this into a proper ruleset we'd need:

  • an idea of typical thresholds for different tasks. What sort of tasks are auto-success or failure, and what sort of tasks demand rolls?
  • can situational bonuses be awarded to a dice roll? Can a character gain +1 on a roll to hit by aiming carefully, and if so, is there a systemized way to do this or is this at GM discretion?
  • Successor rules should be written in such a way that we have the option to leave out the magical realm bit. (It can happen "off-camera", or instead it might be a phylactery passed on, a ceremonial transfer of essence, or any sort of other fluff).
  • Regardless of fluff, to what extent does the Successor inherit the predecessor's abilities?


Wraith World 3rd Edition

The original game was thrown away by one of the player's moms, and was never able to be salvaged from the the trash. A sequel, referred to as "Wraith World 2" was written in the next year, but it's mechanics were more complicated, and it's style borrowed too heavily from anime that was popular at the time. The carefree charm that made the original game was missing, and the sequel was abandoned in favor of other games that were more prominent at the time. Due to positive reception of posters on /tg/, and a general sense of interest in the original system, a 3rd edition of Wraith World is being written by anonymous with help from /tg/ and will be available for download in the form of a PDF. (Though, due to the nature of the necessity of the physical books, it is recommended that THE BOOK OF LEGENDS be printed and placed in a binder.)