While the system for creating wizards and apprentices has changed very little between editions, the system for recruiting soldiers is probably the single largest change in Frostgrave: Second Edition. As I have played and watched hundreds of games of Frostgrave over the years, I have noted two problems with soldiers. First, if a player got really badly defeated – gained no treasure, and lost several soldiers – it could often be impossible to dig back out of this hole in a campaign, especially if it happened early in a campaign. The other problem is that I allowed so much freedom when buying soldiers, it allowed players to create warbands that were just no fun to play against – the ‘all archer’ or ‘all treasure hunter’ warbands are the most egregious. Now, in truth, very few people actually played this way, so it was never a huge problem, but it bothered me as a game-designer, a lot.
In order to fix these two issues, I started by dividing
soldiers into two categories: standard and specialist, in much the same way I
did for Ghost Archipelago. Now, when you are creating a warband, you can have 8
soldiers, with a maximum of 4 specialists. Standard soldiers include thieves,
thugs, men-at-arms, infantrymen and a few others. So, they aren’t all bad, but
they are mostly limited to just fighters. Additionally, thugs and thieves can
now be recruited for free. This means, no matter how badly your warband gets
mauled, you will always be able to field a full complement of figures for your
next game. This eliminates the biggest potential imbalance in the game.
The specialist soldiers include archers, crossbowmen, and
all of the higher-level fighters such as treasure hunters, knights, and
barbarians. In the appendix, at the back of the new book, there is a list of
all of the soldiers found in supplements, stating whether they are standard or
specialist soldiers.
While I was initially worried about these restrictions, I
actually believe they make constructing a warband more interesting. Now, you
really have to think about how you want to approach the game. If you want lots
of archers, it means you aren’t going to be as good in hand-to-hand (especially
since archers and crossbowmen are no longer as good in hand-to-hand). Not only
does this eliminate the issue of ‘unfun’ warbands, but it has a couple of
knock-on effects which I like. First, it helps keeps a campaign balanced,
preventing a player who has made a big score treasure-wise from going out and
spending it all on the best soldiers. Also, it means the rules work
better with how most people actually play the game. Most people like to buy
their ten miniatures, paint them up, and continue to use these same miniatures
throughout a campaign. Maybe just upgrading a figure or two. These rules work
better with that idea, as players will end up keeping more of the soldier they
have instead of immediately discarding them for better ones. That said, players
still have the freedom to switch out soldiers as often as they want.
Some of the soldiers have had their stats changed, and many
of the prices for recruitment have changed, but I’ll leave that for players to
discover when they get the book. Okay…Treasure Hunters are now only Fight +3,
the rest you’ll have to wait to find out.
I’ve accompanied this blog with another rocking piece of the
new artwork by aRu-Mor. This is the ‘knight’. I like this piece because it
shows that the soldiers are open to a lot of interpretation, a lot of
imaginative wiggle-room. A knight can be a classic knight in shining armour, or
it can be an evil looking guy in a grotesque demon mask. The rules don’t care,
so go with whatever fits for your warband!
Well done! This will also make single player scenarios a lot more fun as well, as it pushes the focus from efficiency towards narration.
ReplyDeletethis! so much this. Pushing to narrative is exactly where this game shines.
DeleteSounds more fun
ReplyDeleteNo surprises here :)
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ReplyDeletethere will be rules for soldiers progress?
ReplyDeleteNo. That's not really part of the game. If you want something like that, you could pretty easily use the system presented in Rangers of Shadow Deep.
DeleteI already liked Frostgrave, but I'm super excited for the new launch. I was totally planning on making an archer-heavy warband, though...
ReplyDeleteI wish you'd done a series of articles on Oathmark. I'm interested in it, but don't know much about it.
The osprey games website have a blog section with just that. Got me to buy it 😁
DeleteThanks for the update Joe! With the Pandemic, it pretty much stalled our campaign, so this temporary delay should hopefully see all of us witht he new rules for the campaign relaunch!
ReplyDeleteAlmost totally off topic, but please tell me that North Star Figures is working on a 'Frostgrave Soldiers III' kit inspired by the bloke used to illustrate this article.
ReplyDeleteI want an entire Oathmark army that looks like him.
Sounds great, is there going to be a kickstarter Joe?
ReplyDeleteJoe doesn't do Kickstarters. Now Northstar tends to have Nickstarters for the frostgrave stuff...
DeleteIt sounds like, with the pandemic and all, Northstar will not be doing a Nickstarter for this, and probably won't be doing a Nickstarter for a while, until they get a better handle on backorders, logistics, and how best to operate in this strange new world of ours!
DeleteI love aRu Mor's Art!!! I also like how, even though it's a different style, it still fits with the Frostgrave look.
ReplyDeleteAll the Rules changes sound great. These little updates keep me hyped for the new edition!
That painting of "The Knight" is great; novel and evocative.
ReplyDeleteFantastic news Joe, really great ideas on warband construction. Glad and sad that TH are getting a nerf, totally deserved mind. Going to have some converting to do (no bad thing). Cheers.
ReplyDeleteI really like the way you're taking into consideration your experience of the game being played and the tons of games you've watched and played. This v2 seems to be polished and seamless so far, keep up the good work!
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ReplyDeleteHey, artwork looks amazing. So you can only ever have 4 specialists, or is that just on creation?
ReplyDeleteI am so excited for this! Started playing Frostgrave for real with my girlfriend now during social distancing (even though I have owned the book since release).
ReplyDeleteSince then we have picked up Thaw, Folio and Perilous! And built a ruined terrain board for home!
Just can't wait to see what second edition will bring, might have to pick up the Rangers premium book for some vacation reading before I can get my hands in that one though.
Keep up the good work!
Does this mean that characters that are decent all rounders will be the new "treasure hunter". Thinking Deamon hunters, Trackers and Rangers. Decent shooters, and no slouch in melee. Might be the new defaults?
ReplyDeleteMy hope is that there won't be a new treasure hunter, but we shall see.
ReplyDeleteNice. Sounds like some better balance with takeaway from some of your other projects. Down the line is there are incentive apart from costs for keeping guys alive; Particularly when you draw a line between soldiers and specialists? I guess I was hoping for companion scale improvement like in Rangers. It was never gamebreaking and unlikely to result in runaway warbands because of the slow progression and mortality rates.
ReplyDeleteHi Joe, think these changes are decent. Can't wait for 2nd edition. Close combat still very risky and swingy so archery is a much better way to play Frostgrave. King is not going to let his best archers go out an get killed in crazy quests. Think they need to cost more. Restricting them increases chance of combat.
ReplyDeleteJust a suggestion. Having to fit your summoned creatures into your limit of 12 is a bit restricting. If each spell caster is restricted to only one summoned creature. Negatively effects some spells like imp for example. If you can cast more impressive things imp would not be cast. Why not cast multiple imps based on your level.
Also having all the wild creatures not move till the end phase after everyone has moved is a bit civilised.
Might I suggest every time you roll a natural one on any D20 roll firing weapon, Will check or archery ect. your fumble draws the attention of the nearest NPC creature who moves towards and/or attacks the fumbling character out of turn order. Unpredictable wandering monsters are surprise encounters right. (Plus less things to move in end phase)
Hope you have improved some of the soldiers. Crow masters look great but not too impressive for 100 points.
How about a dog handler/hunter who lets you take hounds over your 12 man restriction. Bit sad that we don't see any warhounds outside of starting warbands. Are theives still out an out better than thugs because of +1 movement?
Looking forward to trying Oathmark too.
I'm a new player just getting into the game. Will the spells be updated in 2.0? If so, will there be an updated grimoire coming out? I just wouldn't want to get something that will be obsolete in a month.
ReplyDeleteIt was mentioned that the spells were mostly not being changed drastically, but there will be changes. You only have a month or so to wait for the 2nd edition. Osprey do have free online resources if you search Gaming Resources - Frostgrave. The game is definitely worth it though.
DeleteThey do plan on releasing cards for FG2.0, but not yet due to COVID-related production delays. I haven't seen the estimated release date.
DeleteI just wanted to say Thanks for all you've done so far. We got into Frostgrave about 18 months ago by chance. We played the 10 scenarios in the book and really enjoyed it. However, we came across some of the issues you mentioned here and in your official blog post about the release. So it is great to hear those are being addressed as well as revitalising the game. Really looking forward to Oathmark too.
ReplyDeleteare all the monster listed in the new rulebook?....
ReplyDeleteSorry about the threadomancy, but I stumbled on this post looking to see if anyone else had done something similar to what my play group cooked up. I think the changes in Soldier categories was a great implementation, but my group did a different workaround during first edition, that some people might interesting or attractive, so thought I'd share.
ReplyDeleteWe all went in together, back in the Before Times and bought the North Star kits (enough so that all six of us would have enough wizards, apprentices, and soldiers to go around). Then one of our group cooked up a system for populating a "pool" of eligible soldiers--effectively the people available in the camps around Felstad and environs, in in-game terms. There was some skew (awful lot of thieves and not many thugs, not too many Archers and almost no Apothecaries, but quite a few Barbarians, etc.), but it added flavor I thought--giving our rendition of Felstad a very particular vibe--and we always had the option of re-running the population process if we had come up with some disproportionate number of archers or an absolute dearth of TH or whatever.
It was a pretty involved process, so it's certainly not for every play group, but I really enjoyed our Draft Night (which had its own set of rules!) and the rest of the group agreed that it was a high point of the whole campaign. None of us are big fantasy football folks, but a few of us had done those drafts before, and it was similar but still more immersive in the context of FG, because you could basically imagine we were these conscripting agents all kind of hanging out in the same drinking tent and looking to identify, contact, and secure the services of the best prospects in the place while the other warband leaders were doing the same thing. It was crazy fun and really set the tone for the whole campaign at a great pitch.
I really do like categorization scheme you mention here and I like that it allows for balancing in a more flexible manner, but if a group is set and consistent in their play and wants to go all in, I don' think I can recommend it enough that they try a draft--super heavy lifting on the front end, but well-worth considering for future campaigns, as the payoff is easily commensurate.