Sunday 21 March 2021

Rogue Stars: review & thoughts

Rogue Stars

Rogue Stars came out in 2016 and I thought I'd wait to read a few reviews before getting a copy.  Months stretched into years but I remembered about it last year and ordered a copy for lockdown reading.

I have mixed thoughts on Rogue Stars.  I enjoy the game itself, but the presentation really brings it down.

Lots of initial reviews were rather negative.  In the same way that Frostgrave was seen as "the new Moredheim", it seems that many viewed Rogue Stars as "the new Necromunda".  This was possibly because of the way it was touted in some sources, but this is in fact a very different kettle of fish and such comparisons were completely unfair.  There is very little in the way of "gang development", only a single page of campaign rules.  The action is also much more tightly focussed and detailed, with smaller groups of characters.  There were also complaints about the amoutn of clutter created by counters on the table tracking various stats, but we'll come onto that later...

I like the main act/react/stress mechanic.  The team with initiative can choose to activate any figure, rolling 1 to 3 "activation dice", needing to score 8+ to activate.  Every success can be used to carry out an action (walk/run/shoot etc).  Every action you take adds a stress counter and every stress counter gives a -1 penalty to that character's next activation roll, so the more you do, the more likely you are to start failing activations.  Failing an activation gives your opponent an opportunity to react or to try and take the initiative.  They roll a reaction die, needing a 10+ to activate or a 16+ to take the initiative.  They will accumulate stress from actions in the same way, thus making it harder to react as time goes on.  If you wanted, you could keep activating the same character over and over again but at some point you'd have so much stress that you would be guaranteed to fail every time.

It differs from the Tomorrow's War reaction system (anyone in LOS can react to a unit that takes an action) in that if the initiative player fails their activation roll, any member of the opposing squad can try to react, regardless of whether they can see the initiative team.  This makes it a much more involved game, with more to-and-fro of action than any other game that I've played.  When the initiative switches, all stress from the squad which previously held initiative is removed, therefore there are often times when you may voluntarily pass the initiative to the opposing force just to get rid of all the stress on your characters.

Because of the way in which the reaction/initiative system functions, there are no "turns" that you can use to set an artificial limit on the length of the game but the fact that you can repeatedly activate the same character over and over again means that the game never seems slow like other IGOUGO ones can at times.

Each player has a squad of a particular "theme" such as miners, space pirates, militia, cultists, merchants etc.   Your theme affects what equipment and skills are available to your force.

Your squad includes 4-6 characters and you have 200XP to spend on creating them.  No-one has a base XP value to which you add things, instead they start at zero and their total cost is calculated by adding up their "Traits" (skills such as marksmanship, first aid, melee combat, physical characteristics such as size, toughness) and their equipment (weapons, cybernetics, armour etc).  Some characters may also have psionics.  Some things have a negative XP cost, for instance "Civilian" subtracts 10XP from your value but has penalties for acting/reacting and morale and restricts you to civilian equipment.

There has been some criticism of the choice to use D20.  I think a D12 or D16 might be better in some ways, probably the former because they're much easier to come by.  Skills add between +1 and +3 to your rolls, so even someone highly skilled won't get a particularly large bonus to their roll.  Alternatively, you could choose to double the bonuses from skills, this would make them more worthwhile having but still allow the effects of stress to build up gradually. I certainly prefer it to the restrictive use of D6 in some other games, though I was always rather partial to the 2D6 system used by Battletech and the way it used the bell-curve to average number of missile hits, damage locations etc.

Some concepts are a rather different to a lot of other games I've played, for instance taking "wounds" from being shot/melee combat.  I spent some time trying to work out how many wounds characters could survive before I realised that having wounds just adds penalties to various rolls, so more wounds = less chance of surviving future hits, poorer performance in melee combat etc.  This could have been explained a bit more obviously in the rules, as could the results of being "pinned"as a combat result, but the lack of space has pevented this, which brings me on to my main problem with the rules as published.

The game is limited by the Osprey format of size and page number - author Andrea Sfiligoi has said that he already fitted in more than he really should which has resulted in a small font size and no index.  There are no character sheets or quick reference sheet but Sfiligoi has explained that would have had to miss out campaign rules in order to fit one in.  Various useful items are available from the Osprey or 1D4 chan web sites, though not all in one place.

Quick reference sheet downloaded makes the game much more playable
 

Some searching on the internet is needed to find all the extra rules.  Counters (or D6) for tracking wounds, pins, stress should be placed on character sheets, not on the board.  Sfiligoi has made this clear in other places (the official character sheet has spaces for these counters/dice) but it should have been mentioned in the book.  As a result, one of the big complaints I've seen is about the number of counters you have cluttering the tabletop, a problem which doesn't exist if you use the character sheets as intended.

 
Note the spaces at the bottom for counters!

Example character sheet (with bad illustration)

The layout of the book is confusing due to space restrictions - the aforementioned lack of an index doesn't help.  An example would be climbing - this isn't mentioned in the movement section of "Actions And Reactions" on page 11, instead it appears in the terrain part of "The Environment" on page 36.

Rules and errata download from Osprey

I have no problem with extra rules or expansions being available as downloads, but it's marketed as a complete game, so you shouldn't have to spend time and effort tracking down missing parts of the basic rules from multiple sources on the internet.

 

Rules expansion from 1D4chan

There are various parts of the rules that seem to be missing or don't make complete sense:

  • Extra Legs trait - more legs doesn't necessarily mean faster - after all there is already a separate "fast" trait.
  • There is no option for character to have wings (but you could just use flight pack rule for this). Khurasan Parasachnids and The Scene Hawkmen spring to mind and for those of a Star Wars bent, winged Geonosians.
  • No "stat line" is a feature of the game, but it might be easier to have one rather than trying to remember all the special rules.  Characters don't just have one or two special rules, they can have 7 or 8 scattered through equipment, traits etc.  Take movement - crawl/walk/run/sprint scores might have +2 from "extra legs" and +3 from "fast".  Easier to record this as 1/2/9/11 instead of having to remember to add up all the modifiers every time. Same goes for shooting bonuses etc.
  • No shotgun in rules (but was added later in errata/FAQs) - big omission, it's one of the standard weapons that law enforcement or colonists often have in sci-fi stories because it's so flexible.
  • Machine gun does same damage as assault rifle but costs more and has disadvantage of being "heavy" (ie. move penalty). Corrected slightly in errata - should also have "infinite rounds". I'd still say that it should do more damage than an assault rifle, most modern GPMGs or LMGs fire larger rounds at a higher rate than an assault rifle or LSW and thus do more damage if they hit you.
  • Silenced weapons (Needlers) are available as equipment, but silencers for other weapons are not included in weapon upgrades. You could add this easily - say 2XP to fit to pistols, SMGs or assault rifles.
  • No bigger weapons - misile launchers, grenade launchers, underslung grenade launchers etc. 
  • Entangler overpowered.  Civilian so available to anyone but "disentangler" is intelligence gear so available to only a single member of a Star Cop squad.  Has a fairly high points cost the same as an assult rifle or heavy blaster but if the target fails a saving roll then become "entangled".  Anyone entangled is unable to move or fight and unless they have psionics, they are essentially out of the game.  Extra equipment in addenda online includes cheap disposable entanglers but these are trying to fix a problem that shouldn't really exist.  A better option might be to restrict the entanglers use to certain scenarios.
  •  Restrictions in themes don't always make sense.  No-one can have cybernetics to start with (though anyone can pay for cybernetics to replace damaged body parts later) except "Cyborgs" squad. Given the danger of their work and the possibly limited access to cloning or advanced medical services, I'd imagine that mercenaries, pirates and miners would all seem likely candidates to be allowed one squad member with cybernetics but only the pirates can have a single "cyber-weapon".  Similarly, some of the restrictions on equipment seem unnecessary.  "Inelligence" equipment can only be used by a single member of a Star Cops squad.  Flight packs, sneak suits, electromag shackles should be available to all Bounty Hunters and Star Cops.  Having the intrusion kit only availabe to cops doesn't make sense.  Some obvious themes to use the intelligance equipment are missing, a black ops or government agency theme should be available, also some sort or organised crime. You can't have an entire squad of sneak-suited infiltrators.

A number of these issues could be solved by simply ignoring the rules you don't like but this would prove a problem in more competitive games.

I also think there are too many pictures, though the artwork is nice.  Scenery and figures are marvellously painted by the talented Kevin Dallimore but often pedestrian in layout.  This is partly a result of the figure style, many are just static "standing around" poses and not very dynamic.  As a result, many the little scenes are not very inspiring and do not really "tell a story", they are just figures arranged in varying combinations in front of some scenery.  I wonder about co-operation between the miniature photographer, illustrator and author - did it happen?  They could have tried to tell a story with the miniatures, added a few effects such as smoke, kept consistency in the groupings (they vary randomly between photographs) and used those as the example squads.  The other Copplestone figures in a few of the photographs are more interesting and gel togeter better in their scenes.  I'm not sure which came first, the artwork or the figures. It might have been better to have the full page artwork including a small box-out of the relevant painted figure.  This would have allowed them to use the in-text photos to illustrate or clarify sections of the rules instead.  Fewer pictures and more text would have made this a better book, in fact you could have lost the majority of the pictures with no effect on the rules.

Example of layout.
 
Something that I haven't touched on yet is cost of additional items, this is actually very minimal and a big plus for the game.  The small model count and flexibility of character creation means that if you already play other sci-fi wargames/skirmish games, you've probably already got the figures you need and you'll be able to represent them easily using the wide range it traits and equipment.  This is the chance to use those really cool figures you just had to buy even though they didn't fit into any of your existing games...

Even if you decide to buy some more figures, it won't cost much to get enough interesting characters together.  I'll be playing in 15mm scale and there are a wealth of manufacturers from which to choose.  Ground Zero Games have a wide range of civilians/colonists, security, technicians and aliens. Brigade Models also offer technicians, andn various character packs,  The Scene have special forces, monsters and more. I decided to add a few extra character models from CP Models and the Alternative Armies HOF and Ion Age ranges.  Alternative Armies have the benefit of allowing you to order individual models from virtually all of their different packs so you can select the exact figures that you want without any wastage.

CP Models ogres and Alternative Armies humans.

CP Models spaceport scum

Alternative Armies Beotan Werewolves

I splashed out on some sets of counters to track pinned, wounds and stress (on the character sheets remember!) but these are cheap enough and you could just use some D6 instead.  I bought some very nice bags of 50x22mm counters in the appropriate pale blue, red and yellow from Cymbeline Games for only 99p a bag plus P&P. 

Counters!

Scenery is something you might need to invest a little more in.  Given the small-scale skirmish nature, this is a game that benefits from lots of scenery with which the individual characters can interact (climbing, hiding behind, looking inside, activating as scenario objective etc).  As with figures, if you're already a gamer you've probably got a reasonable bit of terrain and buying/building some extra scatter scenery doesn't need to be all that time-consuming or expensive.

Overall, I'd grade this a C.  As a game system, this is a B+ set of rules I will definitely be playing again for smaller scale character-based skirmishes.  Unfortunately, the presentation and the effort required in finding the extra rules means that the core rulebook only gets a D-.  This is not a reflection on the author, illustrator or model painting, more a result of the restrictions of the Osprey size and layout (pictures vs text).  It's an example of something which is very much less than the sum of its parts.  This is not the off-the-shelf set of rules that it's sold as - it requires research and other additional work to make it playable.

If you want an enjoyable set of rules that are exciting and immersive and you don't mind taking on some extra homework, then this is a rule set I think you'll enjoy.  If you want something you can pick off the shelf and play immediately, I'd have to advise you to look elsewhere.

3 comments:

  1. Excellent review!

    I picked up Rogue Stars when it first came out with high hopes of a song of blades in space sort of thing but it's a very different beast.

    Alas Osprey have form for releasing games with similar issues, namely Ragnarok which looked like it was going to be fantastic but was bland, poorly laid out (with a key mechanic misprinted meaning the whole ruleset made no sense!) and with decidedly average miniature photography.

    I love the fact that Osprey have produced a selection of wargaming rules and several are good but I do wish they'd spend a bit more time with playtesters, layout and whatnot to make sure they got them right but I suspect each element is worked on independently with minimal communication between.

    Guerrilla Miniature Games over on Youtube played some great battle reports using Rogue Stars that really clarify how it works.

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    1. Yes, I watched the Guerilla Miniature Games review plus 2 or 3 others and read several reviews before I decided to buy. At least with the majority of Osprey games you only have a small price for the rule book and that’s it. No endless codices and new editions to keep taking more money from you! Black Ops and Gaslands are both better in terms of layout and presentation, better miniature photographs too that actually give the impression of being in-game sort of situations.

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  2. Perfect review of quite good rules (in too small book).

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