Signal 99 by Richard Hazlewood, published by Stellagama Publishing, is an
adventure for the Cepheus Engine system, set in the universe of TheseStars are Ours!
The publishers were kind enough to send me a copy of this adventure, so I'm sharing my impression of it. As long time readers of my blog will know, I have worked with Stellagama before in a number of ways. However, my aim is to give as objective an account as I can. I will use the same format I've used for other product reviews.
This
is an adventure for 4-6 PCs, most likely the crew of a private
starship. If the PCs have no ship, they can be passengers aboard a
commercial vessel. Signal 99 is available as a .pdf file from
DriveThruRPG.com
Location:
The Parvati system, in UTR space. The adventure takes place in space,
so the exact system is not crucial to the play of the encounter.
Patron:
There is no patron per se, the PCs are responding to a distress
signal, which by recognized interstellar law, anyone within range
must do.
Mission:
The ship sending the Signal 99 is damaged and in distress. Get
aboard, assess the damage, repair if you can, transfer survivors off
if you can't.
Payoffs:
There's no cash reward, of course, but there are things and people
aboard that can be to the PC's benefit for having encountered them.
PCs from spacefaring backgrounds should feel that maintaining the
tradition of answering distress calls (and the expectation that
others would do so for them) is the reward.
Complications:
All the damage aboard makes moving about dangerous; the ship is an
'enemy vessel', the ship may not last much longer. The players will
have to make some hard choices about what/who to focus on in the time
they've got.
Strong
points: Plenty of setting/background data for the Referee means an
easy adventure to introduce. It is self-contained which means not
much prep time needed. There are good deckplans and detailed
explanation of the ship's damage, which will help bring the setting
to 'life' and keep tension high. There is also a helpful list of
'typical actions' in task format. A quantity of high tech goodies can
be found aboard. Each significant NPC is detailed with their own
motivations and courses of action beyond simple survival.
Self-contained but also open-ended; this can lead into a number of
subsequent adventure avenues.
Weak
points: This is not actually a weakness; there is a lot of time
record-keeping for the referee to do, which I am not fond of, and poor at doing. Players who dither or waste
time will find the clock has run out before they get anything done.
One editing mistake: on page 29 there is a 'see page' reference which
is incomplete, but as the adventure is only 38 pages, it is easy to
determine what page is referred to [page 32].
What
I'd change: I can't think of anything. This adventure is focused,
with plenty of detail while still giving the PCs plenty to choose
from and their choices will matter in a lot of ways.
In My Traveller Universe: Cepheus Engine is similar enough to Classic Traveller that converting Signal 99 to my TU would be no problem. If I set this adventure in Holtzmann's Corridor, the enemy ship would be from Tabraz, a planet of notorious pirates. Non-human NPCs would simply be folk from non-Imperial worlds. The adventure is focused on a ship in space, so it could be set in any world's system.
In summary, this is a good space sci-fi adventure that is more than just brawn and danger. The players will be challenged by the choices they have to make. It sells for $3.99, and I say it's worth the cost. Pick up a copy, and To the Rescue!
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