A downloadable One Page RPG

Buy Now$5.00 USD or more

Calling all Kobolds! 

Gather your crew, assemble your ship, and take to the depths of space on a mission to discover strange new worlds. To seek out life and new civilizations. 

To Koboldly Go where no lizard has gone before!

This game requires a game runner to create challenges and stories and adjudicate rules interactions.

Required hardware: Standard deck of playing cards, tokens, writing implements. Tape is helpful but not required.

StatusReleased
CategoryPhysical game
Rating
Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars
(12 total ratings)
AuthorCoffeeSnake Studios
GenreRole Playing
TagsComedy, Fantasy, kobold, Local multiplayer, Multiplayer, one-page-rpg, Sci-fi, Space, Tabletop
Average sessionA few seconds
LanguagesEnglish
MultiplayerLocal multiplayer

Purchase

Buy Now$5.00 USD or more

In order to download this One Page RPG you must purchase it at or above the minimum price of $5 USD. You will get access to the following files:

Koboldly Go! 1 MB
Koboldly Go.pdf 897 kB

Development log

Comments

Log in with itch.io to leave a comment.

Hosted a tutorial game at the 2024 AnthroExpo convention, played with 8 people, and had a blast! I gave a quick overview of the rules and then we played a short game.

 The rules make for some fast and fun gameplay with room to experiment! It was fun to watch all of the players build their ship together and come up with crazy ideas to solve the Koboldashi Maru scenario I created. Combat and health statuses aren't overly complicated, and the different room abilities can be pretty fun. Some rooms are more useful than others, but I guess that depends on the kind of space adventure you go on.

The hard part was making opposition to the players. The stats aren't super hard to keep track of, but making an entire ship with an opposing crew means that the PCs take their turns and then the Gamemaster takes the same number of turns while they watch. Taking away jobs from the enemy crew makes fights a bit too easy, but tracking each job and location on the enemy ship is a real slowdown. But that's one of the limits of one-page RPGs, so I'm not too bothered.

The page itself is well-condensed, but sometimes it's hard to find where different abilities and rules are actually used (like the different actions in combat, or weapon systems)

Overall, a super fun one-page RPG that I'm excited to run again and again!

This game looks awesome! I'm planning to run it soon and I had a few questions, in case I need to explain stuff to more people.

  1. How does Braverism determine the turn order? How do you determine when the ship automatically attacks?
  2. How low do dice pools go? (ex. a kobold with speedery 1 that's Wounded would have -2 dice rolled)
  3. Does the Machine Shop extinguish fires when it fixes an inoperable room?
  4. Does a Pilot's Evasive Action cause an attack to miss the ship entirely on a complete success? Or just hit another ship if there is one?

I'm looking forward to playing!

Sorry for the delay in answering! 

1. At the start of a combat, have everyone roll it, and go from highest to lowest. If the ship is taking actions, it is either in conjunction with the Kobold at the station or, if there is nobody, in conjunction with the Captain's turn. 

2. There is always a minimum of 1 die for a roll; lucky them!

3. Yes, though there are other ways to extinguish a fire, including manual intervention or venting the atmosphere to the vacuum of space.

4. In the event there is no other ship or other target, yes, you can have the attack against the ship simply miss. 

Thanks for the reply!

Posting my review here:
Just played a game of Koboldly Go! and it was utterly fantastic. The perfect game to read, setup, and play a satisfying scenario in one sitting. There are enough rules to sink your teeth into and foster cooperative play, but not so much you need to study before coming to the table. I especially enjoyed the mixed successes. They drove the story forward while always introducing the next problem for our kobold crew to deal with. Give this game a go!

(+1)

Used this to run Halo 1 (roughly) from the Covenant's perspective and it fitted really well! We only had 3 players, so I'd be curious to try it with more, but it worked out and I'm glad I picked it up :)

I have rules questions (and not ones caused by us not knowing that v1.5 existed and switching rules half way through)!

General

When you get a complete success on repair, do you get +1 power and +1 dice, or just the power.

In the "Make it Go!" section you describe the shooting procedure as: "Roll 1 attack per power to the weapons bay against the power of the defending ship’s engine", however the 1.5 rolls aren't opposed, and the Engine Room just applies a -1 dice per power. Which procedure is right?

Is there a planning phase every round of space conflict?

Abilities

In the "Make it So" section, you say: "but they may add 1 die to a roll as long as they continue to do so". If the Captain gives a new order does the +1 go away, or does the player keep it on each roll as long as they are following the order?

How does the Communications Officer ability work? Does it mean that a 4+ on a Plan or Help roll give +2 dice instead of +1 dice, or does it mean you roll 2 extra dice when making Plan and Help rolls?

Combat

In combat, do enemies (NPCs) also roll to attack? The Blades-style resolution mechanism made us think that it was "one roll resolves both sides action", but the Dodge and NPC stats make it seem like you take turns.

In combat, does a Dodge get declared as your action? Do you choose to Dodge before knowing if you are being attacked? If you are attacked twice in a round, can you Dodge both, or just one?

In ship to ship combat, it says that the ship's weapons: "has a pool of dice equal to the amount of power. It then says: "Roll 1 attack per power to the weapons bay against the power of the defending ship’s engines." Does this mean that attacking doesn't use a kobold's own ratings, but uses just that attack pool (which is decreased by the target's engines)? Do you roll 1 attack per power, each of one dice, or 1 attack per power each equal to the power? What does it mean to roll "against the power of the defending ship's engines"? Since 1.5 rolls aren't opposed — so this reads like a holdover from the previous rules? The more I re-read these rules, the less I understand them :)

Rooms

Can someone other than the Captain allocate power? The Command Deck ability says "The Captain allocates power". If the Captain is off-the bridge, or dead, can someone else do it? If so, and no power is allocated to the Engines, can the ship move?

Does a scan with the Sensor Array reveal both the structure of an enemy ship and the crew position, or just one or the other? Does it reveal the nature of every room, or just some? Does that vary on a partial or complete success?

I wanted to let you know that I’ve seen your questions and hope to have answers for them soon. Thanks for your patience. 

Thanks. We are playing again tonight, so I guess for now we'll just have to stick with the answers we made up ourselves last time.

Good news! I'm actually working on the response right now, and will respond to your original post when I finish.

First, for the sake of clarity, the Koboldly Go! file is the most recent version; if it's got the art and not the watermark, it's the revised version. I did not do a great job making that clear, and that's on me. Apologies.

Another aside before we begin, while it's definitely possible to imagine the players as the only Kobolds on the ship, that was not my intent; the players are the Spock, Kirk, and Uhura, but there are still dozens of other kobolds running around working on and maintaining the ship or causing minor havoc. That said, if you want to imagine them as Han and Chewie, go for it.

Now to your questions, in order:
General:

  • A complete success on a repair grants the room a bonus die of power for the turn; this is a case of a specific rule overriding a general rule. Depending on the room, that may end up granting it an extra die for what it does but that is incidental.
  • The wording is awkward as is slated for a significant revising in the not distant future, but it is intended to function the same way; you have a pool of dice for attacks equal to the power to your weapons minus the power of the targeted ship's engines. You can make any number of attacks with this pool (minimum of one die), concentrating them for more accurate hits or spreading them out to potentially affect more systems. Most notably this is not intended to use the stats of the Kobold operating the weapons systems... they're telling the system what to do but the computer's hardware and software does the actual targeting.
  • It is intended to have a planning phase each turn. Sometimes they can be quite short, like "Do what we did last turn, hopefully better this time".

Abilities:

  • For Make it So, the bonus expires when a new order is given, though I would permit an old order to still grant its bonus if the receiving kobold was not aware of the new order, provided they're not trying to game the system that way.
  • The Communications Officer is intended to be especially good at Planning and Helping, provided their allies can receive their communications. When they get a mixed success on Help or Plan, they will grant 3 bonus dice, and potentially 4 on a complete success. As a sidenote here, I'll be removing strict sensory mechanics going forward so as not to cause issues for people who want to play, for example, deaf or hard of hearing kobolds.
    • Do let me know if you feel like this is a little too strong/overwhelming, I'm considering moving it down to one bonus die.

Combat:

  • Yes, NPCs and NPC ships do roll in combat, this is an intended diversion from the Blades in the Dark norm.
  • Dodge is meant to be taken as your action on a turn, to defend yourself or another Kobold. That said, it feels a little lackluster, especially given that the number of attacks can easily overwhelm the number of potential dodges, so look for this to change... I haven't decided on precisely what the change will be yet.
  • You are absolutely right that this section is terribly confusing; I believe I answered it in the general section above, but do let me know if you're still confused.

Rooms:

  • It is intended that the Captain is the one who can re-allocate power. In the event a captain is dead or otherwise incapacitated, it would be good to either elect a new captain quickly or to have a pre-established chain of command; if you want to make it easy on your players, you could have an NPC Kobold be a First Mate who can automatically step up to allocate power in the captain's absence. That said, if there's nobody in the bridge and no power to engines... that's a bad place to be.
  • It is intended that one scan reveals one thing, so you could learn the positions of the crew or the layout of the ship (including what room does what), but not both with one unit of power. There is no roll associated with this, it just works. You can get both with 2 units of power (or just remembering the layout from a prior turn).

Thank you for your detailed questions! I hope this helped resolve the confusion.

Thank you very much for your comprehensive replies! I think you've cleared up a lot of the confusion I had over ship combat and the way the weapons systems work.

For dodges it sounds like we might need to hosue rule it a little until you have your revisions done.

I'm playing a Comm Officer, so I'll let you know how the bonus feels after our next session.

(1 edit)

Koboldly Go! is a one page rpg (or two pages if you don't print one on the back of the other) about kobolds in space.

It is delightfully crunchy, but also easy to play and it packs a ton of design into its short page-space.

It's got a system for building a ship from a deck of cards, it's got cool abilities and custom classes (including a redshirt whose mechanic is that they die frequently but always come back,) it's got an FTL-style room-powering system, and there's flavorful stats and multiple phases to combat that allow you to plan, give orders, and act each round.

It may not be a good first game for folks who haven't played trpgs before, as its rules take a little interpretation in a few places, but it has an extremely fun structure, and if you're familiar with 5e and want to see what kinds of cool things other game systems can do with crunch, buy this.

Alternately, if you want to play Star Trek but as a bunch of hectic screaming lizards, you should also buy a copy.

Minor Issues:

-How do you determine reactor size?

-Under Make It Go!, attacks are implied to use d20s. Likewise as part of the captain's ability. However under Beam Me Down!, everything is said to use d6 pools.

(+1)

You are correct on both minor issues (Including what caused the second one) and I plan to correct them in a future edition. 

All good! It's a super cool game, and it's not too hard to houserule the mechanics to resolve the issue.

Thank you! And thank you for your kind review. :)

What a quaint game I love it !! The ST & DND inspirations are apparent but I think you work them in your favour to create a slice of sci-fi that shapes itself to be cute and fun, especially for one-shots! I loveee the versatility you've added between the different ship jobs and the vessel, I feel it would help a lot to create different stories from the get-go. The fact that you have suggested personalities is also very helpful for those who may not have played RPGs before! Thank you :)

But my favourite part HAS to be the vessel creation, it's so interesting! Every time a deck of cards is worked into the game as a mechanic I immediately get excited, and it would be so fun to buy a cheap deck specifically for this game and just keep the final vessel map as a memento. I can already see my friends arguing about the next room they should get.

If anything the one-page limitation of this game is the worst part about it because I want to know all about these little guys!!! I love them !!!!! Thank you so much for the game <3