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Looking back at my past campaigns, the ones I've had the most fun running (and which were arguably the most successful) were the ones where the PCs could take a fairly sandboxy approach to exploring a wilderness region. I'd like to develop a new campaign like this again one day, but what I could use for such a campaign is an interesting premise. I am ruling the following premises out:

  • Adventurers plundering old ruins for profit: Too trite.
  • Adenturer-archeologists uncovering the deep history of the region for academic bragging rights: A lot of fun, but I have done this before.
  • Making the region "safe" for colonization and settlement: While the whole concept of "colonizing the frontier" provides plenty of interesting background drama for a campaign that I don't mind exploring, it is too ethically dubious to make the PCs take the side of the colonizers by default.

So, what other premises can you come up with that provide a justification for player characters to hang around a frontier region and explore it?

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[-] pteryx@dice.camp 2 points 2 weeks ago

One idea that pops to mind is simply learning about the strange and sometimes dangerous flora and fauna of a new region... or, more fantastically, about its spirits. Rather than having the tension come from the usual "and we need to find X kind of resource to exploit in the process" (since that's more colonialist thinking), there should be a dawning realization that the region itself is in danger from something the PCs need to stop.

this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2025
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