A Pathfinder Society Scenario designed for 1st- through 4th-level characters.
Within their vaults the Pathfinder Society has located a rare and mysterious star gun from the distant shores of Arcadia that, while broken, still holds a deep power within it. In order to ensure that past wrongs are made right, the Society must arrange for travel within the borders of Arcadia to repair and return the star gun to its rightful home, but to do so they must first convince the council of Segada to allow a team of Pathfinders entry.
A junior team of agents is dispatched to plead their case to the councilmembers, hopefully securing friends and allies of the Society for future exploration and contact. However, a villain lies in wait, aware of the power the agents are concealing and plotting for the exact moment to strike and catch them off guard.
I have been rather unimpressed (understatement...). I played it once (can't even remember high or low tier, but I think high).
It was a slug. No challenge, no interest in the social encounters, the big bad guy is? Well, not really sure what it is, but I am sure of what it is not: a threat.
I have GM'd 75 of the other 84 regular season 1-4 scenarios (and 33 of the 35 quests and bounties, all the one shots, 2 of the 3 specials)and I only voluntarily omitted one of the 9 regular season scenarios I have not run. It is the second I will pass on as a GM.
Pathfinders are heroes and as such, should be challenged. They are not passersby who stroll in and out of a scenario, or a bartender cracking a couple of skulls. Maybe the challenges do not need to be extreme, but the scenarios need to offer the villains a chance of success of some sort.
I resent having wasted my time as a player, and will not waste that of others with it. The blame rests on Paizo as well, for allowing this scenario to happen.
Star gun is a boring roleplay scenario with some trivial combats thrown in.
In this scenario, I liked traveling to a new location, Arcadia, and learning more of the lore that surrounds it. I didn’t see any pictures of Arcadia, but they would have enhanced this aspect of the scenario.
The real failing of Star Gun is that the roleplaying interactions were long, and they were extremely boring. The NPCs weren’t interesting, almost all of the leaders were strong stoic female with almost no personality. In addition to that, we were forced to endure at least 4 rounds of conversation with these NPCs. Star Gun was trying to be a scenario, similar to “Bid for Alabastrine”, but didn’t have NPCs you wanted to speak to, or an interesting setting.
”I believe the interaction system in PF2 needs work”:
The way our GM explained the system, you either spend your round convincing an NPC, or you spend it finding their motivations and secrets (to determine other skill checks you can use).
We had limited rounds and the GM already let us know how many successes we needed, so it made no sense to learn their motivations, which might have been interesting? Anyway, only one of us sensed their motivations (and failed), so it stopped there.
Instead of working like that, I think it would be better if sensing an NPCs motivations were done, for free, at the END of a round of conversation with that NPC. That means you can potentially open up more skills to use against a given NPC the more you speak to them.
Despite my suggestions above, I don’t think it would have made this scenario any better, but it would have streamlined the process, and made the experience much faster (and possibly more interesting).
The combats were also extremely easy and didn’t make a lot of sense considering we were supposed to be under protection.
Lastly, I wish Starfinder would stop crossing over into Pathfinder. We don't want to play Starfinder, OK? Didn't Paizo get the message in PFS Season 6? Please, no more SF maps used in PF either. And not all SF authors should crossover into PF as well.
Overall: Star Gun fails to deliver an interesting roleplay experience. (4/10)
This scenario has the weakest and boring encounters than I've GMed. Encounters that were hard to even hurt a PC felt like a waste of time. Skill checks also seem a little under-tuned (balance between number of successes and time given). Arcadia's lore in the scenario was good, but it wasn't enough to fully enjoy the table.
I'm not entirely sure this lives up to the promise of involving a star gun? I think it's mechanically sound, but not as interesting as it could be narratively.
I feel like there's a couple areas that could be improved on, some that other people have already mentioned.
Spoiler:
Being told to keep the Star Gun secret and immediately after being more or less forced to talk about it feels very awkward. I think there need to be options that don't involve telling her, or have her just already know about it (I mean, there's already a leak somewhere)?
The second thing is more general - the scenario introduces a lot of people right at the start and it feels hard to keep them straight. This isn't really unique to this scenario, but getting five names dropped on me at once quickly leads to me mentally filing them as just Person #1, #2, etc because there's no time to process them all. This isn't terribly uncommon in scenarios though, so...
That said, I do think the back half of the scenario worked well (once the cultists bumble into the party). The dream trap bit was neat. The scenario feels like it has a lack of any actual "boss" encounter, but I don't think that should be required. Enemies redirecting damage was something that I don't know if I've ever seen come up (and becomes amusing when they die to it). I'd have liked to see that with a stronger enemy being protected, but that's not a strike against the scenario so much as it giving me ideas for interesting encounters.
Oh, WOW!! An Arcadia scenario that isn't tied for Port Valen, a trip to Segada, and a star gun? I'm beside myself. And it comes out in my birthday month!
Grabbed this one once midnight rolled around, which shouldn't surprise anyone... and it's a fun romp! A linear little scenario, but a lovely adventure around Segada, somewhere I'm obviously keen to see more of. It's fun to see a variety of Arcadian perspectives on Avistani folk, and to know that they hate the Chelish all the way over on this continent, too. Excited for #4-13, and more Arcadian good stuff after it!
One very small thing: the Segada Protocol sidebar and other bits of this scenario seem to be acting like Canorus is still an active colony, but 1e canon was that it was an undead-haunted ruin, the survivors largely having fled to Anchor's End. Is it up and running again?
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, Rulebook, Starfinder Maps, Starfinder Society Subscriber
Overall, the scenario seems like it's going to be fun to GM, and I'm sure my players will enjoy playing it. And it uses maps that we don't see much anymore. I'm looking forward to Friday!
Was there supposed to be artwork for a specific NPC?
Spoiler:
Tekawenda is on the council AND featured heavily in the second info check. She seems pretty important. So I'm curious as to why we got new artwork for Rahaksenwe, a recurring NPC, new art for a sidekick NPC, but no art for one of the council members that you're supposed to influence.
That seems like an odd choice.
BTW, How do I get my scenarios at midnight? I had to wait until I got the email this afternoon.
This scenario's secondary objective section is missing the sentence that actually rewards reputation ("Doing so earns each PC 2 Reputation with their chosen faction"). As far as I can tell, this is the only PFS2 scenario with this text missing.
Is this intended? Can we get a campaign clarification or errata?