Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave’s Arduin Grimoires - ACKS II Domain Level Play Part II

 Integrating Dave Hargrave's Arduin (a chaotic, techno-magical, multi-genre playground) with ACKS II (Adventurer Conqueror King System II, a hyper-detailed, mathematically airtight simulation of medieval demographics and domain management) creates a fascinating campaign style. While ACKS II assumes a relatively grounded world where human kingdoms use strict economics to manage standard feudal resources, Arduin introduces interstellar nexus points, psychopathic non-humans, and high-octane magic. This blog post picks right up from Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave's Arduin Grimoires - ACKS II Domain Level Play



To run an Arduin-inspired domain inside the engine of ACKS II, you must convert Arduin's gonzo themes into structural rules, economic adjustments, and mass combat traits.



1. Demographic Inversion: The Chaos Multiplier

Standard ACKS II maps out clear guidelines for how many peasant families fit in a hex, how fast populations grow, and what taxes they generate based on a baseline human template. Arduin completely replaces this baseline with bizarre races like the emotionless Phraints (insectoids), the cynical Deodanths (undead future elves), and radioactive Throons.

Instead of treating non-humans as minor variants, apply an Arduinian Demographics Engine to your ACKS II domain tracking sheets:

Dominant Race in HexACKS II Growth ModifierBase Land Yield (gp/family)Civil Morale Shift
Phraints (Insectoid)Fixed +1% monthly (Cloning/Hives)$1.25 \times$ Standard (Flawless hive-mind efficiency)Always Treated as Complacent (Ignore standard unrest prompts)
Deodanth (Fallen Elves)-50% to base growth rate$0.75 \times$ Standard (Contemptuous of physical labor)-2 to surrounding Human domains' Morale due to existential dread
Techno-ScavengersStandard$1.50 \times$ Standard (Paid in recovered pre-cataclysm scrap)+1 to local technological innovation; -2 to Clerical relationships

Economic Conversion: In an Arduin domain, taxes are rarely just gold sovereigns. If a hex is occupied by subterranean Saurigs (dinosaur-men), translate up to 50% of your tax revenue into Monster Components and Alchemical Reagents. These materials can directly fund your Mage's magical research pool in ACKS II, bypassing the need to source raw components from market hubs.

2. Advanced Strongholds: The Techno-Nexus and Slaver Hold

ACKS II categorizes strongholds strictly by class archetypes (Fighter Castles, Cleric Churches, Mage Sanctums). Arduin introduces classes and themes that break these feudal boundaries, requiring custom stronghold mechanics.

The Techno-Mage Power Nexus

In Arduin, magic often behaves like physical, high-energy particle physics utilizing "Mana Points" or power crystals.

  • The ACKS II Mechanic: A Techno-Mage's tower functions as a Mage Sanctum, but it must be built over an active Nexus Point or include an integrated power generator.

  • This structure increases the base cost of the stronghold by 25% (representing alien alloy plating and focus crystals). However, the Nexus grants a permanent +2 bonus to monthly Magical Research throws and halves the gold piece cost required to craft automatons, constructs, or technological crossbreeds.

Slaver and Courtesan Syndromes

Arduin explicitly treats Slavers and Courtesans as core classes with institutional backing.

  • The ACKS II Mechanic: Treat Slaver Fortresses and Courtesan Salons as structural variations of the ACKS II Hideout (Thief Domain).

  • Instead of standard smuggling or pickpocketing "Hijinks," Slaver domains run Abduction and Slave-Raiding operations. This acts as a hostile economic action against adjacent monster or human hexes. A successful operation actively captures 1d10 families from an enemy hex, reducing their domain value and adding them directly to your own workforce or local slave market as luxury or labor commodities.

3. High-Lethality Mass Combat: The "Kill Factor"

The Domains at War engine in ACKS II uses a structured approach to mass combat based on unit composition, morale, and supply lines. Arduin is famous for its sudden, catastrophic combat lethality and explicit critical hit tables.

To merge these two styles without disrupting the tactical math of ACKS II, translate Arduin's combat philosophy directly into the Unit Trait rules:

[Arduinian Vanguard Unit] 
   ↳ Trait: Brutal (Inflicts severe morale penalties when executing a shock charge)
   ↳ Trait: Rad-Infused (Causes lingering attrition damage to defenders in post-battle phases)

The Critical Overrule

When a Player Character or named Hero commander is embedded within an ACKS II combat unit and scores a critical hit on an enemy leader, immediately halt standard damage calculation. Roll directly on the Arduin Critical Hit Table.

  • If the result indicates a gruesome, insta-kill outcome (such as "head cleaving" or "pulverization"), the enemy commander is instantly wiped out of the battle narrative.

  • This triggers an immediate, forced Breakaway Morale Check at a -4 penalty for the entire opposing army sub-division, mirroring the chaotic swing of an Arduinian skirmish.

4. Taxes, Mana, and The Cosmic Domain Event Loop

The core monthly loop in ACKS II relies on stable, predictable calculations:

$$\text{Net Revenue} = \text{Taxes} + \text{Market Revenue} - \text{Garrison Upkeep}$$

To truly implement Arduin, the stability of this economic equation should be continually threatened by cosmic, extra-planar nonsense. Replace the standard ACKS II domain events table with a Gonzo Chaos Event Table.

The Arduinian Domain Turn (Roll 1d12 Monthly)

  • 1: Interdimensional Trade Inversion. A portal opens in your primary market hex, linking it directly to the Multiversal Trading Company. Market performance shifts radically. For this month, double all trade tariffs, but there is a 20% chance an alien plague breaks out, reducing population growth by 5% over the next quarter.

  • 2: Sky-Ship Cataclysm. A massive, ancient skyship crashes into a random rural hex. The hex is completely ruined for agricultural production this month, but it yields 10,000 gp worth of unrefined skystone, tech components, and rare energy cells.

  • 3: The Blood Moon Rises. Deodanth, Demon, and Undead populations across your domain go into a frenzy. All military garrisons composed of these units gain a +2 morale bonus, but civil unrest among human populations increases by 1 step.

  • 4–12: Favorable Cosmic Alignment. Standard ACKS II economic growth applies. The flow of magic is clear, reducing the time required for high-tier item enchanting by 1 week for this month.

5. Executing the Monthly Domain Loop

To run this at your table without bogging down into math paralysis, use the structured ACKS II timeline but filter every decision through Arduin's aesthetic priorities:

1.Determine Base Demographics:ACKS Phase.

Calculate your core populations, market variables, and agricultural tax generation across your claimed hexes.

2.Apply Racial & Special Resource Shifts:Arduin Modification.

Adjust your income based on non-human labor modifiers (e.g., Hive-mind efficiencies, alchemical raw materials instead of coinage).

3.Roll the Cosmic Event:The Hargrave Wildcard.

The Judge rolls on the Arduin Domain Event table to determine if sky-ships crash, rifts open, or techno-scavengers arrive to disrupt your plans.

4.Execute Domain Actions & Schemes:Resolution.

Spend your liquid revenue on building Nexus Cores, funding Slaver raids, or running Techno-Mage research using the standard ACKS II d20 resolution tracks.

Using this hybrid architecture gives you the best of both worlds: the narrative freedom, multi-genre wildness, and sheer danger of Dave Hargrave's world, backed by the robust, logical simulation engine of ACKS II.

In ACKS II (Adventurer Conqueror King System II), domain management isn't a side-game or a narrative afterthought—it is the core endgame of the system. The entire economic, legal, and military engine of ACKS II is designed to scale seamlessly from a single 1st-level thief hiding in an alley up to a 14th-level Emperor managing an entire continent.

The ACKS II domain system is built on strict medieval demographics, land yields, and a highly structured monthly turn. Here is a detailed breakdown of how domains function in the system.

1. The Core Infrastructure: Land, Hexes, and Families

Domains in ACKS II are tracked using geographic 6-mile hexes (the standard map scale). The value and power of a domain are not determined by its sheer physical size, but by its population density and Land Value.

  • The Peasant Family: The fundamental unit of production is the family (roughly 5 individuals). Peasants till the land, pay taxes, buy goods at your markets, and provide the manpower for your garrisons.

  • Land Value (LV): Each 6-mile hex has an inherent Land Value rating (typically ranging from 4 to 9). This number represents the richness of the soil, access to water, and ease of farming.

  • Maximum Capacity: A hex can only support a certain number of families based on its Land Value. A standard 6-mile hex with an LV of 6 can support a maximum of 1,200 families. If population growth pushes a hex past its maximum capacity, excess families must migrate to clear adjacent hexes, prompting the ruler to expand their borders.

2. Strongholds and the Class Archetypes

To claim a domain, a character must build a Stronghold to project power and protect the peasantry. In ACKS II, the type of domain you run is strictly tied to your character class, and each generates revenue and resources differently.

Class Domain TypePrimary StrongholdCore Economic EngineSpecial Mechanics
The Feudal Lord (Fighters, Knights)Castle / KeepDirect agricultural taxation, land rents, and feudal tithes.Can attract vast garrisons of professional soldiers at reduced upkeep costs.
The Sanctum (Mages, Wizards)Mage Tower / DungeonMagical research, magical item creation, and harvesting reagents.The domain's hexes naturally attract magical beasts; allows for dungeon-stocking to harvest monster parts.
The Vault / Hideout (Thieves, Assassins)Guildhouse / Urban VaultHijinks (Smuggling, racketeering, robbery, and espionage).Controls an underworld domain that siphons wealth directly from an existing lord's physical domain.
The Theocracy (Clerics, Paladins)Church / Cathedral / MonasteryReligious tithes, donations, and spiritual offerings from the faithful.Relies heavily on Civilization Morale and can launch Inquisitions or Holy Wars.

3. The Economic Equation: Calculating Revenue

The monthly domain turn requires the ruler (or the Judge) to calculate the financial flow of the realm. The mathematical baseline for a standard feudal domain is structured around a clear formula:

$$\text{Net Revenue} = (\text{Taxes} + \text{Land Rents} + \text{Market Revenue}) - (\text{Garrison Upkeep} + \text{Domain Expenses})$$

Revenue Streams

  • Taxes: Standard baseline taxation is 1 gold piece (gp) per peasant family per month. A ruler can adjust this tax rate up or down, but doing so heavily impacts Civilized Morale.

  • Land Rents: Peasants pay rent to the lord for the right to farm his soil. This is deeply tied to the hex's Land Value (e.g., an LV 6 hex yields higher rents than an LV 4 marshland hex).

  • Market Revenue: If your domain hosts a market town or sits along a major trade route, you collect tariffs and trade income based on the Market Class (ranging from a Class VI village to a Class I metropolis).

Cost Structures

  • Garrison Upkeep: To keep your hexes from reverting to wilderness, you must station soldiers in your stronghold. Un-garrisoned hexes suffer from lawlessness, brigandage, and a rapid drop in peasant morale.

  • Tithes and Tribute: If you are a vassal to a higher king or emperor, a fixed percentage of your gross income (usually 10% to 20%) must be sent up the feudal ladder.

4. The Stability Engine: Civilized Morale

Peasants are not mindless gold-generators; they have a breaking point. ACKS II tracks Civilized Morale, a variable score that dictates how stable your domain is.

Morale is influenced by your tax rates, the presence of an adequate garrison, random events, and how well you protect the population from monster incursions.

[High Morale]   → Population Growth + Immigration → Increased Tax Base
[Low Morale]    → Peasant Riots & Emigration      → Brigandage & Economic Collapse

If Morale drops into negative values, the domain enters a state of Unrest or open Rebellion. When a rebellion triggers, peasant families stop paying taxes entirely, pick up pitchforks, and form rebel militia units that must be dealt with via the mass combat system (Domains at War).

5. The Monthly Domain Turn Protocol

To keep campaign tracking efficient, ACKS II processes domain management using a strict procedural checklist at the start of every in-game month.

1.Population Growth & Migration:Phase 1.

Roll for natural population growth and calculate immigration based on the current Civilized Morale of your hexes.

2.Calculate Gross Revenue:Phase 2.

Sum up all agricultural taxes, land rents, market tariffs, and underworld hijinks revenue across the entire domain.

3.Deduct Expenses & Upkeep:Phase 3.

Subtract the monthly payroll for your military garrisons, specialist employees (alchemists, engineers, spies), and feudal tithes.

4.The Domain Event Roll:Phase 4.

The Judge rolls on the Random Domain Events table. This introduces dynamic narrative shifts such as plagues, unexpected bumper crops, border disputes, or localized monster infestations.

By binding the mechanical progression of the player characters directly to the physical growth, economic health, and military defense of their lands, ACKS II transforms the traditional tabletop campaign into a living, breathing geopolitical sandbox.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Building The Red Planet Empire - Mixing Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP) with the Domain-level Architecture of ACKS II Rpg

 Marrying the Sword and Planet flavor of Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP) with the heavy simulationist, domain-level architecture of ACKS II creates an incredible sandbox. You get the pulpy, high-adventure energy of Barsoom combined with the rigorous economic, logistical, and empire-building mechanics that make ACKS II legendary.




Because both systems are built on top of the classic B/X D&D foundation, they weld together surprisingly well. Here is how to detail that integration smoothly.



1. Character Classes & Archetypes

WotRP features four core classes tailored for planetary romance: the Fighting Man, Scoundrel, Scientist, and Mentalist. To bring them into ACKS II, we map their core competencies to the ACKS II class design framework, particularly scaling their Attack Throws, Saving Throws, and Hit Dice (HD).

  • The Fighting Man & Scoundrel: Treat these simply as reskinned versions of the ACKS II Fighter and Thief. Give them access to the standard ACKS II Combat and Thievery proficiencies, but tweak the flavor (e.g., Savage Resilience instead of Hardiness).

  • The Scientist: This replaces the Mage/Cleric utility role. In ACKS II terms, treat the Scientist as a custom campaign class using the Expert or Mage build chassis but replace spellcasting with Weird Science Gadgetry. Their "spells" are physical inventions that take time and gold to build in a laboratory, utilizing the Magic Research and Construct Construction rules from ACKS II Chapter 7.

  • The Mentalist: This is your psionic archetype. Instead of Vancian magic, they use a power-point or psychic strain system. In ACKS II, you can run them using the Warlock or a modified Mage framework, replacing verbal/somatic components with pure mental concentration, and styling their spell repertoire entirely as telepathy, telekinesis, and biokinesis.

2. Adapting the Proficiency System

ACKS II relies heavily on proficiencies to define a character's mechanical niche. You don't need to invent a new system; just expand the existing list with a science-fantasy coat of paint:

ACKS II Base ProficiencyRed Planet Reskin / VariantCampaign Function
EngineeringRadical Radium EngineeringUsed for repairing ancient sky-galleys and maintaining atmospheric plants.
Beast Whacker / RidingThoat-MasteryGrants bonuses to taming and fighting from the backs of multi-legged alien mounts.
NavigationDead Reckoning (Savage Skies)Crucial for piloting airships across shifting, trackless desert wastes.
AlchemyAlchemical Chemistry & Radium-WeavingUsed by Scientists to brew strange serums, rejuvenation fluids, or unstable explosives.

3. Combat, Armor, and Radium Weapons

One of the iconic elements of Sword and Planet fiction is characters running around in harness/loincloths while wielding deadly radium rifles and longswords. ACKS II’s lethal combat system supports this beautifully if you make a few adjustments:

  • The Armor Paradox: In WotRP, heavy armor is rare or culturally disdained, but ACKS II math expects front-line fighters to have high Armor Class (AC). Implement a Swashbuckling AC Bonus or Agility Deflection rule: characters wearing light or no armor gain an AC bonus equal to their Dexterity modifier plus half their class level (maximum +6), representing active parrying and dodging in the thin air.

  • Radium & Blaster Weapons: Treat radium pistols and rifles as heavy crossbows or arbalests in terms of baseline damage, but give them the Armor Piercing trait (ignoring 2–3 points of physical armor) or treat them as Cleave-eligible missile weapons. To keep melee viable (as it is in the fiction), ammunition should be an incredibly scarce, non-replenishable resource managed closely via ACKS II encumbrance rules.

4. Sky-Galleys and the ACKS II Trade System

This is where the combination truly shines. WotRP gives you rules for airships, but ACKS II gives you a massive, functioning economic engine for Mercantile Ventures.

  • Airship Caravans: Replace the standard ACKS II Merchant Ships and Caravans tables with Sky-Galleys. Use the existing Arbitrage Trading and cargo transport rules verbatim, but adjust the movement speeds to account for aerial travel over desert rifts and dead sea beds.

  • Trade Goods: Swap out mundane fantasy trade goods for planetary variants:

1.Secure the Airship:Capital Investment.

Purchase or capture a Radium-powered Sky-Galley (treat as a modified Galleass or Airship using the ACKS II vehicle construction pricing, roughly 50,000 to 100,000 gp).

2.Source Exotic Cargo:Market Phase.

Roll on modified ACKS II Merchandise Tables to source high-value, low-weight Martian goods like Lifewater Serums, Ancient Tech-Relics, or Radium Ore.

3.Navigate the Dead Sea Beds:Encounter Phase.

Travel across the wastes. Use ACKS II wilderness movement tracking, substituting standard wandering monsters with WotRP predatory megafauna, roaming green-skinned hordes, or atmospheric storms.

4.Liquidate at a City-State:Arbitrage Resolution.

Apply the destination city’s Demand Modifiers based on its local stability and access to resources to calculate your final profit margin in gold pieces.

5. Domain Phase: Forging a Red Empire

When characters hit 9th level in ACKS II, they transition from local adventurers to Kings and Conquerors. In a Red Planet setting, this fits perfectly with the trope of a displaced earthman or a rising warlord uniting fragmented tribes.

  • City-States vs. Nomads: Instead of feudal baronies, domains will take two primary forms:

    1. Isolated Tech-Cities: High-infrastructure, dense urban strongholds centered around a vital resource like an atmospheric plant or an oasis well. Use ACKS II Urban Investment and Villages, Towns, and Cities rules.

    2. Horde Domains: Nomadic encampments or tribal aggregations (like the Green Martians). Use the Chaotic Domains or Borderlands rules, where domain revenue is generated through raiding, tribute, and herding giant livestock rather than standard agricultural taxes.

  • Sinking Capitals into Infrastructure: Income generated from your domains can be directly funneled back into repairing ancient planetary infrastructure—such as commissioning canal projects or expanding a fleet of war-galleys to defend your borders from rival Building a custom class using the ACKS II Imperial Campaign Engine requires balancing trade-offs across the four main design axes: Fighting, Thievery, Divine, and Mage.

    To create the Red Planet Scientist, we are going to use the Expert engine framework rather than giving them true magical power. Their "magic" is completely material—harnessed through blueprints, ancient tech-scraps, and unstable radium compounds.

    Here is the complete mechanical breakdown and class template designed to plug directly into your ACKS II campaign.

    The Red Planet Scientist

    • Prime Requisite: Intelligence

    • Requirements: None

    • Hit Dice: d4 per level (up to 9th level, then +1 HP per level)

    • Maximum Level: 14

    • Armor Allowance: Unarmored or padded/harness equivalent (Leather equivalent max, no shields).

    • Weapon Allowance: Club, dagger, garrote, hand axe, lasso, whip, and all Radium/Blaster weapons (pistols, carbines, rifles).

    ACKS II Class Build Mechanics

    To build this class under the hood, we allocated the 4 Build Points allowed for a baseline class:

    • Fighting 0: (0 points) d4 Hit Dice, Attack Throw 10+, narrow weapons, light armor.

    • Thievery 1: (1 point) 2 Thief skills (assigned to Hear Noise and Find Traps to represent sensory awareness and mechanism analysis).

    • Mage 0: (0 points) No spellcasting.

    • Expert 3: (3 points) 6 class abilities. We spend these on Weird Science Lab, Jury-Rig, Tech-Scavenging, Ancient Lore, and an accelerated Proficiency progression.

    Class Abilities

    1. Weird Science Laboratory (Magical Research Equivalent)

    At 1st level, the Scientist can build, modify, or repair technological devices. This functions identically to the Magical Research rules in ACKS II Chapter 7, but uses Intelligence instead of Worksheet modifications for magical alignment.

    • Invention: They can create "Gadgets" that replicate the effects of arcane spells. To build a gadget, the Scientist must spend gold and time in a workshop. A 1st-level "Spell" gadget takes 1 week and costs 500gp in scrap components.

    • Activation: Gadgets require regular maintenance. A Scientist can safely carry and maintain a number of active gadget "Spell Levels" equal to their slots shown on the Progression Chart below.

    2. Jury-Rig

    Once per day per two class levels (round up), a Scientist can coax a broken, depleted, or malfunctioning piece of ancient technology (including vehicles like Sky-Galleys) into working for $1d6$ turns. This bypasses the need for a formal workshop or gold expenditure, but the item breaks permanently after the duration expires unless properly repaired later.

    3. Tech-Scavenging

    When searching ruins, dead cities, or downed sky-craft, a Scientist adds their class level to any proficiency checks made to scavenge functional components, radium cells, or raw technological scrap metal.

    4. Ancient Lore

    Scientists have spent lifetimes analyzing the fading glyphs of the red planet's past civilizations. This functions exactly like the Lore proficiency. On a throw of 18+, the Scientist can identify the purpose, history, and operation of an ancient artifact or historic location.

    Progression & Tech-Crafting Chart

    LevelExperience PointsHit DiceAttack ThrowSaving ThrowGeneral Prof.Class Prof.Max Invention LevelActive Gadget Slots (By Level)
    101d410+15+121st1
    21,2502d410+15+121st2
    32,5003d410+14+231st2 / 1
    45,0004d49+14+232nd3 / 2
    510,0005d49+13+242nd3 / 2 / 1
    620,0006d49+13+343rd4 / 3 / 2
    740,0007d48+12+353rd4 / 3 / 2 / 1
    880,0008d48+12+354th4 / 4 / 3 / 2
    9160,0009d48+11+464th5 / 4 / 3 / 2 / 1
    10280,000+1 HP7+11+465th5 / 4 / 4 / 3 / 2
    11400,000+2 HP7+10+475th5 / 5 / 4 / 3 / 2 / 1
    12520,000+3 HP7+10+575th5 / 5 / 4 / 4 / 3 / 2
    13640,000+4 HP6+9+585th5 / 5 / 5 / 4 / 3 / 2 / 1
    14760,000+5 HP6+9+585th5 / 5 / 5 / 4 / 4 / 3 / 2

    Note: Active Gadget Slots follow the standard ACKS II Mage spell progression shape, but represent physical items built and maintained by the Scientist.

    Saving Throws

    LevelBlast & BreathDeath & PoisonParalysis & PetrificationSpells (Psychic/Weird Sci)Staffs & Wands
    1–216+14+13+15+16+
    3–415+13+12+14+15+
    5–614+12+11+13+14+
    7–813+11+10+12+13+
    9–1012+10+9+11+12+
    11–1211+9+8+10+11+
    13–1410+8+7+9+10+

    Thief Skills Equivalent (Analysis Mechanics)

    The Scientist gains access to two skills, calculated using their Intelligence modifier instead of Dexterity:

    • Find Traps / Analyze Machinery: Used to locate hidden mechanisms, pressure plates, or analyze security overrides on ancient vault doors.

    • Hear Noise / Sensor Sweeps: Used to pick up low-frequency vibrations, shifting sand-predators, or detecting the hum of active power cores through thick walls.

    LevelFind Traps / Analyze MachineryHear Noise / Sensor Sweeps
    114+18+
    213+17+
    311+15+
    49+13+
    57+11+
    65+9+
    73+7+
    82+5+
    91+4+
    101+3+
    111+2+
    12+1+1+

    Scientist Class Proficiency List

    When choosing class proficiencies, the Scientist selects from the following list:

    Class Proficiencies: Alchemy (Chemical Synthetics), Ancient History, Craft (Weird Science), Cryptography, Engineering (Radium/Atmospheric), Healing, Knowledge (Planetary Geography), Language, Lip Reading, Mapping, Mechanics, Navigation, Signaling, Tracking.

    Domain Level: The Laboratory-Citadel (Level 9+)

    Upon reaching 9th level, a Scientist can construct a Laboratory-Citadel deep within the dead sea beds or anchoring an oasis city-state.

    • Attracting Apprentices: Instead of attracting traditional men-at-arms, a Scientist attracts a cabal of $1d4+1$ lower-level Scientists (levels 1–3) looking to study under their genius, along with $2d6$ mundane technicians and scavengers.

    • Industrial Production: The Scientist can now begin building Constructs (automata, tripods, combat drones) and staging long-term terraforming projects (like restoring an atmospheric plant) using the ACKS II domain investment infrastructure rules.

Building a Sky-Ship (or Sky-Galley) using Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP) within the framework of ACKS II turns a simple vehicular purchase into a major logistical, engineering, and financial project.

In ACKS II, large construction projects are managed by the day, the gold piece, and the specialist labor required. Here is the step-by-step procedure to source, design, and build a Martian Skyship from laying the keel to taking flight.

1. Establish the Workshop & Sourcing Labor

You cannot build a radium-lofted hull in an ordinary medieval shipyard. A Scientist or Engineer needs specialized facilities.

  • The Sky-Yard: Requires a dedicated workshop space valued at a minimum of 25,000 gp (consisting of high-heat smelting forges, glass-blowing apparatuses for radium conduits, and lift-harness rigging).

  • The Work Force: Under ACKS II infrastructure rules, building large structures or vehicles progresses at a rate of 1 day per 500 gp of value. To maximize efficiency, you need a crew of master shipwrights, specialized radium-smiths, and a supervising Scientist.

2. Blueprint Design Phase

Before a single frame is cut, the vessel must be drafted. A Scientist must spend time mapping out the hull's displacement, the lift capacity of the Radium-Levitation cores, and propulsion sail area.

  • Design Throw: The Scientist makes a Weird Science / Magical Research throw. The difficulty depends on the size of the ship (the hull's capacity measured in Stones of encumbrance).

  • Cost & Time: Blueprints cost 10% of the total target vehicle cost and require 1 week of isolation per hull size class.

3. Sky-Ship Hull Specifications & Costs

Below is the structural breakdown mapping the pulpy fliers of WotRP to the logistical hull profiles of ACKS II.

Hull TypeWotRP EquivalentACKS II Chassis BaseConstruction CostCargo CapacityCrew (Min/Max)Structural HP
Light ScoutOne-Man FlierLaunch / Skiff5,000 gp200 stone1 / 21d6+4
Sky-GalleonReconnaissance CruiserSmall Galley25,000 gp1,500 stone8 / 203d6+10
Heavy Ether-LinerImperial War-FlierLarge Merchant Ship65,000 gp6,000 stone20 / 505d6+20
Cloud-LeviathanDreadnought / CitadelWar Galley (Huge)120,000 gp12,000 stone50 / 1508d6+40

4. Engineering Modifications (The "Weird Science" Plug-ins)

A standard wooden hull is useless without planetary romance tech. When assembling the ship, the Scientist must allocate gold from the total budget to install mandatory propulsion and flotation machinery:

A. Radium Levitation Core (Flotation)

  • Cost: 30% of the base hull cost.

  • Mechanic: Utilizes the planet's latent magnetic lines or localized anti-gravity rays to keep the ship aloft. Without an active core, the ship drops out of the sky.

B. Solar-Ether Sails or Radium Propellers

  • Cost: 20% of the base hull cost.

  • Mechanic: Dictates operational speed. Solar sails are fast in cloudless light but slow down in dust storms or during the planet's freezing nights; Radium Engines run consistently but require scarce fuel components.

C. Radium Disintegration Turrets (Artillery)

  • Cost: 5,000 gp per turret installment.

  • Mechanic: Functions as a heavy ballista/catapult hybrid in ACKS II structural combat, but deals Disintegration damage, ignoring mundane wood/metal armor values on enemy ships.

5. Construction Sequence

Building a mid-sized Sky-Galleon (Total Value: 35,000 gp including basic lift engines and weaponry) requires managing the production timeline:

1.Drafting the Blueprints:1 Week / 3,500 gp.

The Lead Scientist isolates themselves in the laboratory to calculate lift-to-weight ratios. Requires a successful Engineering check to finalize blueprints.

2.Laying the Light-Metal Keel:20 Days / 10,000 gp.

Scavenged alloy sheets (like Forandus or ancient structural scrap) are smelted and shaped into a lightweight, ribbed structural frame that can withstand thin atmospheric pressures.

3.Weaving the Radium Conduits:30 Days / 15,000 gp.

Specialized artisans lay down the glowing pipes that distribute levitational force from the central engine core out to the stabilizers arrayed along the hull's wings.

4.Rigging, Sails, and Armament:20 Days / 6,500 gp.

Mounting the thin, iridescent solar-collecting sails and calibrating the defensive radium turrets.

5.The Maiden Launch:1 Day.

The core is permanently pressurized. The crew conducts an initial steering test over the dead sea bed. Total labor time: 71 days using standard yards.

Logistical Reality Check: Operating Costs

Once built, your sky-ship is an ongoing line-item in your kingdom management ledger. Under ACKS II domain rules, maintaining a complex vehicle requires paying a monthly upkeep equal to 1% of its total construction cost in spare parts, radium fluid, and specialist crew salaries. Fail to pay, and the vessel suffers cumulative structural degradation penalties.

 To blend the grand structural scale of ACKS II ship warfare with the daring, swashbuckling boarding actions of Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP), tactical combat splits into two parallel tracks: The Range Phase (naval maneuvering and artillery duels) and The Boarding Phase (skyside melee).

The goal here is to preserve the tactical weight of ACKS II's structural damage while ensuring a well-placed leap with a radium-sword can completely turn the tide.

1. The Tactical Engagement Round

Aerial combat uses a modified 1-minute round split into four distinct steps.

[1. Initiative] ──> [2. Helm & Maneuver] ──> [3. Radium Broadside] ──> [4. The Boarding Leap]

Step 1: Initiative

Roll $1d6$ per vessel, modified by the Helmsman’s Dexterity bonus or relevant proficiency (Navigation or Savage Skies Piloting).

Step 2: The Helm Phase (Maneuvering)

The winner of Initiative dictates the engagement bracket for the round. Ships operate in three abstract ranges:

  • Long Range: Only heavy radium artillery or long-range psychic attacks can find a target.

  • Short Range: Light blasters, small arms, and grappling anchors become viable.

  • Boarding Distance: The hulls are close enough that a character can leap across the open sky.

To close or widen the distance, the helmsman must make a Piloting Check versus the opposing helmsman. Winning allows you to shift the range by one bracket.

2. The Broadside Phase (ACKS II Structural Damage)

When firing ship-mounted weaponry, attackers roll to hit using the gunner's Attack Throw, but damage is dealt directly to the enemy ship's Structural Hit Points (sHP).

Mundane hand-weapons cannot damage a Sky-Ship hull; only vehicular artillery or specific weird-science gadgets can strip sHP.

Weapon TypeRange BracketACKS II Attack ThrowsHP DamageSpecial Traits
Light Blaster TurretShort OnlyGunner's Base$1d4$ sHPAccurate (+1 to hit)
Radium DisintegratorLong / ShortGunner's Base$1d8$ sHPArmor-Melting: Ignores hull plating.
Ether-Cutter BeamShort OnlyGunner -2$2d6$ sHPBreaching: Instantly creates a structural breach.

The Critical Hull Breach (ACKS II Conversion)

Whenever a ship loses more than 25% of its total structural hit points in a single round, or drops below 0 sHP, roll on the Atmospheric Critical Table:

1d6Critical EffectMechanical Consequence
1-2Hull BreachA section of the deck shatters. $1d6$ random crew members must make a Paralysis saving throw or fall into the open sky.
3-4Radium Line LeakGlowing fuel pipes rupture. The deck becomes hazardous terrain; anyone entering the zone takes $1d6$ damage per round from radiation.
5Engine CrippledFlotation/propulsion drops by 50%. The ship automatically loses all initiative rolls for the remainder of the combat.
6Catastrophic Core VentThe radium core goes critical. The ship will explode or crash in $1d4$ rounds. Evacuate immediately.

3. The Boarding Phase (WotRP Swashbuckling)

Once a helmsman successfully maneuvers the vessel into Boarding Distance, the engagement transitions from naval combat into an active dungeon/skyside encounter.

          [ YOUR SKY-SHIP ]
                |  |  (Grappling Anchors Locked)
                V  V
   ~ ~ ~ [ THE OPEN ABYSS ] ~ ~ ~ 
                ^  ^
                |  |  (The Boarding Leap / Swing)
          [ ENEMY SKY-GALLEY ]

Securing the Hold: Grappling

Before boarding, a ship must lock the target in place. Crew members use light ballistas to fire Harpoon Anchors.

  • Roll: Standard Attack Throw against the enemy ship's base Armor Class.

  • Requirement: It takes at least two secured grappling lines to prevent a rival helmsman from using the Helm Phase to break away into Short Range.

The Boarding Leap

Characters jumping across the gap from one moving sky-vessel to another must brave the thin Martian air. This is handled via a Strength or Dexterity Saving Throw (Player's choice, representing brute athletic power vs. precise timing).

  • Success: The character lands dramatically on the enemy deck, ready to fight. They may take their regular combat action immediately.

  • Failure: The leap was mistimed. The character misses the deck but catches themselves on the safety rigging, hanging over the drop. They are considered Helpless and lose their turn while climbing up.

  • Failure by 5 or more: The character plummets into the dead sea beds below unless a companion uses an immediate reaction or psychic ability to catch them.

4. Resolving Mass Crew Clashes

While your player characters are hunting down the enemy Jeddak or Scientist on the main deck, the rest of the crew is engaged in a chaotic melee. Rather than rolling for fifty individual sailors, use the ACKS II Battle Group Mechanics condensed for the deck space:

Every 10 Crew Members form a single Combat Unit.

  • Calculate the unit’s total Hit Dice based on their average level (e.g., 10 Level-1 Fighting Men = a 10 HD Unit).

  • Each round during the boarding phase, the units trade attacks. For every 1 HD of damage a unit takes, one crew member falls overboard or is slain.

  • If a crew unit's morale breaks (using standard ACKS II Morale Throws), they throw down their radium blades and surrender the vessel.

The Capture Objective

In a Sword and Planet campaign, sinking a ship is usually a massive waste of resources. The primary goal is almost always to preserve the hull while eliminating the steering crew. Stripping a ship to 0 sHP forces a crash landing, but executing a flawless boarding action preserves a fully functional Sky-Galley worth tens of thousands of gold pieces for your player's growing empire.