Wednesday, May 20, 2026

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

 Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave’s Arduin Grimoires is a brilliant, if volatile, design space.

On paper, they look like oil and water: ACKS II is a masterpiece of rigorous, simulationist, micro-economically sound world-building. Arduin is a Technicolor fever dream of multi-classed Elven Cyber-Monks, magi-tech powered phasers, and tables that dictate your character dying of a heart attack from pure fright.



But scratch beneath the surface, and they share a foundational truth: both are deeply rooted in the uncompromising, high-lethality ethos of late 1970s campaign play.

Here is a breakdown of how to mediate these two systems so they enrich, rather than destroy, one another.

1. The Core Philosophy: The "Gilded Cage" vs. The "Wilderness"

To make this work, you need a conceptual framework. Think of ACKS II as the structural chassis and Arduin as the high-octane, unstable fuel.

  • ACKS II provides the macro-stability: Keep the domain management, economic pricing, والاستثمار (investments), and the demographic formulas exactly as written. This ensures the world feels real, consequences matter, and gold has explicit utility.

  • Arduin provides the micro-chaos: Inject Arduin at the individual level—critical hit tables, bizarre artifacts, hyper-specialized classes, and cosmic horror elements that bleed into the pristine ACKS economy.

2. Reconciling Combat: Lethality Squared

ACKS II already features a robust, granular mortal injury system via its Mortal Wounds table. Arduin is famous for its hyper-lethal, highly specific Arduin Critical Hit/Fumble Tables.

Instead of letting them fight, layer them by utilizing Arduin's charts for immediate tactical narrative and ACKS for long-term mechanical tracking.

  • The Compromise: When a character suffers a critical hit, roll on the Arduin charts to see what physical trauma occurs immediately (e.g., "Left arm severed at the elbow").

  • The ACKS Integration: Translate that Arduin result directly into an ACKS mechanical condition. A severed arm means the character automatically faces the corresponding penalties on the ACKS Mortal Wounds or Healing tracking, matching the systemic downstream effects (like long-term recovery or infection rolls) but keeping the visceral Arduin flavor.

3. Class and Race Integration

ACKS II relies on tightly balanced, mathematically derived class frameworks (especially if using the Player's Companion toolsets). Arduin introduces things like Phraint (insectoid mantis-men), Deodanths (sadistic, displaced time-cats), and techno-mages.

  • The ACKS II Way: Do not drop Arduin classes raw into ACKS. Instead, use the ACKS II Class Construction rules to build Arduin archetypes.

  • The Blueprint: Assign custom HD, fighting value, and arcane/divine progression to match the Arduin concepts. For instance, a Deodanth can be built using the Elven/Demi-human race build mechanics, buying a high baseline attack matrix, specific thieving skills, and a flaw/vulnerability to simulate their chaotic, cursed nature. This preserves the mathematical balance required for ACKS domain play while preserving the flavor.

4. Magic and Technology: Managing the Economy

The fastest way to break an ACKS II campaign is to introduce Arduin's high-tech artifacts (like Nexus Cartridges or Blasters) without economic friction. ACKS relies on a strict silver/gold standard where magic item creation requires specific monthly wizard back-end labor, components, and cost.

If a PC finds an Arduin techno-relic, it should be treated under the Magi-tech / Artifact rules of ACKS:

  • The "Chaositech" Friction: High technology cannot be repaired or maintained by standard ACKS engineers. To recharge or repair Arduin tech, a PC must secure highly specialized, incredibly rare components (requiring specific mercantile ventures or dangerous dungeon delves).

  • Market Disruption: Selling a functional Arduin laser rifle in an ACKS metropolis shouldn't just net cash; it should disrupt the local market, draw the attention of high-level NPC Conquerors, and trigger dynamic faction responses.

5. The Campaign Setup: The "Borderlands" Nexus

The most seamless way to merge them narratively is through geographic or planar isolation.

Keep your core ACKS II empire pristine, lawful, and mathematically sound. Then, place Arduin elements across a hard geopolitical boundary. Perhaps a massive, ancient megadungeon complex acts as a planar leak where Arduin's multiversal weirdness bleeds into the world, or the "Borderlands" themselves are a chaotic landscape warped by cosmic horror and ancient super-science.

This gives your players the joy of building domains, raising armies, and establishing trade routes in the stable regions, while providing a terrifying, unpredictable "Gonzo Zone" to exploit for high-risk, high-reward relics.

In ACKS II, classes are built using a point-allocation system distributed across four categories: Fighting, Thieving, Divine, and Arcane. Demi-human races require purchasing a "Race slot" that modifies these allocations and establishes baseline racial traits.

Let’s build the Deodanth—Arduin's iconic, unsettling, reality-warping, predatory time-cats. In Arduin lore, they are slender, charcoal-skinned humanoid felines with silver hair, feline eyes, and a cruel, melancholic disposition. They exist slightly out of sync with time, making them lethal, agile combatants and superb ambushers.



Here is how to construct the Deodanth True-Stalker using the explicit mathematics and structural logic of the ACKS II Class Construction system.

The Deodanth Custom Race Template

To establish the Deodanth as a viable race in ACKS II, we must first build their racial modifier package. This package costs 1 Value Slot out of the character's baseline configuration.

Racial Traits & Modifiers

  • Attribute Adjustments: +1 Dexterity, -1 Charisma (their cold, sadistic nature makes them deeply unsettling to normal mortals).

  • Keen Senses: Deodanths possess sharp feline senses. They gain a +1 bonus to avoid surprise and can see in pitch darkness (Infravision 60').

  • Predatory Agility: They gain a +1 bonus to Initiative rolls and a +1 bonus to Evasion.

  • Time-Slip (Racial Ability): Once per day, a Deodanth can step slightly out of the time stream. Mechanically, this grants them a +2 bonus to Armor Class for 1 round, or allows them to re-roll a single missed melee attack roll.

  • Vulnerability to Silver: Deodanths are creatures of shifting reality. Weapons forged of pure silver deal an additional +2 damage to them.

The Class Profile: Deodanth True-Stalker

The True-Stalker blends lethal, light-armor combat prowess with reality-bending ambush techniques. They are the ultimate scouts, assassins, and vanguard skirmishers.

Category Allocations (4 Value Slots Total)

  • Race: 1 Slot (Deodanth Race Template)

  • Fighting: 2 Slots (Fighter-style progression, excellent combat scaling)

  • Thieving: 1 Slot (Basic stealth, climbing, and assassination capabilities)

  • Magic (Arcane/Divine): 0 Slots

Class Progression Basics

  • Hit Dice: d6 per level (derived from Fighting 2 mixed with Thieving/Race constraints).

  • Armor Allowance: Narrow. Limited to leather, padded, or studded leather armor to maintain their supernatural agility. They may use bucklers but not medium or heavy shields.

  • Weapon Allowance: Broad. Any one-handed melee weapon (favoring curved blades and claws) and shortbows.

  • Fighting Value: Expands at the Fighter rate (+1 to hit per level).

Level 1 Class Features & Stats

1. Thieving Skills (Thieving 1 Allocation)

Because of their predatory feline nature, all True-Stalkers possess baseline thief capabilities. They perform the following skills as a Thief of equal level:

  • Move Silently

  • Hide in Shadows

  • Climb Walls

2. Combat Maneuvers & Agility

  • Backstab: When attacking a target from surprise or complete concealment, the True-Stalker gains a +4 bonus to hit and deals x2 damage.

  • Skirmishing: If wearing leather armor or lighter, the True-Stalker may move at full combat speed while maintaining an active defense, granting them a permanent +1 bonus to Armor Class.

3. Saving Throws

The True-Stalker utilizes the Thief saving throw matrix, reflecting their reliance on quick reflexes and supernatural luck over brute physical endurance.

True-Stalker Level Progression Table

LevelExperience PointsHit DiceTitle
101d6Prowler
22,4002d6Shadow-Stalker
34,8003d6Night-Blade
49,6004d6Blood-Seeker
520,0005d6Reality-Cutter
640,0006d6Time-Slayer
780,0007d6Deodanth True-Stalker

XP Progression Note: The baseline cost for a Fighting 2 / Thieving 1 human is 2,000 XP for Level 2. Adding the custom Deodanth racial modifier slot applies a 1.2x multiplier to the XP requirements, resulting in the 2,400 XP baseline shown above.

Campaign Integration: Domain Play (Levels 9+)

When a Deodanth True-Stalker reaches Level 9, they do not build traditional feudal castles. Instead, they establish a Stalker-Nexus—a hidden, shadowed enclave typically located in deep twilight forests, ancient ruins, or planar intersections.

  • They attract a dynamic force of $2d6 \times 10$ lower-level Deodanths and chaotic human outcasts seeking to learn the secrets of time-slip combat.

  • Their domain income is generated primarily through specialized hunting fees, high-end assassination contracts, and the harvesting of rare planar substances rather than standard peasant agriculture.

To translate Dave Hargrave’s iconic Phraint—the lethal, hyper-logical, metallic-blue insectoid warriors of Arduin—into ACKS II, we need to mathematically capture two distinct physical traits: their naturally armored chitin and their legendary, explosive leaping ability.

In ACKS II, we build this by dedicating a high allocation to the Custom Race template, combining it with elite physical martial scaling.

The Phraint Custom Race Template



Because a Phraint’s biological advantages (natural plate-like armor and massive leaping legs) are so profound, the Phraint Race Template requires a Value Allocation of 2 Slots.

Racial Traits & Modifiers

  • Attribute Adjustments: +2 Strength, -2 Charisma (their alien, hive-like, hyper-logical mindset is profoundly unsettling to mammalian races).

  • Chitinous Exoskeleton (Natural Defense): A Phraint’s metallic-blue carapace provides an innate Base AC of 4 (equivalent to Leather Armor + Shield, or Scale Armor) even when completely unarmored. They cannot wear standard mammalian armor; however, specialized smiths can bolt custom-fitted plate reinforces directly onto their carapace at triple the standard cost, increasing their base AC to a maximum of 7.

  • Cold-Blooded Vulnerability: Phraints suffer a -2 penalty to saving throws against cold-based attacks or environmental freezing, and take an additional +1 point of damage per die from cold sources.

  • Leaping Strike (Racial Feature): A Phraint's hind legs are built like massive hydraulic springs.

    • Out of Combat: They can leap up to 30 feet horizontally or 15 feet vertically from a standing start.

    • In Combat: A Phraint can execute a Leaping Charge across a distance of up to 30 feet, bypassing frontline defenders if there is overhead clearance. If this charge hits, it deals double damage with any piercing weapon (such as their signature silver spears). This maneuver can be performed once every 3 rounds.

The Class Profile: Phraint Vanguard

The Phraint Vanguard is a cold, calculating shock trooper. They do not use magic, nor do they care for the subtle arts of thievery. They exist entirely to execute perfect tactical combat vectors.

Category Allocations (4 Value Slots Total)

  • Race: 2 Slots (Phraint Custom Template)

  • Fighting: 2 Slots (Elite fighter progression, maximum combat scaling)

  • Thieving: 0 Slots

  • Magic: 0 Slots

Class Progression Basics

  • Hit Dice: d8 per level (derived from Fighting 2 allocation).

  • Armor Allowance: None (rely entirely on their Chitinous Exoskeleton and shields). They may use any shield, often favoring large, light wicker or chitin bucklers.

  • Weapon Allowance: Unrestricted, but they have a cultural preference for spears, javelins, and two-handed greatswords.

  • Fighting Value: Expands at the maximum Fighter rate (+1 to hit per level).

Level 1 Class Features & Stats

1. Martial Supremacy

  • Combat Reflexes: Phraints gain a +1 bonus to Initiative rolls due to their multi-faceted compound eyes and decentralized nervous system.

  • Weapon Specialization (Spears): When wielding a spear or polearm, the Phraint gains a +1 bonus to damage rolls and a +1 bonus to Cleave rolls.

  • Cleave Progress: Like standard ACKS II Fighters, when a Phraint reduces an enemy to 0 HP, they may make an immediate extra attack against an adjacent foe (up to a maximum of 1 Cleave attack per level per round).

2. Saving Throws

Phraints utilize the Fighter saving throw matrix, reflecting their immense physical resilience against poison, paralysis, and physical trauma.

Phraint Vanguard Level Progression Table

LevelExperience PointsHit DiceTitle
101d8Drone-Warrior
23,0002d8Sentry
36,0003d8Leaper-Blade
412,0004d8Hive-Guard
524,0005d8Myrmidon
650,0006d8Chitin-Lord
7100,0007d8Phraint Vanguard

XP Progression Note: A standard Fighting 2 human requires 2,000 XP to reach Level 2. Because the Phraint race requires a 2-Slot allocation for its high-powered exoskeleton and jumping mechanics, it applies a heavy 1.5x multiplier to the XP curve, resulting in a baseline of 3,000 XP for Level 2.

Campaign Integration: The Hive-Castellum (Levels 9+)

Upon reaching Level 9, a Phraint Vanguard can establish a Hive-Castellum rather than a traditional human barony.

  • Demographics: Instead of attracting random human mercenaries, the Vanguard draws a dedicated cohort of $1d4 \times 10$ lower-level Phraint warriors and $3d6 \times 10$ asexual Phraint worker-drones from their ancestral hives.

  • Architecture: Hive-Castellums are vertically oriented, subterranean or cliff-side networks. They feature no stairs—only massive vertical shafts designed to be navigated entirely by the Phraints' natural 15-foot vertical leaping ability, making them completely un-navigable to mammalian siege forces.

  • Domain Economy: Phraint domains are managed with cold, communistic efficiency. They ignore standard human morale laws; a Phraint peasant workforce never undergoes unrest or rebellion, but their economic output is rigidly capped by the hive's strict, non-expansionist logistical protocols.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Further Meditations on The B2 Keep On The Borderland Adventure Module By Gary Gygax & ACKS II Rpg

 



Gary Gygax’s 1979 module B2: The Keep on the Borderlands is the foundational text of the sandbox campaign. Ostensibly written as an introductory adventure for the D&D Basic Set, it functions under the hood as a masterclass in dynamic world-building, spatial economics, and emergent play. This is going to pick right up from OSR Commentary - Adapting AX2: Secrets of the Nethercity For ACKS II rpg & Barrows & Borderlands Rpg



When peeled back from its nostalgic veneer, B2 reveals a sophisticated, highly volatile ecosystem built on factional tension, economic vulnerability, and a stark, unromantic view of the frontier.

1. The Geometry of Isolation: The Keep's Spatial Design

The Keep itself is not just a safe zone; it is a pressurized container of Law perched precariously on the lip of Chaos. Its architectural layout dictates the social dynamics of the campaign.

  • The Outer Bailey (The Buffer Zone): This is where commerce, transience, and vulnerability live. The tavern, the inn, and the stables form a economic engine designed to extract coin from travelers and mercenaries. It is deliberately exposed; if the outer wall falls, the outer bailey is sacrificed.

  • The Inner Bailey (The High-Trust Engine): Separated by a secondary massive gatehouse, the inner bailey houses the Keep’s actual power structure—the Castellan, the guard garrison, and the chapel. This physical segregation tells low-level PCs exactly where they stand: they are tools of the state, kept in the courtyard until they prove their utility.

The Structural Flaw: The Keep is a logistical nightmare if cut off. It relies entirely on a single, vulnerable trade road to the civilized lowlands. A clever Game Master realizes that the human factions here are just as desperate for stability as the monsters in the caves are for territory.

2. The Caves of Chaos as a Fractured Megadungeon

The Caves of Chaos are frequently misread as a "monster zoo"—a random assortment of humanoids crammed into a single ravine. In practice, they represent a highly sophisticated, multi-tiered tribal ecosystem.

The ravine acts as a literal corporate ladder of absolute savagery, arranged vertically and deeply divided by evolutionary and cultural hatreds.

                  [ The Dark Chapel ] (The True Threat)
                           ^
                           |
            [ Minotaur ] <---> [ Gnolls ]
                 ^                 ^
                 |                 |
     [ Orcs: Tribe A ] <=======> [ Orcs: Tribe B ]
            ^                              ^
            |                              |
     [ Goblins ] <-------------------> [ Hobgoblins ]
            ^
            |
     [ Kobolds ] (The Bottom Feeders)

The Geopolitical Fault Lines

  • The Grudge Match: The two rival Orc tribes (Tribe A and Tribe B) hate each other with a fury that rivals their hatred for the humans. If PCs clear one side, they actively grant a regional monopoly to the other.

  • The Underclass Wars: The Kobolds at the bottom of the ravine are food and slave labor for the Goblins and Hobgoblins. They are structurally incapable of winning a prolonged war, making them prime candidates for PC exploitation, bribery, or asymmetrical warfare.

  • The Hidden Hegemony: At the apex sits the Shrine of Evil Chaos. The cultists are not merely cave dwellers; they are the ideological puppet masters using religious terror and wealth distribution to prevent the humanoids from tearing each other apart before they can overwhelm the Keep.

3. The Undercurrent of Borderland Economics

Gold and silver drive B2 more than any grand narrative of good versus evil. The module operates on a strict zero-sum economy that forces players into grey moral choices.

FactionPrimary Economic EngineVulnerability
The KeepTrade taxes, mercenary exploitation, state supply linesTotal reliance on external grain/goods shipments
The HumanoidsRaiding trade caravans, internecine tributeAbsolute lack of agriculture or sustainable production
The CultistsPlunder, ideological funding from external dark powersExposed supply lines if the ravine is blockaded

The Realities of Gygaxian GP

Because early editions tie character advancement (XP) directly to recovered treasure, the game mechanics force PCs to act as state-sanctioned looters. Every gold piece stripped from a goblin chief’s chest is capital removed from the local wilderness economy and injected into the Keep’s merchant lane.

This creates an inevitable cycle: looting causes tribal desperation, desperation causes increased raids on the trade roads, and increased raids force the Castellan to fund more desperate expeditions into the ravine.

4. The Hidden Catalyst: The Wilderness

The wilderness hexes between the Keep and the Caves are not empty transit space; they are a ticking clock.

  • The Mad Hermit: A textbook example of borderland madness. He represents the fate of those who reject both the rigid martial law of the Keep and the tribal collectivism of the Caves.

  • The Lizardmen: Positioned in the southern fens, they are a neutral wildcard. They do not care about the geopolitical war between the Castellan and the Cultists, but their territorial integrity controls access to the riverways.

5. Turning the Key: Running B2 with Modern Intent

To elevate B2 from a classic crawl into a dynamic, shifting campaign, a Game Master needs to treat the module as a loaded spring. The moment the PCs arrive, the balance of power should begin to crack.

  • Weaponize the Factions: Let the humanoids negotiate. A dying goblin chief should gladly offer the PCs a map of the Hobgoblin complex in exchange for his tribe’s survival.

  • Track the Logistical Fallout: If the players kill the Kobolds, who moves into their caves? The Orcs? Or does the gelatinous cube wander out of the depths because its food supply has dried up?

  • The Keep is Not Safe: The cult has agents inside the walls. The lonely, isolated mercenaries in the Outer Bailey are prime targets for subversion, bribery, and religious radicalization.



To bridge the foundational sandbox of B2: The Keep on the Borderlands with the granular, socio-economic engine of Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) is to transform a classic introductory dungeon crawl into a highly volatile, politically charged borderland simulation.

Where early editions of D&D treat the wealth and manpower of the Keep as static background flavor, ACKS II mechanics demand that every coin looted, every mercenary hired, and every goblin tribe displaced ripples directly through the local market economy and domain stability.

1. The Keep as a Class VI Market (The Borderland Frontier)

In ACKS II, settlements are categorized by Market Classes, which dictate the availability of goods, the maximum value of items that can be sold, and the weekly pool of mercenary talent.

The Keep functions as a Class VI Market (a tiny frontier settlement or fortified outpost).

[ Civilized Lowlands ] ===(Trade Income: High)===> 
[ The Keep: Class VI Market ] ===(Target)===> 
[ The Caves of Chaos ]
                                                            |
                                                   
[ Frontier Garrison ]
                                               
(High Upkeep / Low Tax Base)

The Economic Squeeze

  • The Monthly Supply Limit: A Class VI market has a limited monthly supply of standard equipment and a very low threshold for purchasing monster treasure. If the PCs return from the Caves of Chaos with a hoard worth $3,000\text{ gp}$, they cannot simply liquidate it at the local provisioner. The local merchants lack the liquidity. The PCs must either pay a hefty premium to ship the loot to a larger city downriver, barter directly with the Castellan for land/favors, or accidentally crash the local frontier economy by causing hyperinflation.

  • Mercenary Scarcity: The Outer Bailey tavern is not an infinite well of meat-shields. In ACKS II, a Class VI market might only generate $1\text{d}4$ Light Infantry or Bowmen candidates per month. If the players treat their retainers as disposable trap-detectors in the ravine, they will rapidly find themselves entirely alone; word spreads that expeditions with the PCs are a death sentence, drying up the local labor pool.

2. The Caves of Chaos as a Fragmented Beastman Domain

Instead of seeing the Caves as a random assortment of monster lairs, ACKS II views the ravine through the lens of Beastman Tribes and Domains. The Caves represent an active, competitive ecosystem of overlapping tribal territories fighting for the same limited resources.

Using the ACKS II domain management logic, the Ravine can be mapped out as an unstable web of tribal dynamics:

TribeACKS II Unit TypesPrimary ResourceTerritorial Strategy
KoboldsLight Infantry (Slingers), SkirmishersNumbers & Hidden TunnelsSubservient to the Hobgoblins; focus on ambush and defense.
GoblinsWolf Riders, Light InfantryMobility & Warg BreedingAttempting to secure the Wilderness Road to intercept commerce.
Orcs (Tribe A/B)Heavy Infantry, Medium InfantryMartial Might & RaidingLocked in a blood feud over hunting grounds and tribute.
HobgoblinsPhalanx Infantry, Heavy InfantryDiscipline & Tactical FortificationsFunctions as the military backbone of the ravine, policing lower tribes.
The CultCultists, Dark Pluralists, Anti-ClericsDivine Favor & Unholy RelicsThe shadow government extracting tribute to fund a chaotic node.

The Chieftain's Balance Sheet

In ACKS II, monster chieftains must pay their troops and feed their populations just like human rulers. The humanoids in the Caves are starving; the frontier is over-populated.

  • If the PCs cut off the Goblins’ access to the trade road, the Goblin Chief faces a resource crisis. To prevent a mutiny, he must either launch a desperate, suicidal assault on the Keep’s supply lines or invade the neighboring Orc territory to seize their grain stores.

  • The players can actively use Subversion and Bribery (ACKS II Criminal Syndicate rules) to fund one faction, turning a dungeon crawl into a proxy war.

3. The Castellan’s Dilemma: Garrison Costs vs. Revenue

The Castellan is not just an NPC who gives out quests; he is a Domain Ruler operating on a razor-thin financial margin.

The Keep maintains a formidable garrison: dozens of heavy footmen, crossbowmen, and cavalry. In ACKS II, the monthly upkeep for a professional military force of this size vastly outstrips the tax revenue generated by the tiny civilian population in the Outer Bailey.

+-------------------------------------------------------+
|  THE CASTELLAN'S MONTHLY LEDGER                       |
+-------------------------------------------------------+
|  REVENUE:                                             |
|    - Outer Bailey Market Taxes:              +150 gp  |
|    - Royal Borderland Subsidy:             +1,200 gp  |
+-------------------------------------------------------+
|  EXPENSES:                                            |
|    - Garrison Wages & Rations:             -1,800 gp  |
|    - Wall Fortification Maintenance:         -250 gp  |
+-------------------------------------------------------+
|  NET MONTHLY DEFICIT:                        -700 gp  |
+-------------------------------------------------------+

The Strategic Consequence

The Castellan is hemorrhaging money. The royal court in the civilized interior will only subsidize this outpost for so long before deciding the borderland is a lost cause.

  • The PC as an Investment: This financial pressure is exactly why the Castellan tolerates rowdy, heavily armed adventurers operating out of his tavern. He needs the PCs to clear the caves because his official garrison cannot leave the walls without risking the Keep falling to an immediate siege.

  • The Taxman Cometh: Once the PCs start clearing sections of the Caves, the Castellan will assert legal claim over the recovered territory under crown law. He will demand a tithing or treasure tax (typically 10% to 20%) on all bullion brought through the Keep's gates to balance his ledger, creating a natural point of friction between the party and the law.

4. The Campaign Endgame: Securing the Borderlands

The ultimate synergy between B2 and ACKS II emerges when the party survives to mid-levels ($4\text{th}–6\text{th}$ level) and shifts from mere delvers to domain rulers. The module naturally transitions from a dungeon crawl into a Borderland Clearing Simulation.

[ Level 1-3: Tactical Crawl ] ---> [ Level 4-5: Factional Sabotage ] --->
 [ Level 6+: Domain Construction ]
  - Loot for XP                      - Fund Tribal Wars                     - Clear Hexes
  - Hire Local Retainers             - Intercept Cultist Supply Lines        - Build Borderland Strongholds

From Ravine to Barony

Under ACKS II rules, to claim a domain, the wilderness hexes must be systematically "cleared" of monsters.

  1. The Purge: The Caves of Chaos cannot simply be left half-empty. If the Cult is destroyed but the Hobgoblins remain, the domain is still considered wild. The players must systematically root out or subjugate every faction.

  2. Vassalizing the Humanoids: An enterprising Lawful or Neutral PC might choose not to exterminate the remaining humanoids, but to force them into vassalage. Using the ACKS II Monstrous Vassals mechanics, a defeated Orc chieftain can swear an oath to a player character, turning the remaining cave complexes into a fortified, subterranean march that guards the PC’s new border territory.

  3. The Shadow War: If the players build a stronghold nearby, they must contend with the Unholy Node generated by the Shrine of Evil Chaos. Until the shrine is desecrated and ritually purified by a high-level cleric, it will continuously attract new chaotic monsters to the region, increasing the local Savage Encounter rate and suppressing civilian migration to the players' new lands.

5. Master Faction Conflict Table for the Borderlands

This d20 table represents the regional friction between the Keep's supply lines, the competitive humanoid tribes, and the machinations of the Cult, processed through ACKS II wilderness movement mechanics.

d20Encounter TypeFactions InvolvedEconomic / Tactical Consequence
1-2Tribal SkirmishOrcs (Tribe A) vs. GoblinsThe Orcs are executing a punitive raid on a goblin foraging party. Left alone, one side is wiped out, shifting the balance of power in the ravine.
3-4Cultist Supply InterdictionThe Cult vs. Keep CaravanHooded acolytes and undead skeletons are ambushing an iron shipment meant for the Keep's blacksmith. Success increases the cost of weapons at the Keep by 20%.
5-6The Desperate LevyKeep Garrison vs. WildernessA squad of Keep footmen is forcibly press-ganging local laborers and travelers into service to replace recent casualties. PCs must negotiate or see their preferred torchbearers drafted.
7-8Tribute CollectionHobgoblins vs. KoboldsA disciplined phalanx of Hobgoblins is extracting food and copper from a terrified pack of Kobolds. If the PCs protect the Kobolds, they earn a fragile, low-trust informant network within the Caves.
9-10The Mad Hermit’s Market DisruptorThe Hermit vs. Local EcosystemThe Mad Hermit has trapped a live monster (e.g., a Owlbear or Gray Ooze) and is attempting to steer it toward the Keep’s trade road to drive away "the civilized insects."
11-12Mercenary DesertionDisgruntled Guards vs. The Law$1\text{d}6$ heavy infantrymen have deserted the Keep due to back-pay issues and are turning to highway robbery. They possess inside knowledge of the Keep’s watch schedules.
13-14The Fens EncroachmentLizardmen vs. Orcs (Tribe B)Lizardmen from the southern swamp have traveled upriver to contest a watering hole used by the Orcs. The area is a chaotic three-way hunting ground.
15-16Underground RailroadCultist Infiltrators vs. The KeepA seemingly mundane merchant wagon leaving the Keep is caught smuggling sacrificial victims or silver out to the Shrine under the cover of night.
17-18The Warg RunGoblin Cavalry vs. Trade CaravanGoblin wolf riders are performing a hit-and-run raid on a luxury trade caravan. Wealthy merchants from the lowlands are trapped; saving them offers a direct line to Class I market financing.
19-20Total Ravine MobilizationThe Cult’s VanguardA unified force of Orcs, Goblins, and Cultists are marching to establish a forward siege camp outside the Keep's valley. The campaign sandbox has escalated to an open war footing.