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this post was submitted on 06 Jan 2024
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Ask Game Masters
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I'm quite proud of the system I have for the Orcs of my world. Essentially they live in tribes with a clear leader who sets all the rules and expected behaviours for their tribe known as traditions. Tribe members follow the traditions without question most of the time. But there is a cultural expectation that if any tribe member feels a tradition is wrong or no longer necessary, they must call this out and be ready to stand by their ideas. The leader must provide the tribe member time and opportunity to gain followers to their traditions and then gift them resources to start their own tribe. In this way the tribes with the best traditions tend to grow and the tribes with poor traditions either die out or are absorbed by larger tribes.
I like the idea that a new player coming to my games will be able to make assumptions about orc culture based on preconceptions made from other depictions of orcs over the years, and it would be fairly accurate for my world on a surface level, but there's so much more to it.
That is quite a cool system, and definitely something that I feel fits Orcs quite well, given their general emphasis on survival of the fittest. With this system, it is simply extended to a population rather than an individual; the tribes with unpopular (or popular but bad) ideas will eventually die out. It's very cool!
This is a very gameable system too (in a positive sense). I already want to play an orc who has different ideas about orc society who might want to challange tradition and build my own tribe.
I don't know if you've considered that side of it before but its very cool.