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The Soldier
and the Vampire, a Russian Fairy Tale for Playing RPG Games.
Eastern Europe and Russian are the lands of
the vampires. Few peoples have created such a dark pantheon of creatures as
have those in Eastern Europe, so it comes as no surprise that Russian Fairy
tales like that of "The Soldier and the Vampire" will help you make
some of the darkest fantasy role playing games and worlds. Such stories are
important to read, not only to go to the source of inspiration but because
often times such vampires are very different from what we would expect. In the
folk tale “The Soldier and the Vampire” a soldier meets a vampire who acts
friendly and cordial to him, and goes with him to a wedding party. At first the
vampire is friendly at the wedding party as well but then as he gets drunk he
turns into the monster. Driving out the wedding guests and then causing the
groom and the bride to pass out. He then uses an awl to drain their blood, in
revenge for imagined wrongs, so as to hold their life in vials.
The soldier for his part must fight this vampire until dawn, and then at the cock’s
crow the vampire falls lifeless, for it is not that exposure to sunlight burns
these monsters, but rather that during the day vampires such as the one in this
story loose their magical mobility. However even when lifeless vampires are not
so easy to defeat. For in this story he must be burnt with birch wood, and as
he burns thousands of maggots, cats, and other animals will appear and attempt
to flee the fire, these hold his soul so if but one gets away he will come back
to life to seek revenge.
In Role Playing Games vampires have become fairly typical with only one kind,
or perhaps different clans in some cases. However in folklore there where
dozens of different vampires some barely resembling others, needing to be
killed by stakes, by burning, or in this case by burning with a specific type
of wood. Such a vampire could make for a long term villain for PC’s as it comes
back over and over again. Forcing them to face a now more clever opponent every
night as they search for someone who would know how to kill this creature for
once and for all. This search could lead them into dark woods, and distant
lands to find a witch, perhaps to Baba Yaga herself.
Another interesting way to run the way to run
the search for the defeat the monster in RPG campaigns is to have an elder, a
grandparent type figure help direct the PC's. This would help to draw them into
the world, and would therefore allow more of a story, something necessary for
true horror campaigns (should you wish to run one).
It is also important to notice in the fairy tale of "The Soldier and the
Vampire" that the soldier and the vampire start out as relative friends,
that only after drinking does the vampire show any real outward signs of
evil. The villains the PC’s are forced to fight then could be a friend,
someone they may have known for a short time or even a longer while, who is
prone to a sudden violent attack not even directed towards the PC’s. The PC’s
are then left with the choice between saving a village or the person they know,
again such fairy tale dilemma’s are what could truly make the RPG plot line so
interesting.
Another important aspect of this story to add to your plot lines is simply the
act of visiting peasant weddings for a rest. Doing simple things like this can
help bring your characters more fully into the richness of the fantasy world
and it is such things as this after all that help separate good fantasy novels
from bad ones, for where nearly all fantasy stories will have battle scenes
only the great ones will have your characters interact with the folk of the
world. It is this first and foremost that you will be able to take from
folktales to make all your role playing game ideas better.
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