Maléfices
Maléfices, subtitled "The role-playing game with the scent of sulphur", was published by Jeux Descartes in 1985 as the first original French-language horror role-playing game. Three editions, 13 adventures and a bestiary have been published, and a fourth edition is being developed.
Description
Maléfices is set in France during the years of the Belle Époque, and is a mixture of horror fantasy and Jules Verne technology. All player characters belong to le club Pythagore in Paris, which is designed to resemble Golden Dawn, the historical British secret society that was devoted to the study and practice of the occult, metaphysics, and paranormal activities. As members of the club, player characters are recruited to go on quests or investigate unusual happenings.Components (1st and 2nd editions)
The boxed set contains:- 56-page rule book
- 48-page scenario booklet, contains two adventures: La Malédiction de Fontevrault and Une Etrange Maison de Poupées.
- gamemaster's screen
- blank character sheets
- two ten-sided dice
- 20-card proprietary Tarot deck
- 21 two-sided cardboard character figures with plastic bases
Historical background material is divided into three parts: "France between 1870 and 1914"; a 4-page timeline of French history; and "Witchcraft, Beliefs and Superstition in Nineteenth-century France."
Third edition
The third edition is contained in a single book that describes a great deal of historical and sociological information, as well as police services, investigative and forensic techniques of the period, the Law, procedures of trial and judgement, and typical sentences and punishments. It also includes two adventures, La Jeune Fille et la Mort, and L'Enfant de Colère.Character generation
The player first picks a profession for the player character; female characters are limited to professions that were socially acceptable during La Belle Epoque. The player then rolls dice to determine age and Constitution. These will result in scores between 1–20 for four physical attributes.The player divides a pool of twenty points between two spiritual attributes, although neither can have a starting score lower than 6. In general, Faith protects against the effects of the occult and paranormal. Meanwhile Reason resists fear.
The gamemaster secretly rolls dice to determine a score of 5–20 for the character's paranormal attribute. This is modified by the character's thresholds in White Magic, Black Magic and Other Magic ; otherwise the three concentrations have a base value of "0". The Game Master keeps the Flow Score and its modifiers secret from the player, so they are unaware or unsure of how good or bad they are until they try using it. It contributes to the game's theme that magic is dangerous and not to be trifled with.
Finally the player draws five Tarot cards, four of which the player can see; the fifth is secretly recorded by the gamemaster. These cards modify the character's attributes by granting bonuses or inflicting penalties that affect the player character attempts to use their abilities. For example The Archangel and The Priest give bonuses to Faith and makes casting White Magic easier, The Devil and The Sorcerer give bonuses to Reason and makes casting Black Magic easier, and The Great Grimoire gives bonuses to Flow, Faith and Reason.
Gameplay
The game uses a pair of ten-sided dice and a proprietary deck of tarot cards to resolve actions. A region-coded chart indicates the range of percentile numbers the player has to roll within to achieve a positive result, and the level of success or failure that resulted from their action. The ranges are graded by letter, like a report card. The Success result is graded from "A", "B", "C" and "D". Failure results are graded from "A", "B", "C", "D" and "E". So even a success or failure is by degrees, rather than an absolute Pass/Fail. An Average Success barely makes it, and a Recoverable Failure can succeed if the player wants to do so at a disadvantage or with a complication.The magic system uses a reverse result. The objective is to roll a Failure result rather than a success, as if the roll was being made by The Devil.
The results are modified by drawing Tarot cards. The Fool gives the player good luck, nullifying a negative or fatal result. Death gives bad luck, giving a negative result at a critical time of the gamemaster's choosing.
Fourth Edition
The fourth edition currently being developed will use twenty-sided dice instead of ten-sided dice. There is also a redesigned 22-card Tarot deck with different artwork.Publication history
Maléfices was created by Michel Gaudo and Guillaume Rohmer, and published by Jeux Descartes in 1985 as a boxed set with artwork by Didier Guiserix and Gilles Lautussier. Eight adventures and a bestiary were also published.In 1988, Jeux Descartes published a revised second edition and three more adventures.
In 2006, a greatly expanded third edition in the form of 290-page softcover book and two more adventures were published by Editions du Club Pythagore. The third edition was reprinted in 2007 by Asmodée Éditions.
In 2016 Arkhane Asylum Publishing acquired the rights to Maléfices from Michel Gaudo. In October 2018 they were crowdfunded through Ulule to begin work on a new version of the game and new adventures. They also planned to reissue revised versions of the old supplements and adventures. In 2021, with work on the 4th edition still underway, Arkhane published the first issue of L'Étoile du Matin, a periodical with articles designed to support adventures that will be developed in the future.
Reception
Léo Sigrann, writing for Chroniques d'Altaride, commented on the mix of horror and Belle Epoque steampunk, saying "the fantastic and the Jules Verne technologies coexist in exciting and tortuous scenarios." He also called the use of the Tarot deck to modify action resolutions "one of the unique originalities of the game." Sigrann concluded that the game was "a treat for the gamemaster and the players!"In his 2014 book Game Magic: A Designer's Guide to Magic Systems in Theory and Practice, Jeff Howard notes that "the supernatural forces in the game are hidden, almost invisible, to the point that players may never actually encounter a demon even though the entire game is built around implications of diabolical influence. The metaphor of a faint 'odor of sulphur' is a fascinating design goal."
Olivier Caïra counted Maléfices among those role-playing games which introduced more complex narratives into the genre in the 1980s.
Other reviews and commentary
Casus Belli #30 Casus Belli #42- ' #37
- ' #48
List of related publications
Modules
- No.1 Le drame de la rue des Récollets by Michel Gaudo.
- No.2 L'énigmatique carnet du Capitaine Pop Plinn by Hervé Fontanières
- No.3 Délivrez-nous du mal by Hervé Fontanières
- No.4 Les Brasiers ne s'éteignent jamais by Michel Gaudo
- No.5 Le dompteur de Volcans by Michel Gaudo
- No.6 Enchères sous Pavillon noir by Pascal Gaudo
- No.7 La musique adoucit les meurtres by Michel Gaudo. A sequel to "A Strange Dollhouse".
- No.8 Le montreur d'ombres by Hervé Fontanières
- No.9 Folies viennoises by Daniel Bilous & Nicole Bilous
- No.10 Cœur cruel by Hervé Fontanières
- No.11 Le voile de Kali by Michel Gaudo & Pascal Gaudo
- No.12 Danse macabre by Daniel Dugourd
- No.13 La cornemuse du vieux Jeremiah by Daniel Dugourd
- Les Chasses du Comte Lassary by Michel Gaudo.
Supplements
- À la lisière de la nuit by Hervé Fontanières, Michel Gaudo & Guillaume Rohmer. A collection of stories and quotes about magic and the occult rather than a list of Vancian spells, along with some rules.
- Le Bestiaire by Michel Gaudo & Pascal Gaudo. A series of legends, stories and thematic quotes about animals and monsters rather than concrete statistics to stimulate the imagination of the gamemaster. It also repeats some of the tables and rules from A la Lisière de la Nuit.
- CatéSchisme by Olivier Babarit, Daniel Dugourd, Michel Gaudo, & Jean-Philippe Palanchini. A 4-panel gamemaster's screen with thematic artwork by Gilles Lautussier on the obverse side and important tables on the reverse. It also comes with a revised full-color deck of 22 Tarot Cards and a 32-page softcover booklet containing new rules and three in-universe essays. Superstitions et Diableries is an essay by a Catholic priest who decries Spiritualism as a heretical belief system that is undermining the authority of the Church. It also documents the origins of the Spiritualist movement and its practices. Les Forces Invisibles is a first-hand account of a Spiritualist seance by a scientist who is trying to understand what he saw by using rationality and scientific inquiry. Sciences Secrètes des Initiés is a question and answer session being given by an occultist named Doctor Theobald to an occult group called the Veils of Isis. The lecturer believes that occultism is superior to both modern science and mysticism.