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''Dogs in the Vineyard'' is an independently published
role-playing game A role-playing game (sometimes spelled roleplaying game, or abbreviated as RPG) is a game in which players assume the roles of player character, characters in a fictional Setting (narrative), setting. Players take responsibility for acting out ...
published by
Lumpley Games Lumpley Games is an American game company that produces role-playing games and game supplements. History Vincent Baker began using "lumpley" email addresses and URLs in '' kill puppies for satan'' (2002); Baker had been using the name on online s ...
in 2004 that is loosely based on the history of the
Mormons Mormons are a Religious denomination, religious and ethnocultural group, cultural group related to Mormonism, the principal branch of the Latter Day Saint movement started by Joseph Smith in upstate New York during the 1820s. After Smith's d ...
.


Setting

The game is set in "a West that never quite was"โ€”loosely based on the Mormon
State of Deseret The State of Deseret (modern pronunciation , contemporaneously , as recorded in the Deseret alphabet spelling ๐”๐ฏ๐‘…๐จ๐‘‰๐ฏ๐ป) was a proposed U.S. state, state of the United States promoted by leaders of the Church of Jesus Chri ...
in pre-statehood Utah. Players are "God's Watchdogs" ("Dogs"), who travel from town to town delivering mail, helping out the community and enforcing the judgments of the True Faith of the King of Life. This may involve anything from delivering new interpretations to the town's Steward to executing heretics. Dogs have absolute authority within the Faith, but not within the laws of the Territorial Authority, and so their actions can lead to conflict with the government in the East.


System

The game features a form of conflict resolution in which die rolls are used in
poker Poker is a family of Card game#Comparing games, comparing card games in which Card player, players betting (poker), wager over which poker hand, hand is best according to that specific game's rules. It is played worldwide, with varying rules i ...
-style bids. Characters' statistics and traits are represented by
dice pool In some role-playing game (RPG) systems, rather than rolling a single die to determine the success or failure of an action, the player rolls a number of dice simultaneously, known as a dice pool. The number and type of dice to be rolled are defi ...
s. At the start of a conflict, the
Gamemaster A gamemaster (GM; also known as game master, game manager, game moderator, referee, storyteller, or master of ceremonies) is a person who acts as a facilitator, organizer, officiant regarding rules, arbitrator, and moderator for a multiplayer r ...
and other players decide what is at stake, determine which pools are applicable, and those are rolled ''at that point''. The character with the
initiative Popular initiative A popular initiative (also citizens' initiative) is a form of direct democracy by which a petition meeting certain hurdles can force a legal procedure on a proposition. In direct initiative, the proposition is put direct ...
puts forward a "
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" of two dice, while narrating a portion of the conflict which is beneficial to their character's position in the conflict. The opponent must respond by putting forward one or more dice whose total exceeds the total of the dice which were used to raise, or "give"โ€”i.e. lose the conflict. If three or more dice are needed, the opponent suffers "fallout"โ€”a negative outcome to be determined at the end of the conflict. If only one die is needed by the opponent, the attack has been "turned against the attacker" and the die can be reused to raise in the next round. The opponent now begins a round by putting forward two dice which the first character must match, and so on until one player or the other gives. Players may bring in new dice by "escalating" the conflict, from non-physical (discussion) to physical (running away) to brawling and then to gunfighting. If the conflict didn't start with non-physical, players may de-escalate from gunfighting to discussion, though it occurs only rarely. The GM's set of rules in conflict is very simple: "Roll dice or say yes". As game historian Stu Horvath translated: "If nothing is at stake, the GM should let the players succeed in their action in order to more quickly arrive at conflict that ''does'' require dice-rolling, which is where the stakes are and when events rapidly spiral out of control โ€” the heart of the game." During the "Town Creation" segment, the moral landscape of the town is laid out in the form of characters, their desires, and what they've done to each other which allows players to engage in the town without making wins or losses the only object of play.


Publication history

''Dogs in the Vineyard'' was written by D. Vincent Baker and published by Lumpley Games in 2004. Eventually Baker allowed the game to fall out of print due to his dissatisfaction with the setting and his belief that it promoted the history of colonization in the Americas. Baker indicated that he has considered a new edition or sequel that would extricate the system from the Mormon setting, but work has not begun. In 2019, Baker gave tacit approval for KN Obaugh to publish a setting-free version of the game's system titled ''DOGS'' (the Dice pool and mOral predicament based Generic roleplaying System!)


Reception

In his 2011 book ''Designers & Dragons'', game historian
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called this game "A story of God's Watchdogs, trying to preserve the faithful on the hostile frontier of the 19th century. This was one of the first indies to be notably successful, both financially and sociologically. It introduced the idea of 'say yes or roll', where GMs either went along with player suggestions, or gave them opportunity to occur through a die roll. ''Dogs'' was also notable for its revolutionary game design and for its existence as both an adventure story ''and'' a morality tale, all backed up by those mechanics. It truly captured the imagination of the indie field following its release." Chase Carter for
Polygon In geometry, a polygon () is a plane figure made up of line segments connected to form a closed polygonal chain. The segments of a closed polygonal chain are called its '' edges'' or ''sides''. The points where two edges meet are the polygon ...
listed it as a "seminal" game of the late aughts "blooming of indie RPG designers", along with ''
Apocalypse World ''Apocalypse World'' is a post-apocalyptic indie role-playing game by D. Vincent Baker and Meguey Baker, published in 2010 with only an implied setting that is fleshed out by the players in the course of character creation. It was the game for ...
'', ''Fiasco'', ''Lady Blackbird'', and the '' Romance Trilogy.'' In his 2023 book ''Monsters, Aliens, and Holes in the Ground'', RPG historian Stu Horvath noted, "There is a strong tension between the system, the setting, the moral requirements of the gameplay, and the sensibilities of the players, which almost certainly clash with the dominant, conservative social standards of the setting. Those tensions naturally fuel the escalation of the narrative."


Awards

*At the 2004
Indie RPG Awards The Indie RPG Awards were annual, creator-based awards for Indie role-playing games and supplements. They were established in 2002 by Andy Kitkowski. The final round of awards was given in 2017. For the purposes of the Awards, there exists a follow ...
, ''Dogs in the Vineyard'' won two awards: "Indie RPG of the Year" and "Most Innovative Game." *In 2005 it was nominated for a
Diana Jones Award The Diana Jones Award is an annual award for "excellence in gaming". The original award was made from a burned book encased in lucite. The award is unusual in two ways: first, it is not an award for a specific class of thing, but can be awarded ...
for Excellence in Gaming.


References


External links

* Lumpley Games' home page fo
''Dogs in the Vineyard''
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130729033332/http://nightskygames.com/welcome/game/DogsInTheVineyard , date=2013-07-29
Lumpley Games Forum
on The Forge, mostly concerned with ''DitV'' Forge-era role-playing games Historical role-playing games Historical Western role-playing games Indie role-playing games Indie RPG Awards winners Latter Day Saints in popular culture Role-playing games introduced in 2004