Language Selection

Get healthy now with MedBeds!
Click here to book your session

Protect your whole family with Orgo-Life® Quantum MedBed Energy Technology® devices.

Advertising by Adpathway

         

 Advertising by Adpathway

Pirate Borg RPG Review by Andrew Delacruz

10 months ago 62

PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway

Do you want early access to our giveaways? Do you want to read our reviews before your friends?

Join the COOL KIDS by subscribing to EverythingBoardGames.Com’s Email List Today!!


Quick Look: Pirate Borg RPG


Designer:  Luke Stratton
Publisher: Limithron
Year Published: 2022

RPG Family:Mörk Borg

Find more info HERE.

From the Publisher:

PIRATE BORG is a scurvy ridden, rules light, art heavy RPG based on Mörk Borg. Inspired by history, fantasy, horror, and rum. Your cutlass & flintlock won’t save you from hordes of skeletons and ghost ships…

It’s also a GM tool kit. Most of the tables can be hacked and used with any tabletop RPG, and you can add-on the 5e Bestiary Zine* to get 5e stats for all the monsters and NPCs in the book.

Disclaimer: Anytime you see a link to Amazon on our site, it is another way to get your product there for the normally listed price as well as a way to support Everything Board Games and everything we’re doing here, without paying any extra. We appreciate the support!

Review:

Pirate Borg by Limithron is a pirate themed standalone game based on the award winning Mork Borg RPG. As such it has a lot of the same benefits and issues of that system. 

The Borg games fall under the OSR (Old School Renaissance) umbrella. OSR is a modern movement that tries to get back to the playstyle of old-school D&D. Building off the Basic and Expert sets of D&D released in 1981, these systems tend to focus on simple and streamlined gameplay. They are called “rules-lite” as they tend to have much more simplified rules than we see in modern RPGs like D&D 5e. Borg games in particular tend to also favor style over function. They often are very art heavy and have colorful illustrated pages with very simple rulesets. Pirate Borg follows this rules-lite tradition with most of the game’s rules fitting within 2 pages.

So what makes Pirate Borg unique?

Well… it’s about pirates. Pirate Borg provides classes, weapons, items and mechanics that let players fulfill their dreams of sailing the high seas under a pirate flag. The setting takes place in “The Dark Caribbean” which is basically what happens when an Undead/Eldritch scourge infects the Caribbean. The setting feels very Pirates of the Caribbean meets Lovecraft. The Black Pearl with its cursed skeletal crew would feel right at home in the Dark Caribbean. 

The Setting:

The Dark Caribbean is a unique setting based in the real world Caribbean. Historical factions such as the British, French and Spanish are represented. Familiar cities like Tortuga, Port Royal, and Barbados are represented. But these locations are now swarming not only with pirates, but with monsters and undead. A thriving trade market has popped up taking advantage of “ash” which is a byproduct of undead remains and has physiological and psychedelic effects. So those brave enough to face the horrors of the sea can be greatly rewarded. The book does a great job of expressing the ‘vibe” of the setting. Its art direction and style captures the spooky undead pirate feeling well. The monsters are cool looking and the pages of different boats available make me want to start stealing bigger and bigger vessels.

The Game Mechanics:

For being rules-lite Pirate Borg actually has a lot of game mechanics that support the setting and style of play. Rules for Sailing and Naval combat let players feel like they are sailing a ship and do a good job of letting each crew member feel like they are involved. The Captain of the ship will control movement of the ship with other players contributing with actions including firing the cannons, repairing the ship, or boarding enemy vessels. The rules, although they are simple, do provide what you expect from a naval combat encounter. There is also a mechanism for carousing! When pirates go out on the town there are consequences for their actions. A 4d20 table allows for a huge variety of outcomes for your poor pirate, everything from losing money while gambling to losing an eye to a barmaid. 

The game is highly lethal, with players having generally low HP. The quick character creation though means that dying is not too impactful. Classes feature 6 unique class features with one feature being added per level. I think one of the most thematic mechanics in the game is “Ash”. Ash is a powder made from the remains of destroyed undead and it is known to have physiological and psychedelic effects. Basically your players can choose to snort ash and roll on a table of dramatic effects. These effects can be very beneficial or very bad so naturally when I played all the players were constantly doing it. 

These mechanics come together well to support the theme and really help the players feel like they are pirates out to conquer the Dark Caribbean. 

Overall thoughts :

Overall I think Limithron has put together a great product. The art and layout make the book fun to read. The gameplay is simple and very thematic. If you are looking to run an OSR style Pirate game this is a great system to use. It is definitely rules-lite though, if you are looking for a complex system with a lot of player abilities and combos this is not for you. Combat is fairly simple and straightforward. There is a huge emphasis on the narrative and the storytelling and it does put a lot on the GM. I personally like this style of play, but it isn’t for everyone. Pirate Borg excels at capturing the theme of spooky pirates, it provides simple and streamlined rules for both individual combat and naval combat, it includes a small collection of unique relics with magical effects that will make great treasure for your crew to discover and give you the tools to make interesting and unique characters to fit in this dark pirate world. Also you can snort magical drugs which players loved. I enjoyed playing it and I think that it is a great addition to any RPG library.

After reading Andrew’s review, if this sounds like a game for you at the time of this posting Pirate Borg is available on AMAZON for around $32. Check it out and get it HERE.

Disclaimer: Anytime you see a link to Amazon on our site, it is another way to get your product there for the normally listed price as well as a way to support Everything Board Games and everything we’re doing here, without paying any extra. We appreciate the support!

Did you get it based on our review? Please comment below letting us know!


Do you find that you’re missing too many reviews as we drop them? Provide your name and email below and we’ll keep you in the know of what we reviewed that week as well as other hot news!!!!!


Name
Email

Marketing permission: I give my consent to to be in touch with me via email using the information I have provided in this form for the purpose of news, updates and marketing.What to expect: If you wish to withdraw your consent and stop hearing from us, simply click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of every email we send or contact us at gettinggeekywithgamerleaf@gmail.com. We value and respect your personal data and privacy. To view our privacy policy, please visit our website. By submitting this form, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with these terms.



>


Check out Pirate Borg and Limithron on:

             

Disclaimer: Anytime you see a link to Amazon on our site, it is another way to get your product there for the normally listed price as well as a way to support Everything Board Games and everything we’re doing here, without paying any extra. We appreciate the support!


Andrew Delacruz- Reviewer

Andrew has always had a passion for storytelling, playing games and making things. He is an avid reader and a bit of a Brandon Sanderson fanboy. Although he loves a wide variety of tabletop games, the game that most frequently makes it to the table for his group is D&D 5e. In his professional life he is a supply chain guy. Outside of work, when he isn’t spending time with his wife and three daughters, he pursues several passion projects. Andrew is a game designer with a couple self published works. He runs Perrizo Games, designing games and 3D printable terrain, and also co-founded a TTRPG note-taking app called Tabletop Recorder.

See Andrew Delacruz’s reviews HERE.

Read Entire Article

         

        

Start the new Vibrations with a Medbed Franchise today!  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway