MASHED: A Korean War MASH RPG

MASHED: A Korean War MASH RPG

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“Keep in mind that you can’t take that many well-educated, highly intelligent people and restrict them to live in an area the size of a football field and not expect some very odd and unusual things to happen.”

So said former Korean War helicopter pilot Ed Ziegler, in a quote that starts off MASHED’s early Gameplay section and gives a hint of what the following pages hold in store.

‘MASH’ is a historical acronym that stands for ‘Mobile Army Surgical Hospital,’ though it was popularized by the M*A*S*H film and television series, which may very well be where you first learned of it. The game acknowledges M*A*S*H as a good source of inspiration for your table, but is not based directly on it, thus avoiding any messy trademark or copyright issues. Instead, MASHED content comes from dozens of historical works and military manuals. Fortunately, since they are the same sources as those used by the M*A*S*H producers, the ‘feel’ of the game can be very much like that of the show itself, mixing light comedy, gallows humor, and mature situations.

The core rules are based on Vincent and Meguey Baker’s Apocalypse World (Meguey is also credited as a developmental editor on this book), and inspired by other Powered by the Apocalypse games such as Jason Morningstar’s Night Witches. If you’re familiar at all with the PbtA engine, you’ll have a good idea of how the rules work.

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Of course, there are some new thematic concepts introduced, such as a Stress tracker that can affect your personality (aka Role) if it gets too high, and unique surgical rules that puts your players around a patient playsheet (complete with human body and various countdown and harm clocks) and has them work together as a team. Again evoking thoughts of M*A*S*H, gameplay alternates between operating tent scenes and ‘camp life’ scenes. During surgery, you make hard choices such as who gets operated on first, or whether you can risk spending time on one patient at the risk of another one’s life (scenes that are almost guaranteed to bring Stress points upon the players). These scenes then spur what happens outside of surgery, giving you an incentive to find ways to relax and remove those Stress points from your character.

There are seven different character types, or playbooks. Players are encouraged to play medical staff: the nurses (Angels), surgeons (Cutters), general practitioners (Docs), and enlisted medics (Corpsmen). However, playbooks for mechanics/drivers/pilots (Cowboys), administrative staff/soldiers (Grunts), and the camp chaplain (Padre) are available to cover the different kinds of personnel that were part of a Korean War MASH.

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As in most PbtA games, each playbook has its own unique rules in addition to the game’s basic rules. Each playbook can also choose a Role, or personality type, which provides a further unique move and which you can change to another Role when your Stress gets too high. To further evoke the feel of a 1950s Army unit, each playbook is designed to be printed double-sided on a landscape oriented sheet of paper, then folded to resemble a vintage Army field manual. If you want to check these out, they are freely available (along with the patient playsheets and some other worksheets) in the “Complete Handouts” download on RPGnow and DriveThruRPG.

Individual chapters (and most sections) begin with a quote from a soldier, journalist, medic, or politician of the Korean War era, and help to set the tone for the following text. The fonts are mostly black, with headers and special text boxes appearing in ‘Army green.’ A few maps and flowcharts are scattered throughout and used to quickly highlight things like the country map, branches of the US military and its UN allies, how casualties are transported from the front lines and through the hospital tent, and so on. There is some black and white line art taken from or reminiscent of vintage Army manuals, but most of the art features old photographs that have been digitally altered into a more hand-drawn appearance, then given a single accent color to evoke the style of 1950s magazine art.

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A quick summary of the book’s chapters reveals:

  • The standard legal disclaimers, credits, special thanks, and table of contents, along with some general suggestions for further viewing (M*A*S*H, Battle Circus) and reading.
  • Chapter 1: Basic Training. An introduction to this variant of the PbtA engine and its terminology, a quick 3-page summary of the Korean War, and a discussion of how and whether to introduce the sensitive issues of gender, racism, and sexism that were common in the 1950s.
  • Chapter 2: Character Creation. This is the discussion of the seven playbooks and their special moves, along with information on character roles (Bully, Casanova, Clown, etc.), the various Army ranks, and character stats (of which there are four: Luck, Nerve, Skill, and Tough).
  • Chapter 3: Life & Death. Here you learn how Stress points accumulate and how you can use them to tag your character with emotional and physical conditions that affect how you play. Harm is less important than in combat-heavy games, since you are not (well, almost never) under enemy fire. Also here is a discussion of advancing your characters (adding moves, stat increases, promotion, and retirement). Prominently here are the game’s basic moves (Clobber, Eyeball, Help/Hinder, Influence, Maneuver, Pierce (verbal jabs instead of physical ones), Push Your Luck, Relax (used for removing Stress), and Scrounge), along with details on how to run operating room scenes and use the casualty playsheet with the medical moves of Assist, Diagnose, Prescribe, and Treat.
  • Chapter 4: Welcome to the 99th. Here you get a sample MASH unit (the fictional 8099th), along with an explanation/flowchart of how a MASH unit operates, sample camp and hospital tent maps, details on how pay packets work and how much things cost, and several pages of various Army equipment, vehicles, and weapons.
  • Chapter 5: Being in Command. This chapter is primarily for the GameMaster (known here as the Commanding Officer, or CO), and contains your agenda, principles, a list of CO moves you can use in response to player moves, and a number of sample Threats (things in your MASH, other people, afflictions, landscapes, and weather) and Events (combinations of two or three Threats written as hooks for story ideas). Also here are further instructions on trauma clocks and the patient playsheet, how to use other types of countdown clocks, information and pictures of Army medals and other awards, and helpful hints on running your first session.
  • Chapter 6: Phases. Here the course of the Korean War is broken down into seven phases, each of which includes an introduction to current happenings in the war, logistics that your camp will be dealing with, a list of typical threats during this phase, and many sample story events and questions such as “Whose patient refuses to eat and keeps pulling his IVs out?” and “Who found a wounded soldier using a rifle for a splint, and did it fire during someone’s Diagnose move?”
  • A detailed glossary covers common slang, acronyms, and explains interesting historical terms (like the fact that ‘corpsman’ was used for both Army and Navy medics in the Korean War era, but today is now used only for Navy personnel), followed a references section (if you want to find more information about the war), an index, accolades (thanks to named Kickstarter backers and their friends and family members who served in the military), and copies of the seven playbooks along with a character creation guide and surgical playsheets.

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Also available (for free and/or purchase) are several items designed to reinforce the theme and make gameplay even easier, such as: a 1950-1953 calendar marking important dates, seven deluxe 20-page character playbooks, two CO workbooks for running the game and tracking NPCs, a sample event workbook, and three card decks for spontaneously generating casualties and wounds, tents and local landmarks, and unusual events and items.

Check out the complete game on RPGnow and DriveThruRPG.


Mark Plemmons is an Origins and ENnie award-winning writer and founder with over 16 years of experience in the role-playing and hobby game industry, having also served as: writer, editor, art director, project manager, and/or graphic designer for the HackMaster, Aces & Eights, Adventures Dark and Deep, Baker Street, and Dungeons & Dragons-branded Kingdoms of Kalamar RPGs, multiple Dungeons & Dragons and Knights of the Dinner Table comic book series, and more. He is also available for consulting, editing, and other freelance projects.

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Thomas Parker

Just so long as there are rules that say that you have to have a proper Army haircut, no matter how zany/compassionate/surgically competent you may be.

Eugene R.

I like the Powered by the Apocalypse system quite a lot, and this hack sounds pretty outstanding. It is a bit of a niche setting, which probably works in favor for bringing the mechanics and the setting together (cf. Pendragon). But that also means I would need to hunt up players for it very carefully. Oh, well, tally ho!


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