03-10-2025, 12:11 PM
War Fronts
![[Image: 3a82d91b3a1a49cae901624133510ca2.jpg]](https://i.ibb.co/xtTgGs7w/3a82d91b3a1a49cae901624133510ca2.jpg)
What Are War Fronts?
Our guild thrives on conflict, but much of that energy often turns inward. While infighting is enjoyable, it can sometimes feel like there’s little else to anchor us in the broader war. War Fronts are designed to change that.
War Fronts are small, focused narrative arcs that give our members a dynamic theatre to fight in, opening space for all spheres to contribute in limited but meaningful ways. They are not sprawling, months-long campaigns; instead, they are concise storylines that last a few sessions, offering a sense of progression and consequence.
The aims are:
- Give members a consistent theatre to engage with over multiple sessions.
- Create Sphere RP: (e.g., Insight providing intelligence, Doctrine addressing ideological resistance, Resurgence supporting supply lines, Advancement supplying new tech to be tested and War; strategizing and deploying assets from their vast arsenal. The potential is somewhat, limitless).
- Provide a framework that promotes more RP, more depth and ultimately more battles, strategy, and victories — while making those victories feel part of a living, interconnected galaxy.
The Structure of War Fronts
War Fronts are built on a three-act narrative framework, designed to make RP feel like part of a living campaign rather than a disconnected set of events. Each “act” serves a clear purpose, with escalating stakes and opportunities for different spheres to interact.
Think of it like telling a story together:
- Act I (The Spark): The hook that sets the conflict in motion.
- Act II (The Struggle): Rising tension as factions prepare, manoeuvre, and clash in smaller ways.
- Act III (The Climax): The decisive confrontation that determines the outcome.
This structure gives members a natural progression of challenges while providing clear “entry points” for other spheres to get involved. By pacing things like a story, every War Front has a rhythm that keeps players engaged.
Example Scenario
Republic forces push into Nam’ta, seeking to cut into the mines and mountain passes that fuel our war machine and open up a War Front. Jedi rally local resistance; saboteurs move to disrupt our grip.
Three Phases:
Phase I – Sparks
- Insight gets fed a tip that an SIS is present at location (a GM inciting event leads into an ops to go and neutralize/capture)
- Captured SIS agent interrogation/information they possess reveals critical intel about a Republic advance in the sector, RP outside of an ops.
- Follow-up ops/investigation confirm the information.
- War prepares to repel an assault on a mining site (Scouting ops, into RP strategy/planning + GM coordination about assets).
- Advancement supply specialist artillery that needs to be set up during out of ops RP or, if the GM is creative enough, throughout an ops!
- Doctrine roots out sympathisers or undermines Jedi influence (ops that impact the finale).
- Resurgence secures arms and supply lines, directly influencing what War can field. (ops)
Phase III – The Nam’ta Line
- Guild-scale event, in the style of Sith Andnoa's Uftre Two guild event. Objective: hold the mountain passes against Republic forces.
- Outcome shaped by earlier RP and ops: victories/shortfalls dynamically change enemy forces.
(e.g., if Doctrine successfully “put down” a Jedi, that Jedi is absent in the finale battle)
This is a reasonable plan that we would expect to see for a War Front. It provides conflict (the key driver of narrative), it provides clarity (no getting lost in the sauce) and it provides RP for all; because at the end of the day we're all here to collaboratively tell stories!
Implementation
People that want to run a War Front will volunteer to GM and propose a plan, with officer approval via the ticket system. They will in turn, approve or refine your plans, or point you in the direction of the planetary co-ordinator. They will also assess whether or not the proposed location for the War Front fits with the wider team narrative/lore position of said planets at that time, as well as approve any impacts the outcomes of such would have.
GMs must have a fully formed plan of all phases at the outset, but they will be reminded that these are not intended to be burdensome, vast, “grand campaigns” that drains inspiration. It is simply a framework to consider providing roleplay across the powerbase.
The intent is interconnectedness, and dynamism not bureaucracy.
Why This Works
- Keeps us doing external conflict as the primary driver of combat RP, rather than a million and one infights.
- Provides spheres with controlled touchpoints to contribute without taking over.
- Builds a “campaign feel” that strengthens immersion and continuity.
- Encourages natural IC collaboration, while respecting Pentarch boundaries.
More battles. More victories. More war.