Phoenix: Dawn Command


“You shall not pass!” Gandalf facing the balrog is one of my favorite moments in a fantasy movie. A hero facing an overwhelming evil and ultimately laying down his life to save the rest of the party. But it’s not a situation I’d typically put into an RPG adventure. Usually, putting players in a scenario where the only way to prevent the death of the entire party is for one of the PCs to sacrifice themselves is a cruel move. And yet, that sacrifice — bringing down an impossible foe through an act of courage — is a compelling moment. How do you bring that to the table?

If you’re reading this, you’re probably familiar with the Eberron campaign setting I created for Dungeons & Dragons. What you may not know is that in the last year I’ve released an entirely new fantasy roleplaying game that I codesigned with my friend Dan Garrison. This is Phoenix: Dawn Commandand now that Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Card Game is out, Illimat is on a boat and Action Cats is at the printer I’m going to be putting more time into Phoenix. So I wanted to take a moment to tell you about Phoenix and why you should check it out. Before I get to deep in the details, I’ll note that you can get Phoenix from our website or from Amazon, with Prime shipping through Amazon and free shipping in the US from my site.

Phoenix is set in the fantasy world of Dalea. It’s a traditional RPG, in the sense that you have a gamemaster who guides the story and that it’s best in campaign play, where you have time to develop your characters and your stories. Beyond that, it’s what you might get if you stirred together Dungeons & DragonsCall of Cthulhu, and Exalted. Dalea is caught in the grip of the Dread. Across the known world all manner of supernatural terrors are crawling out of the woodwork. Mortals can’t fight these things… but you’re not mortal. You’re someone who died and managed to earn resurrection and the power of a Phoenix. You can face a mob of chanters or a Fallen prince. But Phoenix is about more than just taking on an undead army or dueling demons. You need to find out WHY the Dread is happening, to understand the nature of each of these threats and how they relate to one another. Can you find a way to lay the Bones to rest? Can you learn how the Chant begins or find a way to cure its victims? Phoenix is built on a foundation of over-the-top action, but to truly succeed you’ll have to channel your inner investigator and solve the mysteries of the Dread.

Mechanically, Phoenix has a number of distinct features. The first is the fact that death is how your character grows stronger. When you die, you are eventually reborn with greater power. This isn’t a trivial thing. Hearing about this, people often ask why their characters wouldn’t jump off a few bridges in order to level up. There’s a few things that play into this.

  • Lives are a limited resource. You return after death… but only up to seven times. Each rebirth brings you closer to the end of your story. In you first few lives you can afford to be reckless; but the more power you gain, the more careful you have to be with it.
  • The stakes are high. In Phoenix you’re not just dungeon-delving to get a new magic sword. You’re the last hope of a world that is losing a war against an unknown enemy. You can’t afford to waste even one life. Death isn’t the end, but you need to be sure you make every life – and death – count.
  • Time is of the essence. When you die you’ll be reborn… but not right away. At the earliest you’ll return with the following dawn. But rebirth is never predictable, and it could be far longer. Most missions in PDC are time-sensitive. If you’re in a city and there’s a Chant outbreak you might have two hours to contain it before it spreads too far to be contained. If you all die in those two hours, you will eventually return; the story isn’t over. But that city will have been lost, and you’ll have to deal with the consequences of that failure.

So death isn’t the end — at least initially — but neither is it trivial. Beyond this, the abilities you gain when you’re reborn are based on the nature of your death and the lessons you’ve learned from it. You don’t need to fear death, but you want to make sure that each moment counts.

Another unique aspect of Phoenix is that it uses cards instead of dice. In PDC each player has a unique deck of cards that reflects the abilities of their character and largely takes over the role of a character sheet. You have a hand of action cards; when you want to take an action you describe it to the gamemaster, and they tell you the suit and value you’ll need to play to succeed. Do you have the cards in your hand that you need to match or exceed that value? If not, you have a pool of mystical energy you can burn to push beyond your limits… but when you use it all, you die. So you can buy success in Phoenix, but the question is always if it’s worth it. This is one of the critical aspects of the game: presenting players with interesting and difficult decisions. There’s a bomb in a room full of innocent people. You might be able to disarm it, but you can’t be sure of the difficulty and if you try and failure it will detonate and kill everyone in the room. On the other hand, you could throw yourself on the bomb: you will certainly die, but everyone else will definitely survive. What do you do? Your fate isn’t determined by a random die roll; it’s a question of evaluating your resources and deciding which path you want to take. Beyond this, because you always know what you have in your hand, what you rarely have is wasted action. In a system based on dice, you’ll frequently attempt to do something and fail when the dice don’t go your way, and you accomplish nothing on your turn. In Phoenix, you essentially know your die roll ahead of time – you know what you have to work with in this turn. So if you have a bad hand, the question is can you find something useful to do with it, whether that’s taking on an easier task or burning sparks to push beyond your limits. But you don’t have that moment of trying to do something cool and rolling a two. Instead, you know you’ve got the two; what can you do with it?

If you’d like to know more about Phoenix, you can ask questions below. In addition, here’s a few things I’ve already written.

In the months ahead, I’ll be delving deeper into the world of Phoenix. Beyond this, we’re evaluating print-on-demand options for creating expansions, and we’re also looking into creating an OGL so people can post their own Phoenix missions. And for those who really want to cross wires, I’ll be looking at what it would mean to run Phoenix in Eberron.

PHOENIX Q&A

Could you explain the different types of Phoenixes briefly and why they have their unique abilities? Did certain types of death suggest certain abilities or Phoenix paths?

There are six Phoenix schools. Each one provides different abilities, and yes, each one is tied to the nature of your death and the lessons you take away from it. The Devoted Phoenix died for others, and their powers help them strengthen others and work as a group. The Shrouded Phoenix died because of a secret, and they excel at uncovering secrets and hiding from others. The Bitter Phoenix died as a failure, and their lessons are about anger and revenge. You can find deeper descriptions of the six schools here.

Thanks for reading. I hope you’ll take a look at Phoenix: Dawn Command. If you have questions — or if you’d like to share your own personal experience with Phoenix — post below!

7 thoughts on “Phoenix: Dawn Command

  1. Hello Keith, and thank you for taking the time to answer questions, it’s an excellent way to make people interested in a game.

    I’m curious about the “classes” if the different archetypes can be called that. Could you explain the different types of Phoenixes briefly and why they have their unique abilities? Did certain types of death suggest certain abilities or Phoenix paths, like how the Devoted is kind of a tank because they died protecting someone/thing?

  2. I am dying to play this game. The KS was right at a time when I got hit by financial issue after another, sadly, but I plan on buying a copy soon.

    I love the whole death concept, especially as death is a big thing I’m trying to tackle in my own game.

    Can’t wait to see your thoughts on Phoenix in Eberron!

    • Can’t wait to see your thoughts on Phoenix in Eberron!

      I recently thought of a new approach I’m interested in trying myself. I’ll likely post about it early in November.

      • Sweet! My Eberron campaign has been on hold for over a month, so I’m eager for a fix!

  3. I recall seeing that Phoenixes are limited in their resurrections by ancient pacts. Is that a limit they impose on themselves or the best they could negotiate for from the source of the power?

    If the former, when things have gone, perhaps literally, to hell why would they continue to limit themselves?

    If the latter, does that imply that there was the possibility of more lives that could have been on offer? And if the source is capable of more, are there some sorts of limitations that prevent them from raising the number of lives?

    Does anyone in setting try to cultivate Phoenixes? I doubt you can manufacture them, and by killing the best you are likely to just deprive yourself of their help rather than getting them returned with supernatural aid. But what about mindsets which emphasize self-sacrifice with the goal of maybe becoming a returned hero as part of a broader system of civic behavior or something along those lines?

    • Dawn Command doesn’t know the origins of the Phoenixes, the power that creates them, or the precise limitations of their powers. Potential Phoenixes don’t bargain for their powers; they are put through trials and tests, that both prove they deserve the power and teach them how to wield it. Each Phoenixes has a mentor who provides guidance, but the mentor (the spirit of a former Phoenix) doesn’t choose whether the potential Phoenix passes the trials. So Phoenixes have no direct contact with the source of the power, beyond the trials that are presented to them.

      Tied to this: Phoenixes don’t automatically come back seven times. Each time a Phoenix dies they go through trials again. It’s entirely possible for a Phoenix to only come back once and to simply lack the conviction to return again. We assume that player characters WILL make it through all the trials, but it’s something that player and GM will generally talk through as an interlude, addressing challenges the PC faced, their interactions with their mentor, and what gave them the strength to return.

      With that said, the answers to these questions are covered in Chapter 5 of the Marshal’s Manual, specifically page 165. PCs can potentially learn these answers over the course of a campaign (though I’ll note that they *aren’t* resolved in the Dark Omens mission path).

      Does anyone in setting try to cultivate Phoenixes?

      They did in the past. During the Phoenix Imperium they established the Dawn Codex which encouraged paths of behavior designed to increase the odds of someone becoming a Phoenix. This was removed from the Imperial Philosophies following the civil war that brought the Phoenix Imperium to an end, but there are still some who follow it. But the short form is that following the civil war Phoenixes stopped returning. Prior to the Dread, it had been over two hundred and fifty years since a new Phoenix had been reborn, and the people of the modern age largely believe that they are just legends. Part of the story of a Phoenix campaign is how the players interact with the people and the forces of the Empire — if they seek to restore faith in the Phoenixes and establish ties with the Empire, or if they simply operate independently.

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