Elreve: I was wondering and if you use all the compacts and conspiracies in the supplements.. don't you think that we got a lot of groups to deal with the supernatural? We already have 9 groups with the manpower to destroy all the "big guys [vampires, werewolves, mages, prometheans, changelings]" in the US... [aegis kae doru, ascending ones, cheiron group, lucifuge, malleus maleficarum, TFV, VASCU, order of saint george, les mysteries, heressy of cain] and that makes me think that maybe the supernatural must be really numerous if the hunters haven't ride the world of them...
Zeev:Keep in mind Hunter is a very toolbox oriented game. You use the groups and tiers you want and (at least for that game) ignore the rest of them. Just like Bloodlines, Lodges, Legacies and etc, as long as you have a good idea of a unique and interesting one, it's worth exploring, since the point isn't too make all these groups coexist in a single setting, but to give the ST and players as many tools as possible to tell the Hunter story they want to tell.
Yes. That is something I have to remind my players. They seem to think everything they read in any NWOD book is going to show up in our Changeling game. With all the options available in Changeling alone I don't need a lot from other books.
“We’re all in the gutter, some of us just stare at the stars."
Elreve:Yeah I know, but it's like when you enter in a chocolate store and you want to eat all the stuff you can
There are a billion different answers to this dilemma, any of which can make a game interesting. 1. Hunter is toolbox-y. So, don't have every conspiracy and compact exist in your world. Problem solved. 2. All the conspiracies and compacts exist - however, they work at cross-purposes. So, the Hunter-Hunter conflict prevents Hunters from being able to effectively organize. So, even though they COULD wipe out the supernatural if they were playing on the same team, they're NOT on the same team. 3. All the conspiracies and compacts exist - and some are actively creating supernatural creatures either intentionally or by accident (Cheiron, I'm lookin' at you). So, the supernatural don't get wiped out because Hunters are creating more. 4. All the conspiracies and compacts exist, but the supernatural are really good at hiding. So, finding them is very hard. Plus, since one-on-one, a supe beats a Hunter, you have to find the supe, and surprise them with an attack... otherwise, they're likely to kill you in your sleep. 5. All the conspiracies and compacts exist, and HAVE wiped out all the supernatural. Ends up that there's just a mass insanity that makes Hunters BELIEVE that the supernatural exist.
I'm sure there are more ways out of the problem. But, these are a few interpretations that could prove interesting...
Hunters are constantly dying, get arrested, go insane and/or go missing. Look at the Horror Recognition Guide – the very premise is that the book is a collection of files from a hunter cell that has disappeared. So while there may appear to be a lot of hunter organizations, many members aren’t involved in the Vigil for terribly long.
The theme is repeated in the background stories of many of the hunter organizations. Even the organizations’ founders have a nasty habit of dying horribly or burning out.
The founder of the Ashwood Abbey, Reverend Doctor Marcus suffered a “swift and untimely death at the wooden talons of a three-armed goblin.”
Thomas Major, the legendary leader of the first Division Six cell, died along with most of the cell b y the early 1980s. There are no canon details but, well, use your imagination.
Meredith Lehane (Starflower), founder of the Keepers of the Source, lives in denial and has nothing to do with the organization. The Keepers’ militant leader who seized control of the group, Duncan Redgrove, was killed by magical lightning.
It’s anyone’s guess as to who/what the mysterious cameraman was that gave three film reels to Jim Harrison, founder of Network Zero.
Jacob Hite of the Promethean Brotherhood committed suicide after stealing the prophetic powers of the so-called “Nostradamus of Vienna.”
And a quick follow-up to what I just posted . . .
Not all hunter organizations want to destroy the supernatural menace. Some, to a certain extent, actually like having it around.
It’s all a game to the Ashwood Abbey and Bear Lodge. The party would be over if the monsters died out.
The Cheiron Group, Network Zero and Null Mysteriis are more interested in observing and studying than eradicating. They need evidence and test subjects, not a high enemy body count.
The Promethean Brotherhood needs witches to sacrifice. They’re not rushing to kill all the witches, only one witch every so often to maintain their stolen magical abilities. The Brotherhood would be screwed if witches became rare or extinct.