Daily Illuminator

September 5, 2015: Anne-Marie De Witt Of Fireside Games Talks Munchkin Panic

Munchkin Panic When we licensed Munchkin to develop a hybrid version of it with Castle Panic, Justin was occupied with designing The Dark Titan, the second expansion to Castle Panic. That's when it occurred to us that it might be better to have a third mind creating the combination. I jumped at the opportunity. At that point, I had designed Bears! and co-designed Bloodsuckers. Mashing up Munchkin and Castle Panic as my next challenge sounded both interesting and simpler since existing, tested mechanics had been established.

The easiest solution would have been a repaint, just slapping John Kovalic's art on Justin's game design. But that's not what we wanted for our Panic line variations. We wanted to build on some basic mechanics but provide players with a new experience, a new way to feel about their play. With Dead Panic, we changed up the objective and introduced characters. Instead of defending towers from relentless monsters (as in Castle Panic), players search a hunting cabin for items and weapons they can use to hold off zombies while survivors come with radio pieces that are used to call for rescue. As the players engage in hand-to-hand combat with the zombies, their characters can take damage. If they are wounded a third time, they die and reanimate in the game as zombies. Then they fight against their former teammates, who are struggling to get to the rescue van. The feel is very cinematic.

Monster tokens

I knew the feel in Munchkin Panic would be equally important and that it would need to draw its inspiration from Munchkin. Legacy Munchkin fans would need to experience a new way to stab their buddies that still felt familiar in some way, and Castle Panic fans would need to experience new mechanics and be able to dial the treachery up or down. During playtesting, I noticed that a significant number of Castle Panic players winced at the idea of backstabbing but loved getting treasure for killing monsters and using the new card combos. So I focused the base game on the treasure cards and added four new Curse cards, both of which were inspired mechanically by Munchkin, and introduced negotiating. Because Munchkin is organized around attaining levels and Castle Panic is built to protect towers, the card specifics had to be adapted. My favorite change is to how the Chicken on Your Head Curse works. (I won't give the joke away here.)

Panic board

These modifications were a way to introduce the Munchkin player to the Panic world and to ease the Castle Panic player into backstabbing. The full experience comes with the More Munchkin Mini-Expansion, which is included in the base game. With that, the players have character abilities and nemeses (adapted from Munchkin), cards to enhance monsters, and a new rule: no more defending the castle. That means the towers have become a second timer on the clock, which players can help manipulate. All that matters in the end is who has the most points in monster kills, regardless of whether a tower is left standing. In true Munchkin form.

The whole experience was not as simple as I thought it would be, but a whole lot interestinger (as Steve Jackson would say).

-- Anne-Marie De Witt, CEO Fireside Games


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