Solemn Vale is a gorgeously presented 352-page full-colour roleplaying game that presents a folk horror roleplaying game firmly set in 1970s Britain. A reference would be 'The Wicker Man' and other of its ilk. It is beautifully (and sometimes disturbingly) illustrated, with a simple clean layout. The game uses its own engine, which aims to give light narrative resolution either at a scene level or close to it. That means it's not designed to go 'blow by blow', but usually resolve a conflict with a single roll. It uses six-sided dice. It is published by Dirty Vortex. It is likely that characters will suffer terrible fates as they become entangled in the influence of Solemn Vale, so the game focuses on the journey to those consequences.
It is worth saying that this book is dark; nasty things are explored and will happen, just like the genre it is focused on. This would be an 18-rated film if it was a movie.
TL;DR: I'm impressed with Solemn Vale. It has a light and effective game engine linked to a layered and complex sandbox that perfectly evokes that 1970s British Folk Horror vibe. The setting lends itself well to exploring stories within that space, across a number of different themes, and the example scenarios are good examples of how to hit those different notes.
Beyond the subject, the thing that really hooked me into this game when it went into crowdfunding was the cover of the standard edition softback and the use of an Ordnance Survey style map for one of the add-ons. It's kind of ironic that I ended up opting for the hardcover (which has a different image) and I'm still waiting for the map (after a shipping issue meant that they went missing and subsequent illness from the creator) but I'm really happy with the material that I have received.
The book opens with some fiction where a young lad and his father are driving to Solemn Vale, moving into the old home of a relative who has died. They encounter a young girl in trauma by the roadside, and as they meet the police you get the feeling that something is very off about the place.
The game engine (Wyrd Abacus) is very simple. Characters are defined by a concept three abilities - Body, Mind and Soul. They will have a minimum value of 3, with a maximum of 9. Each ability has two facets associated with it that help build a picture of how the character is and should be played. Each facet has pros and cons listed. There is an extensive list of facets in the book, but you aren't limited to these.
There are a set of online tools for the game, so you can easily see how characters feel by using the random generator on the website. There are also other random generators for the GM there.
Abilities are used to overcome challenges. Challenges are rated between 2 and 10 typically and will focus on a specific ability area. Each ability covers three different types of challenge; the different types have no real mechanical effect and are there to provide clarity on which ability is in play.
Body has Obstruction, Pursuit and Threat challenges.
Mind has Logic, Pressure and Wits challenges.
Soul has Foreboding, Invocation and Taint challenges.
You resolve a challenge by describing what you are going to do and rolling a D6 to try and equal or exceed the challenge rating. For higher ratings, you will want to spend ability points, which one-for-one increase the dice roll. Spending points removes them from the pool associated with that ability, so there is a degree of resource management to think about, similar to Gumshoe. If you run out of points in an ability, it drops to zero, meaning you cannot influence a challenge outcome beyond the whims of fate from the dice roll. In most challenges, a single character will take a lead and make the roll, with any others involved being able to spend points to boost the result.
Failed challenge rolls often cause additional damage to abilities, reducing them further. If they would be reduced to zero or less, they are 'scratched out'. The next time that ability would be reduced your character will be defeated and taken out of action (killed, driven insane or some other appropriate narrative ending). There are rules for keeping a player involved should this happen and there isn't an appropriate way to introduce a new character.
Instead of damage, a character could suffer a narrative consequence (for example turning a faction against them). Alternatively, the 'stage rules' related to the challenge could require a character to immediately scratch out an ability or suffer some other kind of effect. Consequences to groups are spread between them at the discretion of the players involved.
You can recover ability points. If you have faced a challenge in a scene, you can recover a single point in an ability of your choice between scenes. There is an optional rule that allows you to recover an additional point between scenes if you have strongly role-played a facet. Finally, if you rest and recover in an appropriate way, you can make an influence roll (see later) and restore a number of points. However, you can only recover points in a scratched out ability with an appropriate narrative means (such as visiting a hospital, having a witch's blessing, having therapy).
In the event that you don't have enough points in an ability to boost a roll to pass a challenge, you can draw a Wyrd point from the Wyrd Pool to use a different ability to spend from, so long as it makes narrative sense. If your character isn't present in a scene, they can draw a Wyrd point to allow them to have done something that helps those present (usually addressed with a flashback) and add points to a roll. If you've failed a challenge, you can also opt to draw Wyrd points, one-for-one, to increase the roll you made so it is successful. All these points go into your own personal Wyrd pool.
Each scene has a Wyrd Pool, the level set by the number of characters involved. This represents the entanglement of the character's fate with what is happening in Solemn Vale. Players draw from it, and the points go into their personal pool. As well as using the points to use alternative abilities or boost the end result of a challenge roll, Wyrd points can be sent to introduce an allied or friendly denizen of the Vale into a scene, or to affect the outcome of a Wyrd roll. The Wyrd Pool regenerates at the end of a scene, but the character's personal pools remain.
Influence rolls are used to resolve minor contests or to see who is affected by a twist in the tale (for example, who is targeted as a victim). You get a number of dice equal to your ability pool maximum, and roll them, and take the highest value scored as your result. If the ability is scratched out or at zero, your result is set to a '1'. Bad things will usually happen to the character with the lowest score. Some influence rolls will look for a roll of '6' or '1' to trigger something, for example a countdown clock.
Wyrd rolls work in a similar way, but the number of dice is based upon a character's Personal Wyrd Pool. However, as this represents the entanglement of the character in the influence of Solemn Vale, a high roll may not be a good thing, as it means the focus is upon the character.
Magic is real in Solemn Vale, and usually handled abstractly through a Soul (Invocation) challenge. However, there are some more detailed rules for creating wards, charms, casting spells or making a conjuration to summon something. The text is clear that these are only there for special circumstances.
Overall, the rules are quite light (and are expressed in two pages in sister game Summer of Strange). Immediately after they're presented, a scenario is presented, where a BBC TV crew arrive to do a surprised visit with a child who has written in to them and find the house abandoned with bloody footprints and a compelling reason to follow up. The scenario - "Footprints" - showcases the Vale and the way that scenarios are constructed. They begin with an overview of the scenes, then the denizens involved, then specific 'stage rules'. Stage rules are elements that tailor the scenario from the baseline, and may escalate or drop away depending on where and when the characters are in on their story. Finally, each scene has example challenges and consequences listed, followed by suggestions for handling the outcome of the final scene and any epilogue. Overall, this is a great introductory scenario and serves to demonstrate the rules well.
This is followed by an essay on the decay of 1970s Britain and how it will change as the 1980s arrive. It's a good overview, but some reading around could easily supplement it if you didn't live through parts of it! The book then moves into describing the heart of Solemn Vale.
Solemn Vale is a remote town set on a valley near the coast in Cornwall. It is surrounded by hills and forest. The town itself is surrounded by smaller hamlets and farms, and it seems stuck in the past. The first area described is the heart of the town, beginning with the Green and the Bowler's Arms and including such places as the local nightclub. Each location has the background, secrets, agenda, appearance, allies and enemies described, followed by potential challenges, stage rules and key denizens at that location. Denizens, for example, the pub landlord, are described in a similar manner. These are all evocatively illustrated, and the writing starts to trigger ideas and thoughts for how you could run a game. Although any given scenario will have a plot behind it, the setting is very much a sandbox with lots of levers to pull.
After the town, the book moves onto 'The Manors', the powerful families that hold land and control the Vale. These include Lord Lowen Wellman's Guiding Star Commune, the Moore-Hollow family (whose wealth comes from mining) and the Blythes (established farmers). These families have been here a long time and have a number of simmering feuds. A number of locations where these may play out are described for the Gm to draw upon.
After 'The Manors' come 'The Estates'; the council housing and civic centre built to the north of the town. This is where you'll find the Library, Pharmacy, and Sports & Community Centre. There's the ice cream van, which does a roaring trade with specials. These are the places where you'll meet the Browns, Brownes and Brownlees, an intertwined and interrelated set of families who have lived in the Vale for a long time. If you have time, you could join the Bridge Club, or the Paranormal Investigation Club, meet local artist Mark Robinson and his 'Tea Party', the Masoods, Arkwrights or the Taylors. In much the same way as the early chapters, some key locations are described.
The book then moves to the second scenario, 'The Crisis of Father Aloysius'. Whereas 'Footprints' is focused around nature spirits, this scenario shows a different aspect, exploring a tortured Christian priest facing threat from pagan beliefs, and having a crisis of faith that could go very darkly. Again, a very effective exposition of the themes within the game.
The next chapter, 'The Meat of the Earth' starts a deep dive into the true nature and dangers of Solemn Vale, along with the farms, mines and families who could make life very uncomfortable for the characters. We get to meet Old Blood like the Holloways (traditional farmers with a tendency to violence and intimidation, linked to the Omega Cult), the Havers (again traditional, but with strong pagan beliefs), the Sykes (scrap merchants, petty thieves & criminals and sometime agents of the Holloways) and the Fenmoors (fiercely independent and self-sufficient). We also get to meet New Blood like the Walcotts (who returned from London in the 1800s), the Leightons (the latest tenants in a farm with a dark reputation) and the Crowes (hated once the collapse of the local Quarry was attributed to run-off from their farm). There are also independent families like the Rhodes (whose heritage goes back to Norman times) and the Gardeners (a family with roots from Nigeria who came to Britain with the Empire Windrush in 1948). The chapters rounds out describing locations like the local quarry, the defunct Moore Tin Mine, the abandoned Vale Copper Mine, and the local abattoir.
The next chapter explores the boundaries of the Vale, the woodlands, cliffs and caves and fields, along with key locations like the Stack (an old, abandoned brick chimney), the lonely Ere Rock, the Old Train Station, St Roch's Lighthouse, the Atlas Tin Mine, the old Courthouse, the perilous but beautiful river by the Ryswell Straight, the Witch's House, the old Bunker and tourist locations like the Shrike Hotel and Happy Acres Lumber Mills. There's also places of potential occult significance like the Druid's Circle, Skal's Folly and the Menehary Campgrounds where a brutal crime occurred in the past.
A short chapter describes the Omega Cult and how to use it in play. I won't describe more because of the potential spoilers, but it is a very different kind of horror.
This is followed by the final scenario; 'The Hounds Unleashed". This puts the characters in a situation where one of their party has gone to get supplies but not returned, and they are stuck in a caravan in the middle of bleak cold and frozen moorland. The plot riffs on a traditional folklore threat in such locations and again leaves plenty of opportunities for roleplaying and peril. It draws on several threads established in the chapters after the previous scenario. Overall, I liked this, but I think that it could be messy.
The book rounds out with some fiction from the perspective of a young Police Constable who has been assigned to Solemn Vale. This, like the opening piece, does a good job of giving the oppressive feel that the place gives off if you're a stranger.
The book has several appendices with lists of facets and example stage rules for challenges, denizens, locations and encounters. The latter four lists are also available as decks of cards. I have them, and they're nicely done on good quality card.
Overall, I'm impressed with Solemn Vale. It has a light and effective game engine linked to a layered and complex sandbox that perfectly evokes that 1970s British Folk Horror vibe. The setting lends itself well to exploring stories within that space, across a number of different themes, and the example scenarios are good examples of how to hit those different notes.
Recommended
25 May 2025
Edit: Video of a flick through of the book:
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