Changeling: The Lost

Changeling: The Lost is the fifth supplementary role-playing game line published by White Wolf Publishing. It uses the Storytelling System for rules and is set in the Chronicles of Darkness setting. Changeling is the second limited game published by White Wolf after Promethean: The Created, but in April 2008 it was announced that because of the success of the line it would be an extended limited series not limited to five books.[1] Since then, three full hard-cover books were published: Equinox Road, Dancers in the Dusk, and Swords at Dawn. Goblin Markets, available only on PDF, was also created.[2] This was followed by the setting book Victorian Lost.

Changeling: The Lost
First edition cover art
Designer(s)Ethan Skemp
Publisher(s)
Publication date
  • August 2007 (1st edition)
  • January 2019 (2nd edition)
Genre(s)Personal horror
System(s)Storytelling System

The game is primarily inspired by tales of changelings from European folklore but includes elements of similar stories from around the world. While superficially similar to the Classic World of Darkness game Changeling: The Dreaming, Changeling: The Lost approaches the legends from a more traditional perspective of mortals kidnapped by Fae and eschews the past life angle that characterized its predecessor.

In 2014, Onyx Path Publishing announced a forthcoming second edition.[3]

Release history

The game was released on August 16, 2007, "just in time for Gen Con," according to the White Wolf website. Previous to that, updates on the White Wolf website slowly revealed more about the setting and the mechanics. Much of what was known about the game, prior to the official updates, was disseminated by members who attended the 2007 GAMA Trade Show in Las Vegas.

On April 25, 2007, a White Wolf staff member's publicly posted photograph documenting a prank revealed the Changeling cover for the first time.[4]

On April 30, 2007, the cover for Changeling: The Lost was officially revealed via White Wolf's news feed;[5] coupled with this description of the game line from the publisher:

Taken from your home, transformed by the power of Faerie, kept as the Others’ slave or pet — but you never forgot where you came from. Now you have found your way back through the Thorns, to a home that is no longer yours. You are Lost. Find yourself.

The cover depicts the Changeling title super-imposed over a mass of green thorns; a battered Luna moth is impaled on the thorns.

A "quickstart" version of Changeling: The Lost was released for Free RPG Day, June 23, 2007. This free demo was made available for download from the White Wolf, Inc. website on June 26, 2007.

In 2014, Onyx Path announced that there would be an updated release of Changeling: The Lost, similar to the remakes of their other creative properties.

Game overview

The game is set in the Chronicles of Darkness, a fictional analog to the real world in which human beings unknowingly coexist with legendary monsters and other supernatural phenomena. The "Changelings" of the title are ordinary human beings who were kidnapped by the Fae and taken as slaves to their world (alternately known as Arcadia or Faerie). The player characters are changelings who have managed to escape their otherworldly captors and struggle through the barrier (known as the Hedge or the Thorns) that separates Faerie from Earth. The game focuses on the experiences of these changelings as they re-discover the world of their birth, try to cope with the metamorphoses they have undergone, and seek to evade recapture.

Themes

The dominant themes of the game are the pain of loss, the quest for identity, and the bittersweet nature of human existence.

Changelings refer to themselves as "the Lost": they were kidnapped by the godlike Fae, taken to an alien realm, and held prisoner. While trapped there (referred to as their "Durance"), they were forced to serve their otherworldly masters and endure inhuman tortures; to survive under the twisted laws underpinning Arcadia, they also had to undergo physical and supernatural metamorphoses. Many escape only to find that they have been replaced by a faerie simulacrum (called a "Fetch") and that they have not been missed at all. Most also discover that time passed differently in Arcadia than in the mortal world, and they are either too old or too young to resume their normal lives. Those who can often attempt to pick up where they left off before they were taken, with varying degrees of success, while others try to build new human lives elsewhere. However even under the best possible circumstances, the Lost are no longer fully human; they have become part of both worlds and while they are still human enough to make sense of human things, they have metamorphosed just enough to skew their perceptions. Many embrace their new existences, compensating for the loss of their mortal lives by immersing themselves in changeling society. Most find that they have come to appreciate humanity in a new way, finding beauty in the most mundane or painful of experiences, aching for things they did not appreciate before their capture.

Characters

Changeling characters are unique individuals, each one shaped differently by his or her personal experiences in the world of the Fae. As a result, Changeling: The Lost features a more nuanced and detailed character-creation system than the other World of Darkness games. Each Changeling possesses a Seeming, and may possess a Kith which further defines a seeming, a Court represented by Seasons or any other patterns, and Entitlements which are used to distinguish and describe the nature of the character according to the metamorphoses that her time with the Fae have wrought upon her. Some Changelings exhibit inhuman beauty, while others exhibit atavism; some are defined by a particular season, while others are defined by their approach to social interaction.

All things fae, including changelings, are also protected by the Mask, an illusion that makes them appear as mundane versions of themselves. Only fae beings can see through the Mask, though they can ensorcell humans and thereby grant them the temporary ability to see through the Mask.

The Seemings are as listed:

Beasts: Changelings that share qualities with animals both mythical and mundane.

Darklings: Changelings that represent the aspects of Fear and Shadow.

Elementals: Changelings that have become one with an aspect of nature.

Fairests: Changelings that embody the beauty and majesty of the Fae.

Ogres: Changelings that were subject to violence and became avatars of it.

Wizened: Changelings that served as workers and servants only to become the figure of their profession.

The Lost have many problems to deal with, the most prominent being the Gentry, or True Fae. Other problems include their fetches, Hobgoblins, Enchanted Mortals, Mad Changelings, and the various other beings within the World of Darkness Cosmology. Not to mention conflicts within the political bodies that make up Changeling society, from debates to full-scale underground wars, between Courts, Freeholds and Entitlements.

Books

TitleReleaseProduct no.ISBNNote(s)
Changeling: The LostAugust 16, 2007WW70000ISBN 978-1-58846-527-6Core rulebook
The Fear Maker's PromiseAugust 16, 2007WW70905N/AAdventure for Changeling: The Lost. Published digitally.
Autumn NightmaresOctober 5, 2007WW70300ISBN 978-1-58846-531-3Antagonists book[6]
Winter MasquesNovember 30, 2007WW70200ISBN 978-1-58846-532-0Seemings and kith book[6]
Rites of SpringFebruary 6, 2008WW70201ISBN 978-1-58846-716-4Contracts and magic book
Lords of SummerJune 11, 2008WW70202ISBN 978-1-58846-715-7Courts and entitlements book
The Equinox RoadAugust 6, 2008WW70203ISBN 978-1-58846-717-1Advanced guide on playing with themes, moods, epic levels of play and variants
Night Horrors: Grim FearsOctober 6, 2008WW70205ISBN 978-1-58846-743-0An antagonist book filled with Fae and Lost for any chronicle and crossover
The Rose-Bride's PlightOctober 7, 2007WW70906N/AAdventure for Changeling: The Lost. Published digitally.
Dancers in the DuskApril 1, 2009WW70207ISBN 978-1-58846-361-6Sourcebook on dreams and nightmares, the Hedge and the Dusk court
Swords at DawnJune 24, 2009WW70208ISBN 978-1-58846-370-8An Antagonist book filled with Fae and Lost for any chronicle and crossover
Personae: Ready Made Characters (Changeling: The Lost)July 1, 2009WW70001N/ACharacters with art and backgrounds ready to play without preparation
Goblin MarketsSeptember 9, 2009WW70002N/ASourcebook about goblins and goblin markets. Published digitally.
Victorian LostJune 5, 2012WW70006N/ASourcebook for running chronicles set in Victorian England
The Huntsmen Chronicle AnthologyOctober 25, 2017N/AAnthology of short stories
Changeling: The Lost Second EditionJanuary 16, 2019CTL001N/ARevised core rulebook
Hearts on Trial: Changeling the Lost Second Edition JumpstartJanuary 23, 2019N/ARules digest including ready-made adventure and characters

Reception

Changeling: The Lost has been more popular than its predecessor Changeling: The Dreaming,[7] and has won several awards: in 2008, it received the Gold ENnie Awards for Product of the Year, Best Interior Art, Best Production Values, and Best Writing. Additionally, the supplement The Fear Maker's Promise and the demo Changling: The Lost Quickstart won the Silver ENnie Awards for Best Electronic Book and Best Free Product, respectively.[8]

In her book Elves and Fairies, writer Kris Hirschmann praised the darker and creepier tone of Changeling: The Lost compared to Changeling: The Dreaming, saying that it, despite being too sinister for some, made for a fascinating premise that is "seductive in its scariness".[7]

References

  1. White Wolf Forums :: View topic - 6th Changeling book and/or more Changeling?
  2. White Wolf Forums :: View topic - Confirmation from WW LJ: Another Changeling Book?
  3. Onyx Path Publishing: "The World of Darkness, Second Edition"
  4. "jachilli" (2007-04-25). "They Got Me". Archived from the original on 2012-11-29. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  5. "Changeling Cover Revealed". White Wolf, Inc. 2007-04-30. Archived from the original on 2007-07-07. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  6. WW70900 (Changeling: the Lost Free Rules and Adventure, page 32
  7. Hirschmann, Kris (2012). "Role-Playing Games". Elves and Fairies. ReferencePoint Press. pp. 61–62. ISBN 978-1601524683.
  8. "2008 Noms and Winners". August 24, 2010. Archived from the original on April 27, 2013.
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