Cannon Fodder

One of the first things I think of when creating a new campaign is, “Who/What will the PCs fight?” A few uber-villains always come to mind—an ancient C’thuloid, a Venger-like badass (but with 2 horns, because that always bothered me), a beholder whom I’ve patterned after a hookah-smoking Stalin—but the hard part is identifying the cannon fodder. They have to be unlikable, memorable, and challenging foes to be sure. But not too challenging, else they lose their roles as cannon fodder and become stand-alone villains in their own right.

I suppose conjuring up cannon fodder should be easy, but for whatever reason, the voices in my head make it challenging. So lets talk about cannon fodder.

Q’est-ce que c’est Cannon Fodder?

For those not yet accustomed to the casual apathy reserved for an underling’s well-being, “cannon fodder” are basically the low-level opposition fielded by your campaign’s bad guys. These are the poor slobs that form the first (and second, and maybe even third) waves your PCs have to assault through before they can confront the Big Bad, the Majordomo, the Level Boss, whatever you call him/her/it. Think of ants defending the queen, and you get the idea.

Just about every epic story pits cannon fodder against the heroes, who have to overcome the nameless minions to bring their quest to a successful end. Fodder come in many shapes and sizes—companies of foot soldiers, hordes of orcs, seething masses of heaving savages festooned with beads and poison darts, even a swarm of carnivore bugs who erupt out of the ground to kill Michael Ironside—but they all have a few things in common:

  • They’re crap fighters individually, but en masse, they can overwhelm the heroes
  • They personify an antagonist’s badness—an Urak-hai’s icky birth is a direct reflection on how twisted Saruman has become
  • They whittle away the heroes’ strength and resources (hit points, healing potions, etc.); the best fodder take the Vietnam sniper’s approach: wound (but don’t kill) a target to slow down the entire party
  • They’re iconic to the setting—nazis fit right into pulp ’30s action, orcs are integral to Middle Earth, and Trollocs are the twisted embodiment of the evil rising in the (unfinished) Squeal of Time saga
In ur base, settin’ a trapz!

Looking for examples? Just off the top of my head:

  • Trollocs, foulspawn (from Jordan’s Rand-land)
  • Orcs, Urak-hai (from the father of modern humanoids, JRR Tolkien)
  • Cavewights and Ur-viles (say what you want about Donaldson—he does give his beasties good names)
  • Nazis, Stormtroopers (basically any rank-and-file soldier in the employ of an evil empire)
  • Necromongers (from my wife’s favourite Vin Diesel vehicle, Chronicles of Riddick)
  • Bugs (in this case, from Starship Troopers; what I like about these is that they’re specialised: you have soldiers, fliers, bugs that shoot explosive butt-missiles into space, and brain bugs)
  • Aliens (from the Aliens franchise; while the alien in the first movie was more like a Big Bad, the aliens in the second movie were more like fodder. Get some!)
  • Any humanoid – kobold, goblin, orc, hobgoblin, gnoll (my intro to fodder, courtesy of Moldvay Basic D&D—though subsequent editions spewed out many more flavours; basically these were all the same monster, but with different combat stats)

So What’s the Problem?

Given the common features cannon fodder share, the challenge is to make them interesting, but retain their role as middling foes. Books, movies, comics—possibly even dodgeball—all have established a tremendous precedent for cannon fodder. On the plus side, we know what works. On the down-side, fodder can be boring. I think there’s a fine line between established models and what’s trite. And who wants trite?

Possible Solutions

So here’s some ways I’ve seen (and thought of) to make cannon fodder more interesting. Basically, take one of the examples above and tweak it with one of the traits below. Or use an example as-is, and give traits only to a certain segment of the population. Either way, my recommendation is not to give cannon fodder more than one of these traits (because if they become too special, they cease being cannon fodder):

Roll 1d6+1d4:

1: Special defence (d4: 1 acid for blood; 2 damages weapons when struck; 3 immune to specific material or attack type; 4 force field prevents fodder as long as they don’t attack)

2: Special result when killed (d4: 1 petrifaction, binding weapons into body; 2 noxious corpse; 3 reanimate in 1d4 rounds; 4 useful body part)

3: Special role (d4: 1 soldier caste – bonus to attack and damage; 2 scout caste – sneaky with ranged strike; 3 tank caste- slow but takes a beating while it delivers massive damage every other round; 4 thinker caste – directs allies until killed)

4: Special ability (d4: 1 very strong for extra melee damage; 2 very nimble and hard to hit; 3 natural attack supplements weapon use; 4 can summon reinforcements)

5: Special vulnerability (d4: 1 photosensitive for penalty in daylight; 2 weakness against specific material or attack type; 3 berserker mode makes them reckless under certain conditions; 4 cowardly for poor morale and prone to retreat)

6: Special tactics (d4: 1 always fields hidden reserves to turn the tide of battle; 2 stalwart and fights to the death; 3 assassin mentality makes them refuse a stand-up fight, preferring to attack from prepared ranged positions; 4 unique weapon that has performance edge but can only be used by the fodder race)

I’ve left these system-agnostic, but you should have no problems adapting them to your favourite RPG. Like Chimera, which I suggest you play. Everybody’s doing it…it’ll make you feel good.

Final Words

Two simple questions: (1) what examples from books or movies come to your mind when I say “cannon fodder,” and (2) what do you do in your campaign to make cannon fodder memorable?

3 thoughts on “Cannon Fodder”

  1. Hmm…I’d say in some respects I don’t tend to make the fodder interesting. I give them additional intermediary leaders, instead. Not the big bad, but some lieutenant under his control…who wants to deal with fodder if you’re a big bad? That way I can make an exemplary sort of fodder on an individual basis, without making all fodder overly powerful.

  2. The main feature for cannon fodder is that there are plenty of them – over and over again. It doesn’t matter what sort of features they have, but that they are mass-produced and easily recognisable, often used more as living scenery than actual encounters.

    Almost anything can be intimidating when the PCs are up against thousands of them. Keep them plain and anonymous, and make sure they are reused. Once your BBEG starts using laser-wielding orcs as minions, always have them use laser-weilding orcs as minions, with the same abilities and weaknesses every time.

    This way, they become recognisable as minions, and should a new improved version of minion come out, they will stand out – laser-wielding ogres instead of orcs, for example. Later one, it’s laser-wielding giants, and so forth.

    The minions are a means to personify the villain – not the other way around, and as such everything about the minion should reek of the villain at hand. If the PCs do not know who the villain is, they should be inclined to find out, and they will find it easier to spot new or returning foes by their minions.

    If you use enough of the Assassins of Blood as the minions of the Lords of Carnage, any attack by the Assassins of Blood (or a look alike) will have the PCs beating on the Lords of Carnage door, wanting to know what they hell they’ve done to upset them this time.

    This makes it fun when the Lords of Carnage don’t know what’s going on either, and not only slap the PCs for their ill-timed invasion, but then hire them to discover who is trying to take of the Assassins of Blood and/or frame the Lords of Carnage. The PCs have a choice – work with the bad guys or not, because sometimes, it is “better the devil you know”…

  3. No doubt you’ll all find this amusing then: http://speakwithmonsters.badgods.com/comics/orc

    I just try to make sure their not cut with a cookie cutter. It’s worth a stroke or two of the creative pen. Goblyn Fingerpoke is having a bad day, his feet ache, and his buddy Bludgeon is making a nuisance of himself picking up trash, only he keeps dropping it or trying to hand it off to Fingerpoke to carry, and now there’s intruders, PCs in “his dungeon”. “If I can only get them to level 2 where they’ll get eaten by something horrible,” he sighs. “Ooh, shiny!” says Bludgeon. “You idiot,” says Fingerpoke as Bludgeon suddenly drops everything with a loud crash, “keep that racket up and you’ll get us all killed.” The other Goblins murmer in agreement. “Run to the Big Nasty,” say’s Fingerpoke if we get attacked, “It’ll eat them and we’ll get the scraps, Big Nasty won’t eat their packs.”

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