Succession War: Kill Team Campaign Design

Kill Team Campaign Design

Following the success of my last Kill Team narrative campaign at my local club I’ve decided to run another one. This time I want to incorporate some of the feedback from the participants in an attempt to heighten the narrative and increase engagement. Membership at the club has increased over the last few months so I’m hopeful we can have even more players than previous. But first I need to plan the narrative and scope. So read on for my Kill Team campaign design notes, to get my take on where this next event might take us.

Campaign Scope

While the last campaign was purposefully kept as simple as possible I want to increase the length and scope of this attempt without stretching myself or the players too thin. A couple of goals I’ve set myself includes:

  • Longer event without losing momentum. 7 week campaign this time round.
  • Engaging storyline that goes beyond the regular 40 faction divides of Chaos, Imperium and Xenos.
  • More opportunities for narrative.
  • Links to previous Promethium Wars event.
  • Include more than 12 players if possible.
  • Accessible to all play levels.
  • Multiplayer events.
  • Multiplayer grand finale.

Succession War Narrative

In an attempt to open up the alliances to multiple factions I’ve worked in a narrative based around the death of a Planetary Governor on an Imperial World. His offspring are fighting for the governorship supported by multiple factions. The plot will look something like this:

In the dying embers of the Forge World Velkira Prime, the great Steward Magus Regulus Thane lies on the edge of death. His three children—each bearing different visions for the planet’s future—prepare to seize power.

Amid their silent war of diplomacy, bribery, and sabotage, an external threat looms: Rhyskar the Unbound, a newly ascended Daemon Prince, seeks dominion of the system to prove his worth to the Chaos Pantheon. With Pyrothis V already in ruin, Velkira Prime is next.

The Imperium watches. The Xenos listen. And the Forge World burns with secrets.

Players take the role of shadow operatives, kill teams loyal to hidden masters. At the beginning of the campaign, each player secretly chooses a sibling to support. Each sibling also has one player assigned as their Captain—privy to deeper strategy and mission briefings.

Sibling Factions

The player base will be split across the three sibling factions regardless of whichever faction their Kill Team is aligned to. While each sibling is outwardly aligned to a particular faction they actually appeal to all three as described below.

Darian Thane – The Iron Heir

  • Loyalty: The Imperium
  • Vision: A brutal but stable militarized technocracy. Increased tithe to the Imperium to win political favor.
  • Theme: Order, sacrifice, grim determination.
  • Support: Militarum, Adeptus Mechanicus hardliners, conservative Space Marine chapters.
Darian Thane the Iron Heir

Chaos Support: Chaos-aligned factions view Darian’s rigid order as fertile ground for insidious infiltration. His obsessive devotion to law and productivity blinds him to the slow rot within.
Imperial Support: Darian is the traditionalist’s choice. He vows loyalty to the Imperium, pledges increased tithes, and promotes military strength and hierarchy.
Xenos Support: Pragmatic T’au or mercenary Kroot may ally with Darian via under-the-table deals with his logisticians, supplying rare resources or weapons in exchange for toleration.

Selene Thane – The Hidden Flame

  • Loyalty: Xenos sympathizer
  • Vision: Secret alliances with the T’au and Aeldari to boost production and evade Imperial taxes.
  • Theme: Innovation, progress, secrecy.
  • Support: Rogue Traders, T’au diplomats, Harlequin agents, Forge World fringe cults.
Selene Thane the Hidden Flame

Chaos Support: Chaos cults view Selene’s obsession with innovation and progress as an open door to Tzeentchian manipulation. Her radical reforms destabilize the status quo—perfect for seeding anarchy.
Imperial Support: Some elements in the Imperium (Inquisition radicals, free-thinking Magi, or certain Rogue Traders) see her ideas as necessary evils for survival on the frontier.
Xenos Support: Selene has already opened discreet trade lines with T’au diplomats and Aeldari seers. Her faction embraces alien tech, psychic insight, and fringe experimentation.

Kato Thane – The Pale Prophet

  • Loyalty: Chaos
  • Vision: A Forge World as a daemon-forge of flesh and steel. Secretly devoted to Nurgle and Tzeentch.
  • Theme: Corruption, mutation and progress.
  • Support: Cults, Traitor Astartes, Renegade Mechanicus, Genestealer remnants.
Kato Thane the Pale Prophet

Chaos Support: Kato is a willing servant of Chaos. His hidden cults grow daily, and his daemon-forges swell with unsanctioned warp energies. He dreams of apotheosis.
Imperial Support: Kato presents himself as a quiet, dutiful son. Loyalist factions that prefer a weak or pliable ruler may support him as a puppet candidate.
Xenos Support: Genestealer Cult remnants, radical Necron Crypteks, or even Ork Mekboyz might be amused by Kato’s grotesque tech-heresy. Some see his reign as inevitable—and profitable.

Player Distribution and Captains

In an effort to even up the teams players will be assigned based on rough skill level and experience. A captain will also be assigned with the aim of hyping up their team as well as dishing out specialist campaign equipment. The captains will also be tasked with encouraging the narrative within the campaign, creating rivalries and grudges etc.

Campaign Progression

Campaign progression will look something like the following:

Week ThemeCrit OpsNotes
1Fires of Ambition Secure – Capture Key industrial sites on Velkias Prime
2Silent Alliances Dead Drop – Deliver/collect coded intel across the mapTeam Captains will be given a selection of rare equipment to pass out to their team members.
3Saboteurs Unleashed Sabotage of key rival infrastructure2v2 Half teams multiplayer missions
4Assassination Assassination crit op targeting rival leadersThe sibling with the weakest control is assassinated and removed from the race. Lost faction players redistributed to the winners.
5Aftershocks Turf WarSeize and control disputed territoryCaptains given further assets to distribute to their teams.
6Final StrikeKill Op, wipe out the other teams2v2 Half teams multiplayer missions Adding double control points.
7ControlLarge multiplayer event set in the Governors PalacePlayers bring 1-2 operatives for a final show down. Which faction will control the winning Sibling?

Victory Conditions

A simple map of Velkaria Prime divided into 5 sectors will form the basis of the win condition. Each game (decided or rolled for by the players) will take place in a different sector and a win will create a control point in that location. Control of the planet will therefore take on a visual aspect as control of the different sectors changes hands.

Having a map came up a lot in the player feedback and will form a central unifying aspect of this Kill team campaign design.

A separate element will be the Champion. Each player will nominate a champion (not their leader). Each champion gets a point for every Kill they make. This will form a different leader board giving players another victory condition to work towards.

Final Thoughts on the Kill Team Campaign Design

With regards to this Kill Team campaign design, I’m hoping that the mix of factions and player captains and map will all serve to keep the players engaged. As well as the multiplayer events and shifts in the story arc.

While players will be assigned to factions, it will be important that they develop a narrative around why their team is supporting the given sibling and work changes in the plot.

While a little more complicated than the previous campaign, the administration is actually fairly limited for me as the Arbitrator (organiser). Having the captains help corral players will also be a big help.

Looking forward to getting the map, missions and player pack finalized and kicking it off in a couple of months.


Stories Lived. Stories Told Podcast

A few months ago I recorded an episode of the Stories Lived. Stories Told. podcast hosted by Abbie VanMeter. Abbie was an excellent host, who made the experience very straightforward and the kept the conversation flowing. We talked about D&D in the context of leadership and communication. Heres the official blurb:

How do games like Dungeons and Dragons enable us to practice a CMM-informed way of relating, participating, and communicating?

Today, Abbie and Tom explore Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) as a powerful practice and metaphor for developing more relational, emergent, and collaborative ways of being and leading, touching on the value of experiental learning in scenarios our brains will remember as real; the need (both in game and out) to coordinate across different meanings being made in each of our own imaginations; and the opportunity to transform and be transformed by collective storytelling and world building.

I had a great time recording the episode and we covered a lot of ground. You can find it by following the links below:

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4RDvlAgU0CdgiXk8KtTfAC?si=5004742137b043df

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/stories-lived-stories-told/id1610827437?i=1000722748681

Substack: https://open.substack.com/pub/cmminstitute/p/on-practicing-leadership-playing?r=3momjn&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

YouTube: https://youtu.be/9m4Bhtjme14

And the SLST website: https://www.storieslivedstoriestold.com/podcast

I’d love for you to check it out!

For other podcasts that DnD at Work has appeared on check out our page here.

The 5 Room Dungeon: Easy, Flexible Adventure Design

Sometimes, you only have an hour to run a game session. Other times, you’re designing a one-shot and need a structure to keep things tight and engaging. Enter the 5 Room Dungeon—a simple but powerful framework that’s stood the test of time, perfect for both new and experienced Dungeon Masters looking to craft quick, satisfying adventures. Whether you’re building a fantasy heist, or a sci-fi jailbreak, the 5 Room Dungeon can help you do it all.

What is the 5 Room Dungeon?

The 5 Room Dungeon is a classic RPG design tool created by Johnn Four, a long-time RPG writer and editor of the newsletter Roleplaying Tips. It provides a repeatable format for building compact, memorable adventures that can be played in a single session.

Obscurely, despite the name, it’s not just for literal dungeons. Each “room” represents a beat in the story or an encounter in the adventure. The beauty of the format lies in its flexibility—it works for fantasy, sci-fi, horror, and even real-world or workplace-themed roleplaying.

I “discovered” it a few years ago and it was a game changer for my D&D prep. I made some truly memorable and unique dungeons for my Salkire campaign.

The 5 Room Structure

Here’s the basic breakdown of the 5 Room Dungeons framework:

  1. Room 1: Entrance and Guardian
    The players are tested before they enter the main part of the adventure. This could be a fight, a puzzle, or a social encounter. It’s the hook.
  2. Room 2: Puzzle or Roleplaying Challenge
    Slow things down and give players a chance to think. This could be a riddle, a moral choice, or an NPC interaction.
  3. Room 3: Trick or Setback
    Something unexpected happens. It’s a twist or complication—maybe the villain was expecting them, or the artifact is cursed.
  4. Room 4: Climax / Big Battle
    The final conflict. This is often a combat encounter, but it could also be a tense negotiation or race-against-the-clock event.
  5. Room 5: Reward, Revelation, or Plot Twist
    Wrap things up. The party gains treasure, new knowledge, or a narrative twist that sets up future adventures.

Why It Works

There are at least four benefits to using this framework including:

  • Compact: You can prep a full session in an hour or less.
  • Flexible: Use it for any genre or system.
  • Engaging: Each room has a purpose and keeps the story moving.
  • Replayable: Change the theme or setting, and you’ve got a brand-new adventure.

Adapting the 5 Room Dungeon to Different Genres

As mentioned above the 5 Room Dungeon is adaptable across pretty much every genre. Here are some simple examples of how you might use it.

Fantasy:

  • Theme: “The Cursed Tomb”
  • R1: Guardian skeletons
  • R2: Mural puzzle
  • R3: Hallway collapses
  • R4: Fight the tomb guardian
  • R5: Relic grants visions of a new threat

Sci-Fi:

  • Theme: “Derelict Space Station”
  • R1: Airlock breach
  • R2: Interact with the station AI
  • R3: Rogue drones attack
  • R4: Shut down the reactor
  • R5: Discover the station was sabotaged by their own faction

Horror:

  • Theme: “The House That Whispers”
  • R1: Locked front door—must find the key
  • R2: Possessed mirror asks questions
  • R3: “Friendly” ghost leads them into a trap
  • R4: Exorcise the spirit
  • R5: Learn the house was a prison for something much worse

I used this framework recently in my Star Wars inspired adventure. You can read more here. My adventure had the following frame:

  • Theme: Star Wars – Steal the Phantom TIE Fighter
  • R1: Crash on to planet and avoid Scout Trooper Patrols
  • R2: Try and find and win over the Imperial defector
  • R3: It’s a trap – ambushed by Main villain – Agent Ixil
  • R4: Big battle, escape with the TIE
  • R5: Investigations show Phantom TIE is powered by Sith technology

The 5 Room Dungeon Framework helped me shape what turned out to be a really fun adventure. Obviously, there’s nothing worse than staring at a blank page. Of course, having the bare bones set out already lets you then hang the really interesting stuff onto it. NPCs, environments, twists and dangers all come to mind much more easily when the space is already partially built like this.

Final Thoughts

The 5 Room Dungeon is more than just a dungeon—it’s a storytelling engine. Whether you’re running a fantasy adventure, a modern mystery, or a Star Wars extravaganza, this simple five-beat structure helps you stay focused and deliver a memorable experience. Try it out the next time you’re short on prep time or want to design an adventure with a clear, satisfying arc.

Of course, a big thanks to Johnn Four, the creator of this magnificent DMing tool.

If you are looking for some amazing maps to support your 5 Room Dungeons check out Dyson Logos. You can see his wonderful work in the image at the top of this article. An incredible resource!