The Marvellous: Difference between revisions
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==How the Game Began== | ==How the Game Began== | ||
<blockquote>''"The Marvellous has been played a long time, you see. All the way back to the First City. The stake was seventy-seven of their coins then. It's the same stake now."''<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/%22Truth_be_told,_I_wouldn%27t_mind_an_early_game._But_I%27ll_need_a_reason_to_give_you_the_names_of_the_others...%22 "Truth be told, I wouldn't mind an early game. But I'll need a reason to give you the names of the others...", ''Fallen London'']</ref></blockquote>The Marvellous was not always played with cards; once upon a time, it was a contest of tiles, boxes, and scales etched with searing glyphs.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_the_Marvellous Ask about the Marvellous, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Yearning Custodian lets out a laugh, dry as risen dust. "The cards are a recent convention. It changes with the fashion of the cities. It was a game played with tiles once, and I remember a terrible box of scales and searing glyphs..." The Custodian drifts in memory for a few moments."''</ref> In the days of the [[Third City]], a survivor from the [[The First City|First City]]<ref name=":3">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''"We played for First City Coins. Their joke, to commemorate me. I'm afraid that requirement is my fault. The last person here cursed me vociferously."''</ref> found himself bored beyond measure after living for thousands of years. He petitioned [[Mr Apples|Mr Hearts]], and the Lords (as the Masters were called back then) devised a solution<ref name=":4">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''"I was very old then. Lived too long, bored out of my gourd. I went to one of the Lords: the Lord of Blood," the Custodian pauses. "I beseeched it. Begged it to give me my heart's desire. The Lords, who had themselves grown restless, devised the game: the Marvellous. They found six others, as afflicted as I was. I imagine it was not difficult to do so."''</ref> | <blockquote>''"The Marvellous has been played a long time, you see. All the way back to the First City. The stake was seventy-seven of their coins then. It's the same stake now."''<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/%22Truth_be_told,_I_wouldn%27t_mind_an_early_game._But_I%27ll_need_a_reason_to_give_you_the_names_of_the_others...%22 "Truth be told, I wouldn't mind an early game. But I'll need a reason to give you the names of the others...", ''Fallen London'']</ref></blockquote>The Marvellous was not always played with cards; once upon a time, it was a contest of tiles, boxes, and scales etched with searing glyphs.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_the_Marvellous Ask about the Marvellous, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Yearning Custodian lets out a laugh, dry as risen dust. "The cards are a recent convention. It changes with the fashion of the cities. It was a game played with tiles once, and I remember a terrible box of scales and searing glyphs..." The Custodian drifts in memory for a few moments."''</ref> In the days of the [[Third City]], a survivor from the [[The First City|First City]]<ref name=":3">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''"We played for First City Coins. Their joke, to commemorate me. I'm afraid that requirement is my fault. The last person here cursed me vociferously."''</ref> found himself bored beyond measure after living for thousands of years. He petitioned [[Mr Apples|Mr Hearts]], and the Lords (as the [[Masters]] were called back then) devised a solution:<ref name=":4">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''"I was very old then. Lived too long, bored out of my gourd. I went to one of the Lords: the Lord of Blood," the Custodian pauses. "I beseeched it. Begged it to give me my heart's desire. The Lords, who had themselves grown restless, devised the game: the Marvellous. They found six others, as afflicted as I was. I imagine it was not difficult to do so."''</ref> they borrowed the basic principles of a [[Presbyterate]] game<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Arcana|Arcana|Fallen London|}}''"The Marvellous. Did you know it was invented in the Presbyterate? Listen to the Masters, and you'd think they created it. [...] They'll never admit that they stole its bones from a much older game. Seven players. Bluff and chance. The College of Mortality didn't call it The Marvellous or host tournaments, but the stakes were high. So were the tips."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London|}} ''""...in the Presbyterate, where the Marvellous was born.""''</ref> that had long been played among the College of Mortality, and made it more complex to their liking.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Consult_the_Thirsty_Croupier Consult the Thirsty Croupier, ''Fallen London''] ''"''Their ''version," says the Croupier. "But the Bishop of St Fiacre's remembers.'' I ''remember. Before the Lord of Blood rewrote the rules, the College of Mortality played a much simpler game. Live too long and you'll grow inured to certainty, start craving risk.""''</ref> They gathered six other players<ref name=":4" /> and set the stakes at seventy-seven First City coins, in an apparently humorous commemoration of the weary man.<ref name=":3" /> | ||
The man from the First City won the inaugural game of the Marvellous, but did not know what he wanted, and hesitated when the time came for the Lords to fulfill his wish. What the Lords gave him, then, was a purpose; he became the '''Yearning Custodian''', eternal keeper of the Marvellous and chronicler of its history.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''""We played that first game and I won. The Lords were surprised, I think. They asked me my heart's desire – the thing I had wanted most. But when the time came, I had no answer. I did not know! So they devised one for me. They gave me purpose: this task. Keeper of the Marvellous, chronicler of its history and rulings. Its high priest.""''</ref> He now resides in [[Parabola]], at a place called the Root of Need, down the Wanting Way.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Discuss_the_cards_further Discuss the cards further, ''Fallen London''] ''"As to the cards. "They must be consecrated, naturalously, in the Kingdom of the Is-Not. Parabola is a terrible place, but needs must. You must follow the Wanting Way to the very Root of Need, where you will find one who knows the rites." Mr Pages sighs. "It is, admittedly, something of a palaver. Still: tradition!"''</ref> Here he consecrates new players’ decks,<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Give_him_the_deck Give him the deck, Fallen London] ''""I shall consecrate your cards, if you will allow me." He smiles, his expression all giddiness."''</ref> instructs them in the rules,<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Learn_how_to_play_the_Marvellous Learn how to play the Marvellous, ''Fallen London''] ''"Tracing one long finger across the bottom of the stone, and working his way, slowly, patiently, upward, the Custodian begins to relate to you the rules of the Marvellous as written on the stones, updated over the years as the game has changed."''</ref> and watches over the game that was, | The man from the First City won the inaugural game of the Marvellous, but did not know what he wanted, and hesitated when the time came for the Lords to fulfill his wish. What the Lords gave him, then, was a purpose; he became the '''Yearning Custodian''', eternal keeper of the Marvellous and chronicler of its history.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_him_who_he_is|Ask him who he is|Fallen London|}} ''""We played that first game and I won. The Lords were surprised, I think. They asked me my heart's desire – the thing I had wanted most. But when the time came, I had no answer. I did not know! So they devised one for me. They gave me purpose: this task. Keeper of the Marvellous, chronicler of its history and rulings. Its high priest.""''</ref> He now resides in [[Parabola]], at a place called the Root of Need, down the Wanting Way.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Discuss_the_cards_further Discuss the cards further, ''Fallen London''] ''"As to the cards. "They must be consecrated, naturalously, in the Kingdom of the Is-Not. Parabola is a terrible place, but needs must. You must follow the Wanting Way to the very Root of Need, where you will find one who knows the rites." Mr Pages sighs. "It is, admittedly, something of a palaver. Still: tradition!"''</ref> Here he consecrates new players’ decks,<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Give_him_the_deck Give him the deck, Fallen London] ''""I shall consecrate your cards, if you will allow me." He smiles, his expression all giddiness."''</ref> instructs them in the rules,<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Learn_how_to_play_the_Marvellous Learn how to play the Marvellous, ''Fallen London''] ''"Tracing one long finger across the bottom of the stone, and working his way, slowly, patiently, upward, the Custodian begins to relate to you the rules of the Marvellous as written on the stones, updated over the years as the game has changed."''</ref> and watches over the game that was born (or rather, redesigned) from his own original desire. | ||
== Historical & Cultural Inspirations == | == Historical & Cultural Inspirations == |
Revision as of 05:19, 25 February 2025
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"They say that once every nine years there's a card game where you can gamble your soul and win your heart's desire. That sounds like tremendous fun."[1]
The Marvellous is an esoteric, high-stakes card game, held at rare intervals and played by a select few who seek to claim their heart’s desire.
Structure
"'First,' Pages says, 'you must understand that the Marvellous is not a single game. What a disappointment that would be! No, it is a tournament – a series of contests in which two players face one another. One is knocked from the running; the other advances.'"[2]
The Marvellous is played only at precise celestial alignments, determined by planetary conjunctions.[3] However, if all players agree, the game may begin at any time.[4]
The tournament opens with the Honour, a round in which all players compete simultaneously. The outcome determines the order of eliminations, the pairings for subsequent rounds, and grants the winner a free pass into the second round.[5]
After the Honour, the tournament progresses through head-to-head matches: the first player eliminated faces the second eliminated, and so forth. Each match ends with the winner advancing and the loser leaving the game. This continues until only two players remain.[5] They face off in a final, decisive hand at the heart of the Bazaar.[6] The victor receives their heart’s desire, though it can only be granted to the best of the Masters' abilities.[7]
Rules
"In the end, your head is full of rules, rulings, conventions, revisions and variations. How on earth are you meant to translate this gibberish into a winning strategy?"[8]
The Marvellous is played in a series of hands, and follows a structure reminiscent of poker.[9] The deck consists of four Suits (Cats, Rats, Bats, and Hats) and distinctive face cards known as Trumps (Jacks, Queens, and Kings). Each face card has unique artwork depicting a different being: for instance, the Jack of Cats is a tiger, while the King of Bats is a Master.[10] The Marvellous also incorporates a river; shared cards are revealed gradually, allowing players to build their hands from both their own cards and the river.[11]
Each player begins with a stake of 77 First City coins, gathered personally. They ante 7 coins to enter a hand and are dealt five cards. Players can call (match the current bet), raise (double the bet), or fold (forfeit the hand and their stake in it).[12] If a player raises, their opponent must match, raise further, or fold. Once bets are equal, players may discard and redraw cards — up to one more than they discarded — before continuing. The hand progresses to a showdown, where the highest-ranking hand claims the stake.[13]
A player is eliminated when they lose all their coins. At that moment, they face a choice: leave the game in defeat or wager a Chance. This could be wealth and property,[14] or something more abstract, like one's sanity, destiny, or even humanity.[15] A winning opponent can refuse a Chance wager, but if they accept, one final, all-or-nothing hand is played. Should the desperate challenger win, they reclaim their place.[16] Should they lose, their opponent claims both victory and the staked Chance.[17]
The Marvellous additionally adheres to an array of arcane rules and bylaws: some are never interpreted the same way twice,[18] some are illegal but used anyway,[19] others dictate the pace of the match...[20] and one permits excessive drunkenness while in play.[21]A player at the table is assigned to keep track of raises and fold order, and there is a time limit on each round to discourage players from dallying. This game is never played masked; all the players know each other. The winner traditionally leaves the Marvellous, as winning is the only way to do so[22] — though this is a convention, not a rule.[23] A new candidate must then be found, or they may enter of their own accord.[22] The newest inductee is given the task of procuring a venue and consecrating their own deck before play begins.[24]
The Players
"The Marvellous has seven players, traditionally."[25]
The Marvellous requires seven players, each one an individual of remarkable ambition. The following individuals are known to have played this game in recent iterations:
- The Cardsharp Monkey – Once Gregory Beechwood, a prior victor who wished to become a monkey,[26] he now seeks to end the game itself.[27]
- The Bishop of St Fiacre’s – A pious clergyman who longs for a return to the Garden with his Cousins.[28]
- The Topsy King – Once a musician and scholar, now a madman; Tristram Bagley played to finish his magnum opus, but lost his mind in the process,[29] and now plays to reclaim it.[15]
- The Manager of the Royal Bethlehem – An ancient and powerful figure who dreams of becoming a city like his beloved, the King with a Hundred Hearts.[30]
- Virginia – A devil of considerable influence, who plays the Marvellous to win one simple thing: "sanctuary."[31]
- Mr Pages – One of the Masters of the Bazaar, whose deepest desire is to return to the High Wilderness.[32]
- October - A member of the Calendar Council. Playing under a false identity,[33] she used her victory to make her dreams come true: she gained power over Parabola[34] and used it to imprison Mr Mirrors.[35][36]
- His Amused Lordship – A respectable member of the gentry who played and won the Marvellous in a desperate play to save his friend, Mrs Plenty.[37]
Other past winners include the Yearning Custodian (the originator of the game, discussed below); the current Boatman;[38] and possibly also Penstock, though the implication is vague.[39]
How the Game Began
"The Marvellous has been played a long time, you see. All the way back to the First City. The stake was seventy-seven of their coins then. It's the same stake now."[40]
The Marvellous was not always played with cards; once upon a time, it was a contest of tiles, boxes, and scales etched with searing glyphs.[41] In the days of the Third City, a survivor from the First City[42] found himself bored beyond measure after living for thousands of years. He petitioned Mr Hearts, and the Lords (as the Masters were called back then) devised a solution:[43] they borrowed the basic principles of a Presbyterate game[44][45] that had long been played among the College of Mortality, and made it more complex to their liking.[46] They gathered six other players[43] and set the stakes at seventy-seven First City coins, in an apparently humorous commemoration of the weary man.[42]
The man from the First City won the inaugural game of the Marvellous, but did not know what he wanted, and hesitated when the time came for the Lords to fulfill his wish. What the Lords gave him, then, was a purpose; he became the Yearning Custodian, eternal keeper of the Marvellous and chronicler of its history.[47] He now resides in Parabola, at a place called the Root of Need, down the Wanting Way.[48] Here he consecrates new players’ decks,[49] instructs them in the rules,[50] and watches over the game that was born (or rather, redesigned) from his own original desire.
Historical & Cultural Inspirations
Many of the rules of the Marvellous draw inspiration from Mornington Crescent,[51] a beloved British parlour game popularized by the BBC Radio 4 show I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue. Mornington Crescent is an improvisational comedy game in which players take turns naming London Underground stations, aiming to be the first to declare "Mornington Crescent." The humor lies in the elaborate yet entirely fictional rules, which satirize the complexities of traditional strategy games. Since its first appearance on the show in 1978, the game has become a fan-favorite segment, celebrated for its witty, freeform nature. Though it presents the illusion of intricate regulations, the true essence of Mornington Crescent lies in improvisation, with players crafting the experience through spontaneous creativity and comedic timing.
References
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