RPGBOT.Podcast podcast

HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 3: Pt 2 - We accidentally started a Robot Cult.

0:00
1:07:33
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

Last time on RPGBOT.Podcast: we attempted a stealth infiltration of a pirate space station and immediately turned it into a full-blown crisis involving the Empire.

This time? It gets worse.

Show Notes

In Part 2 of this Star Wars Edge of the Empire actual play, the RPGBOT crew continues their mission to infiltrate a hidden pirate station and hack its central maintenance terminal, but things escalate in the most RPGBOT way possible.

After escaping the chaos of an iconic Star Wars-style cantina and evading Imperial forces, the crew descends into the station's maintenance tunnels. What should have been a straightforward infiltration quickly turns bizarre when they encounter a massive group of inexplicable clones. While Fricata (the Wookiee slicer) attempts to complete the objective using computers checks and slicing mechanics, Nehl Bren (the Twi'lek smuggler) distracts the crowd using deception, persuasion, and sheer confidence. The slicing operation becomes a race against time, demonstrating how GMs can structure skill challenges in the Genesys / Edge of the Empire system.

Just as the crew completes their objective and retrieves the data, they decide to liberate (maybe kidnap?) the clone cult's robotic deity and escape. Unfortunately, their exit is interrupted by the arrival of Imperial forces… including a familiar enemy from Nehl's past.

The episode ends with a bang.

Key Takeaways

  • Actual play sessions highlight the strength of narrative dice systems, especially how Advantage and Threat shape scenes beyond success/failure.

  • Improvisation is core to Star Wars RPG gameplay—players turned a random encounter into a full cult infiltration scenario.

  • Skill challenges (like slicing a terminal) can be structured as multi-roll objectives to build tension.

  • Social encounters can be as complex as combat, especially when dealing with unstable NPC groups.

  • Creative roleplay can bypass traditional obstacles, including turning enemies into allies (or followers).

  • Force powers and talents add narrative depth, even when they don't fully succeed.

  • Destiny Points and narrative control mechanics reinforce the push-and-pull between players and GM.

  • Edge of the Empire thrives on chaos, especially in morally gray Outer Rim scenarios.

  • Recurring character backstories (like Nel's Imperial ties) are powerful tools for introducing conflict.

  • No plan survives contact with the players. Ever.

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Meet the Hosts

  • Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix.

  • Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme.

  • Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy.

Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos.

How to Find Us:

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Tyler Kamstra

Ash Ely

Randall James

Producer Dan

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