Convention Report RopeCon 2005
By Greg Stafford
RopeCon, Finland
July 19 to July 28, 2005
RopeCon (i.e.- Role Playing Convention) is Finland's pre-eminent game convention.
I was invited to RopeCon last year, but could not go because I had just taken that
teaching job in Mexico. But they asked again this year, and I was happy to accept and
go. All that I knew about it, really, I got from
John Kovalic's blog about his visit.
Saunas and naked seamen wrestling? Count me in! When I heard my buddy
Bill Bridges was also GoH, I was even happier.
I took BART to the airport and checked in. Then I went to the In'tl restaurant and
bought some sushi to take on board. I boarded, squeezed into the seat and checked the
equipment. KLM has sophisticated entertainment stuff! Personal view screens and forty
or fifty choices in movies, start'n stop when you want! Music and stuff of course, but
I never listen to that when I've got something to read. (title, read in the trip. Great
and funny lite reading). Also the latest copy of Economist, New Yorker and Forteam
Times.
Great tech, until the guy put his seat down, and the screen became unreadable. Well,
not totally because if I put my seat all the way down and then scrunched down in the
seat I could see the screen. And the woman behind me asked if I could move the seat
up, and I said no. God it was cramped! I politely asked the steward if there was a
way to see the screen, hoping that he could ask the guy in front of slightly tilt up
his chair (he wasn't sleeping!)
Well, it's a ten hour flight to Amsterdam to change planes, so he squirmed around
about as much as I did. Seat up, seat down. So I did see Big Fish again. My wife and
I'd just been discussing this, and after seeing it again I still liked it a lot (B is
my grade) and I still thought it should not have the last scene in it at all (Suzanne
dropped it a whole grade, from an A to a B, because of those last minutes!) And I read
the entire book Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, by David Sedaris. Parts were
just laugh out loud quality, others kinda sad. But a perfect airplane book.
Transferred in Amsterdam, but it was no better on the new plane. What was better was
that it only lasted a few more hours.
Landed in Helsinki, got my bag and walked on to Finnish soil. There awaited Anu, the
"short and red-haired" woman who had been emailing me as liaison; and Antti, another
of the "handlers" as Bill called them, or "keeper" as I did. They chuckled at it
politely because, by the time we said it, we'd spent enough time to know they'd get
the joke. Jukka, the third of them, was at the hotel with Bill.
I was really flattered and pleased with the services that these friendly people
provided. They were happy to chauffeur us around town, take us to fine meals and
explain whatever we wanted to know. Their guidance made a convention trip into a
really enjoyable quick tour of Helsinki to get a huge dose of Finland at once. I
really do thank Anu, Antti and Jukka for their great
care and service. They changed it from a "place event" (i.e.- "I saw Helsinki") to
a "people event" ("My Finnish friends said ...")
Bill and I got there the same day (Wed, July 20), him a couple of hours earlier. Over
the next eight days we pretty much did everything together except convention
activities and a few times when I fell out to take a nap instead of walk around some
more.
A note on English. Everyone I met in Finland spoke English. Everyone: the waitresses,
the cab driver, the retail store clerks. As Antti aid, "Of course we have a choice to
speak only Finnish or speak to other people." This is the same I have heard from
Swedes. So yes, it is easy to understand why they spoke English. But everyone spoke
it well too. And almost all the time signs, menus and so on were in English as well.
We started off with the museum. Nothing better to establish the foundation than
looking at the oldest human artifacts found in the land there. Old stone age tools
and so on. Went right on through to the iron age, the medieval period (part of Sweden)
where they never had any real castles made, as we think of medieval castles;
Russian Period, as part of the Russian Empire; the Liberation in 1818, the Winter War
where little Finland kicked soviet Russia's butt in the Winter War (Finns are
understandably VERY big on pride of that, and references to it are everywhere.)
Great museum.
Wow, a country that is younger than the US! And, so unlike the US, an ethnic entity
that has a national consciousness (tribal, perhaps?). This sense of social awareness
is not the same from where I come from, and it's always a pleasure and insight to
experience it elsewhere. Why? Because I think everyone has this kind of a tribal
consciousness and responds to it. It seems like if you don't be aware of it then you
become a puppet of it, and so everyone in the US dances to some stringed uberhand but
doesn't acknowledge it. We say "We're Americans" but the ubermeaning of that isn't
apparent to us. So manipulators of the local culture/tribal identification, plays
that hand for us even while we pretend it does not exist because "We're all Americans."
Well, Finns are Finns, know it, and are proud of it. I love to see that. And they
deserve to be proud. Kicked Russian butt!
The cities I saw, Helsinki and Espoo, were incredibly clean, modern and affluent.
These two, plus a third, are the major metropolis of the country. Collectively they
have 1/5 of the country's population, about 1,000,000 people. Yes, the entire country
has about 5,000,000 people. My "northern Bay Area" which includes San Franciso,
Oakland, Berkeley and my dear Albany; has about that. But Finland has more area,
including some virgin forest (I was told). We didn't get to see or experience that.
Then we went to an art museum, enjoying the sightseeing of this pretty, modern city.
Bill was beelining us to see the paintings of the classic Kalavala painter. There were
some of the originals painting there, others being absent on tour. Now, I'd had seen
these a hundred times in books. These are the classic pictures of the Kalavala, the
great Finnish mythic epic.
But in person, standing in front of them, they are different. It happened when I saw
the Mona Lisa for real, and here again when I saw these several paintings. I am always
a bit surprised at this phenomenon. I've seen these. But when I see the actual one I
am struck by it to such an extent that I feel why it is an icon-it creates a standard
for artistic impact ("Did it make me feel the way I did when I saw the Mona Lisa?")
For starters, these pictures are huge, seem like six feet tall counting the frame, way
bigger than any reproduction possible, and so they have more detail visible than you
have ever seen. But the whiteness of Aino's skin never comes out, the mocking look on
her face...
And of course we continued to see parts of these paintings all around the city.
National icon.
At the end of one of the historical museums were toys in a display, and among them
were some Magic The Gathering cards in display.
We had planned for those days to be for overcoming the jet lag period. Interestingly,
this time I didn't have the narcoleptic like spells in the mornings of the convention.
Instead I went to sleep right upon getting to bed, then woke up for a period. A couple
of hours. At first I fretted and found stuff to worry about but after a couple of days
I just got up and studied my Spanish since I was missing six days of class before my
final. My choice had been to trade off a game convention in Finland for a week of
class? No choice, of course. Bye bye Spanish!!
The day before the convention my handler took me to a coffee shop to meet the Finnish
club, Kalikos. I knew some of them by name through email and publications, but not
most of them of course. This is a Finnish Glorantha (RQ/HQ) club that also does the
publication. I ran into my first experience with hearing names here. Finnish is not
even an IndoEuropean language, and it doesn't sound anything like English. So when
people said their names, sometimes I didn't even recognize them unless they wrote it
down, or told me who they are ("I'm the guy with the comic," for instance.)
So we spoke all afternoon about Glorantha, HeroQuest and RuneQuest and had a great
time. The handlers showed up and fretted for a bit and offered to get me out of there.
But we stayed late, ended up going to a restaurant called Maya (but no, not even
trying to be Mexican).
RopeCon started next day. It's held in this huge, mildly labyrinthine convention
center. Crammed with people. The convention had about 3000 paid attendees, I later
learned. My general impression was that the crowd was younger and had more women
than the US conventions. And they were more often in costume, but mainly for the
LARPs they were doing. Larps are MUCH bigger there than here. And since the
convention is not commercial-driven, but player-driven, it has events that the
people want to play, and these are often larps.
Oh yea, lots of Goths. I'd checked over the general population and it seemed to have
the usual count of punks, Goths and older folk with hair or tattoos. At the opening
ceremony I looked over the audience and like three-quarters of everyone was dressed
in black. They called me up on stage where I said something not stupid, then Bill
then the third GoH, Claus.
Claus Raasted was the other GoH, a gent from Denmark. For his gaming credentials, he
is a big name in larping in Denmark (and the Nordic countries in general) thanks to
his long history in it and work in it. He now teaches larping to kids and is paid
for it by the Danish government. Who does not want a job teaching kids to play these
games?
But there is more. Claus is also a famous guy from a Danish reality TV show. I forget
the real name, but as he describes it it's the Teach Nerds to Play Soccer show. The
directors took a bunch of non-athletes (and one specific request was to have a
role-player among them) and teach them to play football (the world's most popular
sport), or as the US calls it, soccer. They learned to play, did the whole body
building thing ("I just run up the stairs now when I see them.") and for national
TV played this team and that team. The first one was the leading national high school
girl team or such, and the TV guys lost 7-0. In the season finale they played the
same team and lost 1-0, a fantastic improvement and great accomplishment.
Claus is also famous because in one segment the team was being taken to this camp
where they were supposed to get in touch with their primal masculinity, and so Claus
led them off the bus fully naked. And since the show is shot WAY ahead of time, this
segment became part of the opening segment, so every week Denmark got to see Claus
walking full frontal naked out of the bus on national TV. Now, full frontal nudity
is everyday on Danish TV, so this isn't as big a thing as it might be here in Puritan
US, but rather famous-making nonetheless. Our go-GoH.
I liked Claus from the first couple sentences, and within a few more was joking with
him and I loved his dry and casual humor. "Please," I said, "Do not feed me straight
lines like that." And he kept on, God love him.
I had been asked to give an Opening speech, of two hours, and I shared my history in
the RPG industry and so on. Told a couple of funny stories. ("But that's not what
they are on TV!" Ha ha ha. Or "The only part I liked was the 'Scary Noises at Night
Random Roll Table." But you know, you gotta be there...)
I was on another panel that was basically "All You Wanted To Now About Games You
Didn't Know About." The panel member gets the name of a game, has to explain what it
was about and then field questions from other panelists and the audience about it.
("So in the larp they were actually bound?") My game was Atop the Scorpion and I
blathered. I figured the point was to entertain the crowd, and get some laughs,
which I did with my straight lines ("Well, I didn't quite get genera then.") more
than with my cleverness ("It was a giant pistol like HG Wells that shot six shots
to the moon.") I just kept heaping bs on bs. Afterwards Syksy the moderator of the
panel, said, "You know, I forgot to tell you that your game was supposed to be
plausible. But you can be sure I won't forget again!"
Next day I ran a HQ game for 5 Kalikos guys. The idea was to play it, and then they
would take it out and Narrate it for others. It was 100% impromptu.
We talked and decided they'd play members of a Dara Happan Association going to
Darjiin to establish their tax rights to the territory, replacing the previous
failed Lunar party that had lost the rights. They had to build a bridge that had
been destroyed, and though they had some information, it was not much. These guys
had played together before, and quickly sorted themselves into a party of
The Sons of Raiba trading mission
Dehazar (Simo Levanto) - merchant of Lokarnos, Take the Blame at 15
Gordarius (Samppa Mäkelä) - head of the household, Disapprove 5W
Ariash Damask (Olli Kantola) - keeper of the sandals
Dararius (Topi Pitkänen) - devotee of Raiba the Bridge Builder Doreios
Antigonos (Ville Korpela) - captain of the guard
Buserlassar (Eetu Mäkelä) - Buseri scribe, household astrologist
Having no objective yet other than to entertain, we played for a while to get
everyone used to their characters and the situation. They debarked in the city,
talked to locals and got the general impression of this outback, run down place.
Eventually they met the efficient and loyal mayor, and learned of the rebel Átapaz.
There was some conflict as they scouted around and great roleplaying, where the
worst opponent was the bridge crossing spirit. They decided they had to go on a
HeroQuest to magically prepare to build the road in the face of rebel resistance.
They did, with general success. Then they went off on the HQ as I desperately tried
to remember the rules and key points. They did too, of course, and it was a fun
little segment, uncomplicated and with consequences. Fortunately, they were mostly
positive.
They mustered their resources and marched off to build the bridge. Enemies
surrendered without a fight, but the engineer decided he had to sacrifice himself
to get it built (as the crevice spirit demanded). He fumbled his self-sacrifice
roll, but since it was already 6 hours rather than making something else occur as
a result of this I just described his long, slow and horrible death. The guy with
"Take Responsibility for Others Actions" became the priest of this crossing and
pledged to make an annual human sacrifice ("Yea, of course criminals will do.")
I had a great time. Maybe they have something on their site too. Next morning I
talked to a small crowd Kalikos guys about Gloranthan things.
They were running this gigantic game of Dragon Pass. There was a board like four
feet by four feet, and every couple hours they would have new volunteers sit down
and learn about the tactical situations. Then the players would decide where to
move their troops, write orders down, hand them in and go away. Over the next two
hours the move was analyzed and as the results were determined the pin-on unit
counters were moved, with big arrows showing their movement. It looked like a
military map as the day passed. It was quite interesting and fun to watch.
I had another panel on Sunday morning that was mostly about game design, but the
leader was Satu Helio, who decided that the theme would also be of romance and myth,
and we'd all present a game we just made up on these themes. We had about a day to
think about this subject. Surprise panel. So Ville Vuorela (Finnish game designer,
gave me a copy of his Praedor) explained his Casanova game set in a
pseudo-Venice-but-more-fun place. I threw out a design with a character sheet with
just five skills based on five chakras powers used as ways to interact with the
lover. Bill talked about a mythic game of animal marriage. All really great stuff.
Then I had my last speech and I talked about the meaning of mythology as I understand
it, and what it has to do with roleplaying. It was impromptu, though of course I've
talked about this stuff before. I'm trying to work out some of the parts of my
in-process book The Wall that is a Horse. And people asked questions and I chatted
and answered them. These are smart people who seemed to understand what I had said,
though many had not heard it before.
And a closing ceremony. Afterwards the MC said, "All the guests say the same thing
at the end," laughing. Well, of course.
Afterwards was dinner at Šsšlik, a Russian style restaurant. We were the first to
arrive, Bill and me and Antti and his wife, Päivi. The place was a series of rooms
of various sizes. The rooms had carpets on the wall, Samovars everywhere, waitresses
dressed like members of a high school band. But with a bit more braid. Jeez, they
had bear on the menu, but I passed it up for duck instead. Oh yea, and some Finnish
beer because I didn't like the Russian bitterness so much. An astonishing menu. Best
cheesecake I'd ever had. Päivi horrified us with such facts as that Finnish verbs
can have up to 250 conjugated forms.
We had some time after the convention, as Bill and I had requested, so we could see
something else of the place. So on Monday we spent the day relaxing. We visited
Hviträss, an architectural site where some of Finland's most famous guys had lived.
A nice superhouse on a lake from before MacMansions.
Monday evening was the after-party for the volunteer staff. Including the sauna. Now,
I'd read John's experience, and frankly, I'm from a different time and so the idea
of being in a room sweating with a couple dozen men and women wasn't as foreign to
me. Nor to Bill. I looked forward to a sauna, in fact, as being a quintessential
Finnish experience. Apparently a number of foreigners had not joined into this
national pastime. But heck, I'd not gone all the way to Finland to pass up the most
Finnish thing!
A huge barbecue was roasting all kinds of food and kegs of beer were to be drunk.
We did, all was wonderful. When people would see my empty cup they'd offer to
refill it, and frankly, after three days on my feet and too little sleep, I
accepted. This is what the after-con party is for. I didn't know most of these
folk nor had seen them in the con, but they were the ones who got it done so
I'd planned to just be there and not bother them. But they were quite friendly.
For instance, at one moment we were talking with some of them and the young man
said, "You haven't tried Finnish licorice? Let's see, ten minutes until the store
closes. I can get there if I run." And flash, he was off, and back in ten minutes
with three bags of licorice to for Bill and I to try (my favorite was the salty
one...)
At one point these beginning college students asked, rather mischievously, "Is it
time for the sauna yet?" As I said, apparently many foreigners shun this. Not me!
It was time to sauna! They said they'd show us the ropes, and off we went. No ropes,
really, at all. Just undress here and stack your clothes, shower in the next room,
and take a seat in the third one. Bunches of people there, enjoying the sauna. Big
enough for maybe 60 people or so. Sit in the hot, steamy room as long as possible.
Then, when hot enough, wrap a towel and walk through the party to the dock and out
to the water (a branch of the Finnish Gulf) and jump in. Swim around and talk in
that warm summer night where the sky is still light at midnight. ("Damn! It is!")
Then, back into the sauna and start over again. The seawater was not salty, but
brackish. Only 3% salt, not the "normal" 7%.
Then the cry went up. "Naked seamen wrestling now! Come on out!"
So of course we all go. I watch several rounds, especially as Claus wins and loses
and always gets a laugh out of the crowd. It's hand to hand wrestling, where your
right feet are side to side, and if you move your feet you lose. The actual
several-year champ made a wonderful show of coming out and beating Claus so the
floor could be cleared and the women could prove themselves. Then the men again,
and at one point the crowd is calling for foreign blood and so I am pushed forward.
They asked if I was sure, since I'd so previously said I would not do it because
my joints and ligaments aren't all joined like when I was their age. But yea, of
course I was up to this! Cheers. Damn, I love those folk. They poured vegetable
oil on us wrestlers as a special effect (I guess, um, uh...)
I insisted on opposing someone I could beat, like a small girl or someone (laughter),
and so they pushed forward Claus (bigger laughter). A bit of WWF theatrics all around,
and we set to. We struggled for a second and then Claus threw himself backward into
the bushes. I won! I was laughing as hard as everyone. Another opponent though!
Forgive me, but in the adrenaline of the moment I forget his name, but damn if I
didn't throw him too! I think he was actually trying though. Maybe. A tiny bit. Har
har, cheers and so on.
Then out comes The Champ, Jukka the Organizer. Man, this guy is short, buff and well
balanced even after drinking the required amount of beer for one of the two
convention organizers that year. And he threw me in about one millionth of a
second and nicely enough so I didn't have to fall and hurt myself. Great cheers,
everyone loved the theater.
Later then a similar sequence occurred with Bill. The set up opponent, who nicely
loses, and then out steps Jukka again. And goes hand to hand with Bill. And to the
absolute astonishment of EVERYONE watching Bill throws him! Yea, he falls to the
ground. (Afterwards Bill told me, "I did tai chi you know, and I could hold him,
but I couldn't move him. But it was the oil that made him slip." Yea, right. Oil,
or maybe A Hero Point! J)
Well, the champ and the crowd chanted for two out of three. And the champ beat Bill
twice in a row. Bill did a GREAT job though. Enough so that the next day he realized
his arm hurt from it.
So, that done, back into the sauna. No, wait, gotta first wash off the oil that we
all got dumped on us. Into the sea and scrub with salt water and sand. It did come
off too. Back into the sauna. Sea. Sauna.
"Have you seen the sauna on the right? The wood one? Come on."
It is much smaller than the other, benches for maybe fifteen people or less. As
predicted the steam was softer. I did the bad thing and threw the entire bucket
onto the rocks, but sat there with everyone else and so they all told me about
the saying that the guy who throws the water has to remain inside, just because
people did what I just did and then skipped out. But I didn't skip out so that
was OK.
Them, after the beer ran out, we went to a party where the chief organizers were
winding down. Great folks, sure wish my photos came out instead of like this. But
they were Tunch, Sanli, Jiivonen, Heiccu, Mniksu, Ville, Janka, Anu and Petri.
Next day, 8 hours of shopping. Not me, but Bill had family obligations and so on,
and so around the city we went. It was a great tour outside of the general downtown
area, and by the end I had bought like 40 euros of canned reindeer and moose meat,
and one little can for 40 more of bear meat. And I had a hunk of smoked reindeer
meat that I thought might get through customs because it was shrink-wrapped. I mean,
vacuum-packed.
Next day, our last, we went to this park where they have moved a passel of old
buildings from across the land to one place for public viewing. These are the actual
buildings from across the centuries of Finnish history with appropriate contents and
so on. There's a LOT of buildings, and the larger ones have a guide there to explain
whatever level of detail you want to know.
The farm of the client farmers just rang my bell so loud, and I took a lot of pics
and looked at lots of stuff, and questioned the guides about all kinds of things.
When I need to have a Sartarite stead without a longhouse I will use this place. I
did say, "These guys had a lot of stuff! They must have been well off!" But Antti
and Jukko said, "No, they were clients."
How about this Lapp hut? Said to prevent robbery from the wolverines.
How about these swing sets! A kind a normal one here, and how about
this ferris wheel one! ("Wow," says Suzanne,
"You CAN go over the top!")
And since that tour I have begun a story about the Lunar ladder inspector.
After another reindeer meat lunch we go to walk the island fortress in Helsinki Bay.
We just get onto the ferry when it takes off, and it's a half our or so out here.
Well, I am beat frankly, but it's too early to go home and we want to squeeze
everything into our last day. Somewhere-maybe when we were talking about the
artillery and Antti's experience with it in the navy-I got my second wind and my
feet stopped hurting. It was a beautiful sight of the island-filled harbor approaches
from the point of the defenses. We got back just in time to get the ferry again, ate
and returned to the hotel full of dinner and a chronoportation through Finnish
history.
I packed and went to bed, tired and sleepy. Lay down, and stayed awake. I had been
having trouble sleeping the whole time anyway. After two days of that I just got up
and studied my Spanish ("Let's see, seven days until my final..." um. "Tengo siete
diezes antes mi examina.")
My plane trip home: read how I didn't fit above, but understand that this time I
felt even MORE was more cramped. Because I am an optimist I believe the guy in front
of me had a tinge of conscious at dinner when I asked him to tilt up his seat. He
said it was the woman in front of him who had her chair put back. I said, "Ask her
to sit up. Pass it on." He tilted up for me. I didn't see him ask the woman in front
of him to do the same, though. Nice guy. But he kept it up long enough to see Sahara
this time and half of Miss Congeniality 2.
And I read the entire of Not Before Sundown, by Johanna Sinisalo, too. This was, I
was told, an award wining and popular piece of current Finnish fantasy writing, and
so I bought it. Interesting and good airplane fare, but I didn't think it was great
or revolutionary. A guy takes home a troll, and goes from there on.
Review Score: Well, I read the whole thing.
Big bummer coming into the country though. All the reindeer and moose meat was
confiscated! It is illegal to bring even canned mean of ruminants in. "Can't risk
Mad Cow," they said.
"I'm not feeding it to cows," I say.
Doesn't matter.
"It's free-range," I say.
Doesn't matter.
Well, there goes me serving my favorite Finnish meal to my family and friends. Well,
almost. To the agent's surprise, bear meat is not restructed and so I got that tiny
little can in. (Now only if I can find lingon berries!)
Well, finally got home and began adjusting.
And for the record the Spanish test was easy.
|