Worlds Beyond Number - A narrative play TTRPG podcast telling some of the best stories
I wanted to share this, in case there are interested folks who haven't checked it out yet. This is me gushing about a thing I love and hoping other folks are listening because the story is so good.
Worlds Beyond Number is a podcast run and owned by Brennan Lee Mulligan, Aabria Iyengar, Erika Ishii, and Lou Wilson with the goal of being able to tell the stories they want without time/production pressures. Taylor Moore is the producer and composer.
What stories are they telling?
The first and largest story so far is The Wizard, The Witch and The Wild One, set in the world of Umora using D&D, that starts from Level 1 (with a children's level 0 adventure) with the intent of this being the first long term campaign. The characters are in a world that I'd describe as Ghibli inspired - which includes some of the lightest sweetest moments and some of the most devastating moments of war. There's a bit of a running joke about which character is getting a Kiki or Ponyo moment vs a Mononoke moment in an episode. The Witch is a custom class, the Wizard has a custom subclass, and the Wild One has a custom paladin subclass.
But they've also played a few side games, Erika ran a game of Roll for Shoes, a chaotic game featuring a gangster chicken, a goat that may or may not be the devil, and a retired race horse doing a heist of corn from the county fair. A space jam inspired Space Cram two shot Aabria ran using Tournament Arc and a few prequels set in different areas of the world of Umora.
Where can it be found?
Any podcatcher, with the talkback "Fireside Chats," Children's Adventure, and the side adventures behind a $5 a month Patreon. No other tiers, the goal is to just fund the podcast.
What makes it stand out from other shows
The level of sincerity, and the fact these are some of the absolute best storytellers in the field who consider this their favorite story. In most actual play the rails are firmly on (dimension 20 due to # of episodes) or the episodes are essentially unedited (Critical Role), but these characters have fully split the party multiple times, and have come into genuine conflict, so much so that listeners have, para socially, been upset with players on behalf of the other players for how the characters are acting.
The show is also edited so some rolls and table talk are cut from the finished episodes (the narrative play label), but never to a point where you can't track what's happening. And you still get to hear a delighted squeal, a stressed exhale or a "let's go!" at the table.
The aesthetics are also wonderful with music and sound effects, the characters and different factions have themes that will come back and blend into motifs.
What's coming up next
The fourth "chapter" and first "book" is wrapping up here soon with a bit over 50 episodes, characters around level 5, and major character arc conclusions and then the show is going to take a break from Umora to start another longer campaign run by Aabria, probably hopping back and forth in the future as the goal is not for Brennan to run for like 5 years straight.
Anyway I love these folks (in a non-boundary crossing way) and I love their stories and hope some of y'all are already watching or will check it out and want to talk about it too!
(Note idk where to put this, podcast isn't a group, I went with games.tabletop)
WW&W is fantastic. I'm definitely enjoying it. It's got fantastic production values and is geared towards being a podcast in a way that some other actual play D&D podcasts aren't.
Seconded - it really does make an excellent podcast. The music, sound effects, and ambiance make this feel more like a high-end radio play than a regular D&D campaign recording.
Which is weird because I mostly don't like radio plays as a story telling medium. I'm not sure why, the writing and pacing probably?
Are you caught up? I just caught up through the last four episodes because I only listen to WWW when I have full attention available and got behind. But I'm glad I didn't have to pause and wait 2 weeks. I've even re-listened to #48 because it's so good.
I am. The wait between sections of the rescue was annoying, but worth it. On the whole, having episodes that aren't super long is a good thing.
I've very rarely yelled "oh fuck" out loud listening to a show and this podcast got me twice in two episodes. One for the scene with Steel last ep, and one right before the Kool aid Man impression in this one. (Vagueness for spoiler prevention)
It's been so good.
Strong agree on Steel.
Spoilers for Steel's scene in the last episode
I'm still trying to figure out what the implications of her forgiveness (mercy?) towards Suvi are going to be. Is Suvi actually going to be imprisoned? Is Steel ok with everything that the Citadel is doing towards spirits? My recollection is that she has said to Suvi that she isn't, but then she's participated in the attack in a big way... I guess we'll find outI'm not sure if she's just making exceptions for the people she likes/loves or while she objects theroetically to "bad stuff" happening to the good spirits she's probably fine with the collection of paintings. If there's a central engine to the justification machine I think it's Steel.
Suvi is ready to break away and they're going to have to either bring her back in like her parents or villainize her before she persuades anyone else. I'd compare her to elphaba but she's got a witch on a broom heading her way.
Aaaarrrgh it is unjust that I don't have the last six episodes....
I got very confused reading this title as I got confused with World's Without Number with is very much not a narrative system lol.
That said, I wish so many podcasts didn't focus on D&D, there's other systems that would translate a lot better to the podcast format.
One of their goals is to do more with other systems (and they have in their one shots), but tbh Brennan is one of the absolute geniuses at making it work. There's no conflict between it and the story here.
Not sure if Aabria has shared what system she's using, I think we know it involves space, or I'm making that up in my brain.
Just to add they joked in this week's talk back that they were in a dungeon and since you can't do dungeons or dragons without using D&D this explained why they used the system. And they added that they've played all the other systems so they'd know. (They were teasing the people that complain about the system a bit because they do manage to tell great stories with it but also they were only joking.)
I love Worlds Beyond Number! I'm significantly behind (just finishing up arc three) because I only listen on car trips of at least an hour, but it's phenomenal. These four play so well together. Thanks for sharing, I hope more people get into this!
Oh boy, buckle up! Arc 4 is so good! Please come back and chat about it when you've listened!
My partner and I also listen on long car trips! I prefer it to music these days.
This sounds excellent to me; it's always been my largest struggle with getting into actual-play TTRPG podcasts. The Film Reroll, while increasingly infrequent in its releases, strikes the balance perfectly in my opinion, and I've never been able to find something similarly done. I'll happily give this a listen!
It's more theatrical than Film Reroll (I think Dimension 20 is closer to Film Reroll 's editing style) but the camaraderie is also very similar IMO. These are good friends playing together
I love WBN! I've just started playing a Witch in a D&D campaign a friend is running, though his world is very different to Umora, so it'll be interesting to see how things go.
The production quality is amazing, the performances are outstanding, and I think it showcases a depth of worldbuilding that Dimension 20 rarely gets the opportunity to reach given the relatively short seasons and higher focus on comedy.
The fireside is also a nice place to be, both for the Chats and the unhinged one-shots and extra content (my personal highlights are Cram Daniel and the song of the summer, "Put it in a box")
I'm A Country Affair fan as well as the Horner Corner, because hearing Aabria and Erika share deep horny internet lore with Brennan and Lou is the most hilarious thing.
Both are also excellent! The slow, then ever accelerating derailment of A County Affair is so much fun, I really like the "flashback" stuff they did.
I don't think Brennan or Lou will ever recover from learning about The Once-ler's most devoted fans!
I'm so glad I knew about everything they talked about so I couldn't be traumatized.
I have used the flashback method in my D&D game! It was actually really effective. (They each got one)