I tried a little experiment in prop use with my group this week. I tend to keep such things rare, because I feel it has more effect when it's "special". I started out just wanting to convey some game info to a couple of people via their contacts, but in the end I made up messages for everyone.
The situation is that they're on a smuggling run (their first time) running a gauntlet from Seattle to Dallas with stops in Boise (Idaho), Stockton (California), Phoenix (Arizona), and finally Dallas (Texas). The Boise drop was almost blown because their contact was under surveillance by an enemy syndicate, who made a play for the packages they're delivering (drugs; I've decided that they're moving Tempo, but they haven't done much investigation yet). They repelled the attempt but were largely unhappy with the results, as one of the assailants escaped (barely) in a car, and everyone else they could have questioned was dead. While hiding out for the night in Boise one of the players had a random encounter (I prepared a list of these to use whenever they stay in a motel on the road): a mysterious scream from the room next door. He investigated and found a dying hacker who had been IC'd pretty badly, but he performed First Aid and after they both fled the Motel (the Hacker, "Bit Lee", believed that a cleanup crew was incoming) the group agreed to transport her out of Boise and away from Salish territory in general.
They parted ways with her in Stockton, and she paid them a total of 2,000 nuyen. I had her offer to act as their regular hacker, but RP-wise the group was in separate trouble and didn't want to add her problems to the mix. They did take advantage of her offer to check up electronically on their next drop, and during the trip to Stockton she prevented a freeway battle with mysterious assailants by hacking their car. But I'm rambling. The point is that the group has no hacker, so they're very vulnerable in that regard; I tried to toss them an NPC, but it bounced. Still, she became a low-level contact for two members of the group.
The Stockton drop went fine, but one of our new players has been sniffing after every female NPC, so I decided to finally toss him a bone (so to speak). The drop was at an auto body shop modeled roughly on the Teller/Morrow shop from Sons of Anarchy. While the rest of the group was delivering the goods, he took advantage of the gang's hospitality and ended up nailing some of the random ladies in attendance.
So now the group was on their way from Stockton to Phoenix, going down I5 towards Los Angeles. When they came in, each of them had a message.
- One guy just had a message from a hacker (not Bit Lee) that he took as a contact, relating to the trouble they were on the run from in Seattle (which is why they're smuggling).
- The horny guy (literally - he's a troll) got a message from one of the ladies he nailed, who had basically "stolen" his commcode while he wasn't looking. I was hoping he'd notice and be concerned about the breach of security, but nobody was.
- One guy got an update from the smuggler they're working for back in Seattle that due to concerns after the Boise fiasco, Phoenix had gone off the grid and had left directions to their camp in the desert with a homeless woman that had one green eye and one blue eye.
- Two of them who made contact with Bit Lee got an encoded message (see below) warning them that their networks were compromised and they were under surveillance by unfriendly hackers. I decided that she had tried contacting them normally and received no response; after looking into the matter, she decided to sneak a warning to them without the watcher noticing by disguising her message as porn spam. The watcher was working for bounty hunters who are after the group for a reason I'd rather not get into here; suffice it to say that the bounty hunters know about the drop in the desert and the homeless woman.
Now, for the coded message I wanted something mildly clever, but that my players would see through. As it turns out, none of them saw it, and I had to hint carefully for them to even consider that it wasn't just porn spam (why would any GM write spam mails for his players?) Here's what I wrote:
To: Mr. Nobody and Dryad
From: Kandy Kanez
Hello, my name is Kandy and I would LOVE to party @
your place. I got lots of hot, wet, flexible friends. Get on your
commlink, only 100 nuyen per minute for the hottest cyber-love. This
isn't your daddy's cyber-escort service. We provide pure filth in a
safe, encrypter environment. Your friends will never know.
REACH OUT + TOUCH ME @
00-173-488-697
Now if you just take the first word of each line (I've seen this joke on Reddit/4chan as a method of Rick-Rolling people), you get:
Hello
your
commlink
isn't
safeThe commcode given would take them to an encrypted node where Bit Lee was waiting to give them the skinny on their situation as she saw it.
So, what do you think? Was this a good idea? Too obscure? Something you'd like to try?
Incidentally, they did get it eventually, but they were driving so long on the road that realistically, I had to make them either rest or suffer some sleep deprivation consequences (one of them as the Sustenance power, but he can't drive; the Rigger has no sleep regulator). That gave the bounty hunters time to find the homeless lady and set up an ambush...basically they just wanted for anyone to approach her and trade goods with her (the instructions were to give her an RFID tag in exchange for the GPS coordinates of the desert camp). The players thought they were clever sending the Troll in, since the Bounty Hunters wouldn't know him and he wasn't part of the trouble they were running from, but of course the hunters didn't care what he looked like. He ate a decent number of bullets (I was nice/rushed, didn't feel like having all six roll shots on him) and some stick'n'shock that left him barely standing, and he ran for it. Fancy driving got them to temporary safety and a successful drop. Now the group is planning a showdown/trap to get the hunters off their backs.