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Devil's Advocate and Imp: Difference between pages

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<div id='character-details'>
<div id='character-details'>


[[File:icon_devilsadvocate.png|250px]]
[[File:icon_imp.png|250px]]
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 10px;">Information</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 10px;">Information</span>


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<tr>
<tr>
<td>Type</td>
<td>Type</td>
<td>[[Character Types#Minion|Minion]]</td>
<td>[[Character Types#Demon|Demon]]</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Artist</td>
<td>Aiden Roberts</td>
</tr>
</tr>
</table>
</table>


<p class='flavour'>"My client, should the objection be overruled, pleads innocent by virtue of the prosecution's non-observance of statute 27.B - incorrect or misleading conjugation of a verb. The fact that nine of the jury died last night is simply'' prima face, ''which is, as Wills vs Thule set precedent for, further reason to acquit."<p>
<p class='flavour'>"We must keep our wits sharp and our sword sharper. Evil walks among us, and will stop at nothing to destroy us good, simple folk, bringing our fine town to ruin. Trust no-one. But, if you must trust someone, trust me."</p>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center;">Appears in</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center;">Appears in</span>
[[File:logo_bad_moon_rising.png|100px]]
[[File:logo_trouble_brewing.png|100px]]


<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 20px;">Cult of the Clocktower Episode</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 20px; text-align: center; margin-top: 20px;">Cult of the Clocktower Episode</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 14px; text-align: center;">by Andrew Nathenson</span>
<span style="display: block; color: black; font-size: 14px; text-align: center;">by Andrew Nathenson</span>
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<div class="small-12 large-6 columns">
== Summary ==
== Summary ==
"Each night, choose a living player (different to last night): if executed tomorrow, they don't die."
"Each night*, choose a player: they die. If you kill yourself this way, a Minion becomes the Imp."


The Devil's Advocate saves players from execution.
The Imp kills a player each night, and can make copies of itself... for a terrible price.
*  
*  
*  
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<div class='example'>
<div class='example'>
At night, the Devil's Advocate protects themself. The next day, the Devil's Advocate is executed but remains alive.
It is the first night. The Imp learns that Evin and Sarah are the Minions. The Imp also learns that the {{Good|Monk}}, {{Good|Chef}}, and {{Good|Librarian}} are not in play. The Imp bluffs as the {{Good|Chef}}, then bluffs as {{Good|Mayor}} halfway through the game. Eventually, the Imp is executed and good wins.
</div>
</div>


<div class='example'>
<div class='example'>
The Devil's Advocate protects the {{Evil|Zombuul}}. The {{Evil|Zombuul}} is executed but remains alive, so their life token is not flipped. The next day, the {{Evil|Zombuul}} is executed again and registers as dead.
During the night, the Imp wakes and chooses a player, who dies. The next night, the Imp chooses themselves to die. The Imp dies, and the {{Evil|Poisoner}} becomes the Imp.
</div>
 
<div class='example'>
The Devil's Advocate protects the {{Good|Grandmother}}. The {{Good|Grandmother}} is executed but remains alive. Later, the Devil's Advocate protects the {{Good|Tinker}}. The {{Good|Tinker}} is executed, but the Storyteller kills the {{Good|Tinker}} anyway, due to the {{Good|Tinker}} ability. Later, the Devil's Advocate protects the {{Good|Moonchild}}, and the {{Traveler|Judge}} forces the execution to succeed&mdash;the execution succeeds, but the {{Good|Moonchild}} remains alive.
</div>
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== Tips & Tricks ==
== Tips & Tricks ==


* The Devil's Advocate interferes with due process, keeping nominated players alive even if their execution succeeds. As you can imagine, a clever player with a good sense of timing can use this ability to undermine the good team's strongest ability to hunt down the demon!
* There are many strategies for evil players, particularly the Imp, that are covered in more detail in [[Player Strategy]] section. Generally speaking, as the Demon, you want to look trustworthy, spread false information where possible, get your Minions to confirm that you are a good player, and sacrifice them when needed. Take a look at this section for more information.
 
* Stay alive during the day at all costs. Even in games with three Minions, do not assume there is a {{Evil|Scarlet Woman}} in play. (However, if you talk to your Minion(s) and you learn that there is, then ignore this advice!)
 
* If you are under suspicion, night time suicide is always an option. Killing yourself and passing the Demonhood to a Minion that is looking more trustworthy robs you of the support of their continued voting power, but survival is more important. You can also do this when there is no suspicion on you - people tend to trust players that die at night. Either way, if you die at night, giving false information to the good team the day after, such as claiming to be the {{Good|Ravenkeeper}}, can change the course of the game.
 
* Your Minions are pawns to be sacrificed! Kill them! Kill them all! You're the only one that matters!
 
* At the beginning of the game, the Storyteller will give you three possible bluffs to choose from. You can bluff as whatever you want, of course, but these few bluffs are safe. Since the Imp can die at night, and pass the Demonhood to a Minion, both the more passive and the more aggressive bluffs can be useful. If you are new to the game, or don't quite understand how certain characters work, either ask the Storyteller for help, or bluff as a more passive character, such as the {{Good|Soldier}} or the {{Good|Recluse}}. If you are more adventurous, more high-risk high-reward bluffs such as the {{Good|Fortune Teller}} or {{Good|Undertaker}} can be risked.
 
* A very bold strategy, to be employed on occasion when playing with players who are more familiar with the game, is to claim to be a character that you did not see as one of your bluffs. If you're bluffing as a character that's really in the game, then maybe the good team will assume that you're just a {{Evil|Baron}} who didn't learn any out of play characters, and kill the other players instead. Of course, they might decide that you're actually the {{Evil|Scarlet Woman}} and execute you just to be on the safe side.


* Protect your demon - if you believe they are due for execution! Since your protection can't work on the same player twice in a row, timing the days you pick the demon is pretty important - if you leave them high and dry on a day when the town is getting bloodthirsty, that could cost you and the evil team the game! Pay close attention to the good team, their information, and where their suspicion is leading.
* When choosing who to kill, you generally want to kill powerful, troublesome, information-gathering Townsfolk sooner rather than later, such as the {{Good|Empath}}, {{Good|Undertaker}}, {{Good|Monk}} or {{Good|Slayer}}. Removing their information (or power) from the game early can help you later on. Every so often, deliberately keeping one of these Townsfolk alive until the final day can double-bluff the good players. They may ask this player "If you are really the {{Good|Fortune Teller}}, why are you still alive?", and kill them.


* If you survive to the final day, set yourself up to be protecting your demon. (Beware the {{Good|Minstrel}} or the {{Good|Innkeeper}} being alive at this point though - they may be able to execute you and then interrupt the demon's ability that way, thus overturning you at the last possible moment.)
* Also, when deciding who to attack at night, you are best killing the more trusted players earlier rather than later. A {{Good|Virgin}} that everybody knows is the {{Good|Virgin}} will never be executed, which decreases your odds of being executed later on. A pair of Outsiders that everybody believes are actually Outsiders will need to disappear, because they will not be executed either. On the final day, you will want at least one other player, preferably two, to be looking more suspicious than you.


* Protect yourself and the other minions. Even though the demon should really be your top priority, the more evil players alive, the better! This is especially true if you have a {{Evil|Mastermind}}, who only benefits if they survive when all else fails, or even just an {{Evil|Assassin}} who hasn't gotten to stab anyone yet. Just like with the demon, pay attention to who the good team is suspicious of, and try to time who you grant immunity to with their targets.
* Send your Minions out on information-gathering missions. Gather as much information as you can about who is who. This will help you avoid attacking troublesome characters like the {{Good|Ravenkeeper}} or the {{Good|Soldier}}, and the problems that consequently follow.


* Protect good players that you think will be executed - this has the advantage of making those players look ''incredibly'' suspicious, especially if the good team already knows (or suspects) you are in play. While other effects could save a good player from their execution, a well timed save coupled with a whisper campaign or just old-fashioned good team paranoia will see them turn on the poor schmuck.
* Talk to your Minions! Co-ordinate with them, by helping them bluff. Agree that one of you will look as evil as possible, while the other one will take the Demonhood and survive to the end of the game. Find out what your {{Evil|Spy}} knows. Co-ordinate with your {{Evil|Poisoner}} so that you choose different players at night. Let your {{Evil|Baron}} run wild. Learn if your {{Evil|Scarlet Woman}}'s plan is to kill you, or keep you alive.


* You can use your ability to recreate the behaviour of good character abilities that protect from execution - for example, the {{Good|Tea Lady}}, {{Good|Sailor}} or {{Good|Pacifist}}. Out of all of these, the {{Good|Pacifist}} is the easiest claim since its activation is random, and so the good team cannot try to 'test' you by executing the same player twice in a row - but if you think you can get away with it, your bluff will look extra solid!
* There are lots of reasons why you should register as an evil Imp to good players. If this happens, don't despair! Maybe you can convince the group that {{Good|Empath}} is drunk? Maybe you can argue that you are that {{Good|Fortune Teller}}'s "red herring"?
 
* If you don't want to kill one night, you can choose a dead player instead. This can also help you bluff well as the {{Good|Soldier}} or the {{Good|Monk}}, as no death of a night-time makes it look like your {{Good|Soldier}} or {{Good|Monk}} ability triggered. If no one is dead after the first day, there are no dead players to 'sink' a kill into, but if you're committed to bluffing as one of those characters, just ask your {{Evil|Poisoner}} pick you!
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== Fighting the Devil's Advocate ==
== Fighting the Imp ==
 
* In Trouble Brewing, fighting the Imp is the same as playing the game for the good team, so be sure to have a look at [[General Strategy]]. Killing the Demon wins the game for good. If you have a lead on a possible Demon and another lead on a possible Minion, it's usually best to try prioritize executing the Demon suspects first!
 
* Finding out who the Imp ''isn't'' is almost as important as finding out who the Imp ''is''. Confirming other players as good allows you to build trust, put together information, and build a list of suspects... but it also means that you narrow down the field for who is not the Demon. On the final day, there are usually three players left alive, one of them being the Demon - if aren't certain of the Demon but you can say for sure that one of those people is good, then that gives you 50/50 odds to execute the right player.
** Characters like the {{Good|Ravenkeeper}} or {{Good|Slayer}} are especially good at pinning down people as not Demons - while it's exciting to find an evil player with these one shot abilities, finding a good player is just as powerful.
 
* If someone unexpectedly dies at an odd time, or after coming under a lot of suspicion, you may have just seen the Imp kill themselves and pass the Demonhood on to one of their Minions. This is fantastic information, because knowing this person is evil allows you to look at everything they have done to try and uncover the other members of the evil team. This is where information from characters like the {{Good|Chef}}, {{Good|Empath}} and {{Good|Investigator}} become particularly valuable, since you can use this player as a point of reference for pinning down the other evil characters. If those characters are not in play, you still have a lot of options: Who have they been talking to and built trust with? If they are bluffing as an information gathering character, who has their information confirmed or protected - for example, they may have bluffed as the {{Good|Washerwoman}} to "confirm" the bluff of their Minion and then died at night once people trusted the Minion.


* When a player is executed but doesn't die, do whatever you can to determine the cause. There may be a {{Good|Tea Lady}} or a {{Good|Pacifist}} in-play, or the executed player may be a {{Good|Fool}} or a {{Good|Sailor}}. If you think the executed player was good, you can keep them alive, but if you think that the player was evil and protected by a Devil's Advocate, then execute them again later on.
* Beware the {{Evil|Scarlet Woman}}! So long as there are five or more players alive, the Imp will be able to be executed and the evil team will continue. If you think you know who the Imp is, consider holding off on the execution until you have fewer than five players so that her ability cannot activate, thus stopping the Demon in their tracks right then and there.


* Execute suspicious players twice in a row. Since the Devil's Advocate can not protect the same player twice in a row, killing a player tomorrow if they survived an execution today is a sure way to circumvent a tricky DA.
* The Imp's ability to kill means that they can be extremely effective at removing characters that pose a threat to them, and they will do so with gusto. To protect your players getting ongoing information (like the {{Good|Undertaker}}) or with powerful one-time abilities (like the {{Good|Virgin}}), try to trick the Imp into killing players who are not good choices. For example, a {{Good|Soldier}} or {{Good|Mayor}} could bluff as a juicy target, letting their abilities soak up the hit. Alternatively, characters like the {{Good|Saint}} (who would much prefer to die at night), {{Good|Recluse}}, or the {{Good|Washerwoman}} could try to attract the attention of the Demon - they will die, but better them than your {{Good|Fortune Teller}}!


* If you believe someone is evil and pushing very intensely for the execution of a particular player, wait a day and execute that player tomorrow instead. The Devil's Advocate wants you to execute their protected player, so if you pay attention to which players are pushing hard for particular players to be executed, you can avoid them using their power, whilst still executing the player(s) you want to.
* If you are playing in a game with six or fewer players, the rules for the Demon change slightly. They do not start with bluffs, and they do not know who their Minion is. One fun strategy is to try bluffing as the Minion to another player, and encouraging the Demon to confide in you. If they admit to being the Demon, you can out them to the town for a decisive victory.


* Once you have figured out a Devil's Advocate is in play, hunt them down immediately! Whilst some other Minions can be ignored, the Devil's Advocate can not. For example, if you learn which player the {{Evil|Baron}} is, you are probably best focusing your execution attentions on different player, and keeping the {{Evil|Baron}} alive. Or, if you figure out which player is the {{Evil|Assassin}}, it may be best to keep the {{Evil|Assassin}} alive and put all your efforts into hunting the Demon. However, a Devil's Advocate really, really, needs to die for good to win. Hunt the Devil's Advocate down and kill them before focusing your attentions on the Demon if at all possible.
* Unlike other Demons you may encounter, the Imp's special ability to pass on the Demonhood to their Minions puts them in the unique position of being able to get away with more complicated bluffing strategies, often involving more than one player. When looking for evidence of evil characters, keeping an eye on groups of characters confirming each other. For example:
** They could bluff as a {{Good|Washerwoman}}/{{Good|Librarian}} and confirm their Minion is a Townsfolk/Outsider. (Particularly potent if the Minion is claiming to be the {{Good|Saint}}!)
** They bluff as the {{Good|Empath}} claiming to have two good neighbour shortly before their untimely demise, passing to their neighbouring Minion.
** They can choose to die and then bluff as the {{Good|Ravenkeeper}}, confirming the bluff of their Minion now turned Demon.
** They can bluff as the {{Good|Slayer}}, "slaying" their Minion and then dying. (They can also do this trick with an actually good {{Good|Slayer}}, getting them to target the Minion and passing to them ''after'' they've been confirmed not the Demon).
** They can choose to deliberately kill nobody on a night to allow their Minion to bluff as a {{Good|Soldier}} or {{Good|Monk}}. People are very likely to trust a {{Good|Soldier}} if there's been no kill, making them ideal for taking over the Demonhood later.


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[[Category:Bad Moon Rising]]
[[Category:Trouble Brewing]]
[[Category:Minions]]
[[Category:Demons]]

Revision as of 17:05, 22 March 2023

Icon imp.png Information

Type Demon

"We must keep our wits sharp and our sword sharper. Evil walks among us, and will stop at nothing to destroy us good, simple folk, bringing our fine town to ruin. Trust no-one. But, if you must trust someone, trust me."

Appears in Logo trouble brewing.png

Cult of the Clocktower Episode by Andrew Nathenson

Summary

"Each night*, choose a player: they die. If you kill yourself this way, a Minion becomes the Imp."

The Imp kills a player each night, and can make copies of itself... for a terrible price.

How to Run

Examples

It is the first night. The Imp learns that Evin and Sarah are the Minions. The Imp also learns that the Monk, Chef, and Librarian are not in play. The Imp bluffs as the Chef, then bluffs as Mayor halfway through the game. Eventually, the Imp is executed and good wins.

During the night, the Imp wakes and chooses a player, who dies. The next night, the Imp chooses themselves to die. The Imp dies, and the Poisoner becomes the Imp.

Tips & Tricks

  • There are many strategies for evil players, particularly the Imp, that are covered in more detail in Player Strategy section. Generally speaking, as the Demon, you want to look trustworthy, spread false information where possible, get your Minions to confirm that you are a good player, and sacrifice them when needed. Take a look at this section for more information.
  • Stay alive during the day at all costs. Even in games with three Minions, do not assume there is a Scarlet Woman in play. (However, if you talk to your Minion(s) and you learn that there is, then ignore this advice!)
  • If you are under suspicion, night time suicide is always an option. Killing yourself and passing the Demonhood to a Minion that is looking more trustworthy robs you of the support of their continued voting power, but survival is more important. You can also do this when there is no suspicion on you - people tend to trust players that die at night. Either way, if you die at night, giving false information to the good team the day after, such as claiming to be the Ravenkeeper, can change the course of the game.
  • Your Minions are pawns to be sacrificed! Kill them! Kill them all! You're the only one that matters!
  • At the beginning of the game, the Storyteller will give you three possible bluffs to choose from. You can bluff as whatever you want, of course, but these few bluffs are safe. Since the Imp can die at night, and pass the Demonhood to a Minion, both the more passive and the more aggressive bluffs can be useful. If you are new to the game, or don't quite understand how certain characters work, either ask the Storyteller for help, or bluff as a more passive character, such as the Soldier or the Recluse. If you are more adventurous, more high-risk high-reward bluffs such as the Fortune Teller or Undertaker can be risked.
  • A very bold strategy, to be employed on occasion when playing with players who are more familiar with the game, is to claim to be a character that you did not see as one of your bluffs. If you're bluffing as a character that's really in the game, then maybe the good team will assume that you're just a Baron who didn't learn any out of play characters, and kill the other players instead. Of course, they might decide that you're actually the Scarlet Woman and execute you just to be on the safe side.
  • When choosing who to kill, you generally want to kill powerful, troublesome, information-gathering Townsfolk sooner rather than later, such as the Empath, Undertaker, Monk or Slayer. Removing their information (or power) from the game early can help you later on. Every so often, deliberately keeping one of these Townsfolk alive until the final day can double-bluff the good players. They may ask this player "If you are really the Fortune Teller, why are you still alive?", and kill them.
  • Also, when deciding who to attack at night, you are best killing the more trusted players earlier rather than later. A Virgin that everybody knows is the Virgin will never be executed, which decreases your odds of being executed later on. A pair of Outsiders that everybody believes are actually Outsiders will need to disappear, because they will not be executed either. On the final day, you will want at least one other player, preferably two, to be looking more suspicious than you.
  • Send your Minions out on information-gathering missions. Gather as much information as you can about who is who. This will help you avoid attacking troublesome characters like the Ravenkeeper or the Soldier, and the problems that consequently follow.
  • Talk to your Minions! Co-ordinate with them, by helping them bluff. Agree that one of you will look as evil as possible, while the other one will take the Demonhood and survive to the end of the game. Find out what your Spy knows. Co-ordinate with your Poisoner so that you choose different players at night. Let your Baron run wild. Learn if your Scarlet Woman's plan is to kill you, or keep you alive.
  • There are lots of reasons why you should register as an evil Imp to good players. If this happens, don't despair! Maybe you can convince the group that Empath is drunk? Maybe you can argue that you are that Fortune Teller's "red herring"?
  • If you don't want to kill one night, you can choose a dead player instead. This can also help you bluff well as the Soldier or the Monk, as no death of a night-time makes it look like your Soldier or Monk ability triggered. If no one is dead after the first day, there are no dead players to 'sink' a kill into, but if you're committed to bluffing as one of those characters, just ask your Poisoner pick you!

Fighting the Imp

  • In Trouble Brewing, fighting the Imp is the same as playing the game for the good team, so be sure to have a look at General Strategy. Killing the Demon wins the game for good. If you have a lead on a possible Demon and another lead on a possible Minion, it's usually best to try prioritize executing the Demon suspects first!
  • Finding out who the Imp isn't is almost as important as finding out who the Imp is. Confirming other players as good allows you to build trust, put together information, and build a list of suspects... but it also means that you narrow down the field for who is not the Demon. On the final day, there are usually three players left alive, one of them being the Demon - if aren't certain of the Demon but you can say for sure that one of those people is good, then that gives you 50/50 odds to execute the right player.
    • Characters like the Ravenkeeper or Slayer are especially good at pinning down people as not Demons - while it's exciting to find an evil player with these one shot abilities, finding a good player is just as powerful.
  • If someone unexpectedly dies at an odd time, or after coming under a lot of suspicion, you may have just seen the Imp kill themselves and pass the Demonhood on to one of their Minions. This is fantastic information, because knowing this person is evil allows you to look at everything they have done to try and uncover the other members of the evil team. This is where information from characters like the Chef, Empath and Investigator become particularly valuable, since you can use this player as a point of reference for pinning down the other evil characters. If those characters are not in play, you still have a lot of options: Who have they been talking to and built trust with? If they are bluffing as an information gathering character, who has their information confirmed or protected - for example, they may have bluffed as the Washerwoman to "confirm" the bluff of their Minion and then died at night once people trusted the Minion.
  • Beware the Scarlet Woman! So long as there are five or more players alive, the Imp will be able to be executed and the evil team will continue. If you think you know who the Imp is, consider holding off on the execution until you have fewer than five players so that her ability cannot activate, thus stopping the Demon in their tracks right then and there.
  • The Imp's ability to kill means that they can be extremely effective at removing characters that pose a threat to them, and they will do so with gusto. To protect your players getting ongoing information (like the Undertaker) or with powerful one-time abilities (like the Virgin), try to trick the Imp into killing players who are not good choices. For example, a Soldier or Mayor could bluff as a juicy target, letting their abilities soak up the hit. Alternatively, characters like the Saint (who would much prefer to die at night), Recluse, or the Washerwoman could try to attract the attention of the Demon - they will die, but better them than your Fortune Teller!
  • If you are playing in a game with six or fewer players, the rules for the Demon change slightly. They do not start with bluffs, and they do not know who their Minion is. One fun strategy is to try bluffing as the Minion to another player, and encouraging the Demon to confide in you. If they admit to being the Demon, you can out them to the town for a decisive victory.
  • Unlike other Demons you may encounter, the Imp's special ability to pass on the Demonhood to their Minions puts them in the unique position of being able to get away with more complicated bluffing strategies, often involving more than one player. When looking for evidence of evil characters, keeping an eye on groups of characters confirming each other. For example:
    • They could bluff as a Washerwoman/Librarian and confirm their Minion is a Townsfolk/Outsider. (Particularly potent if the Minion is claiming to be the Saint!)
    • They bluff as the Empath claiming to have two good neighbour shortly before their untimely demise, passing to their neighbouring Minion.
    • They can choose to die and then bluff as the Ravenkeeper, confirming the bluff of their Minion now turned Demon.
    • They can bluff as the Slayer, "slaying" their Minion and then dying. (They can also do this trick with an actually good Slayer, getting them to target the Minion and passing to them after they've been confirmed not the Demon).
    • They can choose to deliberately kill nobody on a night to allow their Minion to bluff as a Soldier or Monk. People are very likely to trust a Soldier if there's been no kill, making them ideal for taking over the Demonhood later.