#Status, Law, and Public Order
Contents
Fiction-Only + Scene Tool. A guide for using social order as play pressure.
#Scent — The City Where Name Tags Tighten Around the Neck
In Edo, a person is seen first by their name and status. Which family they belong to, under whose permission they walk the road, and which temple they are registered at all move ahead of the body. When a yoma incident gets caught in that net, it becomes a public-order incident — and a public-order incident becomes a thing that never happened.
#Law — Social Pressure
- Status is not a list of prohibitions but a scene cost. It adjusts access, speaking rights, the right to bear arms, and the credibility of testimony.
- Place law-enforcement organizations as one of the following: enemy, obstruction, client, or concealment mechanism.
- After an incident ends, always establish who bears responsibility, what it is officially called, how witnesses are handled, and where objects end up.
#Scene Commentary — Status Is a Locked Door
Status is not a prohibition to stop players — it is a locked door that creates the scene. A samurai can open certain doors easily, but the door of responsibility opens with them. A merchant can move money and goods, but their voice shrinks in an official interrogation. A monk can enter under the pretext of funerals and seals, but cannot escape temple registration and the shogunate's supervisory gaze.
Law-enforcement organizations are not one-directional obstacles either. A doshin and okappiki may be a corrupt enemy, the best-informed local source, or a grey-zone collaborator who clashes with the PCs because they were ordered to cover things up. A good Edo scene does not ask "what does the law prevent us from doing?" but "what price comes with using the law?"
How to use status pressure:
- Grant access while attaching a reporting obligation.
- Make testimony easy to obtain while making rumor spread faster.
- Grant arrest authority while making the fallout from killing heavier.
#Session Application — Using Law as a Barrier
- Opening scene: ask not whether the PCs can open the door in front of them, but under what pretext they can open it.
- Complication: entering legally leaves a record; entering secretly leaves suspicion.
- Final question: whose name will the PCs borrow in order to gain authority?
#Core Question
Even after an incident is resolved — who holds the authority to record that fact?
#Status System Introduction for First-Time Readers
The most confusing point when first reading about the Edo period is that "status" differs from modern occupational categories. Status determines not only what work someone does but what rights and obligations they hold, in front of whom they may speak, what clothing and weapons they may carry, and what punishments they receive.
Textbooks often use the phrase "samurai, farmer, artisan, merchant," but the actual society was more complex. For play, the following level of understanding is sufficient.
| Category | Basic Profile | Power in Incidents | Weakness in Incidents |
|---|---|---|---|
| Samurai | Samurai, hatamoto, domain retainer, lower-ranked warrior | Arms, grounds for arrest, official speaking rights | Responsibility, honor, orders from superiors |
| Townspeople | Merchants, craftsmen, urban residents | Money, logistics, rumors, ground-level knowledge | Lack of official authority |
| Farmers | Village communities and the productive base | Local knowledge, records of land and taxation | Movement restrictions, vulnerability before power |
| Religious figures | Monks, shrine priests, ascetics | Funerals, seals, temple registration, access to sacred precincts | Shogunate management of temples and shrines; sectarian politics |
| Marginal figures | Ronin, entertainers, licensed-quarter workers, unofficial informants | Mobility, disguise, secret contacts | Suspicion, low trust, lack of protection |
| Pariah / outcast | People pushed outside law and community | Knowledge of corpses, execution grounds, and taboo places | Discrimination, exploitation, erasure from records |
This table is not for treating real-world suffering as decoration. It is the minimum map for understanding how authority and silence are distributed in an Edo setting. Especially, low-status and marginal figures work powerfully as "people who know a great deal but are not believed."
#Why Samurai Are Strong but Not Free
Samurai can wear swords. Looked at only that way, they seem the most free. But in Edo, a sword is closer to responsibility than to freedom. When a samurai draws in a public place, they must explain why — and if someone dies, the family, the superior, and the domain are dragged out together.
A samurai of the Edo era is a battlefield warrior and also an official at the same time. Writing documents, guard duty, ritual, interrogation, patrol, and reporting take up a large part of daily life. So a samurai PC has strong combat ability but is repeatedly asked "is this something I can do in my own name?"
Pressures to attach to samurai PCs:
- Superiors demand record-clearing before incident resolution.
- Accepting a duel preserves honor but breaks concealment.
- A lower-ranked warrior has on-site authority but cannot defy a superior's honor.
- A ronin is free but has thin legal protection and trust.
#Why Townspeople Are Weak but Formidable
Townspeople (chonin) are the urban population, including merchants and craftsmen. In official status order they rank below samurai, but in Edo's actual daily life they move money, goods, and stories. Merchants know the warehouses, payments, and transport; craftsmen see the true condition of objects; the workers at bathhouses, theaters, and the licensed quarter know which official met whom on which night.
Write the townspeople's world and Edo comes alive. Before a yoma incident becomes an official report, it may already be a bathhouse joke, a storyteller's new tale, or a gambling-den rumor. Even if the shogunate erases the records, the townspeople's world remembers in a different shape.
Good questions for townspeople scenes:
- Who makes money from this incident?
- Which shop hides the witness?
- Which object differs between the ledger and the actual item?
- When the Kaidan spreads, which theater or storyteller grabs it first?
#Law Comes Before the Sword
Edo's law is less a uniform and abstract system like modern criminal codes, and more an order that binds status, region, and accountability relations together. The same act of violence carries different meanings depending on whether a samurai performed it under official orders, a ronin performed it for money, or a townsperson performed it in self-defense.
In play, there is no need to reproduce all legal complexity. Instead, define three things for each incident:
| Question | Example |
|---|---|
| Who has jurisdiction? | Shogunate direct control, domain, temple, shrine, merchant company internal |
| Who takes responsibility? | The PC on site, the client, the family, the dojo, the village |
| What is it called? | Murder, disturbance, disappearance, fire, Kaidan, yoma incident |
The terror of a yoma incident comes from the third question. The same death recorded as "killed by a yoma" shakes the shogunate's order; recorded as "a drunk man's fall," the grudge goes unsettled.
#Status Is Scene Pressure
Edo's status order is not mere background explanation. It limits PC choices in every scene and makes certain choices more dangerous.
A samurai can wear a sword but must bear the responsibility of having drawn it. A townsperson can move the city's money and rumors but has weak official authority. Monks and shrine priests can enter incidents under the names of seals, funerals, and sacred precincts, but cannot be free from shogunate management of temples and shrines. Ronin and wanderers move freely, but when an incident occurs they are the first ones suspected.
#Law-Enforcement Organizations
Edo's public order is split between open organizations and unofficial collaborators.
| Level | Role |
|---|---|
| Shogunate officials | Determine the official name of the incident and the location of responsibility |
| Doshin | On-site investigation and arrest |
| Okappiki | Unofficial information gathering and contact with the lower classes |
| Domain officials | Concealment and cleanup of incidents within their own territory |
| Temples and shrines | Funerals, seals, household registers, management of sacred precincts |
Yoma incidents arise in the gaps of this organization. A doshin sees the corpse but does not know the onryo. A temple feels the grudge but wants to avoid political responsibility. A domain that reports the incident to the shogunate loses face; a domain that does not report it must handle the Spirit Gate alone.
#How to Use Law-Enforcement NPCs in Scenes
Doshin and okappiki are not merely police NPCs. They hold on-site access rights, lower-class networks, the ability to manipulate records, and the ability to avoid responsibility, all at the same time. A doshin has official authority but does not know every location. An okappiki is an unofficial collaborator who knows the dirty alleys well but also brings unreliable rumors.
When creating a law-enforcement NPC, establish one of the following three first:
| Role | How to Use |
|---|---|
| Ally | Provides access to the scene, a witness list, and information on confiscated items |
| Obstruction | Tries to shrink the incident because of orders from above |
| Enemy | Has been bought by a conspiratorial faction, or exploits the yoma incident |
A good law-enforcement scene asks not "can we arrest them?" but "what do we lose by arresting them?" Beating the constables is easy. But once an official arrest record exists, who gets to read that record becomes the next danger.
#Household Registers and Temple Registration
A person in Edo is not a free-floating individual. They are identified by which household, village, temple, employer, and domain they belong to. This system is excellent for handling disappearances, possessions, and disguised identities.
For example: a person disappears, but the temple ledger still records them as alive. Or a dead person is never removed from the register, and taxes and memorial services repeat every year in their name. Or a hanyo PC's household register does not match their actual age and draws an inspector's suspicion. Scenes like these make Edo-style yoma tales stronger.
Household register and temple ledger seeds:
- A missing child appears in the ledger as having been born three times.
- A dead daimyo's name in the temple records changes to different characters every night.
- Only the people registered at an abandoned temple share the same dream.
- Someone has entered a yoma's name in a human household register and is protecting it.
#Law and Concealment
The law in Strange Tales of Edo has two faces. The surface law finds criminals, compensates for harm, and restores order. The underneath law keeps the word "yoma" out of the records.
After every incident is resolved, the GM always asks one question.
| Question | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Who takes responsibility? | Punishment and honor |
| What is it recorded as? | Concealment of the yoma incident |
| What happens to the witnesses? | Spread of rumor and Kaidan |
| Where do the objects go? | The fate of famous blades, talismans, and yoma remnants |
These questions become the seeds of the next scenario.
"Edo's law does not ask about the crime first — it first decides what name to give the crime."
