Outsiders & Others

Gary Con XVII Afterword

The Other Side -

 Back from Gary Con 17! I had an absolute blast. Got to see so many great people. Old friends, fans of the blog and my games, so many great gamers with great stories.  Sales wise, we did really great this year, Thirteen Parsecs was our big hit of course, but we also sold a lot of Wasted Lands. I think word of mouth is finally catching on!

Gary Con 17 badge

I bought a lot less this year, only picking up the Cthulhu by Gaslight Investigator's book. But there was a lot of great stuff here.

Discovered there are editions of Dungeon! I do not own, Spanish and German. So now I am on a hunt for those.

Spanish language Dungeon, "Calabozo"
Spanish language Dungeon, "Calabozo"
German language Dungeon, "Verlies"

I do speak both Spanish and German. Just not very well.

I worked on my old-school autograph collection.

Jeff Grubb
Zeb Cook
Ed Greenwood & Jeff Grubb
Tim Kask
Erol Otus

I learned the hard way a while back if you want to talk to these guys you need to do it now. None of us are getting any younger.

Talking with Tim Kask is always great. I discovered there is a bit of early D&D lore connected to our Alma Mater, Southern Illinois University, that I plan to explore in depth soon. Talking with Jeff Grubb is always great, this is the first year I thought to get his autograph! So much for following my own advice. 

Jeff Easly and Darlene were there, and they were fantastic as always. I didn't get anything signed from them this year since I do every year. Let someone else in.

I did get a chance to talk to Kelsey Dionne a couple of times and she is every bit as nice and approachable as everyone has said she is. She even knew about my witch book! So I had to give her a copy. They had a great con, I fully expect they sold out of their stock as well.  It is hard not to wish them all the success in the world, really. 

Shadowdark Witches

As I said, we did good, but Jason did better with Troll Lords Games. His new Wasted Lands sold out of its first printing and was the star of Troll Lords this year. So expect to see him to be writing for them for a long time to come. 

Amazing Adventures
Amazing Adventures

My oldest went with me and did not but play AD&D 1st Ed. We had a BECMI game one night but we were both so tired we opted to drive home instead. Yeah, I still drive into Gary Con every day. My youngest with with us the last day, but didnot stay, they were picked up by their girlfriend and they spent the day in downtown Lake Geneva while we did the con.

So yeah, we all had a complete blast!

My wife was in England that whole time, lucky (for her) when she booked her trip she flew out of London City Airport and not Heathrow. So she was not affected by the fire at Heathrow, save for her flight being delayed a little.

Looking forward to Gary Con XXVIII next year!

Miskatonic Monday #349: Omega Kappa DIE!!!

Reviews from R'lyeh -

Much like the Jonstown Compendium for RuneQuest: Roleplaying in Glorantha and The Companions of Arthur for material set in Greg Stafford’s masterpiece of Arthurian legend and romance, Pendragon, the Miskatonic Repository for Call of Cthulhu, Seventh Edition is a curated platform for user-made content. It is thus, “...a new way for creators to publish and distribute their own original Call of Cthulhu content including scenarios, settings, spells and more…” To support the endeavours of their creators, Chaosium has provided templates and art packs, both free to use, so that the resulting releases can look and feel as professional as possible. To support the efforts of these contributors, Miskatonic Monday is an occasional series of reviews which will in turn examine an item drawn from the depths of the Miskatonic Repository.

—oOo—
Name: Omega Kappa DIE!!! – A Highly Inebriated, Modern(ish) Horror-Comedy Scenario For Call of CthulhuPublisher: Chaosium, Inc.
Author Colin Richards

Setting: USA, 1930 and 1999Product: One-shot
What You Get: Seven page, 877.91 KB PDFElevator Pitch: Animal House meets Call of CthulhuPlot Hook: “’Cause they say2000, zero-zero, party over, oops, out of timeSo tonight, I’m gonna party like it’s 1999” – 1999, PrincePlot Support: Staging advice, ten pre-generated Investigators, eight handouts, one set of floorplans, six NPCs, a robot, three Mythos monsters, and a goat.Production Values: Excellent.
Pros# Thematically brilliant design# Good handouts# Inventively macabre description of the ritual# En media res action# Every player gets a Drunkometer# Dipsophobia# Social anxiety disorder# Phasmophobia
Cons# Astrology or Astronomy?# A lot of mature elements and the caveats are deserved# Some scenes are going make you go, “Ick!”, let alone the players# “Nyarlathogoat”
Conclusion# Don’t say Omega Kappa Pi, say Omega Kappa DIE!# An orgy of witting nastiness that highlights the horror of the Mythos # Reviews from R’lyeh Recommends & Discommends

Prohibition & Powers

Reviews from R'lyeh -

The set-up for Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties is really simple. It is the 1920s. It is the USA. Prohibition is in full swing and under the terms of the Volstead Act, the sale of alcohol is outlawed. Which means there is money to be made from making the stuff in illegal stills or smuggling it across the border from Canada. Which means criminals are getting rich from making people happy and officials and cops are topping up their pensions by looking the other way. However, not every cop or bureau agent is on the take. Some want to enforce the law and are brave enough to do it. Some even have the power to back it up, not just with a sense of fairness and justice and a Smith & Wesson .38 Special Model 1899 Military and Police Hand Ejector, but the ability to fly or create a stream of acid or pick up things up with their hair or manipulate probability or control small objects. Used at the right time and in the right fashion, any one of these abilities can help the law bust criminal activities or arrest a crook. However, the life of a law enforcement Caper—as these powered individuals are known—is not that easy, because just as a would-be Caper is drawn to uphold the law, another Caper is drawn to break it. There are Capers protecting gangs and syndicates, running numbers games, cooking the books, bootlegging, and bringing the number one prohibited substance into the country—alcohol.

Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties is published by Nedburger Games, following a successful Kickstarter campaign. It is a super-powered roleplaying set in a Jazz Age, but not a Jazz Age that we would fully recognise. Capers are a known and recognised phenomenon, appearing in newspapers and news reports, many stories being of a sensationalist nature, whilst the Department of Justice has established a Registry of Abnormal Persons and begun tracking their locations and activities. Currently, registration is voluntary. Capers may face religious intolerance and there are doctors and hospitals who will not treat them, but the US Army is actively recruiting them and the media loves them! Elsewhere, Carla ‘Lucky’ Luciano is the right-hand-woman to New York Boss Arnold Rothstein and Al Capone’s mentor is Giada Torrio, and a broader range of ethnicities and genders are accepted at all levels of society. It is thus ahistorical, rather than truly historical and more representative of modern sensibilities. As is the feel of the roleplaying game and its look, is more akin to a cartoon show. A cartoon show that can be told from two different angles. One is with the cast of Capers as members of law enforcement and the other is with the cast of Capers as members of a criminal gang or organisation. In that, it shares some resemblance with the set-up in TSR, Inc.’s Gangbusters: 1920’s Role-Playing Adventure. However, as a super-powered roleplaying game, Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties is very much a ‘Street Level’ campaign and very much not a ‘Four Colour’ setting. Essentially, this is not a traditional cowl and capes style of superhero roleplaying game, but a setting more akin to the masked adventurers style of the following decade of the thirties—and that is even if the Caper wears a costume at all. All of which is detailed in a simple, easy to grasp introduction that explains its situation within a few pages.

A Player Character in Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties is either an Exceptional or an actual Caper. There are also Regulars, but these are normal people and so not what a player will be typically roleplaying. An Exceptional will not have full superpowers, but will instead have Perks, such as ‘Lucky’, ‘Power-Resistant’, or ‘Speciality Skill’. There are only nine Perks given in the roleplaying game, as compared to the thirty-nine major and minor powers. What an Exceptional makes up for in terms of a limited choice of Perks is having a wider choice of general abilities, whereas a Caper will have a limited choice of general abilities and more powers. Beyond a concept, such as gangster, enforcer, bounty hunter, journalist, or federal agent, a Player Character has three Anchors. Consisting of Identity, Virtue, and Vice, these define who the Player Character is, and by roleplaying them, provide a means of the Player Character regaining Moxie. He also has six Traits—Charisma, Agility, Perception, Expertise, Resilience, and Strength—which are rated between one and three for Regulars, but can go as high as four or five for Capers. Each Trait has an associated Defence value, which is sets how difficult it is for an opponent to overcome a Player Character. He will have between three and five skills, and if a Caper either one or two Minor Powers or one Major Power, whilst if an Exceptional, a combination of either Perks or Trem-Gear. The latter consists of devices, weapons, and suits powered by the previously unknown radioactive element called Trembium, which is also found in the blood of Capers. It is possible to be injected with Trembium and temporarily gain powers, but similarly, it is possible to be injected with Anti-Trembium and Powers be temporarily negated. This sets up some interesting story possibilities, whilst the quick guide Trem-Gear in the book, with careful adjudication upon the part of the Game Master, might lend itself to some possible gadgeteering.

In general, skills are fairly broad, so Conveyances covers all vehicles, Sciences all of the sciences, and so on. How they are used varies though, depending on what a Player Character wants to do. To perform an impressive driving feat, for example, a bootlegger reverse, a player might combine his character’s Charisma Trait with his Conveyances skill, whilst attempting to drive into a narrow alley at high speed would use Agility and Conveyances instead. Notably, there is no Gambling skill or Performance skill, so the Game Master and player will need to work together to get skill and Trait combinations that work.

In comparison, Perks and Powers in Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties are much narrower in scope. Perks tend to provide better protection against an Exceptional’s powers than a Regular has. Minor Powers are more tightly focused and flashier in their use, and include Acid Stream, Body Armour, Concussion Beam, Dimensional Manipulation, Force Field, Mental Shield, and more. Major Powers are broader and include Dimension Step, Elasticity, Invisibility, Mimic, Speedster, and many enhancement to Traits, like Super Expertise or Super Strength. Some Powers are simply active all the time, whilst others require a Power Check to activate. Many also provide a range of different effects or Boosts. For example, the Speedster Major Power has the Chaperone Boost, the Damage Boost, the Lightning Boost, the Speed Boost, the Water Walk Boost, and the Whirlwind Boost. When creating his character, a player selects one of these Boosts as the standard effect for that Power. He can still do the others, but they are not as easy for him to do.
Creating an Exceptional or a Caper is a matter of making choices and assigning a few points to the Player Character’s Traits. The only random element is determining his Anchors—done by drawing cards from an ordinary deck of playing cards, but even this does not need to be done randomly.

Our example Caper is Arabella Bellange. She is a former magician’s assistant who graduated to stage magician when the magician had an unfortunate accident that meant he could not perform for a few months. Not Arabella’s doing, but rather he was unlucky and she was lucky. It seems that life goes that way for Arabella. She looks good on stage or when doing close-up tricks, but things just seem to go her way—and that includes the cards. Which suits her fine. She wants fame and money and she has the ambition to drive her into crime if she met the right person. She might come out of whatever they do smelling of roses, but her friend might not be so lucky…

Name: Arabella Bellange
Type: Caper
Identity: Leader
Virtue: Moderate
Vice: Vain

Body 9 Mind 9 Hits 14
Speed 30’
Level 1

TRAITS
Charisma 3 (Defence 10) Agility 2 (Defence 9) Perception 2 (Defence 9)
Expertise 2 (Defence 9) Resilience 2 (Defence 9) Strength 1 (Defence 8)

SKILLS
Deception, Insight, Sciences, Sleight of Hand

POWER
Minor – Probability Manipulation (Rank 1)
Minor – Hypnosis (Rank 1)

Mechanically, Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties uses decks of ordinary playing cards and every player needs to have a deck of his own. Whenever a player wants his character to act, he flips over a card. The value of the card, its suit, and its colour determines the outcome and specific effects from the desired action. The value of the card determines if the action is a success or a failure, ranging from a Task Difficulty of Routine or four to Incredible or Ace. The Task Difficulty is set by the Game Master and kept secret until the Player Character succeeds or fails. The suit of the card will determine the degree of the success or failure, with Spades cards being the best and Clubs cards being the worst. So, if the value of the card indicates the action is successful and its suit is Spades, it is a ‘Success with a Boon’, but a ‘Success with a Complication’ if the suit is Clubs. Conversely, if the value of the card indicates the action is a failure and its suit is Spades, it is a ‘Failure with a Motivation’, but a ‘Botch’ if the suit is Clubs. The ‘Failure with a Motivation’ result means that the Player Character is pushed to try again and receive a point of Moxie to use on his next action. Drawing an Ace means that the Player Character succeeds with a Boon, or two, if the Ace of Spades. Drawing the red Joker will end the player’s turn and means the Player Character suffers a botch, but the black Joker means the Player Character succeeds with a boon and can take another action.

This is drawing just the one card, but a player can draw more. His Caper or Exceptional has a Card Count equal to the Trait being used. If using an appropriate skill, the Card Count will increase by one and if the Game Master grants Advantage on the action, it increases by one again. (Conversely, having Disadvantage on an action will decrease it by one and if the card Count is reduced to zero, the action cannot be attempted.) Each extra card flipped after the first replaces the previous card, the aim being to draw the best card possible, effectively turning every action into a gamble! A player’s deck is typically reshuffled after the end of a fight or significant scene.

For most actions, a player will determine the Card Count from a Trait or a combination of a Trait and an appropriate Skill if his character has one. For a Power Check, when a player wants his character to use a Power, the Card Count is equal to the Rank of the Power.

In addition, a Player Character has access to Moxie. It can be spent to increase the Card Count on an action, reduce incoming damage, gain a Boon, shape the narrative, take an extra action related to a Trait, recall a card (which must be a card used in current action rather than a previous one), reshuffle the deck immediately, and to have an Exceptional or a Caper commit an act of self-sacrifice, meaning that he takes damage from an attack rather than a colleague or NPC. Moxie is gained at the end of significant encounters, a player roleplaying his character’s Anchors—such as staying true to a Virtue or suffering a complication due to a Vice, or his character doing something cool or entertaining.
For example, Arabella Bellange is playing a high stakes Poker game. If she wins, she gets top billing at the speakeasy where she has been performing. If she loses, she has to work for the owner, Domenic ‘Peanuts’ Conigliaro, in the speakeasy for free for a year. Arabella wants to play this as straight possible, since she does not want to suffer any slight to her reputation that an accusation of cheating would cause, so is counting the cards and working the odds rather than resorting to deception. This will use her Expertise Trait, which gives her a base Card Count of two. Her Sciences skill will increase this by one to a total of three. The Game Master sets the Task Difficulty at Challenging or ten.

Arabella’s player turns over the top card of her deck. The card is a three of Hearts. This is not good enough to beat Arabella’s boss’ hand, so her player draws a second card, the nine of Spades, followed by the seven of Spades. Again, not enough. Arabella’s player decides to spend some Moxie. First to increase her Card Count by one. This means she can draw another card, but she spends a second to reshuffle her deck. Then she uses Probability Manipulation Power and its Control Boost to look at the top three cards of her deck and rearrange them. The cards are the ten of Diamonds, the eight of Clubs, and the Ace of Hearts in that order. Now the ten of Diamonds is enough to win the Poker game, but the Ace of Hearts is a surefire win and it grants Arabella a boon. She moves this to the top of her deck and with her last card drawn because of her increased Card Count draws the Ace of Hearts. Arabella’s boon is not only top billing at the speakeasy, but a better clothing allowance because a girl has to look her best… The Game Master agrees to this, but also because this ties in with her Vice of Vanity, awards her a point of Moxie.Combat in Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties uses the same mechanic. Each participant will make an Agility/Sense Reaction Check to determine his place in the Initiative order, whilst Agility/Guns or Agility/Ranged Weapons are used for ranged attacks and Strength/Fisticuffs or Strength/Melee Weapons are used for melee combat. In either case, the Target Difficulty for the attacker is equal to the Defence value of the defender’s Body value. The amount of damage inflicted is determined by the Suit and Colour of the card used for the attack, Black and Spades inflicting the most damage. Damage typically ranges between one and six points, but can be higher, as the weapon used will modify this. If a Player Character’s Hits are reduced to zero, he is either temporarily removed from the story or dead, player’s choice. If a player chooses to have his character die, then he gets one final turn in which he can use all of his Moxie to affect the narrative. Similarly, if a character reduces an enemy to zero Hits, his player get to decide whether he is merely knocked unconscious or is killed.

An important or unexpected fight can be preceded by a standoff, in which the participants stare each other out and attempt to assess the abilities of their would-be opponents. Played out over three rounds, it can gain a Player Character the initiative and more cards to play on the resulting action check. Other actions include assessing an opponent, intimidating him, or using a Power to boost the Player Character.

Overall, there is pleasing depth to game play, with players not just aiming to draw cards of a value sufficient to overcome a challenge or inflict damage, but also of the right colour and suit to get a more beneficial outcome. Although a player will mainly be relying upon better Card Counts to increase the possibility of drawing better cards, the use of Moxie allows for some limited manipulation of the cards , hopefully, towards a better outcome.

In terms of setting, Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties provides a short section of goods and services that noticeably includes prices for speakeasies, breweries, casinos, and hotels for gangster Exceptionals and Capers who want something to invest their ill-gotten gains in, as well as thirteen different Backdrops in which the Game Master can set her campaign. These are the big cities of the USA, notorious for their criminal underworlds during the era of Prohibition. Atlantic City, Chicago, and New York have several pages devoted to them each, covering recent history and the current state in the city, notable organisations and places, and people of note. Plus, stats are provided for the latter as well as a map of the city and story hooks for both law enforcement and gangster campaigns. The others, including Atlanta, Boston, Cincinnati, and Miami, only receive a page each, so will require some development upon the part of the Game Master to bring into play, especially if she wants to base her campaign in any one of them. The main three though, are very playable location write-ups ready for a campaign.

Similarly, law enforcement is given a broad overview before the Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties delves into a toolbox containing all manner of strange elements to bring into play. These include a selection of alternative earths, like ‘Capek’s Earth’ where automata have become part of everyday society; ‘Flipside’ where anyone from Principal Earth occupies the mind of their counterpart on this openly violent world where Al Capone is already dead; and ‘Madworld’, where the Central Powers used Capers to slaughter thousands in France, Capers in the USA are hated, hunted, and outlawed. These are all given the same degree of detail as the Backdrops of Atlantic City, Chicago, and New York, and together expand the storytelling possibilities of a campaign set in the world of Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties. There is a lot here that the Game Master can play around with in combining classic superhero style stories and elements with the cop with powers versus robbers powers nature of the setting. There is even Stone Island Beach, a secure island prison off the coast of New York for Capers, much like The Raft from the Marvel Universe.

All of this supported with advice for the Game Master on how to run the game, allow scope for player agency and input, adjudicate the rules, design adventures and encounters, and even on how to give animals powers and set up ‘events’ in which more people—either around the world or in one city—suddenly become Capers and explore the consequences that ensue. It is good solid advice, but there is a certain brevity to it. What it does not do is look at long term play in any of the roleplaying game’s three genres—law enforcement, crime, or superheroes—and the differences between them. What does a campaign look like? After all, a law enforcement campaign is going to be different from a criminal enterprise gang. The first is all about investigating criminal empires and tearing them down, whilst the second is all about building criminal empires up and preventing them from being torn down. The bibliography will provide some inspiration, as will familiarity with the genres, but this is definitely where the Game Master wanting to run a longer game of Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters could have done with more help and advice.

Physically, Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties is neatly, cleanly presented. The artwork has a cartoon style, and there is a short, but engaging cartoon strip in the middle of the book.

Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties has a setting that is actually unique and sounds cool—superheroes and supervillains in the Roaring Twenties fighting for law and order or crime and corruption. The addition of superpowers is the game changer, of course, both in terms of the setting and play, but the various abilities feel suitably low key and never like they are going to overwhelm the setting or the storytelling. This is helped by the fact that the card-based always make the game play feel as if the players and their characters are pushing their luck and gambling on the outcome. If underdeveloped with regard to long term play, Capers: A Super-Powered Game of Gangsters in the Roaring Twenties offers a breezy, fast-paced, and intriguingly different combination of genres in a familiar setting.

Advanced Savage Worlds?

Reviews from R'lyeh -

To be upfront and absolutely clear, the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide is not necessary to run Savage Worlds. It is not, in the traditional roleplaying sense, a guide to being a Game Master. All the advice that the Savage Worlds Game Master needs to run Savage Worlds Adventure Edition, or ‘SWADE’, is in the core rulebook. If it is not a traditional guide to being a Game Master for Savage Worlds, what then is the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide? This is the book for the Savage Worlds Game Master who wants to go a bit further than simply running the game for her friends on a week-by-week basis. The book is a collection of articles divided into three categories—guides to world building and writing content for Savage Worlds, running the game in situations other than at home, and advice on tweaking the game here and there, plus a handful of anecdotes that capture how fun Savage Worlds is to play and run. Published by Pinnacle Entertainment Group [https://peginc.com/], the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide is written by the publisher’s members of staff as well as freelancers and Game Masters who have writing and running Savage Worlds for more than a decade.

The World Builder and Game Master’s Guide opens with ‘World Building’, the first of the two articles on world building and writing content for Savage Worlds. The uncredited article explores how a Game Master might go about creating worlds and settings of her own. It is not extensive article—indeed whole books have dedicated to the subject—but it does boil the process down to a handful of questions such as what makes this new world special and exciting? What is its genre? Or as in the case of so many worlds for Savage Worlds, its genres? It suggests summing this up in an elevator pitch before discussing the various elements that make up the setting. Naturally, this is done through the lens of Savage Worlds, so looks at Edges and Hindrances, various types of adventure, and of course, Plot Point campaigns. These are Pinnacle Entertainment Group’s signature campaign format, providing a means to tell a big story in a setting, but also explore different aspects of the setting as well. Backed up with the ‘Pinnacle Style Guide’, this is a solid introduction to world creation, especially for Savage Worlds. Beyond this, the Game Master will likely want more detailed advice.

Some of that does come in Richard Woolcock’s ‘Turning Ideas into SWAG’. This gives advice on how the prospective author can create his own content and then publish it as part of the Savage Worlds Adventurer’s Guild, Pinnacle Entertainment Group’s community content programme. It covers first principles in terms of the working process, structuring the setting and the wordcount, editing and proofreading, playtesting and feedback, and so on, all the way up to making it available as Print on Demand, marketing the release, and even setting a price. The specifics do relate to Savage Worlds as you would expect, but there is advice here too that applies to any of the community content programmes that feature on DriveThruRPG. Combined with the first article in the supplement and the ‘Pinnacle Style Guide’, and this is a good introduction to the process of getting published.

Jodi Black’s ‘Savage Worlds For All Ages’ is the first of two articles which look at running Savage Worlds under different circumstances. As its title suggests, this one looks at the challenges of running Savage Worlds and gives tips on how to prepare a game, run a game, and keep player interest in a game going for different ages, from six years old to sixty-five and older, as well as groups of mixed ages. There are houses rules for each age group, such as for players aged six and up, awarding Bennies for good manners, initiative run in seating order rather than drawing cards, and the need for ‘wiggle breaks’ when the players get restless, as well as suggested plots. For example, making them feel epic in terms of scope for those aged between fifteen and twenty-five who have more time for this sort of game. Accompanied by the author’s guide to running a game club at her school, this is the best article in the supplement, applying to any roleplaying game and not just Savage Worlds. Of all the articles in the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide, this should be freely available.

The other article on running Savage Worlds under different circumstances is ‘Building Your Tribe’ by Chris Fuchs and Chris Landauer. This charts their establishment of the Rocky Mountain Savages, a team of Game Masters that run Savage Worlds at conventions. There are numerous teams that do this, not necessarily for single games or just Savage Worlds, and some actually handle the demonstration games for various publishers. At conventions, these groups and their Game Masters have become part of the public face for the publishers in question, such as the Rocky Mountain Savages for Pinnacle Entertainment Group. It is not just a guide on how to create and run a team of semi-professional Game Masters, but also how to run games at conventions and how to play in games at conventions. The latter gives the article a surprising third strand to its advice, but one that has a broader application than the other two strands since most roleplayers are more likely to play at a convention than be the Game Master or set up a Game Master group. Nevertheless, despite the limited application of the other advice in the article—an aspect common to the supplement as a whole—this is all good advice.

Despite it not being a supplement of general advice on running Savage Worlds, there is still advice to do so in World Builder and Game Master’s Guide. This starts with Owen Lean’s ‘Risks & Reversals’, which is all about the benefits of risk in a game, that essentially, it makes it exciting and whatever the outcome, often memorable. Together with its discussion of ‘reversals’, the joy of going from success to failure and back again as a situation changes, the article throws a bucket-load of examples at the reader, all taken from films with which he is very likely familiar—Pirates of the Caribbean, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and so on—that illustrate both situations. He neatly scales this up from scenes to adventures and campaigns to show how reversals work on that bigger scale. The scaling up continues with ‘High Powered Games’ by Tracy Sizemore. This examines the power progression in Savage Worlds, from Player Characters rising in power vertically initially and then horizontally as their power broadens in application before offering advice on how to use the rules and mechanics of Savage Worlds to adjust to the play and lethality of high-powered play. This includes setting a Wound Cap to limit the amount of damage a Player Character will suffer, but also using the Gritty Damage Setting for deadlier games. It also looks at the unpredictability of the core mechanic to Savage Worlds, how the dice results can swing wildly from one roll to the next, potentially causing disappointment and excitement from one round to the next, and how that can be managed. Suggestions include creating non-combat goals, making villains complex and interesting to give them a role other than wanting to destroy the Player Characters, and so on. There are numerous options and ideas here which support both high-powered play and high-end play.

In ‘The Long Game’, Shane Hensley charts the history of how Deadlands came about and its development over the years, and how the game has been kept fresh since its publication in 1996 and how a Game Master’s campaign can be kept going. Lastly, World Builder and Game Master’s Guide, ‘Anecdotes’ offers not a selection of stories and memories as the title suggests, but further advice on a variety of differing aspects of running Savage Worlds, such as ‘The Art of the Celebrity Con Game’ by Ed Wetterman on running audience participation games with celebrity players, Sean Patrick Fannon on ‘Running the Big Game’ with eight to sixteen players, and recording and making available your game play with Jordan Caves-Callarman’s ‘Savage Steaming’. None of these sections of advice is bad and some of it is useful, but not one of them is an ‘anecdote’, not one of them is story, and labelling them as such is an annoyingly misleading misnomer. Lastly, Clint Black gets ‘Under the Hood’ and discusses ideas on how the Game Master and player might tweak their Savage Worlds game, bringing the supplement to close with the broadest of advice.

Physically, World Builder and Game Master’s Guide is well presented, easy to read, and a nice-looking book.

Ultimately, the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide is not a book that is essential for any Savage Worlds Game Master. There is no denying that there is plenty of advice within its pages, but it is too specialised to be of general use to the average Savage Worlds Game Master. For the Game Master looking to do more than run the game for her friends, then the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide has the possibility of being useful and have the advice that she wants—and if so, then it is useful, it is good, it is helpful. Otherwise, the World Builder and Game Master’s Guide is too specific and too specialised for the average Game Master’s needs.

Quick-Start Saturday: The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide

Reviews from R'lyeh -

Quick-starts are a means of trying out a roleplaying game before you buy. Each should provide a Game Master with sufficient background to introduce and explain the setting to her players, the rules to run the scenario included, and a set of ready-to-play, pre-generated characters that the players can pick up and understand almost as soon as they have sat down to play. The scenario itself should provide an introduction to the setting for the players as well as to the type of adventures that their characters will have and just an idea of some of the things their characters will be doing on said adventures. All of which should be packaged up in an easy-to-understand booklet whose contents, with a minimum of preparation upon the part of the Game Master, can be brought to the table and run for her gaming group in a single evening’s session—or perhaps two. And at the end of it, Game Master and players alike should ideally know whether they want to play the game again, perhaps purchasing another adventure or even the full rules for the roleplaying game.

Alternatively, if the Game Master already has the full rules for the roleplaying game the quick-start is for, then what it provides is a sample scenario that she still run as an introduction or even as part of her campaign for the roleplaying game. The ideal quick-start should entice and intrigue a playing group, but above all effectively introduce and teach the roleplaying game, as well as showcase both rules and setting.

—oOo—

What is it?
The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is the quick-start for The Smurfs Roleplaying Game, based on the Belgian comic created by Peyo and The Smurfs cartoon series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and broadcast between 1981 and 1989. It is published by Maestro Media Ventures.

It is a twenty-page, 5.24 MB full colour PDF.

How long will it take to play?
The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is designed to be played through in a single session, two at most.
What else do you need to play?
The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide needs five six-sided dice per player.
Who do you play?
The five Player Characters—or Smurfs—in The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide consist of Smurfette, Hefty, Jokey, Smurflily, and Clumsy Smurf.
How is a Player Character defined?A Smurf in The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is defined by his name which provides a broad description of him and a motivation which explains how he thinks. A Smurf also has an Advantage, a special power which ties into his name or motivation. Each Advantage provides a bonus which applies to certain situations, modifies action rolls, or grants access to certain equipment. For example, Hefty has an Advantage that grants a bonus to any test of strength, whilst Smurflily, who has the Motivation of, “I will do my best to be friends with, and not hurt, any Smurf or other creature.” has an Advantage that reduces the difficulty of skill tests to persuade, calm, or befriend any NPC. Each Smurf also has four attributes—Quick, Brawn, Mind, and Heart—rated between four and twelve.
How do the mechanics work?
Mechanically, The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide uses the BURN 2d6 published by Saltheart RPG. To have his Smurf undertake an action, a player rolls two or more six-sided dice, aiming to roll under the appropriate attribute. If the roll is under the attribute value, the action succeeds, but if it is equal to the attribute value, it is only a partial success. A roll higher than the attribute is a failure. Bonuses can come from equipment, Advantages, and Smurfberries.

The difficulty of the action is set by the number of dice a player has to roll. This ranges from two for a Challenging difficulty to five dice for an Impossible difficulty. The Storyteller can make an action more challenging by adding another die, whilst a player can add another die if he wants the outcome of the action to have greater effect. A player can also reduce the number of dice ha has to roll by spending Effort. Each attribute has a number of points of Effort equal to its value and they can only be spent on actions related to that attribute. If a Smurf runs out of Effort for a single attribute, all of his actions are penalised an extra die. If Effect is exhausted for a second attribute, a Smurf falls unconscious or rather, is smurfed...

To avoid this and other dangerous situations, for example, a dragon breathing fire on a Smurf or a Smurf falling from a great height, a player can make a Safety Roll. It is rolled on two six-sided dice and difficulty for is determined by the Smurf’s own Smurf House (but is set to three for the purposes of The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide). If the Safety Roll is successful, the Smurf wakes up in his bed, fully refreshed, but with no idea of how he got there. If a failure, the Smurf will probably start the next session in dire circumstances.
In addition to Advantages, bonuses to any action can come from equipment and Smurfberries. Smurfberries are enjoyed by every Smurf and by every player because they are rewarded for good roleplaying. Each Smurf begins play with one and their primary use is to give a player a one-point advantage on any roll. Their secondary use is to restore a point of Effort to a single attribute. This can be for the player’s Smurf or the Smurf of another player, and is more expensive, costing three Smurfberries.
Lastly, each Smurf has access to Smurf Power! This is represented by the Smurf Power Die, and can be used in one of two ways. When rolled, it replaces one of the standard dice a Smurf’s player rolls for any action. It is a standard six-sided die, but marked with the Smurf Symbol on five of its six faces and the Smurf Critical symbol on the one face. It does not add anything to a roll, but when the Smurf Critical symbol is rolled, one of two things can happen. If the roll is a success, with the Smurf Critical symbol, it becomes an amazing absolutely smurfy success. However, if a failure, it becomes the unsmurfiest of failures possible. Alternatively, it can be used to add a narrative element to the play of the game. The ability to roll or use the Smurf Power Die becomes possible once a player rolls all sixes on a previous roll. Otherwise, it is inactive.
Besides the possibility of a critical failure, there is another downside to using the Smurf Power Die. This is that when used, it grants the Game Master a Thorn, which she can then use to make the lives of the Smurfs that much more difficult. This can be by describing a change in circumstances and adding an extra die to a roll, adding a complication by adding or removing a story element, allowing an opponent to act first (as Smurfs always act first otherwise), or cause a piece of equipment to become lost.
Mechanically, The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is player-facing. This means that the players make all the dice rolls rather than the Game Master.
How does combat work?
Combat? In a roleplaying game about Smurfs?

What do you play?
The scenario in The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is ‘Papa Smurf Goes Missing: An Introductory Adventure for The Smurfs RPG’. The adventure begins when the Smurfs wake up to find that Papa Smurf and his Mushroom House has gone missing, leaving a big hole in the ground where it stood the previous day. Investigating the hole reveals the wreckage of his house at the bottom and a tunnel leading deep into the earth! Where will lead and where has Papa Smurf gone? The adventure is quite straightforward, primarily involving a mixture of stealth and exploration. It also comes with plenty of staging advice that the Game Master can use simply as examples of play or inspiration for when she runs the scenario. It playable in a single session.
Is there anything missing?
Yes. The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide does not come with a Smurf Power die, so the Game Master will need to provide something in its stead.
Is it easy to prepare?
The core rules presented in The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide are very easy to prepare. They are light and easy to use as much as they are to teach, making them and the quick-start as a whole suitable for running for a younger audience.
Is it worth it?
Yes. The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide presents everything you you need to play a fun, happy-go-lucky session of Smurfiness, with a little dash of mild peril. The rules are easy to grasp and teach and the scenario is an uncomplicated affair. However, this is a quick-start (and a roleplaying game) for fans of The Smurfs rather than the casual player necessarily and they are likely to get more out of this than the said casual player. Otherwise, this is a well done quick-start, one that roleplaying fans of The Smurfs will pick up with ease and enjoy. Plus, if there are younger fans of The Smurfs, this is something that they will enjoy playing and being run for them.
The Smurfs Roleplaying Game – Quick-start Guide is published by Maestro Media and is available to download here.

Friday Fantasy: Doom of the Savage Kings

Reviews from R'lyeh -

The village of Hirot stands besieged, its inhabitants cowering and scared at who they might have to give up next. Standing atop a hillock, jutting up above windswept moors and rain sodden forests, for the past six months a monster, a devil-hound, has climbed over its palisade walls every night and stalked its few streets looking for victims. Once found, the creature from hell butchers and plays with their corpses, before vanishing into the mists leaving a bloody and rent corpse for the survivors to render funeral rites to. No one is safe and to date, neither the Jarl, master of Hirot, nor his thegns, have been able to kill the best, for every time they do, it quickly returns another night to kill yet another victim. The Jarl’s seer, Sylle Ru, has advised that a random villager should be sacrificed to the killer very third day and this has been taking place over the past few weeks, reducing the population of the village by a third. It is one of these sacrifices, being driven forward by a village mob and overseen by the Jarl and his thegns, to be placed upon ancient altar stones, that the Player Characters come across at the start of Dungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings, a scenario for the Dungeon Crawl Classics Roleplaying Game published by Goodman Games.

Dungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings is a special scenario for the Dungeon Crawl Classics Roleplaying Game. For although it was not the first to be published as a standalone scenario—that would be Dungeon Crawl Classics #67: Sailors on the Starless SeaDungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings was the first scenario that many players roleplayed, for it was included as a separate item in the rulebook for Dungeon Crawl Classics as the first scenario to be played after they had played through the roleplaying game’s signature feature, a ‘Character Funnel’. Written by Harley Stroh, It is designed to be played by between six and twelve First Player Characters and mixes the classic ‘village in peril’ set-up of so many a fantasy roleplaying scenario with the classic tale of Beowulf and the Sherlock Holmes novel, The Hound of the Baskervilles with more than a dash of Hammer Horror. Much like the author’s later Dungeon Crawl Classics #72: Beyond the Black Gate, it has a grim, northern European feel to it that suggests Saxon or Scandinavian influences upon its dark Swords & Sorcery.

When the Player Characters offer to help deal with the creature, nicknamed the ‘Hound of Hirot’, the Jarl seems oddly disinterested in offer of aid, rebuking them for their meddling and suggesting instead that giving themselves as sacrifices to the creature is the best thing that they can do. In comparison—and despite their pessimism, the thegns and the commoners will be welcoming, looking to the Player Characters for hope and perhaps a solution to the ghastly situation in which the village and its inhabitants find themselves in. Both Jarl and his thegns will tell the Player Characters why the situation is hopeless. Simply that the ‘Hound of Hirot’ cannot be killed. Of course, this is not the case, because the creature can be dealt with. It is not easy though, and will require some investigation and interaction, some exploration, and some brute strength upon the part of the Player Characters. Or combination of all three. The scenario provides multiple means—shackles woven from the hair of the dead that will bind the hound, the Wolf-spear of Ulfheonar which can pin the creature in place, and simply wrestling with it—and it is just up to the Player Characters to find out about these methods and decide which ones they want to use. Of course, in the first means, they will need to find some dead men with hair still on their heads and bring it back, whilst in the latter, they need to find where the Wolf-spear of Ulfheonar is and how they can get it.

The scenario consists of three distinct acts. In the first, the Player Characters arrive at Hirot and investigate the village, talking to the inhabitants, and winkling out some rumours and secrets that might help them defeat the beast. To that end, the Judge is furnished with a table of ready rumours and a detailed description of the village and its inhabitants. The descriptions nicely brings to life the morose sense of hopelessness that pervades Hirot whilst also providing the players with plenty of opportunities to roleplay. The encounter with the village’s old crone, known as the mad widow, is a delight and has a fantastic payoff at the end of the scenario. What is also great about the encounters in the village is that none of the NPCs are truly evil. Venal, desperate, resigned, and most of all, fearful, but not evil.

If the emphasis in the first act is on investigation and interaction in the village of Hirot, the second is on exploration of the ‘Tomb of the Ulfheonar’, where hopefully the Player Characters will be able to find the other primary means of defeating the ‘Hound of Hirot’, the Wolf-spear of Ulfheonar. The barrow-mound is quite sparse in look and feel, all rough stone slabs and earth and roots. It is quite small and barely—and only recently—inhabited by a nasty trio of monsters, that lurk in the dark ready to ambush intruders. The tomb also narrows towards the end setting up a really nasty, claustrophobic ambush that should really scare the players, let alone their characters. Combined with a deadly trap at the end—this being a tomb after all—the Player Characters will likely be very relieved to get out of the tomb. And the moment when they exit is when the Jarl strikes, ambushing them as threat to even the dark situation and his hold over it in the village of Hirot. Of course, if the Player Characters decide not to hunt for the Wolf-spear of Ulfheonar, then the entire dungeon is optional. (In some ways, this spoils the adventure for the Judge, denying her the opportunity to throw some horrible little encounters at her players, but that does not stop her from repurposing the dungeon-tomb and placing it elsewhere in another adventure.)

The third act of the scenario is the confrontation with the beast, using whatever means the Player Characters have gathered. Here the emphasis is on exploration and combat, a slog through the mire of a foul swamp and down into the maw of the creature’s lair. The sinkhole is a nasty place to have a fight, but it makes a great scene for a grand climax.

Physically, Dungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings is a good-looking book. For the most part, the artwork is good, but the cartography is excellent. The adventure is well written and explained, making it easy to prepare.

Dungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings packs a lot of adventure, a good monster, and plenty of decent NPCs into its sixteen pages. It also includes quite a bit of treasure, all nicely unique and different as well as lots of little details that might play out well beyond the pages of the scenario. Finally, Dungeon Crawl Classics #66.5: Doom of the Savage Kings has atmosphere aplenty, grim and foreboding, a genuinely epic mini-saga for First Level Player Characters.

Kickstart Your Weekend: Castles, ShadowDark, Witches and More Witches

The Other Side -

 Still at Gary Con, having a great time. A few more Kickstarters from some good souls. They honestly don't need my help, but here they are all the same.

Castle Zagyg Galleries of the Arch Mage

Castle Zagyg Galleries of the Arch Mage

https://www.backerkit.com/c/projects/troll-lord-games/castle-zagyg-galleries-of-the-arch-mage

Long story short, this is the real Castle Greyhawk brought to us from Gary Gygax via Troll Lord Games. You know you want this. 

Shadowdark RPG: The Western Reaches Setting

 The Western Reaches Setting

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/shadowdarkrpg/western-reaches

At the time of writing this is at $1.6 Million. Not too shabby, and they are crazy popular here at Gary Con. 

25th Anniversary of Tarot, Witch of the Black Rose Issue!

25th Anniversary of Tarot, Witch of the Black Rose Issue!

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/jimbalent/25th-anniversary-of-tarot-witch-of-the-black-rose-issue

Jim and Holly are good friends of the Other Side. This is the 25th anniversary of their little comic that could, Tarot Witch of the Black Rose. This Kickstarter is doing well already, but I would love to see it do even better.

SPELL BOUND vintage witchcraft occult 1960s 1970s art

SPELL BOUND vintage witchcraft occult 1960s 1970s art

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/centuryguild/spell-bound-vintage-witchcraft-occult-hardcover-art-book

Okay, how could I not love this? Witchcraft covers from the 1960s and 1970s? It's like it was custom-made for me. How could I not love this?

So lots of great choices here. Spend wisely!

The Other OSR: Vast Grimm – Space Cruisers

Reviews from R'lyeh -

It has been over six hundred years since the First Prophecy of Fatuma came to pass. The SIX, the Disciples of Fatuma, who following the prophecies put down in the Book of Fatuma, made a pilgrimage to the Primordial Mausoleum of THEY and deployed the Power of Tributes to decrypt the Mystical Lock sealing the Mausoleum. It was then that the They drew in the stale air of the Mausoleum, becoming one with the THEY and breathing out the parasites. The Six scattered, bringing the word and the infection of THEY to every corner of the ’verse. Then the Gnawing began. The parasites of THEY gnawed their way out of the infected. They spread. They gnawed their way out of planets. They spread. The infected split open. The planets split apart. Now mankind clings to life, looking out for any signs of THEY or hiding it inside them in the hope that it never erupts and spreads… The Earth is gone. Shattered into large pieces. There are places and planets where the remnants of Mankind survive, squabbling over resources and power, fearing the parasitical infectious word of THEY, but not without hope. There are whispers of a means to escape the end of this universe by entering another, one entirely free of THEY. It is called the Gate of Infinite Stars. Yet time is running out. The First Prophecy of Fatuma came to pass and so has every other Prophecy of Fatuma since. Except the last Seven Torments. Will the last Seven Torments come to pass and allow the Würms and the Grimm to consume the ’verse and with it, the last of Mankind? Or will the lucky few find their way to the Gate of Infinite Stars and at last be free of the Würms and the Grimm in a better, brighter future? That is, of course, if everyone fleeing through the Gate of Infinite Stars is free of the gnawing…
This is the set-up for Vast Grimm. Published by Infinite Black, it is a pre-apocalypse Science Fiction roleplaying game compatible in tone and structure with Mörk Borg, the Swedish pre-apocalypse Old School Renaissance style roleplaying game designed by Ockult Örtmästare Games and Stockholm Kartell and published by Free League Publishing. To get around the shattered solar system of the Vast Grimm’s ghastly future, let alone out into ’verse, the survivors are going to need transport and places to go. This is where Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers comes to the fore.
Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers expands on the rules for starships given in Vast Grimm. It provides the means to both create and modify them, gives rules for starship combat, and it describes three new locations that the Game Master can add to her game and her Player Characters can visit. Lastly, it includes rules for generating abandoned starships. The latter is particularly useful as it adds further uncertainty to the setting, provides somewhere for the Player Characters to explore, investigate, and loot. Effectively, mini-dungeons in space, if you will. Further, such vessels also serve as a ready source of parts and resources to scavenge, as well as potential replacement starships. The latter is important because the last starship to roll out of the shipyards was three hundred years ago. In a universe where the Grimm are the biggest threat that Mankind had ever faced, building the then current spaceship models and developing new spaceship designs was very quickly low on everyone’s priorities. Which means that the Player Characters may start play with one starship and end up with another and then another, just due to wear and tear and use and a lack of parts.

Creating a starship for Vast Grimm is quick and easy. It involves choosing or rolling for a Starship Class and following the various steps listed for each Starship Class in terms of capabilities, equipment, and modifications. Then rolls are made for the Starship’s Abilities, Hit Points, characteristics, battle scars, and Modifications. There are six Starship Classes and there are six options given for each. These are ‘Minimal Crew’, ‘Transports’, ‘Cruisers’, ‘Freighters’, ‘Warships’, and ‘Shotrods’, the latter being intergalactic hotrods. The ‘Minimal Crew’ Class includes ‘Family Truckster’, ‘Intergalactic Trucker’, and ‘DIY Death Trap’; ‘Transports’ like a ‘Yachthole’ or ‘Jailboat’; ‘Cruisers’ such as a ‘Light Cruiser’ or ‘Ram Jam’; ‘Freighters’ include ‘Garbage Getter’ and ‘Crowdfunded Slow Boat’; ‘Warships’ such as a ‘Frackin’ Frigate’ or ‘Dreadnought’; and ‘Chopper’ and ‘Domed Disc’ for the ‘Shotrods’. Starship Abilities consist of Manoeuvre, Accuracy, Fortitude, and Power, ranging in value from three to eight, modified by Class.

Most Starships have an A.I. on board, but it is possible to purchase the code to install a new one or replace an old, possibly damaged one. There is a table of A.I. personalities included, but these is quite short at six entries, especially given the Starship-hopping/Starship-scavenging nature of play. The likelihood is that the Game Master is going to run out of A.I. personalities quickly.

Name: The Slim Grimm ExpressClass: Transport
Type: Galaxy Express
Size: 1 Speed: 2 Crew: 2Armour: Tier 6 (-2d6)Hit Points: 35
Pilot Presence dR12Well-Engineered
Starship’s Log: A.I. Overkill (each section of the starship is controlled by a different A.I. personality)
Battle Scars: All original seating gutted. Replaced with lawn furniture.Modifications: Escape Pod, Surge Protector, Armour (Tier 2), Slam ShockerWeapon: Laser Turret (3d8 damage)Manoeuvre 7 (-2) Accuracy 13 (+1) Fortitude 15 (+3) Power 18 (+4)

The process is not difficult and provides a total of thirty-six Starship types from which to choose or generate. Consequently, the likelihood of the Player Characters finding a similar ship to their own is quite low and even if they do, it will still be very different. Starship operation requires minimum Power to operate and also use weapons and other capabilities. A Power Core can be recharged, but can also be scavenged from other Starships.
Starship combat is played out on a hex grid. One player takes the role of Captain, who is then responsible for manoeuvring the starship in combat. Possible other actions available to the Player Characters include using a weapon, a capability, activating a Tribute (data chips containing the Neuromantic energy released at the same time as the Grimm when THEY opened the Primordial Mausoleum of THEY and used for various effects), defending the Starship, conducting repairs, and even a launching a raiding party if the two Starships are close enough. Although the combatants do roll for initiative, damage occurs simultaneously. Critical rolls inflict double damage and reduce the target Starship’s armour by a tier, whilst on a critical Defence roll, the damage bounces back and inflicts damage on the attacker or the attack is Evaded, and the defending Starship manoeuvre’s away. Fumbles include temporary weapon malfunctions, a Player Character spilling a drink on a console and having to clean it up before it works again, and so on. If the Hit Points of a Starship are reduced to zero, then the Starship is broken, possibly leading to a loss of oxygen, all systems shutting down to maintain life support, and worse. If the damage is reduced to below zero, the damage is worse.
In addition to the rules for Starships and Starship combat, Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers details three locations that the Player Characters can visit in their vessel. They include ‘Guthrie’s Fuel & Fix’, a former waste barge turned travelling station and source of parts, repairs, and fuel. There are tables for Power Core recharge rates, availability of parts, and so on, plus stats for its operator, a short and rusty service bot that records everything. ‘Tangle Station’ is a small planetoid run by the necrotic cyborg Kid Arachnid—the only non-robot on the facility—and dedicated to keeping the Netwürk running. He will sell all sorts of information to any manner of buyers, though not all of it is safe. The ‘Roach Coach 2’ is probably the last place that anyone might want to eat, what with its ‘Mystery Meat pie’, ‘Sautéed Gooey Gland’, and ‘Crunchy Sugar Larvae’ on its menu and the fact that it is run by Cockroach Karl, Jr. Then there are the side effects, which might be positive, might be negative…
There is a brevity to the content of Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers, but in many cases that makes the content easy to grasp and use in play, even when rolling at the table. It also leaves scope for the Game Master to develop that content herself and tailor it to fit her campaign. This is made all the easier by the engaging and entertaining nature of the content.
Lastly, Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers comes with lots of tables. The main set will help the Game master determine the appearance, current occupiers, and some sample rooms that might be found aboard a seemingly abandoned Starship. Others include a table of parts that might break down on a trip and tables of things and person who might be found on a Starship.
Physically, Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers adheres to the Artpunk aesthetic of both Vast Grimm and Mörk Borg, with its use of vibrant, often neon colours and heavy typefaces. It looks amazing, a swirling riot of colour that wants to reach out and infect everything, but where the core rules were not always the easiest to read, the simplicity of the content in this supplement make it easier to read and use.

Mechanically, Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers is not as easily explained as it could have been, especially when it comes to Starship combat. Another page and probably an example of play would not have gone amiss and it would make the grasping of what should be relatively straightforward rules that much easier. This is not to say that they are difficult, but that the explanation could have been clearer. besides that, Vast Grimm: Space Cruisers neatly expands on the single aspect of the dark future that is Vast Grimm and provides the means for the Game Master to bring Starships into her campaign in greater and more entertaining fashion.

Gary Con XVII

The Other Side -

 I am at Gary Con!

Come by the Elf Lair Game booth to say hi. Both #119.

Elf Lair Games

We have NIGHT SHIFT, Wasted Lands, Thirteen Parsecs, and Jason's newest one Cd8.

Come on by, say hi, buy some books.


Witchcraft Wednesday: Trese (2021)

The Other Side -

Trese I just watched the Netflix series Trese. I really, really enjoyed it—more so than I was expecting to. 

I also watched a documentary about the show, which increased my appreciation.

The show focuses on the magic detective Alexandra Trese. She was inspired by detectives like Constantine and Fox Mulder and based on Filipino myths and legends.  

My knowledge of Filipino myths is, well, not great. Maybe better than most, but certainly by no means great. But this show does not penalize people for not knowing. The story-telling and animation are so rich and evocative that you are brought along for the ride. 

The documentary covers not just the monsters featured in the anime (and the comic) but also the locations in Manila. Also nearly everyone involved in the show was Filipino which is rather cool.  Also, they tend to refer to characters with AD&D alignments which was fun.

Of course, there is the big question about Alexandra Trese. Is she a witch? Well, she does use magic; she is the 6th child of a 6th child. She is also a healer and the representative of humans to the supernatural world. She even has a ritual dagger. Plus, she wears all black, her hairstyle reminds me of devil horns, and her name, "Trese," means "Thirteen" in Filipino. 

While it is not an anime per se (it is Filipino, not Japanese), it does have a solid Witch Hunter Robin vibe to it.

Now I need to check out the comics for it. 

Of course, it would be perfect to build for NIGHT SHIFT. Alexandra could be better suited as a Chosen One with some spell-casting ability. 

Miskatonic Monday #348: Shadow of the Eagle

Reviews from R'lyeh -

Much like the Jonstown Compendium for RuneQuest: Roleplaying in Glorantha and The Companions of Arthur for material set in Greg Stafford’s masterpiece of Arthurian legend and romance, Pendragon, the Miskatonic Repository for Call of Cthulhu, Seventh Edition is a curated platform for user-made content. It is thus, “...a new way for creators to publish and distribute their own original Call of Cthulhu content including scenarios, settings, spells and more…” To support the endeavours of their creators, Chaosium has provided templates and art packs, both free to use, so that the resulting releases can look and feel as professional as possible. To support the efforts of these contributors, Miskatonic Monday is an occasional series of reviews which will in turn examine an item drawn from the depths of the Miskatonic Repository.

—oOo—
Name: Shadow of the EaglePublisher: Chaosium, Inc.
Author Jordan Falcon

Setting: Vietnam, 1968Product: One-shot
What You Get: Seven page, 877.91 KB PDFElevator Pitch: “In the jungle, the mighty jungleThe Mi-go hunts tonightIn the jungle the quiet jungleThe Mi-go hunts tonight”Plot Hook: “Near the village, the peaceful villageThe Tcho-Tcho sleeps tonightNear the village, the quiet villageThe Tcho-Tcho sleeps tonight”Plot Support: Staging advice, no pre-generated Investigators, no handouts, no maps, one NPCs, and two Mythos monsters.Production Values: Plain.
Pros# Interesting period for Mythos investigation# Straightforward and easy to run# Could form the basis for an anti-Delta Green campaign for use with Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game and/or The Fall of Delta Green# Gephyrophobia# Vorarephobia# Entomophobia
Cons# No pre-generated Investigators# No advice on creating Investigators# Short and linear
Conclusion# Potential starter to a campaign, but too basic# Pre-generated Investigators with backgrounds would make it 100% better

Gary Con bound!

The Other Side -

 This is a quick one today. I am trying to get some things done. Why? Because I am headed to Gary Con again!

GaryCon 17

Once again I'll be with Elf Lair Games, so stop by (and buy!) if you can.

Looking forward to seeing everyone again.

Miskatonic Monday #347: The Demon of the Deep Leads

Reviews from R'lyeh -

Much like the Jonstown Compendium for RuneQuest: Roleplaying in Glorantha and The Companions of Arthur for material set in Greg Stafford’s masterpiece of Arthurian legend and romance, Pendragon, the Miskatonic Repository for Call of Cthulhu, Seventh Edition is a curated platform for user-made content. It is thus, “...a new way for creators to publish and distribute their own original Call of Cthulhu content including scenarios, settings, spells and more…” To support the endeavours of their creators, Chaosium has provided templates and art packs, both free to use, so that the resulting releases can look and feel as professional as possible. To support the efforts of these contributors, Miskatonic Monday is an occasional series of reviews which will in turn examine an item drawn from the depths of the Miskatonic Repository.

—oOo—
Name: The Demon of the Deep LeadsPublisher: Chaosium, Inc.
Author David Waldron

Setting: Ballarat, 1854Product: One-shot
What You Get: Forty-three page, 21.49 MB PDFElevator Pitch: The Blue Mountains panther hunts by nightPlot Hook: Hunt for a missing man in time of chaos
Plot Support: Staging advice, five pre-generated Investigators, three handouts, two maps, four NPCs, one non-Mythos monster, and one Mythos monster.Production Values: Reasonable.
Pros# Combines Cthulhu by Gaslight and Call of Cthulhu: Darker Trails, but in Australia!# Engaging historically based scenario# Solid interaction investigation# Straightforward, uncomplicated # Can be run as a non-Mythos horror scenario# Ailurophobia# Teratophobia# Amychophobia
Cons# Needs an edit# No pre-generated Investigator backgrounds# Underwritten introduction
Conclusion# Uncomplicated scenario against a chaotic background# Engaging sense of history combined with an urban legend

Your Own Dark Master

Reviews from R'lyeh -

The land and all of its good people face a threat. One that has lingered far from the farms and villages, towns and cities, plotting, waiting, slumbering, brooding, all for the time when it is right to rise again and send forth its agents and minions, even its armies and its magics to destroy all that it good, to bring under its yoke, and to cast a darkness everlasting upon the land. Yet land and all of its good people are not without hope and their hearts are strong, for even as the great hosts of the dark lord outnumber what armies the forces of good can muster, they have heroes. Mighty of sword, stout of character, strong in magic, and wily in cunning, perhaps it is they who will be able to step forth from their thresholds and make the great journey across the land, best done in secret, to strike at the lord of shadow. This sounds not unlike the plot of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings or Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn series or Margaret Weis and Tracey Hickman’s Dragonlance Chronicles series—and it is. It is also the underlying plot to Against the Darkmaster: The Classic Game of Fantasy Adventure, which describes itself as an “Epic Fantasy roleplaying game of high adventure, heroic action, and heavy metal combat.” This is a roleplaying game of high fantasy and high stakes and a roleplaying game with a pedigree. Its mechanics derive ultimately from two games published by Iron Crown Enterprises. The first was RoleMaster, but the real inspiration for Against the Darkmaster is the simpler, more streamlined version of RoleMaster that was Middle-earth Role Playing: a complete system for adventuring in J.R.R. Tolkien’s World. That inspiration is both mechanical and thematic, but although veterans of both RoleMaster and Middle-earth Role Playing will find much that is familiar in the pages of Against the Darkmaster, they will not find their characters forming a fellowship and going on a great journey across the land to heroically confront the dark lord himself, Sauron, but instead a different great evil, either one of the Game Master’s own devising or one of the three provided as examples in the book. This is the roleplaying game with which to play campaigns of high fantasy and adventure, in the process, save the world.

Against the Darkmaster: The Classic Game of Fantasy Adventure is published by Open Ended Games, Inc. and in addition to providing the means for the Game Master to create her own Darkmaster, it explains the rules, provides the means to create a fellowship, covers travel, combat, and magic, details a bestiary, and supports the roleplaying game with a setting and scenario. It starts though, with a discussion of its principles. These include the fact that it is a tale of good versus evil, that the presence and influence of the Darkmaster looms over the world, that previous conflicts between nations and with the Darkmaster have left the landscape dotted with ruins and secrets, magic is dangerous and rare and that the gods watch from afar rather than being directly involved in the doings of the land, and that despite all of this, there is still room for heroism and hope. Along with a lengthy bibliography of the books, films, heavy metal music, and other roleplaying games that influenced Against the Darkmaster this neatly sums up what the roleplaying game is about.

A Player Character in Against the Darkmaster consists of six Stats—Brawn, Swiftness, Fortitude, Wits, Wisdom, and Bearing, and then a Kin and a Culture. He will also have a Vocation, Background Options, and Passions. The six Stats range in value between -20 and +35 and serve directly as bonuses to skill and action rolls. This is a change from roleplaying games such as RoleMaster, Middle-earth Role Playing, and HARP Fantasy where there are stats ranging in value from one to one hundred and bonuses are derived from them. There are thirteen different Kin: Dwarf, Halfling, Man, Wildfolk, High Man, Half-Elf, Dusk Elf, Silver Elf, Star Elf, Half-Orc, Orc, Stone Troll, and Firbolg. Each provides bonuses to a Player Character’s Stats, Hit Points, Magic Points, Toughness Save Roll, and Willpower Save Roll, as well as Maximum Hit Points, Background Points, and starting Wealth Level. Each Kin also suggests suitable Cultures. There are thirteen Cultures, including Arctic, City, Deep, Desert, Fey, Hill, Marauding, Noble, Pastoral, Plains, Seafaring, Weald, and Woad. A Culture provides Ranks in a Player Character’s skills and Spell Lores, typical outfit and equipment, Passions, and additional starting Wealth Level. The Vocations consist of Warrior, Rogue, Wizard, Animist, Dabbler, and Champion. The Animist is a druid or shaman, the Dabbler can do a mix of everything rather than specialising, and the Champion is a mystic warrior. A Vocation provides Development Points for the player to assign to his character as well as skill bonuses.

Skills are divided into seven categories—Armour, Combat, Adventuring, Roguery, Lore, Spells, and Body. The individual skills with each category are broad in nature, for example, Blunt, Blades, Ranged, Polearms, and Brawl for Combat, and Acrobatics, Stealth, Locks & Traps, Perception, and Deceive. Several Speciality Skills are suggested, such as ‘Assassination’, ‘Craftsmanship’, ‘Dual Weapons Training’, ‘Swashbuckling’, and more, but these are optional.

Background Options represent a Player Character’s Back Story and what he did before joining the Fellowship. They include ‘Ancient Heirloom’, ‘Burglar’, ‘Heroic Bloodline’, ‘Mundane’, ‘Strider’, and more, each providing a wide range of bonuses and benefits. They are either Minor or Major Tier, of which the player chooses one or the other. A Player Character will have between one and three Passions, typically either a Nature, Allegiance, or Motivation. Here is where the Heavy Metal aspect of Against the Darkmaster first comes to the fore, the book suggesting that a player select a Passion based on a Heavy Metal song along with providing numerous examples, such as ‘All men are equal when their memory fades’ inspired by Motorhead’s ‘Deaf Forever’ and ‘I was born under omens of greatness and doom’ inspired by Iron Maiden’s ‘Seventh Son of a Seventh Son’. By adhering to his Passions, a character can earn Drive, up to a total of five, and this can then be spent to gain various effects, such as gaining a +10 bonus to a Skill, Attack, or Save roll, reroll a failed Roll with a +10 bonus, reroll a Critical Strike just suffered to try and lower its effect, and so on. Five points of Drive can be spent to set the result of a roll to 100, add a +20 bonus to a Critical Strike Roll, and so on.

One interesting use of Drive is to track Milestones and Revelations. For every ten points of Drive spent, a Player Character gains a ‘Milestone’. This can then be used to unlock a ‘Revelation’ about themself, perhaps when they are resting after an adventure and have had time to reflect or at a moment of crisis. Mechanically, it is used to permanently improve a Stat, the number of Magic Points a Player Character has, or improve an item as they come to master its use. Narratively, this should make sense within the flow of play and it needs to be approved by all of the players.

Of the choices for character creation, the Dusk Elf is roughly the equivalent of the Wood Elf and the Star Elf the High Elf, and the Wildfolk the Woses and the High Man the Númenóreans or Dúnedain from Middle-earth. So, there are parallels between Against the Darkmaster and Middle-earth Role Playing in the options open to the players. Some of the options are not necessarily heroically Tolkienesque, such as the Orc and Half-Orc, but nevertheless, they could be in the Game Master’s own campaign or kept as servants of the Darkmaster. Of the Cultures, the Marauding Culture is not intended for the Player Characters, but for use by the Game Master to create servants of the Darkmaster.

To create a character, a player can either roll for his Stats or opt for a point-buy method. Similarly, he can roll for or choose his character’s Kin and Culture, but then selects a Vocation. He notes down the bonuses, skill Ranks, and traits gained, before spending Development Points and selecting Background Options and Passions. The process is not complex, but is a little lengthy. One issue perhaps is keeping track of the differences between the Skill bonuses from Kin and Vocation, the skill Ranks provided by a Vocation, and the Development Points also provided by a Vocation which the player spends to assign further skill Ranks. Ultimately, they all provide bonuses, but from slightly different sources.

Name: Jarbad Duskheart
Kin: Dwarf
Culture: Weald
Vocation: Animist

STATS
Brawn +05 Swiftness +05 Fortitude +30 Wits +15 Wisdom +15 Bearing +20

Hit Points: 80 Maximum Hit Points: 150
Magic Points: 04 Drive: 1
Toughness Save Roll: +55 Willpower Save Roll: +40
Wealth Level: 1
Movement: 15
Defence: +05

TRAITS
Dark Sight, Forgekin, Stoneborn, Superstitious

BACKGROUNDS
Dark Past (Minor), Shapechanger (Major)

PASSIONS
Nature: I will live by the Laws of Nature under the Silver Stars.
Allegiance: My tribe, freed of Darkmaster’s grasp
Motivation: I will free my tribe, I will free all

SKILLS
Skill / Stat / Rank & Bonus / Vocation / Kin / Special / Item / Total
Armour
Armour / +05 (SWI) / 01 & +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +05
Combat
Blunt / +05 (BRN) / 01 & +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +10
Blades / +05 (BRN) / 00 & +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +05
Ranged / +05 (SWI) / 01 & +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +10
Polearms / +05 (BRN) / 02 & +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Brawl / +05 (BRN) / 02 & +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Adventuring
Athletics / +05 (BRN) / 02 & +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Ride / +05 (SWI) / 00 & +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +05
Hunting / +15 (WIT) / 04 & +20 / +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +40
Nature / +15 (WSD) / 04 & +20 / +15 / +20 / +00 / +00 / +70
Wandering / +15 (WSD) / 03 & +15 / +20 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +50
Roguery
Acrobatics / +05 (SWI) / 00 & +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +05
Stealth / +05 (SWI) / 02 & +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Locks & Traps / +15 (WIT) / 00 & +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Perception / +15 (WSD) / 02 & +10 / +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +30
Deceive WIT / +15 (WIT) / 00 & +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +15
Lore
Arcana / +15 (WIT) / 01 & +05 / +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +30
Charisma / +20 (BEA) / 01 & +05 / +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +30
Cultures / +15 (WIT) / 02 & +10 / +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +30
Healer / +15 (WSD) / 01 & +05 / +20 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +40
Songs & Tales / +20 (BEA) / 01 & +05 / +05 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +30
Spell Lores
Aspects of Nature / +15 (WSD) / 01 & +05 / +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +20
Master of Animals / +15 (WSD) / 01 & +05 / +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +20
Master of Plants / +15 (WSD) / 01 & +05 / +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +20
Healing / +15 (WSD) / 02 & +10 / +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +35
Body
Body / +30 (FOR) / 02 & +10 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +00 / +40

Mechanically, Against the Darkmaster is ‘Powered by Open00’. The core resolution involves rolling percentile dice and adding the value of a Stat or Skill total. The roll is open-ended, meaning that if the player rolls ninety-six or above, he rolls again and adds to the total. Similarly, if he rolls four or less, he rolls again and deducts from the total. A result of four or less is a critical failure, between five and seventy-four is a failure, between seventy-five and ninety-nine is a partial success, a result of one-hundred or more is a success, and anything over one-hundred-and-seventy-five is a critical success. Modifiers range from Challenging and ‘-10’ to Insane and ‘-70’. Once rolled, dice results are final. Save Rolls are made against a Player Character’s Toughness Save for physical effects and Willpower Save Roll against fear, illusion, and mind control. Either way, the roll is made against the Save Roll Difficulty. Either way, the roll is made against the Save Roll Difficulty which is determined by the Attack Level of the effect or the result of the spell rolled by the caster.

Combat in Against the Darkmaster breaks its action down into rounds consisting of several phases—Assessment, Action Declaration, Move, Spell A, Ranged A, Melee, Ranged B, Spell B, and Other Actions. Actions in combat consist of Full Actions, Half Actions, and Free Actions. Full Actions include making a melee or ranged attack, casting a non-instantaneous spell, and moving at full Move Rate, whilst Half Actions can be readying an item or drawing a weapon, casting an instantaneous spell, and taking a Half Movement to engage a foe in melee. During a Round, a Player Character can take a Full Action and a Free Action, two Half Actions, or a Full Action and a Half Action, but both with a penalty. Free Actions include talking, singing, or chanting, making an Assessment Roll, and dropping a wielded weapon or item. The rules also cover aiming, charging, improvised weapons, fighting with two weapons, and more, including parrying, which involves reducing an attacker’s Combat Bonus and increasing his Defence by the same amount.

The actual Attack Roll uses the same open-ended roll mechanic to which is added the attacker’s Combat Bonus—derived from the total skill bonus for the weapon used or attack type spell cast and any situational modifiers—whilst the defendant’s Defence value is deducted from it. The result is cross-referenced on the appropriate table for the attack type (notably weapons are either edged or blunt, there is no piercing damage table) against the type of armour worn—none, light, medium, or heavy—to determine the damage. The damage indicates how many Hit Points are lost by the defendant and may also indicate a Critical Strike. This can be Superficial, Light, Moderate, Grievous, or Lethal, the severity indicating the bonus to be added to roll on the appropriate Critical Strike Table. Here is where there is a Critical Strike Table for piercing weapons as well as cutting and impact weapons, plus Critical Strike Tables for beasts, area effects, and various types of spell damage. Damage can come from a variety of sources, including the darkest of magic and the touch of the undead which can scar a Player Character’s very own soul. This Soul Damage drains the life of the sufferer and typically takes magic or special herbs to heal.
For example, Jarbad is part of a band that has been ambushed by a band of Orcs in the service to the Darkmaster. He is not a skilled warrior, but aids where he can. His friend has been beaten back by a marauding Orc and Jarbad runs over to help him, hoping that he can be enough of a distraction for his friend to rally. Jarbad’s player declares that the Dwarf will charge the Orc and strike him from behind. This grants him a +20 bonus to his Combat Bonus, and since he is striking from behind, the Orc will not get his Defence bonus. So Jarbad’s player is rolling the dice and adding a total Combat Bonus of +35. He rolls 91 and adds the Combat Bonus to get a result of 126. The Game Master consults the Edged Attack Table and cross-references the result against the Orc’s lamellar armour, which counts as medium. The result is that the Orc suffers 14 points of damage and a Moderate Critical Strike, which grants a +20 bonus when rolling the Critical Strike. Jarbad’s player rolls the dice (the roll is not open-ended) and with the bonus, the total is 74 which gives the result of, “Direct shot the chest. If the target’s unarmoured, the strike pierces deep: +8 Damage, 4 Bleed, and Stunned. If the target’s wearing armour: +4 Damage and 2 Bleed.” However, Jarbad’s player decides that this is not enough and declares that he will spend a point of Drive to reroll the Critical Strike, declaring that this is in line with his Allegiance Passion of ‘My tribe, freed of Darkmaster’s grasp’. The Game Master allows it and Jarbad’s player rerolls. This time the total is 144, which gives the result, “Piercing strike to the chest. If the target’s wearing rigid armor: +5 Damage, 4 Bleed, Stunned, and -20 to all actions for a deep side cut. If not: lung pierced, +15 Damage, Stunned, and -50 activity, dies in 6 hours.” The Orc staggers as Jarbad shoves his spear under his armour, forcing him to one knee, unable to act… Magic in Against the Darkmaster includes the enchanted songs of the Elves sung under the stars, the eldritch might of wizardry, and the foul sorcery of the Darkmaster and his minions. It is divided into Spell Lores, which grant the practitioner knowledge of the ten Weaves within each branch of magic covered by the Spell Lore, from simple cantrips to major feats of world changing magic. The spells are divided into Common Spell Lores, Vocational Spell Lores, and Kin Spell Lores. The Common Spell Lores—Detections, Chanting, Cleansing, Eldritch Visions, Eldritch Might, Eldritch Wards, Lore of Nature, Movements of Nature, Nature’s Path, and Sounds & Lights—can be learnt by anyone, but only to a limited extent. Both the Silver Elf and Star Elf Kin have access to the Vocational Spell Lores of Elven Lore and Spell Songs, and can learn these whatever their Vocations. The Animist Vocation learns Spell Lores like Channelling, Earth Mould, and Master of Animals, whilst the Wizard learns Spell Lores such as Eldritch Fire, Eldritch Storm, Illusions, and Mind Control.

A Spell Lore has ten Ranks and each Rank grants knowledge of one Weave or spell. For example, as Jarbad Duskheart has only the one Rank in the Masters of Nature Spell Lore, the only spell he knows is Hinder, which turns the surrounding terrain into arduous for his enemies as roots and branches seem to grasp at them, whilst for the Healing Spell Lore, he has two Ranks and knows the Heal spell which hastens natural healing and the Clotting spell which reduces the blood loss from Bleeding Wounds.

Casting spells requires concentration and a caster can gain a bonus for concentrating for a single round and longer. A spell can also be cast without this concentration, but is done at a penalty. Some spells can be cast to greater effect, improving both their Weave and their Magic Point cost. This is called Warping. For example, Frostbite is a Rank Two spell from the Eldritch Frost Spell Lore. Its effect is to numb a target with cold, leaving them sluggish, inflicting a -20 penalty on all actions, but a caster could increase this penalty by another -20 up to a maximum of -100 for increase in the Weave of two each time. Spells can also be overcast for greater effect, typically from a magical ritual, self-sacrifice, and the correct celestial alignment. Overcasting a spell is more difficult, but does increase the Weave.

However, casting spells is not without its dangers within a land beset by the Darkmaster. If a player rolls doubles whilst his character casts a spell, the Game Master must make a ‘Magical Resonance Roll’. Depending on the location where the spell is cast and the type of spell, nothing might happen except for an inquisitive shadow fleetingly passing over, or the Darkmaster might be alerted to the caster’s presence or location and send his servants after him. A simple failure to cast a spell can also leave the caster stunned, the spell affecting someone other than the target, or worse.

Against the Darkmaster also provides detailed rules for movement—and specifically, extended travel, and the hazards and perils that a fellowship might face, complete with tables of possible hazards, terrain by terrain. The rules also cover campsites and the establishment, finding, and use of safe havens. These are intended to be exceptional locations, places where the Player Characters can rest and recuperate, but also train and mediate, study and conduct research, or simply relax, and eventually, even retire. Beyond the core rules, there is advice for the Game Master in terms of preparing and running the game, covering the principles of the role, how to pitch the game to the players, develop a scenario and a campaign, handling NPCs, running battles and war and how to involve the Player Characters, and more. There are options for generational play, play beyond Level Ten, and low magic campaigns, in which case, the Animist, Champion, Dabbler, and Wizard Vocations are replaced by the Sage Vocation. The bestiary, from Awakened Tree, Boggart, and Demon to Wild Best, Wight, and Wraith, is short with just thirty entries, but all feel appropriate to add to a Tolkienesque setting.

Against the Darkmaster does include magical items, but they are not intended to be common within a campaign, each item feeling special and unique, complete with a history. They include potions, items that grant skill or Stat bonuses or extra Magic Points, items that cast spells, weapons that have slaying ability woven into them that always ensure that any Critical Strike is lethal, and so on. There are notes on cursed items, enchanted materials, items of power that require attunement. The rules are supported with a treasury of various potencies.

Of course, the signature NPC in Against the Darkmaster is the Darkmaster itself. In Middle-earth and The Lord of the Rings, the Darkmaster is, of course, Sauron, the Dark Lord. In Against the Darkmaster, the Game Master gets to create her own. This includes creating a suitable epithet like ‘The Timeless Dark of Hate’ or ‘The Black Angel of Despair’, and a Covet Artefact, complete with power, drawback, bane, and prophecy. For example, the spear, which can be thrown at any foe in sight, slaying them, but there is one champion who will be able to catch it and throw it back at the wielder, killing him, whilst the spear will impale the heart of the Darkmaster, putting Him at rest. Should it ever be pulled out, the Darkmaster will be returned to life. To this, the Game Master can add servants, a dark place, and dark powers, including eldritch horror, life scourge, offering dark temptation, and heralding eternal winter. The mark of the Darkmaster upon a Player Character is measured by Taint, typically when a Dark Spell Lore is learned or a Tainted Magic Item is used. Taint corrupts a Player Character’s Passions, so that his Motivation becomes an Obsession, then his Allegiance a Dark Oath, and their Nature a Perversion. After this, the Player Character becomes an NPC. It is possible to find redemption from this, but only the one attempt can be made. There is good advice on exploring the how and why a Darkmaster came to be, and how to create his appearance and goals, and there are also three, ready-to-use examples, including ‘The Horned King of Annwn’, ‘The Witch Queen of Despair’, and ‘The Blood Lord of War’. These three and the details of the Dark Sorcery and Necromancy Spell Lores that follow, are presented on, thematically and appropriately, enough, black pages!

Rounding out Against the Darkmaster is ‘Shadows of the Northern Woods’, a complete mini-setting and campaign consisting of three scenarios, plus six pre-generated Player Characters and example Passions appropriate to the setting. That setting is the fortified settlement of Willow Lake and the surrounding vale. Whilst an ancient Darkmaster lurks on the other side of the mountains to the north, the scenarios involve hunting for a beast that stalks the surrounding area that has recently gone from killing livestock and stealing things to killing an inhabitant of Willow Lake, attempting to deal with the real threat to Willow Lake as the settlement is attacked by a scouting party from the Darkmaster’s army to the north, and preventing the destruction of Willow Lake, so saving everyone in the process. The region is nicely detailed and together the three scenarios should provide multiple session’s worth of playing, taking the Player Characters up to Level Three. If the tone of the campaign is suitably Tolkienesque, the setting still feels like a setting for a more generic fantasy roleplaying campaign. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but an indication that it is written to be played and concessions have had to be made.
Against the Darkmaster can be played as a traditional fantasy roleplaying game and the rules and content do support that. Where it shines though is in setting up and supporting a world imperilled by a great threat personified in the form of the Darkmaster, whilst at the same constraining some of the wider excesses of more traditional fantasy roleplaying games with a relatively limited bestiary and availability and choice of magical items. The lack of the latter makes them more interesting and important when they do appear and means that the Player Characters will be relying very much on their own skills and spells. In some ways this feels more like low rather than high fantasy, but the Player Characters do all have access to magic if they want it and they and their world are threatened by a great and powerful magic. In addition, within this framework, Against the Darkmaster provides plenty of options and advice on changing aspects of the rules, so that the Game Master and her players can play the game how they want.

Physically, Against the Darkmaster is a massive book, done in black and white. It is well written—though it does need an edit in places, it is easy to read, the artwork has a classic fantasy roleplaying feel to it, and its looks are deceptive. It is a big book, but the layout is quite open so that it never feels cramped or as if you can never find anything.

Against the Darkmaster: The Classic Game of Fantasy Adventure is not a direct retroclone of Middle-earth Role Playing: a complete system for adventuring in J.R.R. Tolkien’s World, but then it does not claim to be. Instead, it is heavily inspired by Middle-earth Role Playing, so much so that it does not so much wear that inspiration on its sleeve as wrap it around itself like a hooded elven cloak with an evil lord (who is definitely not Sauron) attached like an elven brooch. This it builds around a classic percentile system that is presented in an impressively clean, tidy, and accessible fashion with options and suggestions to adjust the game however the Game Master and her players want. The result is that for the group that wants to play classic roleplaying game in a Tolkienesque style, then Against the Darkmaster: The Classic Game of Fantasy Adventure is a great choice.

A Conjunction of Conspiracies

Reviews from R'lyeh -

For many, their first expose to the world of Lovecraftian investigative horror and conspiracy that is Delta Green would have been the scenario, Puppet Shows and Shadow Plays, which appeared in the Delta Green sourcebook published for use with Call of Cthulhu by Pagan Publishing in 1997. However, it was not the first scenario for Delta Green. That was Convergence and if On the Trail of the Loathsome Slime is not only one of the most important scenarios ever to be published for Call of Cthulhu and certainly the one with the best ever title, then Convergence is certainly its equal, in importance, if not the humour of its title. On the Trail of the Loathsome Slime, published in 1983 by Games Workshop, based on the article, ‘Cthulhu Now! - Call of Cthulhu in the 1980s’ which appeared in White Dwarf #42 (June 1983), followed by ‘Cthulhu Now! - Part 2: Mini-Scenario outlines for Call of Cthulhu in the 1980s’ in the next issue, introduced the concept of roleplaying in the modern day for Call of Cthulhu. Up until that point, scenarios and campaigns had been set in the Jazz Age of the Roaring Twenties. With On the Trail of the Loathsome Slime, players could have their Investigators encounter the Cthulhu Mythos in the world that they were familiar with, that is, their then here and now. If On the Trail of the Loathsome Slime updated Call of Cthulhu, then Convergence not only updated it by another decade, but it also introduced both an entirely new way of playing it and an entirely new reason to play it. In introducing Delta Green, what Convergence did was give a reason as to why the Player Characters are investigating the Mythos, that they are both investigating and covering up evidence of the Mythos.

Convergence, though, was not widely available when first published. This was in the pages of The Unspeakable Oath, Issue 7, published in the Autumn of 1992 by Pagan Publishing. Originally published for Call of Cthulhu, Fifth Edition, Arc Dream Publishing [has since updated the scenario for use with Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game. The scenario begins in September 1996, after the FBI and Georgia state troopers arrest Billy Ray Spivey, a teenager who has been on a strangely reluctant rampage, robbing gas stations and killing an attendant with punch, in pain, and fleeing his family after killing his father. Medical analysis of the teenager reveals that the muscles in his arms and legs have been entirely replaced with a strange tissue that mimics human muscle, but possesses non-human characteristics, and his arms and legs are covered with microscopic scars. This occurred after he disappeared for two days some nine days ago. The contact for the Agents—as the Player Characters in Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game—assigns them to travel to Spivey’s hometown of Groversville, Tennessee, investigate what happened to him and find out who or what performed the surgery on him.

The Player Characters are Federal Agents, but for this operation go undercover conducting an investigation into Spivey’s drug connections. Their investigation should be as low key as the town is sleepy and quiet, there being an air of melancholy to the place. In the course of their investigation, the Agents will discover classic signs of UFO activity—signs of abductions, cattle mutilation, and more… Then, Convergence really puts the knife in. The Agents are given a means of detecting the cause of Spivey’s condition and it is everywhere… If that is not enough, Convergence takes a firm grip of the handle of the knife and gives it a hard twist or two. Not only are the Agents being monitored—not once, but thrice over, by agents human and inhuman, and cowboy media ready to put them under the spotlight. In both ways, Convergence quickly amplifies its horror and the horror in which the Agents find themselves in. It serves this up in a couple of really great set-pieces, one of which will put the players off from going into motel bathrooms for life! There really are some scenes in the scenario which are going to make the players go, “Oh shit!” This is an indication of the quality of the writing, combined with the quality of the ideas underlying Delta Green. Ultimately, the play of Convergence boils down to two things. One is surviving. The other is surviving and conducting a successful cover up of the investigation. Both are incredibly challenging and there is high chance of a total party kill in the scenario.
If there is an issue with Convergence it is the television series, The X-Files. Both the setting of Delta Green and The X-Files deal with similar subjects and feel similar. However, Delta Green predates The X-Files, but nevertheless, Convergence very feels like an episode of the television series. A very nasty episode. Any player who goes into the scenario thinking that it was going to be like the television series would have received a big shock.

Physically, Convergence is superbly presented in the standard style for Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game. The artwork is also great, as you would expect from Dennis Detwiller.

Convergence is short, no surprise given its original appearance as a scenario in a semi-professional magazine. But it packs a punch—quite literally. Convergence was a great introduction to the conspiratorial world of Delta Green in 1992, establishing the pattern for Delta Green operations and scenarios for decades to come. It is still a horrifyingly scary three decades on…

Stone Age Science Fantasy Starter

Reviews from R'lyeh -

The Cave of Our People is a scenario for Primal Quest – Weird Stone & Sorcery Adventure Game. This roleplaying game of a Stone Age that never was, inspired by the fiction and films of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Thundarr the Barbarian, Horizon Zero Dawn, the Cavemaster RPG and Hollow Earth Expedition, and more. This is a world in which humanity survives alongside dinosaurs and other creatures and ancient secrets and aliens lurk, with the Player Characters as warriors and hunters, shamans and sorcerers, exploring an environment dominated by a nature untrammeled by mankind. The Cave of Our People is a short, one session—two at most—scenario designed to introduce players and their characters to the Stone Age world of Primal Quest. The Player Characters want to join the People of the Vale. This can be as children wanting to become adult members of the tribe or it can be as newcomers to the area wanting to join the tribe. The latter is the default for the scenario, but either way, the Player Characters will have to undergo an initiation, and it is this initiation that will take the Player Characters into ‘The Cave of Our People’. This cave is located in a stony hill just north of Lakit and it is here that the people of Lakit bury their ancestors. In this way, the cave also serves as a link between them and the wise spirits who reside inside, and this is why it is thus used to initiate newcomers to the customs of the People of the Vale.
The Cave of Our People begins with the Player Characters in a cave with no other exit than the one to the outside,, drinking tea made with rare herbs and magic mushrooms by Brikla, the village elder, shaman, and leader. Under the influence of the tea, the Player Characters undergo a series of challenges. They will fight the Ape King, harvest fruits from an ancient mother tree, be tested by the environment, come to the help of others—both dead and alive, and even make a leap into the unknown… Each encounter will both mystify and challenge the players and their characters in different ways. This will seem like a random series of encounters and for the most part it is. However, there are acts that may not be obvious, but if done, the Player Characters will earn more Experience Points and if they can make it to the end of the cave system (though there is scope for the Game Master to expand it if she wants), they may be able to learn about some of the particular tasks which will earn them these Experience Points, so tenacity and clever play will prevail.
At the end of the initiation, the Player Characters awaken to find themselves in the cave where they started. This brings the scenario to a close as well, but it also sets up what is the most fun part of the scenario. Each of the Player Characters gets to draw a cave painting to add to the wall based on their experiences in the cave, but the best bit is that the players get to draw this out themselves. Even better, is the fact is that given that these are cave paintings, the players do not have to be the best artists to draw them. The scenario even has a blank page of stone where the players could draw them.

Physically, The Cave of Our People is cleanly and simply laid out. The scenario is solidly written, whilst the artwork and the cartography are both excellent.

The Cave of Our People is simple and straightforward, an easy introduction to Primal Quest – Weird Stone & Sorcery Adventure Game. It is also simple to adapt so that a Game Master could run it for Paleomythic: A Stone and Sorcery Roleplaying Game and other Stone Age roleplaying games.

3D Printed Random Figures

Fantasy Toy Soldiers -

3D printing is almost certainly the future for high end figures of all types.  It is still fairly expensive to print the figures compared to mass production, but that may change in the coming years.  Below are the first 3D printed figures I purchased off of ebay.  The are a random assortment of super cool poses.  These are in 54mm scale.  It would be easy to spend a fortune on these figures.  I intend to be very particular about the ones I buy going forward.















































Friday Fear: Horror in Hopkinsville

Reviews from R'lyeh -

On the night of Sunday, 21st August 1955 and the early morning of Monday, 22nd August 1955, five adults and seven children, residents near the communities of near the communities of Kelly and Hopkinsville in Christian County, Kentucky, were attacked in their farmhouse home. For four hours they held off an assault by small, dark alien creatures peering in their windows and doors. Were the strange creatures, nicknamed the ‘Hopkinsville Goblins’, actually extraterrestrials from outer space, having just landed in their UFO, something else, or as the United States Air Force officially classified the encounter for a Project Blue Book, a hoax? Although the event has passed into folklore and become a renowned close encounter case amongst UFOlogists, even celebrated as the Little Green Men Days Festival in Kelly community, most regard it as a hoax. Now, your players have an opportunity to find out for themselves as their characters investigate a similar case in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Published by Yeti Spaghetti and Friends, Horror in Hopkinsville is a short, one-night horror scenario, part of and first in the publisher’s ‘Frightshow Classics’ line. Ostensibly written for use with Chill or Cryptworld: Chilling Adventures into the Unexplained, the percentile mechanics of the scenario mean that it could easily be adapted to run with Call of Cthulhu, Seventh Edition and similar roleplaying games, whilst its UFOlogical themes that it would very well with Delta Green: The Role-Playing Game.

Horror in Hopkinsville does not concern the infamous Kelly-Hopkinsville encounter directly. Rather it is a sequel in which the Player Characters investigate another incident and so might posit a cause for both. David and Julia Wright have been terrorised in recent weeks by strange and unusual occurrences in and around their house. Scratching sounds on the roof late at night, followed chittering or ‘clicking’ noises, loud thumps on the side of the house, the electricity in the house flickering, and the camera system that the Wrights installed to capture evidence of the culprits broke down, whilst the motion-sensor lights have proven ineffective, having detected nothing. The Wrights have been unable to find any cause and are almost at their wits’ end, so they want the matter investigated. The scenario suggests several ways in which the Player Characters might get involved—being a friend or relation of the Wrights, other inhabitants in the town having suffered similar incidences and indicate that the Wrights might have witnessed something, the Wrights revealed their story to a local paranormal or UFO study group of which the Player Characters are members, or the Player Characters are members of a secret organisation that investigates the paranormal or UFOs and are responding to a report made by the Wrights. However, the eight Player Characters provided in Horror in Hopkinsville are really only suited to the first three options rather than the fourth.

Prior to the start of the adventure proper, the Player Characters get to do some research, either using the Humanities/History, Journalism, or Paranormal/Folklore skills. Both the skills and their results reveal at the very least the details of the Kelly-Hopkinsville, and are also easily adapted to the roleplaying game of the Game Master’s choice. The scenario proper begins with the arrival of the Player Characters at the Wright family home on a quiet Wednesday evening. There they have the opportunity to both interview the family, including with some care, the Wright’s eight-year-old daughter, Tianna, and investigate the house. The inference is, of course, that whatever is plaguing the house, has some connection with Tianna, that, for example, she might be psychic. Investigation quickly reveals evidence that something is going on and this is confirmed as the action quickly heats up. The scenario neatly accounts for most of the options that the Player Characters might take, such as one of their number watching from outside whilst the rest investigate inside, but whatever the Player Characters do, it should lead up to a couple of jump scares and the revelation that there is something under the Wright family home—in the sewers!

If the scenario is fairly tightly plotted up until this point, the Player Characters have more freedom of action after they descend into the sewers under the street around the Wright family home and begin searching for the strange creatures that have been lurking near and scratching the house. Effectively, the scenario becomes a bug hunt in the dark, broken by the cold beam of their torches and the hissing of the white, pasty creatures. The scenario includes some encounter descriptions for when the Player Characters are down in the sewers, but does feel underwritten. Perhaps the possibility of the creatures having kidnapped the Wrights’ baby son might have provided some impetus for the Player Characters to act and it would have been interesting if the creatures’ lair were described so that the Player Characters could not only find it, but also find evidence that the activities of the creatures are connected to the Kelly-Hopkinsville encounter?

By the end of the scenario, the authorities will have arrived and the Player Characters will need to justify their actions, running around in the sewers, firing guns being frowned upon. This will take some persuasion, but will be easier if the Player Characters are members of a secret government agency. That agency might want to clean up the area and cover up the story even if they are not.

Physically, Horror in Hopkinsville is well presented, although the choice of font and artwork is a little heavy in style. This though, does not mean that it is bad. The scenario is not badly written, although it does need an edit in places and it is written for an American audience, so the Game Master may need to look up a term or two. The cartography of both the house and the sewers is decent, whilst the front cover is excellent, echoing the look and feel of the classic covers for the Chill roleplaying game and pulp horror paperback books.

Horror in Hopkinsville is designed to be a pulp horror scenario, one that is easy to run and quick to prepare—and that is the case, no matter which roleplaying rules the Game Master decides to use. However, it is not a sophisticated plot or story and the Game Master may want to develop it a bit further herself. However, for a single evening’s worth of straightforward, easy-to-prepare, pulp action horror, Horror in Hopkinsville is a decent choice.

Fantasy Fridays: Hyperborea 3rd Edition

The Other Side -

 Welcome to my first proper Fantasy Fridays. For this first one I want to feature one of my favorite fantasy RPGs. It is Jeffrey Talanian's Hyperborea RPG, now in its 3rd Edition.

I keep coming back to this game time and time again for good reason, it is just a fantastic game.

Hyperborea Player's ManualHyperborea Referee's Manual

This game has the feel of first Edition AD&D in a "Dying Earth" style setting. It is part Jack Vance's Dying Earth, but a greater part of Clark Ashton Smith's "Zothique." The world is old, cold, and dying.

The first edition was a boxed set of three books, and the second edition was a single massive tome. The third edition is now two separate books.

I have all three and have reviewed them all.  I'll throw some links below to the reviews and other characters, here is the the latest, the third edition, which sits nicely on my shelves with my AD&D books.

HYPERBOREA Player's ManualHYPERBOREA Player's Manual

PDF and Hardcover. 324 pages. Color cover, black & white art with full color art pages.

For my review, I am going to be considering the hardcover from the Kickstarter and the PDFs from DriveThruRPG.

The book starts with the credits, acknowledgments, and dedication to John Eric Holmes, the author/editor of the "Holmes" Basic edition. 

Chapter 1: Introduction this covers what this game is and what RPGs in general are. This is important and worth a read since it sets the stage for what sort of sub-genre this game covers, "swords, sorcery, and weird science-fantasy."  The classics of Swords and Sorcery are covered here briefly and how they add to the feeling of this game. This is pure Howard, Lovecraft, and Smith.

Chapter 2: Character Generation covers character creation. This chapter is brief covering of what you can do with the five chapters.  This also has a listing of the common "facts" known to every character. There is a section on leveling up. 

Chapter 3: Statistics or the "rolling up characters" chapter. The six recognizable methods are presented here. The most common of course is Method III; roll 4d6 drop the lowest.  We also have the same six attributes we have always had.

Each class has a "Fighting Ability" (FA) and a "Casting Ability" (CA) which relates to attacks. So yes, even magicians can get a little better in combat as they go up in level.  It's a great little shorthand and works great.  So a 4th level Fighter has a fighting ability of 4. A 4th level magician still only has a fighting ability of 1 and a cleric 3 and thief 3.  Subclasses can and do vary.

AC is descending (like old school games), BUT with the Fighting Ability stat it could be converted to an ascending AC easily.

Chapter 4: Classes We still have our Basic Four; Fighter, Magician, Cleric, and Thief.  Each also gets a number of subclasses.  Fighters get Barbarian, Berserker, Cataphract, Huntsman, Paladin, Ranger, and Warlock.  The Magician has Cryomancer, Illusionist, Necromancer, Pyromancer, and Witch. The Cleric has the Druid, Monk, Priest, Runegraver, and Shaman.  Finally, the Thief has the Assassin, Bard, Legerdemainist, Purloiner, and Scout.  

Each subclass is very much like its parent classes with some changes.  The classes look pretty well balanced.


HYPERBOREA Witch

Chapter 5: Background This covers all the things about the character that "happened" before they were characters.

Races are dealt with first. They include Amazons, Atlanteans, Esquimaux, Hyperboreans, Ixians, Kelts, Kimmerians, Lemurians, Picts, and Vikings along with the catch-all "Common" race of man.  No elves or dwarves here. Physique is also covered. 

Alignment is a simpler affair of Lawful Good, Lawful Evil, Chaotic Good, Chaotic Evil, and Neutral.

Along with race, there are various languages the characters can learn/know.  There are also gods here, an interesting mix of Greek, Lovecraftian, Norse, and Smith gods. 

There are background skills and weapon skills. Though I misread "charcoaler" as "chocolatier," and now I want a character with this background. 

Chapter 6: Equipment Or the "let's go shopping" chapter.  If you missed the "to hit modifiers vs. armor types/AC" in AD&D then I have a treat for you. Weapons here are more detailed than they were in previous editions of HYPERBOREA; or at least more detailed than my memory of the older editions.  Just checked, this one is much more detailed. 

Chapter 7: Sorcery This is our spell chapter but it also covers alchemy. Spells are split up by character class. Spells are limit to 6th level since classes are all limited to 12 levels. Spell descriptions are all alphabetical. This covers about 75 pages.  

Chapter 8: Adventure. This chapter improves over the previous editions. It covers all sorts of adventure topics like hirelings and henchmen, climbing, doors, nonstandard actions, time and movement.

Chapter 9: Combat. All sorts of combat topics are covered. Critical hits, unarmed combat, mounted combat and more. Damage and madness are also covered. The madness section is small and not really designed to mimic the real world. 

Appendix A: Name Generator. Pretty useful, really, to get the right feel of the game. Afterall "Bob the Barbarian" isn't going to cut it here. 

Appendix B: Lordship and Strongholds. What each class and subclass gains as a Lord or Lady of their chosen strongholds.  There is a great section on creating strongholds as well.

Appendix C: Cooperative Gaming. This covers how well to play in a group.

Appendix D: OGL Statement. This is our OGL statement.

These appendices (with the exception of D) are all new. 

There is also a great index.

So I will admit I was unsure about backing the 3rd Edition of HYPERBOREA.  I have the 1st and 2nd Editions and they have served me well over the last few years.  This edition brings enough new material to the table that it really is the definitive version of the game. 

The leatherette covers are really nice and I am happy I waited for it. Since the Player's and Ref's books are now separate, I could, if I wanted, pick up another Player's book.

The art is great. There are some reused pieces and still plenty of new ones. It uses the art well and helps set the tone of the game.

Leatherette covers

HYPERBOREA Referee's Manual

HYPERBOREA Referee's Manual

PDF and Hardcover. 308 pages. Color cover, black & white art with full-color art pages.

Chapter 10: Introduction Again, this is our introduction this time for the Game Master or Referee's point of view. What the Referee does for the game and more. 

Chapter 11: Refereeing This get's into the Game Mastering process in detail. This covers grant experience for the characters and setting up the campaign. 

Chapter 12: Bestiary Our monster section and truthfully one of my favorites. The expected ones are here, but there are also plenty of new ones.  This covers roughly 130 pages.  There are interesting new takes on some classic "D&D" monsters, plus many new ones like a bunch of new "lesser" and "sublunary" demons. The format is most similar to Basic or Labyrinth Lord, and it is full of the usual suspects with some Lovecraftian Horrors, and even remnants of alien and bygone ages. "Demons" are here, but no devils. 

Dæmons

Chapter 13: Treasure Covers treasure types and magical treasure. Among the magic items are things like Radium Pistols and other sc-fi artifacts. Very pulpy. It also includes some rules on scribing spell and protection scrolls. There is even a small section on Alchemy in Hyperborea. Very useful to have really.

Chapter 14: Gazetteer.  The lands are a pastiche of Howard, Vance, Lovecraft, and Smith.  If these names mean anything to you, then you know or have an idea, of what you are going to get here.  This section has been greatly expanded from the previous editions. Included here are the gods again and a little more on religion.  Basically, you get the idea that gods are either something you swear by (or to) or get sacrificed to by crazy cultists.  So yeah, you know I am a fan.

Appendix A: Weather in Hyperborea. Likely more important here than, say, other game worlds. Weather in Hyperborea is dangerous. 

Appendix B: Hazards of Hyperborea. There are horrible things waiting for you in Hyperborea and they are not all monsters or the weather. 

Appendix C: Waterborne Expeditions. Covers waterborne adventures and combat. 

Appendix D: Warfare and Siege. Your characters have built their strongholds. Now someone wants to know it down.  Here are the rules.

Appendix E: OGL Statement. The OGL statement for this book.

Since the 2nd edition, nearly every aspect of this game has been expanded, some sections more than others, but it is a great upgrade.

The art throughout is very evocative of the setting. Mighty thewed barbarians, shining knights, elderly and eldritch wizards. 

Larina Nix for Hyperborea 3rd Edition

A dedicated witch class? Yes please! That means I want to try out Larina here. Now I have tried other witch characters with the Hyperborea rules, but to build my iconic witch is something of a full test for me and a game. 

Larina at the End of Time

Larina Nix

Female Kelt Witch 12th level

Alignment: Neutral (Lawful)

ST 9 [+0 +0 2:6 4%]
DX 12 [+0 +0 3:6 4%]
CN 12 [+0 +0 75% 2:6 4%]
IN 18 [+3 95%, Bonus Spells 1, 2, 3, 4]
WS 18 [+2]
CH 18 [+3 12 +1]
Age: 30s
AC: 1 (Cloak of Darkness, Bracers of Defense)
HD: d4
hp: 27
FA: 5
CA: 12
#Attacks: 1/1
Damage: 1d4+3 (dagger+3), 1d6 (staff)
SV: 11 (+2 Transformation, +2 Sorcery)
ML: 12

Abilities
Alchemy, Brew Decoction, Familiar, Read Magic, Scroll Use, Scroll Writing, Sorcery, Dance of Beguilement, Effigy, Henchmen, Broom Enchantment, Ladyship, Witch's Apprentice

Spells
First level (5+1): Charm Person, Detect Magic, Mending, Shocking Grasp, Sleep, Write Spell (Charm Person in ring)
Second level (5+1): Bless, Extrasensory Perception, Hold Person, Identity, Ray of Enfeeblement, Shatter, (Ungovernable Hideous Laughter in ring)
Third level (4+1): Dispel Magic, Phantasm, Tongues, Witch Fire, Wind Wall, (Starlight in ring)
Fourth level (4+1): Gylph of Warding, Moonlight, Mirror Mirror, Sorcerer Eye, (Transfer Wounds in ring)
Fifth level (3): Anti-magic Shell, Control Winds, Shadow ConjurationSixth level (2): Control Weather, See
Languages: Common, Keltic (Goidelic), Hellenic (Greek), Old Norse, Speak with the Dead, Speak with Nature Spirits
Size: M (Height: 5'4", 125 lbs)
Move: 40
Saving Throw Modifiers: Transformation +2, Sorcery +2
Secondary Skill: Scribe
God: Lunaqqua

Flying Cat ("Cotton Ball"): AL N; SZ S; MV 10 (Fly 80); DX 15; AC 7; HD 1/4 (hp 5); #AT 3/1 (claw, claw, bite); D 1/1/1; SV 17; ML 5; XP 11

Normal Gear
Clothing, daggers (2), backpack, woolen blanket, chalk, ink and quill, polished steel mirror, incendiary oil, parchment (4), soft leather pouch (2), small sack (2), tinderbox, torches (2), wineskin (wine), writing stick, iron rations (one week), spellbook (contains all prepared spells), 5 gp, 15 sp, gems (100gp)

Magic Items
Bracers of Defense, Ring of Spell Storing (4 spells), Ring of Telekinesis (100 lbs), Wand of Magic Missiles, Wand of Lightning Bolts, Bonded Broom, Cloak of Shadows, Gem of Brightness, Horn of Blasting (Thor), Copper Skull Necklace 

I like this version. So who is this Larina? This is Larina at the End of Time. She has all the memories of her past lives and often gets lost in them. Not really remembering who, or when, she is. She lives alone in her witch's cottage with her, yet unnamed apprentice. This is not the Witch-Queen Larina, this is something lesser and far older.

She would make for a great NPC for the next time I run this game.

Larina sheets for Hyperborea

Who Should Play This Game?

Anyone that enjoyed First Edition AD&D but liked the level limits of B/X D&D. Humans abound here, so if you like playing anything other than a human, you might not have as much fun. Also, the world is bleak and dying. This is not a time of heroes to make for a better day; better days are past. This is a time to survive against brutal odds and in the face of an uncaring universe. 

Also, play this if you loved the works of Jack Vance, H.P. Lovecraft, and especially Clark Ashton Smith. 

There is also a pretty good online community for this game, so support and advice are often a click or two away.

This is one of the games that I play the least but want to play the most. I love everything about it. It combines so many of my favorite things in one game that I am hard pressed to think of something I would have done differently.  Well...maybe go to level 14 so I could map it onto my Basic-era games plans a bit better.  

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