The structure of the scenarios includes some well handled introduction scenes for each Player Character so that we get to see them in action before the plot gets rolling. Much like the film its takes its inspiration from, the early part of the scenario is on rails as they take a guided tour round the park. After that though, the players and their characters have more freedom.
Sunday, 31 May 2026
Your SHIVER Blockbuster Starter
The structure of the scenarios includes some well handled introduction scenes for each Player Character so that we get to see them in action before the plot gets rolling. Much like the film its takes its inspiration from, the early part of the scenario is on rails as they take a guided tour round the park. After that though, the players and their characters have more freedom.
Saturday, 30 May 2026
Home & Horror
Achtung! Cthulhu is the roleplaying game of fast-paced pulp action and Mythos magic published by Modiphius Entertainment. It is pitches the Allied Agents of the Britain’s Section M, the United States’ Majestic, and the brave Resistance into a Secret War against those Nazi Agents and organisations which would command and entreat with the occult and forces beyond the understanding of mankind. They are willing to risk their lives and their sanity against malicious Nazi villains and the unfathomable gods and monsters of the Mythos themselves, each striving for supremacy in mankind’s darkest yet finest hour! Yet even the darkest of drives to take advantage of the Mythos is riven by differing ideologies and approaches pandering to Hitler’s whims. The Black Sun consists of Nazi warrior-sorcerers supreme who use foul magic and summoned creatures from nameless dimensions to dominate the battlefields of men, whilst Nachtwölfe, the Night Wolves, utilise technology, biological enhancements, and wunderwaffen (wonder weapons) to win the war for Germany. Ultimately, both utilise and fall under the malign influence of the Mythos, the forces of which have their own unknowable designs…
From the start, Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance makes clear that campaigns involving the various resistance organisations will be different to normal campaigns for Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20, darker in tone and more dangerous in play. Whilst the Player Characters may be the heroic protagonists of the story, they will be constantly watched and often hunted, whilst not always having the support of their fellow countrymen. Collaborators and traitors might betray them at any minute—and sometimes they can be family or colleagues. Thus, the atmosphere of Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance is one of mistrust and paranoia rather than just its usual straightforward combination of heroic, pulp action and weird Secret War occultism. There is plenty of scope for that combination, often acts of sabotage and resistance snatched in the dead of night between hiding out in fear of capture, interrogation, and worse. What this means is that the discussion about the campaign’s themes and tone in Session Zero will be differ from that of a standard Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20 campaign. Whilst the supplement does include a discussion safety tools, it is the standard discussion found in all Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20 books rather than addressing issues specific to Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance.
The includes a mix of equipment, spells, and tomes. There are requisition rules in Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20 and these primarily come in to play during preparation for a mission, usually at a base. Members of the Resistance rarely have that luxury, so most of the time they default to being in the field, though they can request items from SOE in London. Equipment includes a range of new skill kits, such as a Poisoner’s Kit and a Safecracking Kit; a bicycle dynamo for charging and powering electrical devices and a one-shot pistol disguised as a smoker’s pipe(!); and experimental items like Glue Grenades and Charges developed by Polish alchemists, and a Grounding Spike, a pure iron, sigil marked spike created by the Parisian diabolic society, Loge de Flauros, to weaken summoned demons! The new tome and spells consist of a Demonology spellbook, Abjuration Of The Regal Star, and its associated spells. Of these the new equipment is likely to be of more use, depending upon whether the Game Master accepts demonology in her game.
For the Game Master, there are tables and charts, which she can use to create missions for her Player Characters. These can be used in conjunction with the Achtung! Cthulhu Gamemaster’s Toolkit. Lastly, she is provided with five missions that she can develop into full scenarios. These include stealing a Mythos tome from a grand exhibition of stolen art in ‘The Grotesque Gala’; concealing signs of Resistance activities when the Nazis raid a base of operations in ‘Home and Hearth’; investigate and sabotage Nachtwölfe operations in a factory in ‘The Industry of Storms’; recover dropped supplies before the Germans do in ‘Under Moonlit Skies’; and delay a convoy train in ‘War on the Rails’. All five are given a good page of details and adventure hooks as well as a full colour map. These maps are also provided unmarked for the players’ use.
Physically, Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance is well presented. The artwork is great and everything is well organised.
Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance is mechanically sound, but thematically underwritten in places. Whilst it does mention the differences in tone and style for a Resistance style campaign, it does not explore them in any depth and the lack of advice for the Game Master given those differences is disappointing. Another area where the supplement could have benefited is a bibliography, since the activities and stories of the various resistance groups are not as well known and the Game Master could have done with greater inspiration. And then there is the inclusion of Demonology? Does it fit? Does it not fit? Its inclusion pushes Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20 towards more pulp horror, rather its usual Lovecraftian action horror, and it very likely not going to be for everyone. Achtung! Cthulhu 2d20: Vive La Résistance only touches the surface of its subject, leaving the Game Master with work to do to explore its themes.
Quick-Start Saturday: Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual
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.
What is it?
Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual is the quick-start for Tom Clancy’s The Division: The Official Tabletop Roleplaying Game, the roleplaying game based on the video game developed by Massive Entertainment and published by Ubisoft, and its subsequent novels and comic book series.
It is a eighty-four page, 51.14 MB full colour PDF.
It is decently written and the artwork really is very good.
Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual is designed to be played through in one or two sessions.
What else do you need to play?
Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual needs five ten-sided dice per player.
Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual includes five pre-generated Player Characters or Agents. They consist of a sharpshooter and scout, a non-specialist soldier, an ex-member of the riot squad, a medic, and a leader. None of the pre-generated Agents have backgrounds.
How is a Player Character defined?
What do you play?
No. Not as written, but examples of play or combat would not have gone amiss.
Is it easy to prepare?
Yes. Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual is easy to prepare.
Is it worth it?
Yes. Tom Clancy’s The Division – Quickstart Manual does give a good idea of that the roleplaying game will be like. Some players may be disappointed by the lack of tactical elements in the combat system and the combat mechanics may be too light for others, especially given the combat-focused game play of the video game it is based on. On the other hand the rules are not too complex, the background to the setting is surprisingly detailed in its explanation, and the scenario is decent.
Friday, 29 May 2026
Friday Fantasy: Altar of Madness
Altar of Madness is the final resting place of the mythical First Wizard and the good news is that it has been found. Who or what the First Wizard was is not known, but what is known is that he was interred with a splendid variety of magical treasures ripe for the taking. To which the blurb for Altar of Madness adds, “You are so, so fucked.” Which is entirely accurate, because what Altar of Madness actually is a deathtrap dungeon, or rather a deathtrap room. A room filled with features that are going to entice the players to have their characters investigate and search and play around with and have things go wrong, oh so wrong, that their characters are going to walk away changed. Changed. Cursed. Poisoned. Maddened. Scarred. Aware. Altered. Infested. Bleeding. Incensed. Undead. Armoured. Prescient. Bejewelled. Blinded and blinding. Unlucky. Colourblind. Deviated. All of these are entirely possible conditions that a Player Character can suffer in Altar of Madness. Essentially, this is a tomb with not so much traps as items and objects and spaces which if the Player Characters interact with them, they are going to suffer. This is one giant ‘screw you’ for the players and their characters if their curiosity and greed get the better of them—and it will because there are good magical items to be found—and touch things.
The Altar of Madness is a room one hundred feet in diameter and twenty feet high, with a five foot wide ledge running round the edge. Steps lead down to a bowl of thick phosphorescent mist out of which rises in the centre of the room is fountain topped with demonic skulls and filled with an oily black liquid. A ten foot high diameter hangs over the fountain. Spaced around the room is a statue of a naked woman holding aloft an actual bolt of lightning and a chain hangs straight up from the floor to a hole in space. To the left, there is writing in an unknown language on the wall, whilst to the right, there is a mural of a star-filled sky. In alcoves dotted around the room is an altar carved with human faces, a skeleton dressed in fine clothes lying on a couch, two sarcophagi in separate alcoves, and an eyeball floating in a jar, sitting on a table. There is more, but this is what is visible from the door.
All of this can be interacted with and all of it is described in a very great detail. As are the effects of what happens when the Player Characters do, those effects being rolled on the tables that are associated with each piece of furniture or dressing in the room. Some of the features in the room are connected, primarily through the treasures that they hide, but most are not. The result is that actually many of the features are more installations, almost pieces of art that are designed to screw with the Player Characters. They do not feel out of place as such, but they could be used in a dungeon of the Game Master’s design without any real issue.
This being a design for Lamentations of the Flame Princess Weird Fantasy Roleplay, it should be no surprise that the content is intended for mature players. That said, some of the descriptions of what the Player Characters could do and what the consequences are, is prurient, if not distasteful, concerning as it does the molestation of a highly anatomically accurate statue and a pliant woman. To be clear, the author is not encouraging or condoning such actions, but rather explaining the consequences if a player has his character undertake such actions. The first reaction is to wonder quite who you are roleplaying with if a player does think of these actions and voices them, and then the Game Master allows it. The second reaction is to wonder if that content should have been in the book at all, to which the answer is no. Of course, the Game Master can ignore such content if she wants and not allow for the possibility of the players suggesting such ideas, but still… No.
Physically, Altar of Madness is well done. It has an arcane look to it with just the sigil on its front cover and no title or blurb. Inside the book is in black and white and full of dense text. This encounter does need a careful study to understand how each item in the room works.
Altar of Madness is an amazingly inventive exercise in ‘screw the characters, screw the players’ in deathtrap dungeon design. A comical circus of consequences for the overly curious.
Drawing Dungeons
As its subtitle suggests, Dungeon Designer’s Deck: 100 Cards to Level Up your Dungeon Game consists of one hundred cards. This includes sixty ‘Terrain Feature Cards’, ten ‘Quest Cards’, ten ‘Room Cards’, ten ‘Door Cards’, five ‘Enemy Generator Cards’, two ‘Random Loot Cards’, and three ‘How To Use Cards’. This includes sixty Terrain Feature Cards, ten Quest Cards, ten Room Cards, ten Door Cards, five Enemy Generator Cards, two Random Loot Cards, and three How to use Cards. In addition to this, there is a foldout map and a reference book. The map is double-sided and shows plain flagstones on one side and a simple room arrangement on the other. If the Game Master or player wants other room arrangements, the Terrain Feature Cards do work with other maps from the publisher.
The Reference Book replicates all of the content on the cards and can be used during play or during the designing of a quest or dungeon. The contents of the Dungeon Designer’s Deck can be used randomly. So ‘Encounter Cards’ can be drawn when a new room is entered and ‘Door Cards’ when a door is found, and this can be done randomly, whether the Dungeon Master is drawing it for her group of players and their adventurers or a player is drawing the cards for solo play. Unlike other solo and/or random dungeon generator tools, there is map making or drawing necessary, though there is nothing to stop the Dungeon Master or player from drawing a map. The Dungeon Master can use the cards to help her create a dungeon as part of her preparation. Alternatively, the ‘Quest Cards’ provide outlines of missions that can played solo and run for a group. These require some preparation and whilst the Dungeon Master might run the same ‘Quest Card’ more than once, there is still plenty in the box for the Dungeon Master to use, whilst a solo player might try again to see how well he can do this time.
The multi-purpose Dungeon Designer’s Deck: 100 Cards to Level Up your Dungeon Game has the potential to provide quite a bit of game play, whether from creating quests and dungeons for solo or group play and enhance that game play with attractive scenery that can be different each time it is drawn. The Dungeon Master will need to provide the connective tissue, that is, the narrative to the story generated and the corridors between locations, but that is her job.
Monday, 25 May 2026
[Fanzine Focus XLIII] The Travellers’ Digest Number 10
Since 2008 with the publication of Fight On #1, the Old School Renaissance has had its own fanzines. The advantage of the Old School Renaissance is that the various Retroclones draw from the same source and thus one Dungeons & Dragons-style RPG is compatible with another. This means that the contents of one fanzine will be compatible with the Retroclone that you already run and play even if not specifically written for it. Labyrinth Lord and Lamentations of the Flame Princess Weird Fantasy Roleplay have proved to be popular choices to base fanzines around, as has Swords & Wizardry. However, not all fanzines written with the Old School Renaissance in mind need to be written for a specific retroclone. Although not the case now, the popularity of Traveller would spawn several fanzines, of which The Travellers’ Digest, published by Digest Group Publications, was the most well known and would eventually transform from a fanzine into a magazine.
The publication of The Travellers’ Digest #1 in December, 1985 marked the entry of Digest Group Publications into the hobby and from this small, but ambitious beginnings would stem a complete campaign and numerous highly-regarded supplements for Game Designers Workshop’s Traveller and MegaTraveller, as well as a magazine that all together would run for twenty-one issues between 1985 and 1990. The conceit was that The Travellers’ Digest was a magazine within the setting of the Third Imperium, its offices based on Deneb in the Deneb Sector, and that it awarded the Travellers’ Digest Touring Award. This award would be won by one of the Player Characters and thus the stage is set for ‘The Grand Tour’, the long-running campaign in the pages of The Travellers’ Digest. In classic fashion, as with Europe of the eighteenth century, this would take the Player Characters on a tour of the major capitals of known space. These include Vland, Capitol, Terra, the Aslan Hierate, and even across the Great Rift. The meat of this first issue, as well as subsequent issues, would be dedicated to an adventure, each a stop-off on the ‘The Grand Tour’, along with support for it. The date for the first issue of The Travellers’ Digest and thus when the campaign begins is 152-1101, the 152nd day of the 1101st year of the Imperium.
The Travellers’ Digest Number 10 was published in 1987. One major change announced in the editorial is the magazine will no longer print the Universal Task Profile. In past issues, this has explained the mechanical format used in The Travellers’ Digest, but with the publication of and its application in MegaTraveller, it seems redundant. This gives the magazine two extra pages to play with! In previous issue, The Travellers’ Digest Number 9, and ninth part of ‘The Grand Tour’ brought the Travellers to Capital, the heart of the Third Imperium, and the Emperor’s court at ‘Before the Iridium Throne’. When ‘Reference Point’, the tenth part by Gary L. Thomas, opens, the Travellers found themselves with a problem. To get to Capital, the four Travellers were granted Imperial space-required travel vouchers. However, the Emperor’s largesse does not run in the opposite direction. Thus, they find themselves on Capital, the core of the Third Imperium, with nowhere to go and now way of paying for it! Fortunately, three of the four have transferable skills aboard ship and the other is a member of the Traveller’s Aid Society and so can begin make their way. They decide to see more of the Third Imperium and head Rimward towards Sol in the Solomani Sphere.
‘Reference Point’ is followed by a second adventure, ‘Plague of Perruques’. This is by Gary L. Thomas and Marc W. Miller and is set in the Regina Subsector following the end of the Fifth Frontier War. The party, led by Baron Ganidiirsi hault-Reitan, are touring his holdings, surveying them for damage, when he has arranged a hunting trip for the Rebacked Slonth on Uakye in Regina Subsector. The scenario is divided into two parts. In the first half, the Player Characters go hunting, but in the second, they return to the capital to discover that a strange and unfortunately deadly plague has broken out. Its symptoms include grey fibres appearing at the roots of suffers’ hair and covering the skull in a few days, followed by a film growing over the eyes, leading to blindness and fever. It kills half of its sufferers. This is an investigative scenario in which the Player Characters need to travel to various locations, sifting rumour from fact. It is challenging and needs some set-up by the Referee to ensure that the players have some pointers to get started, but this is a solid scenario, and like ‘Reference Point’ before it, has its world data presented in same format as for The Grand Survey. Task details are provided for the hunting half of the scenario, and whilst the scenario was originally written as a tournament scenario, it does not come with any pre-generated Player Characters.
[Fanzine Focus XLIII] The Valley Out of Time: Gods Walk the Valley
On the tail of Old School Renaissance has come another movement—the rise of the fanzine. Although the fanzine—a nonprofessional and nonofficial publication produced by fans of a particular cultural phenomenon, got its start in Science Fiction fandom, in the gaming hobby it first started with Chess and Diplomacy fanzines before finding fertile ground in the roleplaying hobby in the 1970s. Here these amateurish publications allowed the hobby a public space for two things. First, they were somewhere that the hobby could voice opinions and ideas that lay outside those of a game’s publisher. Second, in the Golden Age of roleplaying when the Dungeon Masters were expected to create their own settings and adventures, they also provided a rough and ready source of support for the game of your choice. Many also served as vehicles for the fanzine editor’s house campaign and thus they showed how another Dungeon Master and her group played said game. This would often change over time if a fanzine accepted submissions. Initially, fanzines were primarily dedicated to the big three RPGs of the 1970s—Dungeons & Dragons, RuneQuest, and Traveller—but fanzines have appeared dedicated to other RPGs since, some of which helped keep a game popular in the face of no official support.
The Valley Out of Time: Gods Walk the Valley is the sixth and final entry in the series. Unfortunately, it marks a return to form for the series. Unlike the fourth and fifth issues in the series before it, The Valley Out of Time: Tribes and Factions and The Valley Out of Time: Rotten at the Core it does not do anything more than just give the Judge one more dinosaur or megafauna or one more fight with one more dinosaur or megafauna. For the Judge that wants fights and monsters, the first three issues of The Valley Out of Time were perfect, and the good news is that in the case of The Valley Out of Time: Gods Walk the Valley, that Judge will find the issue equally as good. However, for the Judge wanting more, this sixth issue as well as the first three issues, will be a disappointment. What the series promises is set out on the back cover: “The Valley Out of Time is a series of ’zine-sized adventures from SGP. This valley can be placed in any ongoing campaign, and is set in the “Neanderthal Period” of development. Huge monsters – both dinosaurs and otherwise – and devolved humanoids plague the area, and only the hardiest of adventurers will prevail!” The problem is that the series failed to deliver on anything more than just dinosaurs and at best, very minor encounters, all of which emphasised combat rather than interaction or exploration. Certainly, until The Valley Out of Time: Tribes and Factions and The Valley Out of Time: Rotten at the Core, the series failed to provide what might be called an adventure as promised on the back cover.







