Every Week It's Wibbley-Wobbley Timey-Wimey Pookie-Reviewery...

Friday, 3 October 2025

The Other OSR: Buried in the Bahamas

The skies darken as the storm clouds gather and the winds begin to whirl. The Tarrantula is caught in a hurricane and as her pirate crew tries to ride out the worst of the storm, up and down the swells as tall as her masts, a wicked galleon bears down upon her. A ship with hull of bones and torn black sails, flames roaring from the eyes of the skulls mounted on her aft, and then there is her crew. Black skeletons. They leap upon the crew of The Tarrantula and as battle swirls across her deck, one of the crew screams out, “Land!”. This is the beginning of Buried in the Bahamas: An Introductory Adventure for Pirate Borg. Specifically, it is designed to serve as an introductory adventure for not just for the players, but also the Game Master, one that can be run as the beginning of an ongoing campaign or as one-shot scenario that can be shortened to run as a one-shot, suitable for convention play. It begins with a linear introduction that will introduce the players and their characters to the setting and the rules—including how combat and the Devil’s Luck work—before throwing ashore and into a situation where they have more freedom of action. With this agency, they can sail the seas of the Dark Caribbean, fight zombies and sharks, and go in search of treasure!

Buried in the Bahamas: An Introductory Adventure for Pirate Borg is published by Limithron. As an adventure for Pirate Borg, it takes place in the Dark Caribbean, a sea of tropical islands marked with European towns and fortresses and ruins of civilisations long gone, of shipwrecks with rich cargoes and even richer treasures, and of the Scourge. The Scourge made the dead walk once again, ghosts return to haunt the living, and monsters lurk ready to smash the foothold that the Europeans have established in the region. The governors and the viceroys, representatives of kings and queens, have forced to adapt and rule with no contact from home following the Scourge and even take advantage of the situation, especially since the discovery of abilities and addictive nature of ASH, the ash of the burned and ground undead.

Buried in the Bahamas: An Introductory Adventure for Pirate Borg is based upon Mörk Borg, the Swedish pre-apocalypse Old School Renaissance style roleplaying game designed by Ockult Örtmästare Games and Stockholm Kartell and also published by Free League Publishing. As an introductory scenario, it presents the Game Master and her players with a simple set-up and outlines the step-by-step process that will take everyone from an introduction to Pirate Borg and the Dark Caribbean through character creation and into the game and the scenario. This is intentionally tight at the beginning, with a battle scene that begins en media res and so throws them into the action, enables the players to establish their characters and get used to the rules, but as the scenario progresses, it opens up and the players and their characters have greater freedom of action.

The layout of Buried in the Bahamas is also designed with this in mind. The initial battle scene is all presented on a double page spread, including its set-up, guidance for the Game Master, what the players and their characters have to do, and the monsters and NPCs detailed the margins. The next scene is laid out in similar fashion, but presents more options in terms of what the Player Characters can do on the island they have been shipwrecked on. The island is tiny, but there is still room to explore and direct the other survivors, whether that is to build shelter or a raft to get off the island. What will drive the Player Characters to leave the island is not just survival, but the treasure map they were handed by the late captain of The Tarantula.

It is possession of this treasure map that will drive the second half of the scenario, pushing the Player Characters to sail to the other two islands nearby where the entrance to the cave where the treasure is hidden may be found. These islands are larger and far more detailed, enabling the Player Characters to spend time in a shanty town, dive on a wreck, and explore zombie-infested ruins. Ultimately, the Player Characters will discover the entrance to the Cave of Seven Skulls where the treasure has been hidden. The cave leads to a tomb complex, one that the Player Characters will have an advantage in exploring if their backgrounds are academic, archaeological, or linguistic in nature, but even so, this is a potentially deadly complex, but the rewards are high in terms of both coin and magic.

The Game Master can run Buried in the Bahamas as written and it will provide multiple sessions’ worth of play and potentially, lead into a longer campaign. Alternatively, the middle section of the scenario, where the Player Characters explore the larger of three islands in the scenario as a mini-hexcrawl, can be cut and the scenario run in fewer sessions, or even a single session. Throughout the scenario, there is advice for the Game Master and references to the core rules for Pirate Borg. The advice for the Game Master is stronger at the start of the scenario and that is appropriate, since this start is designed to ease both her and her players and their characters into the setting and the game.

Physically, Buried in the Bahamas is very well laid out. Almost everything is clearly presented and easy to read. The thing that is not, is the actual advice for the Game Master as it is given in a pale grey text on a white background making it difficult to read. Otherwise, the maps for the scenario are all nicely done and the artwork is reasonable.

Experienced players will enjoy it and get into its set-up and play faster, but Buried in the Bahamas: An Introductory Adventure for Pirate Borg is a really good beginning scenario for Pirate Borg. It is not only flexible in how it is used, but it effectively helps the Game Master guide her players into the world of the Dark Caribbean and the play of Pirate Borg.

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