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

Friday, 12 December 2025

Friday Fantasy: Return of the Green Death

Doom comes once again to the village of Riverside! Sixty years ago, Terrapocalypse the Great Green Wyrm—‘The Green Death’—descended upon the tower of the Coterie of the Way Wizards that had traditionally protected the trading port that stands at the confluence of the Cranen and Iron Wash Rivers. It ravaged the tower with green flame and spread its poison across the surrounding the land with its toxic breath and then fell on the village. It took prisoners and turned the region into a wasteland. Then it disappeared and the people returned and re-established the village, building it once again into a rough, but profitable town. Were it not for the prophetic words of an old crone who begs in Riverside, ‘The Green Death’ would have been passed into legend, but now green flames have been seen erupting from atop of the old tower of Coterie of the Way Wizards. The villagers fear that the dragon has returned and worry what it will do next. The village guild masters have paid a tribute to Terrapocalypse’s emissary, though some whisper that if this continues, it will bankrupt Riverside. Worse, the Festival of the Harvest Moon, Riverside’s autumn trade moot occurs in six days and the guild masters fear that word of the return of the ‘The Green Death’ will dissuade people from attending, damaging the village’s reputation and portending a poor winter. Thus, with less than a week to go, the guild masters resort to desperate measures—they will hire adventurers to investigate the old tower of Coterie of the Way Wizards, find out if Terrapocalypse the Great Green Wyrm has truly returned, and drive away his emissary.

This is the set-up for Return of the Green Death, a scenario for ShadowDark, the retroclone inspired by both the Old School Renaissance and Dungeons & Dragons, Fifth Edition from The Arcane Library. The scenario is written and published by John White and designed to be played by four First Level Player Characters. And as a set-up, it is a scam. The players are likely to realise this fairly quickly, if not their characters. Terrapocalypse’s emissary, Renlo Lullsen the Enchanter—much like the titular Wizard of Oz—has charmed the inhabitants of Riverside with a lot of green-coloured special effects and is now exhorting them. He also has other agents in the village and they will do their best to persuade the Player Characters not to get involved if they learn that the Guild Masters have hired them to investigate the tower of the Coterie of the Way Wizards. The NPC whom the Game Master will have the most fun roleplaying is the Old Crone, the beggar who is the last remaining worshipper of the Green Death and can impart some useful information in between her mad utterances and pleas for a copper or two. However, bar rumours about there being a vampire in the village, the Player Characters will not linger long in Riverside.

The Player Characters can find multiple ways into the tower of the Coterie of the Way Wizards, including via an underground lake and lift into the tower, where they will encounter some Mist Dwarfs. They are noted as being notorious slavers, but quickly disappear from the scenario, their appearance left unexplored and undeveloped. The tower itself is infested with Kobolds, who for the most part are either working or playing. Player Characters who employ stealth and even a little charm can make relatively easy progress through the tower. There are some fun encounters such as playing a gambling game with the Kobolds using animal bones, saving a Halfling from a deathmatch with giant lizards being prodded to attack by Kobolds, and coming across a Half-Ogre harem! There are secrets to be uncovered too, some left over from when the tower was occupied by wizards and some to do with Renlo Lullsen’s activities.

However, there are elements in Return of the Green Death which are left are unexplained. For example, why exactly the Kobolds are excavating parts of the tower? How are the Mist Dwarves involved? What is nature of the dragon atop the tower that the Player Characters need to get past? Lastly, Renlo Lullsen remains an opaque figure. The author never fully explains who he is and what he wants and the Player Characters never have an opportunity to interact with him beyond the physical fight in the final confrontation atop the tower. There are no suggestions as to what he might say, so that he remains a flat, two-dimensional villain to fight, and nothing more.

Rounding out Return of the Green Death are some suggestions as to what might happen next, previewing the sequel, Fates of Doom. Appendices detail several new spells, a handful of new magic items, and the monster stats as well as all of the maps for the scenario. These maps are intended to be used with the Player Characters.

Physically, Return of the Green Death is tidily presented and the artwork is decent throughout. The maps are all good and those for the Game Master are marked with the monster locations. However, the scenario could have done with more maps and illustrations. These include maps of the wider region showing the relationship between Riverside and the tower of the Coterie of the Way Wizards. There are also no illustrations of the tower, so that it is only depicted on the inside by the maps, and the overall effect is a lack of context and feel for the region as a whole.

Return of the Green Death is a decent enough adventure, but at points, whether it is more maps or illustrations, or unfortunately, more NPC character development, it is lacking. Meaning that the Game Master is going to have flesh out parts of the scenario for it to be a fully realised affair.

The Other OSR: Eye of the Aeons

Troika!
is both a setting and a roleplaying game. As the latter, it provides simple, clear mechanics inspired by the Fighting Fantasy series of solo adventure books, but combined with a wonderfully weird cast of character types, all ready to play the constantly odd introductory adventure, ‘The Blancmange and Thistle’. As the former, it takes the Player Characters on adventures through the multiverse, from one strange sphere to another, to visit twin towers which in their dying are spreading a blight that are turning a world to dust, investigate murder on the Nantucket Sleigh Ride on an ice planet, and investigate hard boiled murder and economic malfeasance following the collapse of the Scarf-Worm investment bubble. At the heart of Troika! stands the city itself, large, undefined, existing somewhere in the cosmos with easy access from one dimension after another, visited by tourists from across the universe and next door, and in game terms, possessing room aplenty for further additions, details, and locations. One such location is Eye of the Aeons.

Eye of the Aeons is the third entry in a new series of scenarios for Troika! from the Melsonian Arts Council begun with Whalgravaak’s Warehouse and continued with The Hand of God. This is the ‘1:5 Troika Adventures’ series, which places an emphasis on shorter, location-based adventures, typically hexcrawls or dungeoncrawls, set within the city of Troika, but which do not provide new Backgrounds for Player Characters or ‘Hack’ how Troika! is played. Eye of the Aeons lives up to these tenets, in that it is a dungeoncrawl that takes place in a single castle location, but arguably fails to live up to these tenets by not actually being set in the city of Troika, but in the rubbish and detritus strewn wastes beyond the city’s extensive walls. The location is the Manse of Mirrors, a walled castle consisting of seven domes and three towers that is home to Queen Yanwa of the Cyclopes. It is of particular interest to the Wizards of the College Illuminate, a minor school of magic in the city of Troika, because it also houses the Eye of the Aeons, a mysterious prism of immense power said to be cause of the Red Eye Curse that afflicts some of the college’s members. ;Victims of this curse randomly shoot a fire bolt that pierces armour, which makes them a danger to others. ;Queen Yanwa of the Cyclopes also suffers from the Red Eye Curse, but is rumoured to dole out an elixir that cures or at least alleviates the ailment, attracting many sufferers, known as ‘Burning Eye Pilgrims’ to the manse in the hope of relief. Unfortunately, Queen Yanwa has been beset by rebellion, not once, but twice. The Cyclopes’ former servants, the Anthropophagi, which have four arms and hands and no legs, so always walk on their hands, a single eye and a mouth in their stomach, and no head, have rebelled and set up their own kingdom in the manse, where they squabble and fight, and regularly hold elections to see who the new Jub-Jub will be. Worse, Yorg the Usurper has dethroned Queen Yanwa, and studies the Eye of the Aeons in hopes that it will repower his golden barge and enable him and his compatriots to escape to the Outer Spheres where he hopes they will be safe from the fate ordained for him. Add in rumours of a Chaos Godling at the heart of the manse, a missing wizard’s apprentice, and treasures said to be hidden within its walls, and the Manse of Mirrors sounds like an intriguing place to visit and explore.

Getting the Player Characters to the Manse of Mirrors requires some set-up. Several hooks are given, ranging from shattering the mirrors in the manse to prevent something terrible from approaching this sphere to finding a cure to the Red Eye Curse by asking Yorg the Usurper. One or more of these can be used to drive the Player Characters to explore the manse and interact with its factions, who though opposed to each other maintain a rough truce between themselves, barring the odd raid or Queen Yanwa’s Cyclopes deciding to turn the mighty weapon atop the Gun Tower on somewhere in the Manse. That said, the ; obvious starting point and entrance into the Manse is not as clearly signposted as it could be and the factions, the relationships between them. and what they want are not as clearly explained as they could be. Which is a pity because it hinders the set-up process and getting the Player Characters involved in Eye of the Aeons.

The likelihood is that the Player Characters will begin at the Burning Eye Pilgrims’ Camp in one of the ruined tower, though there are other options as how they might enter the Manse. Here they can pick up rumours, interact with the members of the various factions, and begin to learn more about the situation within the Manse. Beyond this the grounds of the manse are split between a very large pond and an equally large, but overgrown garden. The pond is dominated by the boathouse, home to the rowdy Anthropophagi, and the blind boatwoman who sees beauty in ugliness and ugliness in beauty and cleanliness, and who prefers to be paid in trinkets and eyes. The garden is an oasis of calm by comparison. The Manse, though, is dominated by its nineteen towers, many of them in ruins, some of them containing mounds of rubbish and rubble, and some home to the rival factions of the Cyclopes. Others though house sets of mirrors, set up in differing fashions, sometimes to hold an object in place between them, sometimes to hold something or someone within. The mirrors form the major magical element of the scenario and finding the way to operate them will grant access to some of the secrets in the Manse of Mirrors.

There are some nasty surprises to be found and dangers to be encountered in the walls of the Manse of Mirrors, but Eye of the Aeons is not a scenario that drips with menace or suffers a sense of impending doom. Rather, the Manse of Mirrors feels forlorn, run down, and forgotten, the last refuge of a fallen Queen, that the Player Characters can explore and pick over, perhaps siding with one faction or another as they attempt to fulfil their objectives within the manse. This will expose them to the weirdness and wonder to be found in the Manse of Mirrors.

The scenario is supported by stats the various faction members in the Manse of Mirrors, as well as the enemies that the Player Characters might face. There is a list of new equipment too, but many of the items to be found within the manse’s walls are drawn from the Troika! rulebook.

Physically, Eye of the Aeons is very well presented. The layout is tidy and the artwork is excellent.

Eye of the Aeons is far from a bad adventure, but in comparison to other scenarios for Troika! and its ‘1:5 Troika Adventures’ series, it does not grab the reader and make him want to run it. Unlike the first two entries in the series, it lacks the enthrallment of a good elevator pitch and its set-up needs development itself to motivate the players and their characters to want to explore the Manse of the Mirrors. None of that is beyond the ability of a good Game Master to fix, and if that is done, Eye of the Aeons is a quiet, eerie manse meander punctuated by hullabaloo and horror.

Monday, 8 December 2025

Miskatonic Monday #399: Strange Carol

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—
Publisher: Chaosium, Inc.
Author: Konstantinos Kotsaridis

Setting: Arkham, 1926
Product: Scenario
What You Get: Forty-one page, 12.35 MB Full Colour PDF

Elevator Pitch: The circus is evil, because circuses are evil…
Plot Hook: What are a mistrusted academic’s ties to the circus?
Plot Support: Staging advice, six pre-generated Investigators, twenty-two NPCs, five handouts, one map, and one Mythos monster.
Production Values: Decent

Pros
# Can be tied with a Miskatonic University campaign
# Easy to adapt to other university cities and time frames
# Twists the classic circus as you would expect
# Cacophobia
# Algophobia
# Anomalophobia

Cons
# Muddled background & set-up
# Needs a slight edit

Conclusion
# The circus is a show, the scenario is a show
# Leads the Investigators on a clue trail without much agency

Companion Chronicles #23: A Guide to Arthurian Britain

Much like the Miskatonic Repository for Call of Cthulhu, Seventh Edition and the Jonstown Compendium for RuneQuest: Roleplaying in Glorantha, The Companions of Arthur is a curated platform for user-made content, but for material set in Greg Stafford’s masterpiece of Arthurian legend and romance, Pendragon. It enables creators to sell their own original content for use with Pendragon, Sixth Edition. This can be original scenarios, background material, alternate Arthurian settings, and more, but none of this content should be considered to be ‘canon’, but rather fall under ‘Your Pendragon Will Vary’. This means that there is still scope for the authors to create interesting and useful content that others can bring to their Pendragon campaigns.

—oOo—

What is the Nature of the Quest?
A Guide to Arthurian Britain is a supplement for use with Pendragon, Sixth Edition. It describes itself as ‘A Resource Supplement for Pendragon’.

It is a full colour, fourteen page, 65.38 MB PDF.

The layout is tidy, but it does need an edit in places.

Where is the Quest Set?
A Guide to Arthurian Britain is a supplement for Pendragon, Sixth Edition that provides an introduction to, and an overview of, Britain in the Anarchy, the period of chaos between the death of Uther Pendragon and Arthur pulling the sword from the stone and being proclaimed king and before the chronicles of King Arthur begin.

Who should go on this Quest?
Any type of Player-knight can go on this quest.

What does the Quest require?
A Guide to Arthurian Britain requires the Pendragon, Sixth Edition Core Rulebook and the Pendragon: Gamemaster’s Handbook in the long term, but also works with the Pendragon Starter Set.

Where will the Quest take the Knights?
A Guide to Arthurian Britain can be divided into three parts. The first, ‘Britain, Your Home’ is ‘A Handout for New Knights’ that summarises the history and geography of the land at the end of Anarchy. This is one-page primer that focuses upon the history of Britain after the Romans have left and the resulting conflicts between the Britons and the Picts and Saxons as well as an overview of the country’s geography and politics. Particular attention here is paid to Logres as the main kingdom of Britain and Salisbury, the default starting point for The Great Pendragon Campaign. It is short and snappy and provides a decent introduction without miring the prospective player in detail.

The main part of A Guide to Arthurian Britain is for the Game Master and presents a guide to the ‘Lands of the Cymri’, from Cambria in the west, Essex in the east, from Cumbria in the north to Cornwall in the south. In each it gives a breakdown of each region politics and history, lists its significance during Arthur’s reign, suggests some story themes and hooks, and recommends further ‘Reading and Viewing’. For example, it explains that Cornwall was split between the Duchy of Cornwall and Kingdom of Cornwall, but following the death of King Uther, King Idres of the Kingdom of Cornwall conquered the Duchy of Cornwall and given his support in battle to the Saxons. Thematically, Cornwall remains a thorn in King Arthur’s side even when openly resisting his rule for much of his reign. King Idres also rules Britanny, which many Bretons are opposed to, and so there are seeds for rebellion there as well as the suggestion that an adventure in Cornwall might involve Wreckers—a very Cornish theme—and giants, many civilised, and fairies may be found in the region. In terms of ‘Reading and Viewing’, it suggests the classic film Excalibur, since Cornwall is Arthur’s birthplace (and source of his accent), as well as the film Tristan and Isolde and the poems it is based upon.

In general, more detail is given the kingdoms and regions that surround Logres, whilst the Saxon kingdoms are only given a paragraph each and their primary suggested ‘Reading and Viewing’ is Beowulf. Other lands are not ignored, the supplement providing introductions to the Picts and their lands north of the Two Walls, Ireland, and even further beyond. Lastly, A Guide to Arthurian Britain includes a handy timeline from 410 CE when the Romans leave Britain to the Sword Tournament in Londinium in 510 CE.

Should the Knights ride out on this Quest?
A Guide to Arthurian Britain is a good introduction to the Britain of Pendragon, Sixth Edition, the ‘Britain, Your Home’ handout being a most useful and excellent introduction for players with relatively little knowledge of the setting, that works for a convention game or a home campaign. A Guide to Arthurian Britain is good for forearming both player and Game Master alike and getting them ready for their Arthurian saga.

Sunday, 7 December 2025

Weird Wizard Wondrousness

For a thousand years there has existed a divide in the land. In the west stands the Great Kingdom and many other nations that arose following the collapse of earlier civilisations and kingdoms, most notably the Old Empire. In the east, the land is dominated by one figure—the Weird Wizard. Whether a fallen god, cast down from the stars by Lord Death himself or a traveller from another world swallowed by darkness, the Weird Wizard established himself and brooked no challenge. None dared do so, for rumours came of the great changes he wrought over his lands, raising mountains to reach the stars, setting rocks to flow like a waterfall into a great chasm, islands floating in the sky, forests of mushrooms, or the clockworks he established to run his capital, the Forbidden City. His shadow, the ‘Shadow of the Weird Wizard’ reached beyond the divide, for surely all of the ills—great and small—that beset the peoples of the Great Kingdom could be blamed for whatever strangeness he was enacting in his lands. Then one day, he disappeared. No one knows why, but it remains a matter of much speculation, from lowly taverns to the great courts. Whether the gods decided to punish him by sealing him away with the Ancient Ones or a mighty ended his reign with a single blow of his sword, perhaps one day someone will discover what happened to him. With his disappearance too went the divide between the Great Kingdom and all the lands to the east. With it went stability and assurance as the Great Kingdom fell into civil war. No one knows if the two are connected. What they do know is that refugees have fled to the borderlands as monsters from the east—cruel faeries, hybrid beasts, the undead, multilegged hulking collectors, and floating eyes that hang in the air trailing their nerve endings—have skulked west into the borderlands. As explorers slip into the east in search of answers, the inhabitants and refugees in the borderlands need protecting. It is a time for brave adventurers to step forth and stop the monsters, to protect the people, and perhaps track them to their source, and so become heroes.

This is the set-up for Shadow of the Weird Wizard, a roleplaying game of high fantasy, high magic, and high adventure published by Schwalb Entertainment following a successful Kickstarter campaign. The publisher is best known for the grim dark, horror fantasy roleplaying game, Shadow of the Demon Lord, but whilst both Shadow of the Demon Lord and Shadow of the Weird Wizard use the same Demon Lord Engine for their mechanics, Shadow of the Weird Wizard is not as bleak and the Player Characters are intended to champion the innocent, brave grave dangers, and right terrible wrongs. In other words, they are meant to be heroes rather than just protagonists. Shadow of the Weird Wizard consists of two core books. One is Shadow of the Weird Wizard, the other is Secrets of the Weird Wizard, but Shadow of the Weird Wizard is the core book, providing an introduction to the setting, the core rules for combat and magic, the means to create Player Characters, and lots and lots of spells and career choices.

Although there is some history given for the setting of Shadow of the Weird Wizard, it really defines the nature of the world and what it is like rather than geographical and political specifics. These are that the world of Erth is much like that of Earth, including the Sun and the Moon, a day lasting twenty-four hours, and week seven days, and so on. This is where the differences end because Erth is home to multiple species— Dwarfs, Faeries, Clockworks, Dragonets, and more, as well as weird hybrid creatures, dragons, and monsters. Magic is real and studied, there is technological development (including muskets and bicycles), the gods exist and some even walk the Erth, the Ancient Ones were defeated by Lord Death and remain asleep, and so on. The combination gives the setting a sense of familiarity and difference. The companion volume, Secrets of the Weird Wizard, does go into more detail, as well as doing one more pertinent thing, and that is providing Ancestry details. Only the Human Ancestry is available in Shadow of the Weird Wizard, which is disappointing. However, Secrets of the Weird Wizard is intended as companion, so details of Archon (exiled angels), Cambion (Human and Fiend parentage), Centaur, Changeling, Clockwork, Daeva, Dhampir, Dragonet, Dwarf, Elf, Faun, Goblin, Halfling, Haren (leporine or rabbit-like), Harpy, Hobgoblin, Janni (masters of elemental magic), Naga, Pollywog, Revenant, Sphinx, Spriggan, Sprite, Triton, Warg, and Woodwose ancestries can all be found in its pages.

As with other Demon Lord Engine roleplaying games, Shadow of the Weird Wizard is a Class or Profession and Level roleplaying game. A Player Character starts at First Level and can rise as far as Tenth Level (although Secrets of the Weird Wizard does give options for continued play beyond this). As a Player Character gains Levels he will enter and follow different Paths, each Path providing an array of benefits. These include setting the Player Character’s natural defence and Health, and determining languages spoken, bonus damage, and talents. Some also grant access to Traditions, different schools of magic, mostly for the spellcasting character types, some martial and skill-based character options grant access to limited magic.

The most basic Paths are Fighter, Mage, Priest, and Rogue, which provides benefits at First, Second, and Fifth Level. At Third Level, a Player Character can enter an Expert Path, categorised as Paths of Battle, Paths of Faith, Paths of Power, and Paths of Skill, which provides benefits at Third, Fourth, Sixth, and Ninth Level, and at Seventh Level, he enters a Master Path. These are categorised as Paths of Arms, Paths of the Gods, Paths of Magic, and Paths of prowess, granting benefits at Seventh, Eighth, and Tenth Level. The choice of Paths widen as a Player Character gains Levels, so that whilst at the beginning one Rogue will very much be like another Rogue, by the time a Rogue has followed the Expert Path and entered the Master Path, he really is different in comparison to another Rogue. So, a Priest might begin as just that, but for his Master Path, he might become a Cleric and cast miracles or an Inquisitor, a Paladin, or a Theurge who summons angels to aid him, and then for the Master Path he could continue to cast miracles as a High Priest, or switch to become a Moon Celebrant in service to Sister Moon.

Besides Ancestry and Level, a Player Character is defined by four attributes—Strength, Agility, Intellect, and Will. These initially range in value between nine and twelve and provide a modifier, which is equal to the attribute minus ten. He will also have a basic profession; what he did before becoming an adventurer which will provide an item of equipment. The creation process starts by selecting an Ancestry (only Human in Shadow of the Weird Wizard, but another option from Secrets of the Weird Wizard), and then rolling for the Player Character’s Profession, and then Distinctive Feature, Affability, Dependability, Outlook, Receptiveness, Sociability, Piety, and Religions. The process is quick and easy.

Name: Tilia
Ancestry: Human
Profession: Hunter (Wilderness)
Level 1
Novice Path: Priest
Distinctive Feature: Different coloured eyes
Affability: You can fend for yourself in social situations, but you’re also fine when alone.
Dependability: You try to be conscientious, but sometimes fall short
Outlook: You strive to be a positive, upbeat person. You look for the good in all things and hope for the best.
Receptiveness: New ideas and activities make you uncomfortable.
Sociability: You believe people can be good or bad. You withhold judgment about someone until you get to know them.
Piety: You believe in the gods and offer prayers to them all.
Religions: Horned Lord
Divine Calling: Some tragedy or horrific experience saw you turn to the gods for meaning. You might have suffered an attack by undead, encountered a spirit, or had someone close to you fall into the clutches of a diabolical fiend.

Strength 11 (+1) Agility 10 (+0) Intellect 13 (+3) Will 11 (+1)
Natural Defence: 9 Health: 14

Languages: Common and one other language
Traditions: Primal, Animism
Talents: Prayer (Magical), Holy Symbol (Magical), Holy Smite, Holy Healing, Holy Denunciation, Armor of the Ancient Oak, Bestial Aspect
Spells: Plant the Seed, Stalk Prey

The basic mechanic in Shadow of the Weird Wizard is simple and straightforward, whether a player needs to make an attribute check, an attack roll, or a roll against an attack or spell for his character. The player rolls a twenty-sided die and adds any Attribute bonuses or penalties, and if the result is ten or more, or is equal to or greater than the target number, typically the target’s Defence value, his character succeeds. In addition, a Player Character can also have Boons or Banes—each a six-sided die—that he can add to, or subtract from, the roll. These can come from a Path, a Talent, or spell, and Banes and Boons cancel each other out prior to rolling, but when rolling multiples of either type, only the highest number rolled counts and is added to the total. A critical success occurs on a roll higher than the target or a natural twenty, whilst a critical failure occurs if the result is zero or less. This can occur due to the effect of a Bane reducing the final result. In comparison, a luck roll is made without any modifiers and the target number is always ten.

Combat uses the same core mechanic, with attack rolls being against the target’s Defence value, either natural or derived from armour worn. Damage is accrued up to the limit of the target’s Health. If the target suffers damage equal to, or greater than, half his Health, he is injured and may suffer extra effects from certain Talents and spells, and if he suffers total damage equal to his Health, he is his incapacitated. Damage beyond this actually reduces his Health and the amount of damage he can suffer. If his Health is reduced to zero, he is dead. In general, Player Characters have more Health than in other Demon Lord Engine roleplaying games.

The most radical element of combat is how initiative works in Shadow of the Weird Wizard. In a round, a combatant can move and use an action, whether an attack or casting a spell or something else, but the Player Characters do not automatically act first. The NPCs and any monsters controlled by the Sage—as the Game Master is known—move and act first, followed by the Player Characters, which can be in any order. However, some effects and actions enable the Player Characters to act out of turn, using Reactions. For example, a Free Attack occurs as a Reaction if an enemy moves out of reach without retreating, a Dodge is a Reaction, and so is ‘Taking the Initiative’. If the Player Characters are aware of their enemies at the beginning of a new round, then they can use a Reaction to ‘Take the Initiative’ and act before the enemy does. They can do this in any order they like. That said, effects such as wearing heavy armour prevents the ‘Take the Initiative’ Reaction. This seems more complex than it really is and really means that the Player Characters have more control than it first appears.

Magic and spellcasting is also kept simple. Shadow of the Weird Wizard a total of thirty-three Traditions from Aeromancy, Alchemy, and Alteration to Technomancy, Teleportation, and War. Each provides four Talents and eighteen spells spread across Novice, Expert, and Master Paths. Each spell description includes its effects as well as its target and number of castings. The latter is the number of times that a spellcaster can cast it between rests, which never changes unless a player decides to choose that spell again, doubling the amount. Spell effects, especially damage effects, do increase as the caster moves into the next Path. For the most part, casting a spell is also automatic, though a player may need to make an attribute check to gain a particular effect and improve its effects, or to strike a target. This is done on a spell by spell basis, so that any player with a Mage or Priest character will need to learn the specifics of every spell that their character knows. Lastly, Mage and Priest Player Characters can learn any Traditions that they want, though Priests are likely to pick those that relate to their faiths and their gods.

Besides Paths and spells, Shadow of the Weird Wizard includes rules for most adventuring situations, common information that every Player Character will know, how to handle social situations, companions and hirelings, and a lengthy guide to equipment that includes a few magical items, explosives, clockwork prosthetic and wheeled chairs, and more. Yet it is the Paths and Spells that dominate Shadow of the Weird Wizard. Beyond the four Novice Paths, Shadow of the Weird Wizard details forty-two Expert Paths and one-hundred-and-twenty-one Master Paths, and whilst a Player Character could specialise, combining Expert and Master Paths to be the best at a particular way of fighting, school of magic, or expertise, he is also free to switch Paths entirely because there are no prerequisites. It means that the possible combinations are more than might be explored over the course of multiple campaigns!

Physically, Shadow of the Weird Wizard is a densely presented book. The artwork is good and it is well written, but there is a lot of information in the book, obviously related to character creation as well as the core rules. Given that density, the core rules could have been made more obvious and perhaps a reference page included at the start or end of the book to make it easier to run.

Shadow of the Weird Wizard is the equivalent of the Player’s Handbook for Shadow of the Weird Wizard. It is not quite perfect, the inclusion of only one Ancestry limits player choice, but a roleplaying group is going to be using Secrets of the Weird Wizard anyway, so this is not as much of an issue as it could have been, whereas the density of the book making the rules less accessible than they could have been, is more of an issue. Not an insurmountable issue by any means, but rather one that could have eased. Nevertheless, as well as presenting a more streamlined version of the Demon Lord Engine mechanics for its rules, it presents the player with hundreds of options and then hundreds and hundreds of choices and combinations in terms of what his character is and can be. Want to become a Berserker who Juggernauts his way through walls? A Holy Avenger who employs Necromancy to wreak his vengeance? An Inheritor of a mighty magical weapon who as Diabolist deals in the Dark Arts? An Artificer who imbues technology with magic and pilots his own War Machine? All these—and a whole lot more—are possible in Shadow of the Weird Wizard. Overall, Shadow of the Weird Wizard is a comprehensive set-up and introduction to playing positive, high fantasy using the Demon Lord Engine.

Saturday, 6 December 2025

The Full Zero to Hero

Like any good action film, Mission Dossier: Project Medusa starts with a bang! Not with the bang of a gunshot, but with the sound a door being kicked open and the bruised and bloody contact that the Heroes have been waiting for, being thrown to the floor of the diner where they have been waiting for him. After the requisite brawl with the thugs that beat him and came after the Heroes, the chase is on the MacGuffin of the title—a speedy drive to the airfield followed by a race to board a departing aeroplane, which before it reaches it destination, will explode, deliberately, of course, leaving the heroes in mid air and short of parachutes… This then is the opening part of Mission Dossier: Project Medusa, a scenario, or ‘mini-campaign’ for Outgunned, the cinematic action roleplaying game inspired by the classic action films of the past sixty years—Die Hard, Goldfinger, Kingsman, Ocean’s Eleven, Hot Fuzz, Lethal Weapon, and John Wick.

Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is ‘A 3-Shot Introductory Campaign for Outgunned’ and if it seems familiar, there is a good reasons for this. This is because its first part, or shot, ‘Race Against Time’ is used in both the core rulebook as the introductory scenario and in Outgunned– Zero to Hero, the quick-start for Outgunned. So, by the time the Director and her players get to Mission Dossier: Project Medusa, they may already have played through the first part. That said, it is nice to have the whole scenario in one place, and further, all of Mission Dossier: Project Medusa can be run using the Outgunned – Zero to Hero rather than the full rules in Outgunned. Both Outgunned and Mission Dossier: Project Medusa were funded via a Kickstarter campaign and published by the Italian publisher, Two Little Mice, via Free League Publishing. Mission Dossier: Project Medusa comes with four ready-to-play Heroes—a maverick undercover police officer, a hotshot driver and pilot, an ever cheerful bounty hunter, and a charming martial artist—and can be played through in two or three sessions. Some elements of these Heroes are written into the story, so if the players want to create their own Heroes, the Director will need to link them to the plot. If the players do want to create their own Heroes, it is recommended that one of them be a hotshot driver.

Mission Dossier: Project Medusa quickly summarises the plot and its three shots, introduces the four Heroes (character sheets for each of them is included at the back), and both explains who the villain is and what his dastardly plan is. This is the charming Greek philanthropist, Konstantin Stamos, who has a very dark past and a suitcase to take delivery of. The suitcase is the MacGuffin of the scenario and contains a deadly virus, which if unleashed, would kill millions. ‘Race Against Time’ is not clear as to where it is set beyond an unspecified sea-side city, but the action definitely switches to Greece for the second and parts of the scenario, ‘Unwanted Guests’ and ‘Into the Heart of Medusa’. In ‘Unwanted Guests’, the Heroes land in Greece and discover who is behind the beating up of the Heroes’ contact in the previous act, one Konstantin Stamos, and that he is holding a big party very shortly. Which gives an opportunity for the Heroes to infiltrate the event, trying to avoid the attention of the security at Stamos’ villa, and learning more of the villain’s secrets. Since this is the second act, it will end with another fight, of course, a big fight, and will end with the Heroes being captured and imprisoned. ‘Into the Heart of Medusa’, they discover the truly monstrous nature of both Stamos’ plans and its origins, fight their way out of a collapsing secret laboratory, and engage in a helicopter chase, before a final showdown between Stamos and one Hero atop a cliff.

Make no mistake, Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is linear and straightforward, and whilst there is opportunity for the players to embellish parts of the scenario, there is no deviation from its plot. This should be okay though, since the players are here for an action film, not a melodrama, and for their heroes to land punches and shoot the villains and look very, very cool whilst doing it.

What is particularly noticeable about Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is its format. The details of the scenario are always placed on the left, whilst the advice—or ‘Pro-Tips’—for the Director, is always placed on the right in a big, bold, red block with the text in white and different typefaces used on each page. The ‘Pro-Tips’ varies in size, or rather width, throughout the scenario. On some two-page spreads, it is a simple sidebar, on others, it takes up a whole page. The latter includes every scene and situation in the adventure, the advice and suggestions keyed to particular scenes. The advice suggests moments when the Heroes have an opportunity to rest and remove a Condition they might have suffered in a previous scene, the best way to handle a scene, ideas as to how a scene might be expanded or embellished typically to enable the players to develop their Heroes, and to expand on the villains’ actions. The advice is very good and there is so much of it that Mission Dossier: Project Medusa might actually be considered to be half-adventure, half-advice for the Director. Certainly, there is a lot here that the Director can learn and apply to subsequent Outgunned campaigns.

Lastly, Mission Dossier: Project Medusa includes not one, but six ideas which the Director can develop into full scenarios, all connected to the events of Mission Dossier: Project Medusa. These are divided into three sequels and three prequels, so that with the latter, the Director could run some flashback scenarios before the sequels which link to the mysterious organisation that Stamos was connected to. What this organisation is and what it wants is very much up to the Director to decide and develop (unless, of course, the publisher develops a further campaign in the meantime).

Physically, beyond the depictions of the Heroes and major NPCs, Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is not illustrated. Nor are there any maps. The latter should not be too much of an issue, since many of the locations in the scenario will be familiar from all manner of action films. That said, there is nothing to stop the Director from finding her own maps and floorplans. Otherwise, the layout is clean and tidy and effective as outlined earlier. It does need an edit in places though.

Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is exactly what you want in a scenario for an action movie. It is fast paced, there are secrets and betrayals to discover, a mystery to be solved, the world to be saved, and lots and lots of opportunities for the Heroes to be heroic. Of course, this means that there are more than a few clichés of the genre along the way, but they are to be expected and the players should be buying into them as much as they are the cinematic action and chance for their Heroes to look cool. Supported by excellent advice for Director, Mission Dossier: Project Medusa is an entertaining introduction to running and playing Outgunned – Cinematic Action Role Playing Game.

Magazine Madness 43: Interface RED Volume 4

The gaming magazine is dead. After all, when was the last time that you were able to purchase a gaming magazine at your nearest newsagent? Games Workshop’s White Dwarf is of course the exception, but it has been over a decade since Dragon appeared in print. However, in more recent times, the hobby has found other means to bring the magazine format to the market. Digitally, of course, but publishers have also created their own in-house titles and sold them direct or through distribution. Another vehicle has been Kickststarter.com, which has allowed amateurs to write, create, fund, and publish titles of their own, much like the fanzines of Kickstarter’s ZineQuest. The resulting titles are not fanzines though, being longer, tackling broader subject matters, and more professional in terms of their layout and design.

—oOo—

Technically Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4 is not a magazine. It collects some of the downloadable content made available for Cyberpunk RED, the fourth edition of R. Talsorian Games, Inc.’s Cyberpunk roleplaying game. So, its origins are not those of a magazine, but between 1990 and 1992, Prometheus Press published six issues of the magazine, Interface, which provided support for both Cyberpunk 2013 and Cyberpunk 2.0.2.0. It this mantle that Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 1, Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 2, Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 3,
and future issues is picking up in providing support for the current edition of the roleplaying game. As a consequence of the issue collecting previously available downloadable content, there is a lot in the issue that is both immediately useful and can be prepared for play with relative ease. There is also some that is not, and may not make it into a Game Master’s campaign.

Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4
opens with ‘Hornet’s Pharmacy: A Chemical Wonderland’, which introduces a dealer—Hornet—in street drugs, his wares, and more. There are combat drugs for the Solo, of course, but surprisingly for the Exec and the Netrunner too. ‘Berserker’, which lets the user shrug off the immediate effects of Critical Injuries, so good for the Solo, whilst the Exec becomes a killer in the office with temporary bonuses to Will and Cool with ‘Prime Time’, but a huge loss of Humanity, and ‘Sixgun’, which gives a Netrunner a bonus to Speed when Jacked in and always effect a Safe Jack Out, but reduces his Move and Ref. Additive Compounds include a ‘Delaying Compound’, which can delay the effects of a substance, and ‘Distilling Compound’, which supercharges any substance, increasing the difficulty to resist its effects. New gear includes the Suzumebachi Assassin Drone, which can be operated remotely and is equipped with a dartgun, and new Cyberware, such as the ‘Pursuit Security Inc. Gas Jet’, which is installed in a cyberarm and is an aerosol gas launcher that effectively works as an exotic shotgun that sprays the chemical or toxin of the user’s choice.

‘Black Chrome+: Extra Content for Black Chrome’ puts the Edgerunners in contact with another dealer, Molly Anderson, who has stuff left out of Black Chrome. There is ‘Junk Ammunition’ and ‘Scavenged Armour’ for the Edgerunner on a budget, incendiary grenades, of course called ‘Molotov Cocktails’, and more. The content of ‘Black Chrome+: Extra Content for Black Chrome’ is less useful than ‘Hornet’s Pharmacy: A Chemical Wonderland’, since it is really filling in niches rather than presenting items of more general use. What is definite of use in ‘Black Chrome+: Extra Content for Black Chrome’ is the answers to questions, “What does X style look like?” and “What do External and Internal Linear Frames look like?” Part of Player Character generation in Cyberpunk RED is deciding what the Player Character looks like and to that end, Cyberpunk RED suggests ten basic fashion types, such as ‘Bag Lady Chic’, ‘Gang Colours’, and ‘Urban Flash’. In response to R. Talsorian Games, Inc. having to answer the first question one too many times, it decides to show you with a set of mini illustrations for each fashion type that nicely bring this aspect of 2045 to life. Then it does the same for Linear Frames along with some description too. Again, very useful because the Game Master can show her players rather than just tell.

The fact that ‘Achievements and Loot Boxes’ was the publisher’s April Fool’s download makes complete sense, since it is bonkers, but it is easy to imagine it being integrated into play. It is a reward system, known as the ‘M.R.A.M.A.Z.E.’ or ‘Mystery Reward Achievements Making (you) Attain (the) Zenith (of) Existence’ program, which gives an Edgerunner a trophy for attaining certain targets. For example, ‘15 Minutes of Fame’ is awarded when an Edgerunner reaches Reputation level 7, ‘Going Dark’ for completing a mission without resorting to combat, and ‘Pub Crawl’, for a buying a drink in a bar in each one of Night City’s districts. In return, a player can turn an Achievement in to gain a reroll or one of Mr. Amaze’s Mystery Boxes, randomly rolled for. This adds loot boxes to the play of Cyberpunk RED and versions of the Achievement Badges are given that the Game Master could print out and actually put on badges! It is a very silly option and probably the best way to use it is either to ignore it or to combine it with a city wide event with a limited time frame.

‘Stickball: The sport of the street’ gives the rules for the game that some gangs in Night City, as well as other groups, use as a means to settle disputes. It is a non-lethal combat sport in which microwavers, acid paintballs, heavy handguns loaded with Stickball-sanctioned rubber ammunition, smoke grenades, stun batons, stun guns, and Stickball Sticks are ‘legal’ weapons, the game being played with electrified balls and electromagnetic lacrosse sticks. Although the players and their Edgerunners need to learn the rules to Stickball, this adds a non-lethal option for an action session or so. Of course, if violence is the preferred option, then a gang might take the engines off one or more AV-4s, bolt them onto a combination of bus, truck, and/or junk, and hang whatever it can off the sides and mount the biggest weapons it can to create a cobbled-together scrap vehicle that might just give the gang the means to stand up to the hi-tech, dedicated combat vehicles fielded by law enforcement and corporate military forces. If only for a little while… The result is ‘The Dreaded Punknaught’, a Mad Max-style battering ram, weapons platform, and ganger transport that the article gives the means and guide for the Game Master to create one for her gangs. It even comes with a character sheet for the Punknaught and its own death table, and the vehicle can be used as threat to the Edgerunners, as a temporary vehicle for the Edgerunners, and the Edgerunners might even have to build one themselves!

One of the useful articles back in Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 2 was ‘Cargo Containers & Cube Hotels’ which explored options of where an Edgerunner might live if on a budget. ‘Corporate Conapts & Studio Apartments’ is the sequel, presenting more luxurious choices for when an Edgerunner is ready to move out of the modified Cargo Container home. The focus here is on the types of accommodation that the various corporations provide and where they are in Night City. For example, the employees of bitter rivals Petrochem and SovOil both reside in the ‘Petrochem & SovOil Joint Temporary Housing Solution’ near their offices. The facility is cheap because it is what they could get after they blew each other’s apartment blocks and to avoid each, the employees of Petrochem use one lift and one tennis court and the employees of SovOil use another. Unless one of the lifts breaks down and, in the meantime, human resources for both companies say it is just temporary. There are lots of little details like this, plus the article suggests what apartments are like in different districts and what fittings the up and coming Edgerunner might furnish his new home with. Real instant coffee, smart oven, and orbital crystal shower head for the ultimate in water pressure are some of the options here. The article definitely needed more though, and a sequel would be fitting since players do like to go shopping, if not always for guns.

‘Halloween Screamsheets: three spooky shorts for Cyberpunk RED’ outlines three scenarios to run during October. In ‘Haunted Vendit Haunts NCU Campus’, it appears that someone is aping a Continental Brands Triti-Fizz Vendit to sell flavours that the corporation does not and denies it is testing. The Edgerunners are hired to find the rogue Vendit, put it out of operation, and return the remains for analysis. In ‘Spook Up at Ghostglobe Halloween’, the EdgeRunners are hired by the Goth poser gang, the Sinful Adams, to run security for its upcoming Halloween event and prevent the Philharmonic Vampyres from crashing the event. This is a point defence scenario, which works especially well if the Edgerunners have encountered the Philharmonic Vampyres before, perhaps in ‘A Night at the Opera – Darkness and Desire in Night City’, from Tales of the RED: Street Stories. The third Screamsheet is ‘TSpooks’ Terror, Episode 21: Werewolf in Watson’. After a series of werewolf sightings and the supposed death of one in the district, the assistant coroner asks the Edgerunners to investivate what looks like enforced body sculpting. This a more detailed investigation than the previous two, but all three can be played through in a single session, and whilst all three involve Halloween, none of them have a whiff of the supernatural about them. This does not stop them from being horrific in places. Of the three, ‘Haunted Vendit Haunts NCU Campus’ is the screamsheet with least connection to Halloween, so can be run at any time of the year, whilst the other two are more specific in their time setting. All three are good solid screamsheets though, easily played through in a single session or two.

Penultimately, Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4 offers up its by now traditional Christmas carol suitable for the ‘Time of the Red’ and twelve classic pieces of cyberware or gear from days of Cyberpunk past. The head-mounted Cybercam EX -1 is every Media’s dream, whilst the Tech will want to get his hands on the Master Mechanic’s Tool Kit, especially given the bonus it gives to all tech-related rolls. Meanwhile the Cops of the NCPD swear by the Cyberscanner which picks up the cyberware installed in a suspect and the ION Cuffs that when placed on the suspect’s wrists shuts them down.

Lastly, ‘Cyberfists of Fury: Expanded Martial Arts’ adds twenty-three new martial arts forms for Cyberpunk RED which has martial artists learn multiple forms as their skill level increases, each form providing its own Special Moves as access to the Shared Special Moves common to most forms. The new forms in the article are divided between the traditional, such as Boxing, which provides Knockout Punch and Punch Combination, and Tai Chi, like Joint Manipulation and Lu, and the new, specific to the ‘Time of the Red’. Unsurprisingly, Arasaka and Militech have their own forms. Arasaka-te teaches Counter Strike and Escape Hold, whilst Militech Commando Training includes Combat Knife Training and Commando Disarm. For the Full Body Conversion, there is PanzerFaust with Borg Fist and Inner Chrome. There are also weapons-focused martial arts including Kendo or ‘Way of the Sword’, the archery focused Kyudo, and Gun Fu, the latter a modern Form with the Special Moves of Combat Reload and the amusingly named Woo Technique.

The need to choose a Form with each increase in skill level enables martial artists to learn a wide range of techniques and styles, and can be used in a variety of ways. One is to suggest a martial artist’s origins, such as training in Arasaka-te versus Capoeira, whilst another is set up a roleplaying opportunity, a martial artist Edgerunner needing to find and satisfy a teacher to learn a new Form and its Special Moves. Then of course, a Form can suggest details about an NPC as well as the way in which he fights. The article expands the options available to both player and Game Master and is undoubtedly useful to any campaign in which martial arts play a role, however significant.

Physically, Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4 is cleanly, tidily laid out. The artwork is decent too and everything is easy to read. Notably, many of the articles open with colour fiction that detail individuals and places that a Game Master could easily use help bring her campaign to life, for example, Hornet of ‘Hornet’s Pharmacy: A Chemical Wonderland’.

Although much of it was originally available for free, as with previous issues, with the publication of Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4, it is nice to have it in print. And again, as before, all of it is useful in some ways, but barring the drug-related gear of ‘Hornet’s Pharmacy: A Chemical Wonderland’, the new equipment detailed in the issue is the least interesting content. ‘Halloween Screamsheets: three spooky shorts for Cyberpunk RED’ gives three good scenarios, whilst ‘Cyberfists of Fury: Expanded Martial Arts’ expands the character options in the roleplaying game in very useful fashion and ‘Corporate Conapts & Studio Apartments’ adds further detail and colour to the downtime of the Edgerunner with Eurobucks to spend. Interface RED: A Collection for Cyberpunk RED Enthusiasts Volume 4 brings a wealth of new detail to Cyberpunk RED and there is something useful in its pages for every Cyberpunk RED Game Master.