Here is a nasty little beastie from WAY back in my past. I used these guys in AD&D 2nd Ed and then again for Ghosts of Albion where they were a big part of my Obsession adventure.
Blood Goblin (Hæmogoblin)
Undead faerie
Frequency: Very Rare
No. Enc.: 1-4 (1-6)
Alignment: Chaotic (Chaotic Evil)
Movement: 120' (40') [12"]
Armor Class: 6 [13]
Hit Dice: 4d8+4** (22 hp)
Attacks: 2 claws/1 bite (blood drain)
Damage: 1d4+1, 1d4+1, 1d6 + blood drain
Special: Acidic blood, 1d4 on touch, only harmed by silver, track by scent
Size: Small
Save: Monster 5
Morale: 7
Treasure Hoard Class:
XP: 225
Blood Goblins are nasty little beasties. Nominally part of the faerie, their essences have been corrupted by a vampiric or demonic power. The ritual to turn a faerie into a blood goblin is unknown to most mortals, but what is known is it is dark and evil and requires the vampire or demon to bind the potential blood goblin to feed it some of its own foul blood.
Once complete the faerie undergoes a horrible transformation. Their form becomes a twisted parody of what it once was. Wings (if they had them) wither and fall off. Teeth grow long and sharp. Their skin takes on the unhealthy look of a bruise or rotting flesh and thick acidic blood weeps from their pores. Arms grow long and their now taloned hands drag the ground. Their eyes turn completely milky white with no pupils visible.
They can speak, but it is difficult to understand them.
Blood goblins are bound to their master and will do his bidding. The trouble is most are far too dimwitted to be anything other than a nasty little killer. They enjoy hiding in alleys or darkened paths and ambush their targets. They have a keen sense of smell so often they need something that smells like the intended victim in order to attack them. But they can and will attack anything warm-blooded.
Like all undead blood goblins are affected by holy water, taking 2-8 hp of damage per vial. blood goblins also take damage from sunlight. Blood goblins take 10 hit points of damage for every round they are exposed to bright, full sunlight. A “Continual Light” spell will also cause 1d4 hp of damage. Also they are unaffected by any mind spells (“Charm”, “Hold”, “ESP”) or “Sleep”.
Blood goblins have infravision to 90’.
Blood Goblins turn as Ghasts.
Here are my original AD&D 2nd Ed stats for them.
Hæmogoblin
CLIMATE/TERRAIN: Any
FREQUENCY: Very Rare
ORGANIZATION: Solitary
ACTIVITY CYCLE: Night
DIET : Living beings
INTELLIGENCE: Low (5)
TREASURE: Nil
ALIGNMENT: Chaotic Evil
NO. APPEARING: 1 (1-4)
ARMOR CLASS: 6
MOVEMENT: 12”
HIT DICE: 4+4
THAC0: 16
NO. OF ATTACKS: 3 (claw/claw/bite)
DAMAGE/ATTACK: 1-8/1-8/1-10
SPECIAL ATTACKS: Blood Drain
SPECIAL DEFENSES: Can only be hit by silver or magic.
MAGIC RESISTANCE: Nil
SIZE: S (3’ to 4’)
MORALE: Steady (11 - 12)
XP VALUE: 800
PSIONICS: Nil
The highest level of undead a human may obtain is arguably the Vampire. It’s ability to blend in with human or demi-human society is as much as an asset to it as it’s great strength and magic. However, many sub-human races are not suitable for vampiric conversion. Some sages claim it could be their force of will or life is relatively low. Others claim it is the gods that control the sprits (and not souls) of these humanoids that do not allow them to become vampires. It could be that vampires find these sub-humans distasteful. However some sub-humans have become undead. Undead gnolls (q.v. Shoovusa) and trolls (q.v. Spectral and Spirit Trolls) have been recorded. The Hæmogoblin is also such a creature.
Hæmogoblin’s, are created by vampires in need of a specialized servant. Creating a hæmogoblin is similar to creating any other type of vampire; blood is exchanged between the vampire and the victim. However to create the hæmogoblin the vampire needs to do something slightly different. The vampire uses any humanoid creature, (orcs, kobolds, goblins, hobgoblins, norkers, etc…) usually goblins are chosen, due to their size and manageability.
It should be noted that creatures as large as an ogre might be used, but none have ever been reported, also goblyns (from Feast of Goblyns) can not be used, they have already been converted using powerful magics.
The vampire master takes the humanoid victim and first drains it of most of its blood. The vampire then will regurgitate the purloined blood back into the humanoids mouth. The victim will swallow the blood and it’s transformation to undeath has begun. Usually by the next nightfall the victim will reawaken to full hæmogoblin status. The vampire lord can create a number of these creatures that is equal to its own hit dice, e.g. a 12 hit die vampire can create 3 (3*4 hit die=12) of these creatures. From this point the hæmogoblin will act as a servant somewhere between a homunculus/familiar and a vampiric slave.
Combat: Hæmogoblins attack with a claw/claw/bite routine. On any natural “20” rolled to hit with the bite attack the hæmogoblin will begin to drain the victim's blood at the rate of 1 CON point per round. The hæmogoblin can only be removed with a successful “Bend bars/Lift Gates” roll. The victim may not attack during the rounds an attempt to remove the hæmogoblin takes place. If the hæmogoblins are S size or smaller then up to two may be draining one victim at the same time. If the victim reaches 0 CON points then they die. Unless a “Bless” or “Remove Curse” spell is cast on the corpse it will rise the next night as a Ghast.
Hæmogoblins turn as Ghasts. Hæmogoblins cannot pass on their curse of undeath like the vampire to create other hæmogoblins, however, there is a 50% chance that any sub-human killed by a hæmogoblin will become a ghoul, with 5% of those becoming ghasts. These victims are free-willed, but they are at a disadvantage when encountering the vampire that created the hæmogoblin. They make their saves at –5 and are 25% more likely to fall under that vampire’s control.
Like all undead hæmogoblins are affected by holy water, taking 2-8 hp of damage per vial. Hæmogoblins also take damage from sunlight. Hæmogoblins take 10 hit points of damage for every round they are exposed to bright, full sunlight. A “Continual Light” spell will also cause 1d4 hp of damage. Also they are unaffected by any mind spells (“Charm”, “Hold”, “ESP”), or “Sleep”.
Hæmogoblins have infravision to 90’.
Habitat/Society: Hæmogoblin’s are created undead, none will occur “naturally”. They can be most often found in or near the lairs of vampires. Crypts are very commonplace for hæmogoblins. They have been known to associate with ghouls for increased protection and hunting. Hæmogoblin’s prefer to eat living humans and humanoids. Often however they are forced to eat the scraps left to them by their vampire masters. If hard-pressed hæmogoblins will eat corpses.
Most hæmogoblins encountered will be in the service of a vampire lord/lady. They are often used as spies for the vampire. In one recorded incident a vampire set up one his own Hæmogoblins as a scapegoat to cover his own tracks. While any angry mob was dealing with the hæmogoblin, the vampire left the area.
Unlike a true familiar, the vampire suffers no ill effects if his hæmogoblin is destroyed.
Ecology: Hæmogoblins are undead and produce nothing. While the corpses of hæmogoblins may be useful to necromancers or sages, they have nothing else of value.
Monday, May 25, 2020
Friday, May 22, 2020
#FollowFriday
On Twitter #FollowFriday is a long-established Friday tradition. You post your tweet with the #FollowFriday hashtag to get more followers.
Well today I want to do to bring your attention to some lesser-known or lesser trafficked social media sites.
This is the next evolution of The Best Blog You Are Not Following. This moves a bit beyond blogs into all social media.
I'll post my links and if you have any you want to share post them below. Just keep them on topic.
Ove on Facebook there is a lot great D&D and RPG groups. If I posted one a week I would still be posting in a year or more. Today I want to share a couple.
I'd Rather Be Killing Monsters
https://www.facebook.com/groups/776216536226728
This group covers the same sort of material you will see here. Started by Tim Knight of Hero Press fame it is RPG and geeky media focused.
Victorian Gamers Association
https://www.facebook.com/groups/VictorianGamersAssociation
This group is one I run and it is dedicated to all sorts of Victorian-era RPGs. Here we talk about the games and the Victorian-era, 1837 to 1901.
Over on Instagram there is a lot of great artists.
Wayne Reynolds Art
https://www.instagram.com/waynereynoldsart/
Wayne Reynolds has been making art for D&D and Pathfinder for years.
Djinn in the Shade
https://www.instagram.com/djinnintheshade/
Djinn is an old friend of the Other Side and she has some great D&D art and the lewd adventures of her D&D character Solaine.
If you prefer something more SFW, try her other site: https://www.instagram.com/djinninthebox/
MeWe is the newest Social Media kid on the block, and it shows, so let's give some of those groups some love.
Basic Fantasy and Table Top RPG
https://mewe.com/group/5bbcd4672ee15f2bb807556c
This is a group I am active in and it needs some more active participants. So please come by and join! Let me know you saw it here!
And here are my sites.
Personal Sites
The Other Side Sites
- The Other Side blog (hint, you are here now!)
- The Other Side Publishing at DriveThruRPG
- The Other Side Facebook Page
- MeWe Group
- The Other Side Tumblr
Post your links below.
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
OMG: Special Edition The Goddess of Magic
I want to get back to my One Man's God series, but before I do I want to take look at the various Goddess of Magic.
One thing myths seem to have in common, at least the handful I have covered to date, is a Goddess of Magic. These goddesses, while different in many respects and aspects, share something in common. They have learned the secrets of magic and these secrets seem to be something only goddess are meant to know.
Here are a few an how I see them through the lens of a Goddess of the Witches.
Ereshkigal
The world's first goth-girl. I talked a lot about her during my wrap-up of the Babylonian, Sumerian, and Akkadian myths. She is the goddess of the underworld and the magic associated with that. Ereshkigal is often considered to be the dark half of her sister Innana/Ishtar.
Isis
Isis is the earliest Goddess of Magic of Egypt.
With Osiris and Horus (the divine child) they make up a Holy Trinity. She is the Goddess of marriage, motherhood, fertility, magic, healing, reincarnation, and divination, to name but a few. Isis is the patroness of priestesses. One myth has Isis poisoning the Sun God Ra, offering to save him only if he would reveal his secret name. At last, at the brink of destruction, Ra gives Isis his heart, with the secret name it held, and his two eyes (the Sun and the Moon). Isis quells the poison and ends up with Ra’s supreme power. In time the great Eye was passed along to her son Horus. Proclus mentions a statue of her which bore the inscription “I am that which is, has been and shall be. My veil no one has lifted”. Hence, to lift the veil of Isis is to pierce the heart of a great mystery.
Hecate
Hecate got her own OMG post a while back.
Hecate is, in Greek mythology, the Goddess of darkness, magic, and witchcraft. She is the daughter of the Titans Perses and Asteria. Unlike Artemis, who represented the moonlight and splendor of the night, Hecate represented its darkness and its terrors. On moonless nights she was believed to roam the earth with a pack of ghostly, howling dogs. She was the Goddess of sorcery and witchcraft and was especially worshiped by magicians and witches, who sacrificed black lambs and black dogs to her. As Goddess of the crossroads, Hecate and her pack of dogs were believed to haunt these remote spots, which seemed evil and ghostly places to travelers. In art Hecate is often represented with either three bodies or three heads and with serpents entwined about her neck.
Of all the deities who have covens, Hecate’s covens are the most widespread and well known. Hecate was once a fairly benign goddess in early Greek times. She later became the dread Greco-Roman Goddess of ghosts, a close confidante of Persephone, and a patron of witches. The brutally wronged Hecuba of Troy was reincarnated as one of Hecate’s black dogs, which accompanied her on her night walks. When Hades kidnapped Persephone in the later Greek myth, farseeing Hecate was the only one who witnessed it. Hecate was worshiped at three-way crossroads at night even by ordinary Greek families and could ward off ghosts if properly propitiated. But Romans also believed She had more sinister worshipers; the witches and sorceresses who could coerce even the gods to do their will.
Freyja
Freyja is associated with magic, but mostly with seiðr. What is seiðr? Well, it is a bit of an odd translation but it usually refers to a pre-Christian pagan form of magic. Today we would shorthand it and call it "witchcraft" but that is not exactly right.
I hope to cover her more when I finally get to Norse myths.
Ceridwen
Celtic Goddess of wisdom, intelligence, magic, divination, and enchantment. She is the Goddess of the cauldron. Popular among the Celtic Classical and Craft of the Wise Traditions.
Cerridwen’s cauldron has the power to return the dead to life.
Áine
Another Celtic Goddess is the Irish goddess Áine. She is also the Goddess of Summer.
I want to get back to Celtic myths soon.
Coyolxāuhqui
I forgot to mention Coyolxāuhqui last week when I did Central American myths. She is the sister of Huitzilopochtli (the God of War in the D&DG). She is most often depicted as the Goddess of the Moon when she was beheaded by her brother and he tossed her head into the sky.
Huitaca
Also known as Xubchasgagua she is the Goddess of arts, dance and music, witchcraft, sexual liberation, and the Moon. That is quite the portfolio. Like many Goddesses, she is associated with the owl as her animal. She is described as a "rebel Goddess." She is really the archetypical witch.
She is associated with the religion of the Muisca which is now Columbia in South America.
From D&D
Wee Jas
Wee Jas also got her own post a while back. Wee Jas is what Hecate would be if she were a Suel god. Or more to the point the D&D version of Hecate, the Goddess of Magic, Witches, Ghosts, Necromancy and the Crossroads. It is said that Wee Jas guards the doorways to the dead and the same is true for Hecate. In fact, I have used them rather interchangeably for years.
I think for my own version of Wee Jas, I would start with the Dragon 88 version, add a little bit of what we saw in D&D 3.x, and then change her "Death" portfolio to "Spirits" ("Wee Jas" = "Ouija"). She can summon undead, and her priests may do so as well, but no raise dead spells. I rather liked the Raven Queen from D&D 4 and 5, so pass off Wee Jas' control of Death (save for spirits) to the Raven Queen. Since the Raven Queen is described as a young or new Goddess, it could even be that she is the daughter of Wee Jas. Ioun was one of Wee Jas' first students.
Mystra
Mystra is the Forgotten Realms Goddess of Magic. I have not talked much about her here because my knowledge of the Realms is limited. But I have always wanted to explore the Mystra-Mystara connection. Is there one? Likely not, but there should be at least in my games!
I am sure there are more, lots more even, but this is good for now.
Hecate by Iren Horrors |
Here are a few an how I see them through the lens of a Goddess of the Witches.
Ereshkigal
The world's first goth-girl. I talked a lot about her during my wrap-up of the Babylonian, Sumerian, and Akkadian myths. She is the goddess of the underworld and the magic associated with that. Ereshkigal is often considered to be the dark half of her sister Innana/Ishtar.
Isis
Isis is the earliest Goddess of Magic of Egypt.
With Osiris and Horus (the divine child) they make up a Holy Trinity. She is the Goddess of marriage, motherhood, fertility, magic, healing, reincarnation, and divination, to name but a few. Isis is the patroness of priestesses. One myth has Isis poisoning the Sun God Ra, offering to save him only if he would reveal his secret name. At last, at the brink of destruction, Ra gives Isis his heart, with the secret name it held, and his two eyes (the Sun and the Moon). Isis quells the poison and ends up with Ra’s supreme power. In time the great Eye was passed along to her son Horus. Proclus mentions a statue of her which bore the inscription “I am that which is, has been and shall be. My veil no one has lifted”. Hence, to lift the veil of Isis is to pierce the heart of a great mystery.
Hecate
Hecate got her own OMG post a while back.
Hecate is, in Greek mythology, the Goddess of darkness, magic, and witchcraft. She is the daughter of the Titans Perses and Asteria. Unlike Artemis, who represented the moonlight and splendor of the night, Hecate represented its darkness and its terrors. On moonless nights she was believed to roam the earth with a pack of ghostly, howling dogs. She was the Goddess of sorcery and witchcraft and was especially worshiped by magicians and witches, who sacrificed black lambs and black dogs to her. As Goddess of the crossroads, Hecate and her pack of dogs were believed to haunt these remote spots, which seemed evil and ghostly places to travelers. In art Hecate is often represented with either three bodies or three heads and with serpents entwined about her neck.
Of all the deities who have covens, Hecate’s covens are the most widespread and well known. Hecate was once a fairly benign goddess in early Greek times. She later became the dread Greco-Roman Goddess of ghosts, a close confidante of Persephone, and a patron of witches. The brutally wronged Hecuba of Troy was reincarnated as one of Hecate’s black dogs, which accompanied her on her night walks. When Hades kidnapped Persephone in the later Greek myth, farseeing Hecate was the only one who witnessed it. Hecate was worshiped at three-way crossroads at night even by ordinary Greek families and could ward off ghosts if properly propitiated. But Romans also believed She had more sinister worshipers; the witches and sorceresses who could coerce even the gods to do their will.
Freyja
Freyja is associated with magic, but mostly with seiðr. What is seiðr? Well, it is a bit of an odd translation but it usually refers to a pre-Christian pagan form of magic. Today we would shorthand it and call it "witchcraft" but that is not exactly right.
I hope to cover her more when I finally get to Norse myths.
Ceridwen
Celtic Goddess of wisdom, intelligence, magic, divination, and enchantment. She is the Goddess of the cauldron. Popular among the Celtic Classical and Craft of the Wise Traditions.
Cerridwen’s cauldron has the power to return the dead to life.
Áine
Another Celtic Goddess is the Irish goddess Áine. She is also the Goddess of Summer.
I want to get back to Celtic myths soon.
Coyolxāuhqui
I forgot to mention Coyolxāuhqui last week when I did Central American myths. She is the sister of Huitzilopochtli (the God of War in the D&DG). She is most often depicted as the Goddess of the Moon when she was beheaded by her brother and he tossed her head into the sky.
Huitaca
Also known as Xubchasgagua she is the Goddess of arts, dance and music, witchcraft, sexual liberation, and the Moon. That is quite the portfolio. Like many Goddesses, she is associated with the owl as her animal. She is described as a "rebel Goddess." She is really the archetypical witch.
She is associated with the religion of the Muisca which is now Columbia in South America.
From D&D
Wee Jas
Wee Jas also got her own post a while back. Wee Jas is what Hecate would be if she were a Suel god. Or more to the point the D&D version of Hecate, the Goddess of Magic, Witches, Ghosts, Necromancy and the Crossroads. It is said that Wee Jas guards the doorways to the dead and the same is true for Hecate. In fact, I have used them rather interchangeably for years.
I think for my own version of Wee Jas, I would start with the Dragon 88 version, add a little bit of what we saw in D&D 3.x, and then change her "Death" portfolio to "Spirits" ("Wee Jas" = "Ouija"). She can summon undead, and her priests may do so as well, but no raise dead spells. I rather liked the Raven Queen from D&D 4 and 5, so pass off Wee Jas' control of Death (save for spirits) to the Raven Queen. Since the Raven Queen is described as a young or new Goddess, it could even be that she is the daughter of Wee Jas. Ioun was one of Wee Jas' first students.
Mystra
Mystra is the Forgotten Realms Goddess of Magic. I have not talked much about her here because my knowledge of the Realms is limited. But I have always wanted to explore the Mystra-Mystara connection. Is there one? Likely not, but there should be at least in my games!
I am sure there are more, lots more even, but this is good for now.
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Gen Con 2020 Canceled
If you have not heard the news it is official, Gen Con 2020 has been canceled.
You can read more here:
https://www.gencon.com/press/gen-con-2020-cancellation
With many cons canceling including Comic-Con this was too much of a public health risk. We had planned to not go this year back in late March, but I was hoping that things might turn around.
My hope would have been justified if we didn't have a complete moron in charge of our country, but I should have known better.
This is the right call really.
If you look at the high-risk population and the average Gen Con attendee, there is a lot of overlap.
Now, of course, we don't know what will be going on in late July, early August, but I do know that plenty of schools are considering not opening up for Fall term and they stand to lose more than Gen Con by several orders of magnitude.
So I am sad yes. I have not told my kids yet.
I have canceled my hotel I had downtown (at the J.W. Marriott where we stay every year).
I was looking forward to finishing the great Order of the Platinum Dragon campaign we play at every Gen Con. The characters are just one adventure away from retirement.
You can read more here:
https://www.gencon.com/press/gen-con-2020-cancellation
With many cons canceling including Comic-Con this was too much of a public health risk. We had planned to not go this year back in late March, but I was hoping that things might turn around.
My hope would have been justified if we didn't have a complete moron in charge of our country, but I should have known better.
This is the right call really.
If you look at the high-risk population and the average Gen Con attendee, there is a lot of overlap.
Now, of course, we don't know what will be going on in late July, early August, but I do know that plenty of schools are considering not opening up for Fall term and they stand to lose more than Gen Con by several orders of magnitude.
So I am sad yes. I have not told my kids yet.
I have canceled my hotel I had downtown (at the J.W. Marriott where we stay every year).
I was looking forward to finishing the great Order of the Platinum Dragon campaign we play at every Gen Con. The characters are just one adventure away from retirement.
Monday, May 18, 2020
Monstrous Monday: Gladyolus
One of the big influences I have had for my Monstrous Mondays and my new monster book has been my mom.
No kidding.
My mom loves sci-fi and horror. When I started playing D&D back in the 80s she took one of my D&D books, I think it was the AD&D DMG, and she proclaimed "this is just mythology and math!" But she loved all the monsters and she had always loved telling all us kids stories about them.
Here is one of them!
She told us this story back when I was in sixth grade. I know that it is not 100% original, but it still thrilled us as kids. Though in my mom's defense, she never read any Clark Ashton Smith.
Gladyolus
Monstrous Plant
Frequency: Very Rare
No. Enc.: 2-20 (5-100)
Alignment: Chaotic (Chaotic Evil)
Movement: 0' (0') [0"]
Armor Class: 9 [10]
Hit Dice: 1d8 (5 hp)
Attacks: 1 (blood drain)
Damage: 1d4+1
Special: Nag (see below), takes 2x damage from fire
Size: Small
Save: Monster 1
Morale: 12
Treasure Hoard Class: Nil
XP: 15
According to tales, the Gladyolus flower began not as a plant but as a woman named Gladys. Gladys was not a happy woman. She nagged her adult children, her friends, but most of all she nagged her husband. One day she was complaining about something when her husband finally snapped and he killed her. Seeing what he had done he decided to dig up his garden and bury Gladys in it.
The next spring the flowers he had planted grew, but all had Gladys' face and voice.
The nagging drove her husband to kill himself and the Gladyolus fed on the corpse.
The Gladoylus is a monstrous plant that feeds on the blood of warm-blooded creatures. Humanoids are its favorite source of food. The plant flower has the face of a woman. When encountering humanoid creatures each flower begins to talk to berate the creatures. On a failed save vs. Spells the creatures will wade into the plants to attempt to get them to be quiet. Once in the midst of the plants they will all begin to attack, up to 1d10 plants per round, doing 1d4+1 per plant.
The plants can't move and take double damage from fire.
--
So I am solidifying my stat-block for this book. I am going to opt for Advanced Labyrinth Lord compatibility. This solves two really big issues. First, it gives a solid XP matrix to work with. Since LL is one of the most popular retro-clones on the market, this covers a lot of players. Second, it also gives me a Treasure Type/Horde Class that is easier to use and I don't need to invent my own.
I am still going to add Type, Frequency, and Size. But I don't think I am going use the size = different HD as I talked about last week. Adding Type, Frequency, and Size. is easy and won't detract too much on people's games. Changing HD type might be a bridge too far. So my current plan is to provide them as an Appendix. So this creature would be listed as: "Gladyolus, Small, 1d6 (4 hp)."
This is going to be a lot of fun!
No kidding.
My mom loves sci-fi and horror. When I started playing D&D back in the 80s she took one of my D&D books, I think it was the AD&D DMG, and she proclaimed "this is just mythology and math!" But she loved all the monsters and she had always loved telling all us kids stories about them.
Here is one of them!
She told us this story back when I was in sixth grade. I know that it is not 100% original, but it still thrilled us as kids. Though in my mom's defense, she never read any Clark Ashton Smith.
Gladyolus
Monstrous Plant
Frequency: Very Rare
No. Enc.: 2-20 (5-100)
Alignment: Chaotic (Chaotic Evil)
Movement: 0' (0') [0"]
Armor Class: 9 [10]
Hit Dice: 1d8 (5 hp)
Attacks: 1 (blood drain)
Damage: 1d4+1
Special: Nag (see below), takes 2x damage from fire
Size: Small
Save: Monster 1
Morale: 12
Treasure Hoard Class: Nil
XP: 15
According to tales, the Gladyolus flower began not as a plant but as a woman named Gladys. Gladys was not a happy woman. She nagged her adult children, her friends, but most of all she nagged her husband. One day she was complaining about something when her husband finally snapped and he killed her. Seeing what he had done he decided to dig up his garden and bury Gladys in it.
The next spring the flowers he had planted grew, but all had Gladys' face and voice.
The nagging drove her husband to kill himself and the Gladyolus fed on the corpse.
The Gladoylus is a monstrous plant that feeds on the blood of warm-blooded creatures. Humanoids are its favorite source of food. The plant flower has the face of a woman. When encountering humanoid creatures each flower begins to talk to berate the creatures. On a failed save vs. Spells the creatures will wade into the plants to attempt to get them to be quiet. Once in the midst of the plants they will all begin to attack, up to 1d10 plants per round, doing 1d4+1 per plant.
The plants can't move and take double damage from fire.
--
So I am solidifying my stat-block for this book. I am going to opt for Advanced Labyrinth Lord compatibility. This solves two really big issues. First, it gives a solid XP matrix to work with. Since LL is one of the most popular retro-clones on the market, this covers a lot of players. Second, it also gives me a Treasure Type/Horde Class that is easier to use and I don't need to invent my own.
I am still going to add Type, Frequency, and Size. But I don't think I am going use the size = different HD as I talked about last week. Adding Type, Frequency, and Size. is easy and won't detract too much on people's games. Changing HD type might be a bridge too far. So my current plan is to provide them as an Appendix. So this creature would be listed as: "Gladyolus, Small, 1d6 (4 hp)."
This is going to be a lot of fun!
Friday, May 15, 2020
Kickstart Your Weekend: DCC RPG: Fred Saberhagen's Empire of the East
A new Kickstarter from Goodman Games and good friend of the Other Side Jason Vey!
DCC RPG: Fred Saberhagen's Empire of the East
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1409961192/dcc-rpg-fred-saberhagens-empire-of-the-east?ref=theotherside
So what do we have here? Goodman Games. Dungeon Crawl Classics AND Mutant Crawl Classics. Jason Vey of AFMBE, Castles & Crusades, AND Night Shift fame.
I always enjoyed the work of Fred Saberhagen and discovered him at the same time I was getting into AD&D, so in a way I always associate him with AD&D even though I can't point to a single thing of his I imported into my games.
This might change that.
Jason has had a solid game design career. He worked on a number of great AFMBE books for Eden, LOTS of Castles & Crusades and Amazing Adventures (which he is the line developer) and of course OSR games with Elf Lair Games. And yes we worked together on Night Shift.
So these reasons alone are enough to get this.
DCC RPG: Fred Saberhagen's Empire of the East
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1409961192/dcc-rpg-fred-saberhagens-empire-of-the-east?ref=theotherside
So what do we have here? Goodman Games. Dungeon Crawl Classics AND Mutant Crawl Classics. Jason Vey of AFMBE, Castles & Crusades, AND Night Shift fame.
I always enjoyed the work of Fred Saberhagen and discovered him at the same time I was getting into AD&D, so in a way I always associate him with AD&D even though I can't point to a single thing of his I imported into my games.
This might change that.
Jason has had a solid game design career. He worked on a number of great AFMBE books for Eden, LOTS of Castles & Crusades and Amazing Adventures (which he is the line developer) and of course OSR games with Elf Lair Games. And yes we worked together on Night Shift.
So these reasons alone are enough to get this.
Thursday, May 14, 2020
Old-School Compatibility Logos, Part 2
The other day I posted some concepts for a set of "Old-School Compatibility Logos."
This morning I decided to expand on the idea some more.
Old-School Compatibility Logos Page
I created a page here with all the logos and a list of details about the games I like to use for each one. I am not indicating 100% compatibility with a single game, but rather a compatibility with a play style. I have also listed the DriveThruRPG categories I put items I have written that would use these logos/banners.
You can see that page here: https://bit.ly/osclogos
If you could, please use this shortened URL for linking.
Sub-Categories on The Other Side store.
I also modified them slightly and used them as sub-categories over at the Other Side storefront at DriveThruRPG.
Here is how the Basic-Era Sub-Category looks.
Going to play around with it for a while and see what happens.
This morning I decided to expand on the idea some more.
Old-School Compatibility Logos Page
I created a page here with all the logos and a list of details about the games I like to use for each one. I am not indicating 100% compatibility with a single game, but rather a compatibility with a play style. I have also listed the DriveThruRPG categories I put items I have written that would use these logos/banners.
You can see that page here: https://bit.ly/osclogos
If you could, please use this shortened URL for linking.
Sub-Categories on The Other Side store.
I also modified them slightly and used them as sub-categories over at the Other Side storefront at DriveThruRPG.
Here is how the Basic-Era Sub-Category looks.
Going to play around with it for a while and see what happens.
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