Thursday, October 2, 2025

The Enchanted World: Tales of Terror

Tales of Terror
Wow. Has it really been about a year since I did one of these? That is fairly inexcusable.  But it is October and tales of terror abound. So lets jump back into these. 

Tales of Terror

by Editors of Time-LIFE Books, 1987 (144 pages)
ISBN 0809452774, 0809452782  (US Editions)

This one moves away from the established format and gives us 13 chapters of tales. 

Chapter One: The Walking Dead of Brittany 

A tale of two lovers and an not-so-dead, dead man.

Brittany has always been a land caught between the Mortal realm and the Lands of the Dead, and this chapter dives right into the Ankou, the skeletal cart-driver of souls. The imagery is dripping with fog and grave dirt, and you can practically hear the creak of his wagon on the cobbled paths. As a first chapter, it sets the tone perfectly: folklore that is not quaint, but deeply unsettling. 

Chapter Two: An Implacable Army 

This short German tale begins with a mass-murder and ends with the invasion of an army of vengeful rats. I can't help but think of the movies "Willard," "Ben," and "Food of the Gods."

Chapter Two: An Implacable Army

Chapter Three: In the Body of the Beast

This one’s all about possession, the unsettling idea of losing one’s body to another spirit or force. Unlike Hollywood exorcisms, the folkloric accounts here are more ambiguous: sometimes it’s a demon, sometimes a restless ancestor, sometimes something nameless. The takeaway is the horror of being a passenger in your own flesh.

Chapter Four: Harvest of Horrors

Iceland's horror tales are often as bleak as their landscape. Few things feel more old-world than the fear of crops failing or harvests being tainted. This chapter ties together famine, curses, and a time when the Old Gods still ruled. Reading it, I’m reminded that “horror” doesn’t have to be gothic castles, it can be watching your children starve because something inhuman blighted your barley.

Chapter Five: The Goblin's Guest 

Japan has some wonderful tales of terror and these goblins are not the mischievous faerie creatures of lore, nor are they even the dreadful orc-like creatures of Tolkien. These goblins are more akin to demons, and even having their heads cut off is not a stop to their evil. 

Chapter Six: An Unfinished Death

A dead husband seeks revenge on his widow after death, but a stranger intervenes.

Chapter Six: An Unfinished Death

Chapter Seven: Furies of the Far North

Cold lands and bitter winds bring tales of vengeful spirits who stalk the snow. The terror here, though, is not freezing to death, but the insatiable craving for human flesh due to starvation. 

This one treats us to the lore of the Angiak, monstrous children left to die in the cold and now craving their mother's flesh. 

Chapter Eight: Bloodguilt of a Royal House 

This chapter plunges into Greek tragedy at its rawest: the cursed House of Atreus and the cycle of blood that no god nor mortal could halt. We see Agamemnon sacrificing his daughter, Iphigenia, for favorable winds to Troy, and Clytemnestra’s smoldering hatred that blooms into bloody revenge. The narrative is lushly violent, brimming with betrayal, murder, and the grim reminder that no war ends when the armies return home.

As a horror tale, it’s less about ghosts and more about inevitability—the horror of family doom written in blood. For a gaming table, this is the blueprint of the “accursed bloodline” trope. A campaign built around such a house isn’t about who wins or loses, but whether anyone can break the curse before the next ax falls.

Chapter Nine: A Stormy Reckoning

The killing a seal is the beginning of tale of woe of Elias and his family. 

Chapter Ten: Bride of the Ghost-Chief

A promised bride to the Chief of the dead leads to a strange bargaining between two worlds. But unlike Persephone, the Bride had to stay in the land of Ghosts. When she breaks this contract, the land of the ghosts is forever sealed off from the land of the living. 

Chapter Eleven: The Kiss of Evil 

Seduction, corruption, and deals with devils. This chapter reads like the dark sibling to old fairy tales, where the kiss isn’t salvation but damnation. Folklore doesn’t shy from the sexual undertones here, and neither should horror gaming. There’s room for succubi, but also more subtle lures: the temptation of comfort in exchange for corruption. Here, an evil djinn tempts a man with riches and sex, only to lose everything. 

Chapter Twelve: Demons of the Dreamtime

The book goes global with Australian Aboriginal myths and monsters, exploring spirits of the Dreamtime that slip into nightmares. The imagery is stark and strange, very different from European hauntings, and it adds real weight to the “Enchanted World” premise. 

In a campaign, this is where planar adventures meet primal myth. Bring dream-demons into play when players think they’re safe at rest.

Chapter Thirteen: The Healer's Secret 

Death offers to become the Godmother to man's child. The father was given gold, and Death would return when the child turned 20. On his 20th birthday Death gives the man a plant that cures all ills, but conditions are given. Of course these conditions are broken and Death comes for his new bride. When he tries to rescue his Bride from the land of the dead, Death gives him the only gift she has. 

--

This one is less on the mythology or the ever present theme of the "Dying of the Enchanted World" and instead just gives us 13 (well 12 and so) stories of death and the spectre of dying. No surprise really, we are no closer today to understanding death or what happens after. 

Each one can act as inspiration for an adventure or side-quest. 

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge: Witchcraft (1988)

Witchcraft (1988)
This October Horror Movie Challenge, I am going "themeless." Well, not entirely themeless, I am going to hit some movies I have been wanting to see for a while. I am going to hit some movies with a strong occult themes to help with my Occult D&D ideas. And a lot of movies that are random picks. 

So, lets get in a Witchcraft Wednesday special!

Some horror movies become classics because they’re great. Others become classics because they’re terrible. And then there are the ones like Witchcraft (1988)—movies that sit in that odd middle space where you can’t really call them good, but you also can’t quite look away. This was the beginning of what would inexplicably become the longest-running horror franchise of all time, with over a dozen sequels. Yep, this little direct-to-video oddity outlasted Friday the 13th.

Witchcraft has always been out there, taunting me. The later direct-to-video offerings are essentially cheesy, low-grade horror with soft-core porn. There is a time and place for that, but not often in the Horror Movie Challenge. Still, I am not going to rule out more of these for the simple reasons that A.) this one wasn't so bad (ok it is, but) and B.) maybe there is something to extract here.

The setup is Gothic in all the right ways. The film opens with a young woman, Grace Churchill, giving birth to a child in a spooky old mansion, watched over by ominous figures who may or may not be part of a Satanic coven. The baby, William, grows up haunted by strange powers and a dark inheritance. That’s about as coherent as the plot gets. The rest is a mix of supernatural brooding, awkward family drama, softcore sex, and a finale where witchcraft and devil-worship clash in melodramatic fashion.

It’s the kind of movie that promises “occult terror” on the box but delivers more soap opera than sorcery. The budget clearly wasn’t there, and it shows—cheap sets, stilted acting, and special effects that would’ve been laughed off Tales from the Darkside. But there’s something about the sheer earnestness of it that makes it oddly watchable. You get the sense that everyone involved thought they were making something serious, maybe even artistic. Instead, they accidentally launched the trashiest franchise in horror history.

What stands out, though, is the vibe. Witchcraft is soaked in late-80s VHS energy, grainy lighting, synth score, and a sleazy Gothic tone that feels like it belongs in a tattered paperback you’d find in a used bookstore. It’s not scary, not really, but it is atmospheric in that “midnight cable TV/Cinemax” way.

Witchcraft (1988) isn’t good. But it’s important. It’s the seed from which a whole weird forest of bargain-bin horror would grow, a franchise that leaned more and more into sleaze and supernatural soap opera. I can't help but think that this series promises a better movie. 

Maybe I'll watch them all one day. But not this month. 

Occult D&D and NIGHT SHIFT

Yeah, there is a NIGHT SHIFT campaign here, but it is likely a silly one.


October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge 2025
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Witches of Appendix N: Poul Anderson

Three Hearts and Three Lions (1953)
 It is the start of October and time for another foundational author for D&D from Gary's Appendix N. As always with this feature I am focusing on the witches presented in these tales.

Poul Anderson (1926-2001) is much better known for his Science Fiction tales, but he does have three (well, 2.5) fantasy stories on the Appendix N list, and two of these feature witches rather prominently: "Three Hearts and Three Lions" and "The Broken Sword."

I will take each in turn and also expand a little from "just witches" with these.

Three Hearts and Three Lions (1953)

Anderson’s Three Hearts and Three Lions is already famous in D&D circles for giving us Law vs Chaos, the Swanmay, regenerating trolls, and even the proto-paladin in Holger Carlsen. But nestled amid the elves, trolls, and Moorcock-before-Moorcock cosmology is one of the first proper "witches" of Appendix N.

The unnamed witch of the forest hut is classic fairy-tale witchcraft: ugly, corrupt, but wielding real power. She brews potions, dabbles in deviltry, and represents the Chaos side of Anderson’s moral spectrum. Anderson clearly has one foot in the folkloric hag tradition; this witch could have walked right out of the Brothers Grimm, but her function in the story is thematic as much as narrative. She exists as a living symbol of the Chaos that Holger is pitted against, an incarnation of superstition and malice. While her interactions with Holger are not long, she is his first clue that magic, chaos, and evil are real, tangible things in the world/time.

Then there is Morgan Le Fey. She is Holger's former lover in a past life, and she is the main antagonist. She is a representative of the "Old Ways," the paganism of Europe, dying out in the face of rising Christianity. She is also representative of chaos, evil, and magic. Where the old hag is evil and ugly, Morgan Le Fey is evil and beautiful. Representing that evil does come in many guises and our hero needs to recognize that.

The battle is a parallel of the one Holger left in his time, World War II.

Both witches represent the two types of witches most often seen: the old Satanic Hag and the beautiful Pagan. Both, however, represent evil and mostly Chaos. 

The notion of Paganism/Old Ways versus Christianity is a recurring theme in Anderson's other significant Appendix N book.

The Broken Sword (1954/1971)

The Broken Sword (1954/1971)

The Broken Sword gives us a much darker, more primal vision of witchcraft. 

Here we get another hag-witch who is close enough to the elves and trolls to have dealings with them, but is also very explicitly Satanic. She lives in a run-down cottage/hut, deals with the dark forces of evil, and has a talking rat familiar. Honestly, she could even be the same witch if so many years were not between them.

She also tempts our main antagonist, the Changeling Valgard, by glamouring herself into a beautiful woman. It is her desire for vengeance that sets the plot into motion. 

Like Three Hearts, the Witch, and she never is given a proper name, is a force of evil and chaos. Also like Three Hearts, the story centers around the battle between Pagans and Christianity, which Anderson casts here as Evil/Chaos vs Good/Law, respectively.

The elves and trolls of The Broken Sword are more similar to each other; both are forces of Chaos, for example, and an elf/troll child is a Changeling. Their magic is also described as akin to witchcraft ("witchsight" allows humans to see the world of faerie) and to the witchcraft the old hag employs. Many elves and trolls have "Warlocks" in their ranks.

Here, also, the big Pagans vs. Christians war takes a back seat to two warring factions of Pagans, the Elves/Faerie and the Trolls/Giants. The interaction our protagonist Valgard has with the displaced Faun is very telling. This area of England/British Isles is one of the last holdouts of the Pagan ways. 

The mixing of the various mythologies, Norse, Irish, Welsh, British, and Greek, is very D&D. 

That Last Half

I joked above, 2.5 books in Appendix N. The ".5" is "The High Crusade" which is more appropriately a Science Fiction or Science Fantasy novel. I didn't include it here because, simply, I have not read it. 

A Note About Trolls

Three Hearts and Three Lions is notable for giving us the "D&D Troll," but the ones in The Broken Sword are much more interesting. Yes, they are ugly and brutish, but they are also smarter, and while they have enough similarities to elves to produce offspring (with the help of magic), they are explicitly related to the Jotun of Norse myth. 

Closing Thoughts

Anderson gives us some compelling stories. While not explicitly set in the same world, they are also not not the same world. His epic war of Good vs. Evil, Law vs. Chaos, is something that rings loudly even today in all editions of D&D. His wars of Christians vs. Pagans ring loudly to me.

His witches are less characters and more caricatures at times, but this fits into the world view these books have: the witches are just pawns and tools. Even when they have agency, their fate is already predetermined.

The entire time I was reading The Broken Sword, I could not help but wonder why witches didn't play a more prominent role in the game. Of course, the reason is simple. I was reading this looking for witches and not the larger themes. Gary, I assume, read these and saw the cosmic battle of Law vs. Chaos.  

None of the witches in these two tales would make for good Player Characters. They would, however, make for great NPCs using the Dragon Magazine witch class. 

In the AD&D Player's Handbook, it is mentioned that the Druid class is the same as the pre-Christian (not Gary's words) druid that has survived to Medieval times. If this is the case then certainly other "pagans" have survived. The witches of Poul Anderson certainly could be among those numbers.  

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

 It's October-eve, and that means big things here at The Other Side. I'm starting my Horror Movie Marathon here in a bit. And my theme this year is ... no theme at all! That's right, I am just going to watch horror movies as I find them, as they come to me, or however they get here. I plan to watch all the movies in The Conjuring universe and the movies in the Insidious series, too. 

October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

Really looking forward to this month.

Monday, September 29, 2025

Monstrous Mondays: Archangels

Guido Reni - Michael Defeats Satan
 I was looking for an idea to post today and saw that it was Michaelmas. Now I am not Catholic (I am not even a Christian, or a believer) but I thought this was a good excuse to round out my hierarchies of angels both for my Occult D&D project and for my Basic Bestiary.

A Word About My Basic Bestiary

This one is taking a bit. I am climbing the dual mountains of editing close to 400 monsters AND finding good art for them. I am funding the art myself, as I don't want to rely on crowdfunding for this. 

Angels

I have talked about the various angels and related creatures in my games before. 

What I want to do is create groupings of various good-aligned outsiders (Celestials) and assign them hierarchies similar to those found in the lower planes. Angels, then, are the Lawful Good-aligned Celestials. 

The trick has been finding the right way to group them all, figure out the hierarchies as the Medieval scholars would have classified them, AND (and maybe the most important) find something that works well for the games I play.

The Archangels

The generals of Heaven's armies are the seven Archangels. While some scholars equate an archangel to a particular layer of the Seven Heavens, this is not really the case.  Of these seven, St. Michael is considered to be their leader and the most powerful. 

ARCHANGEL MICHAEL
General of the Heavenly Hosts

FREQUENCY: Unique
NO. APPEARING: 1
ARMOR CLASS: –6
MOVE: 24”/36” (flying)
HIT DICE: 22 (231 hp)
% IN LAIR: Nil
TREASURE TYPE: Special (holy relics only)
NO. OF ATTACKS: 3 (flaming Holy Avenger sword +6)
DAMAGE/ATTACK: 1d12 + 12 (STR and magic bonuses) + 1d8 fire per hit +6d6 damage to the "unholy."
SPECIAL ATTACKS: Holy Word at will; spell-like abilities as a 22nd-level cleric; Voice of Authority (as Command on all evil within 60’, no save vs. 6 HD or less); Haste 3/day; may summon 2–20 angels once per day.
SPECIAL DEFENSES: +2 or better weapon to hit; immune to fire, lightning, charm, petrification, poison, death magic; regenerates 3 hp/round; 90% magic resistance.
MAGIC RESISTANCE: 90%
INTELLIGENCE: Supra-genius (25)
ALIGNMENT: Lawful Good
SIZE: Huge (9’–10’ tall)
PSIONIC ABILITY: 350
— Attack/Defense Modes: All/All

“I have seen demons in their true forms, nightmare creatures born in dreams of madmen, and even sat in the galleries of a diabolic auction to bid back a mortal soul from the clutches of a Duke of Hell. I have faced things that should have unmade me, yet I walked away with laughter still on my lips.

But when Michael appeared, when the sky split as if dawn had come at midnight, my laughter died. I had thought devils horrific, but they are at least comprehensible: greedy, ambitious, vile. The Archangel is none of these things, and that is what made him terrifying. His presence was like a storm that judged the worth of every breath I had ever drawn. His eyes pierced every spell, every secret and lie I had cloaked myself in, and for a moment, I was naked in truth before the heavens. And he saw all. 

I confess, the most dreadful creature I have ever faced was not a demon or a devil or some abomination from beyond the veils of reality, but the Archangel himself. Not because he is cruel, but because he is absolute and just.”

- From the Journal of Larina Nix

Michael is one of the seven archangels and the greatest warrior among them. He appears as a towering, armored figure of radiant fire, bearing a great Holy Avenger that burns with divine light. His voice alone can turn entire legions of fiends.

When encountered, Michael is always on a mission of cosmic import, never idly wandering the planes. He may be summoned only by direct decree of the highest divine power. In battle, Michael is the equal and opposite of the greatest demon princes and arch-devils, such as Demogorgon or Asmodeus.

Michael is the war-leader of Heaven, the one who cast down Lucifer in the First Rebellion, and who wields the flaming sword at the threshold of Paradise. He is invoked in exorcisms, called upon as protector of the dying, and hailed as the angel of judgment. In many myths, Michael weighs the souls of the dead upon golden scales, determining whether they ascend or fall.

Unlike other celestials who guide, heal, or inspire, Michael exists to fight. His presence is a living reminder that the heavens themselves are not pacifistic, but hold a sword against the darkness. He embodies both the mercy of the divine and the implacable wrath of cosmic law.

The sword borne by Michael is no ordinary weapon, but a Holy Avenger of such potency that it channels his immense strength and divine fire together. Each strike inflicts 1d12 damage, to which both his +6 Strength bonus and +6 enchantment bonus are added, followed by an additional 1d8 points of searing flame. Against demons, devils, undead, and those faerie creatures which are inimical to Law and Good, the sword delivers an additional 6d6 points of radiant destruction. Few beings can withstand even a single blow.

Michael’s arsenal of powers extends beyond his martial prowess. He may utter a Holy Word at will, casting down evil beings as if by the decree of heaven itself. His Voice of Authority compels obedience in all creatures of non-good alignment within 60 feet, with no saving throw allowed for those of 6 hit dice or less. In battle, he moves with preternatural swiftness, able to Haste himself and his allies thrice per day, and once per day, he may summon an entire host of angels (2–20, of any order) to his side.

In defense, Michael is nearly unassailable. Only enchanted weapons of +2 or better may harm him. He is wholly immune to fire, lightning, charm, petrification, poison, and all death-dealing magics. His body regenerates 3 hit points per round even if dismembered or disintegrated, so long as a spark of his divine essence remains. In addition, he possesses a 90% magic resistance, rendering most spells against him useless.

To mortals, the sight of Michael is awe beyond bearing. His radiance is said to blind the unworthy, and even those of good heart find their voices stolen in his presence. Against him, demon princes falter, and arch-devils bow in bitter hatred.

Michael as a Patron of Celestial Warlocks

Unlike the dark bargains made with demons and devils, pacts with Archangel Michael are covenants rather than contracts. The warlock does not “steal” or “bind” power from him; instead, Michael bestows divine might upon the worthy as part of their service to the Cause of Law and Good. Such warlocks are sometimes called Knights of the Flame or Champions of the Dawn.

The requirements and duties of the Warlock of St. Michael are so strict that few can adhere to them. 

Requirements

Alignment: Lawful Good. Any deviation severs the pact.

Vows: The warlock must swear oaths of courage, protection of the innocent, and resistance to evil in all its forms. They may never knowingly ally with demons, devils, or the unseelie fae.

Service: At least once per year, the warlock must undertake a holy quest of Michael’s choosing (via vision, angelic messenger, or dream).

Gifts of Michael

Warlocks in covenant with Michael receive invocations suited to battle and the banishment of evil:

(Minimum level in parentheses.)

Radiant Smite (1st): Once per day per level, the warlock’s weapon shines with holy fire, dealing +1d6 radiant damage to undead, demons, devils, or evil faerie creatures.

Shield of the Host (3rd): The warlock may call upon angelic warding, granting them protection from evil 10’ radius for 1 turn once per day.

Voice of Command (5th): Once per day, the warlock may issue a single-word command (as the spell Command), affecting all evil creatures of 6 HD or less within 30’.

Flame of Michael (7th): The warlock may invoke Michael’s light, striking a foe with 3d6 holy fire (save vs. spells for half). Usable once per week.

Summon the Dawn (9th+): Once per month, the warlock may summon a single Agathós (Aurora, Astral, or Lunar) to aid them for 1 turn per caster level.

Drawbacks

Michael is implacable in judgment. Warlocks who deviate from his vows may find their powers withdrawn instantly. Should they betray their covenant or consort with the unholy, Michael himself may appear, not as a teacher, but as an executioner.

Friday, September 26, 2025

Urban Fantasy Fridays: Supernatural (Special Edition)

Supernatural RPG

 This year I have been celebrating various Fantasy RPGs and judging them on their ability to replace D&D. For October I am going to focus instead on Urban Fantasy games with Horror elements to them; something I rather love. 

This past week, instead of gaming, my son and I worked on characters. I was working on characters for my Urban Fantasy Fridays and he was doing Call of Cthulhu 7th ed. We got to talking while listening to his "D&D Classic Rock mix" when the subject came around to the Supernatural series. We both commented on how this September was the 20th anniversary of the show's premiere (September 13, 2005). We all agreed we had a lot of fun watching it. It was the last show we all watched together as a family, you know, before the kids got their own lives. Liam lamented that there was no Supernatural RPG. To which I corrected him and pulled it out.  He was pretty excited about it, to be honest. 

So we dropped the games we were working on (him CoC7, me Chill 3rd Edition) to recreate the same characters in Supernatural.

Supernatural RPG

2009. by Jamie Chambers. Published by Margaret Weiss Productions.

Supernatural: The Role Playing Game came out in 2009 from Margaret Weis Productions, back when they were adapting a lot of TV properties into RPG form. Like Smallville and Battlestar Galactica, this one used the Cortex System (the pre-Cortex Plus version). That alone puts it in a particular place in RPG history, when licensed games were less about “crunch” and more about catching the mood of the show.

I am somewhat hesitant to review this one. The big reason is that it is long out of print. You can find it on eBay for some really insane prices. The other reason is it only covers Supernatural up to Season 3; so about 20% of the show. There is a lot in the show that is not covered by these rules. Lastly, and this one is hard, it doesn't really *do* anything that other games can also do. The system itself, Cortex, is like a bastard child of Unisystem and Savage Worlds. 

The book is great looking and there is a lot here in terms of use and layout that will later be seen in the Dresden Files RPG. 

So I am taking this one out of my "Urban Fantasy Fridays" proper, but still giving it its own due by placing it in Supernatural's premiere month. 

As you’d expect, this game built for monster hunting, salt, shotguns, and a healthy dose of bad family drama. The book does a good job of introducing newcomers to the Supernatural world, but if you were watching the show back then, it was a nice way to immerse yourself in that universe at home. Characters are hunters, of course, though not necessarily Sam and Dean. You can make your own, or play with archetypes drawn right from the show. Sam, Dean, John (their dad), and Bobby (their other dad) are the only featured NPCs.

Mechanically, it’s pure Cortex: roll a couple of dice based on your traits and hope for the best, with plot points to keep the action flowing. It’s not a heavy system and fits the episodic structure of Supernatural really well, you can knock out a “case of the week” in a session or two. The downside is that it doesn’t dig too deep into campaign longevity; it’s really tuned for one-shots and short arcs rather than sprawling epics. Which is ironic given the show's eventual 15-year-long life

Looking back, the game is a time capsule. The series was still early in its run (season three), so it reflects Supernatural before it got truly cosmic. So no Crowley, no Castiel, and sadly no Rowena. That makes it more urban horror and road-trip mystery than angels, Leviathans, and end-of-the-world plots. In a way, that’s a strength, it captures the weird Americana vibe that made those early seasons fun.

It’s out of print now, and not easy to find at a reasonable price. Still, as a piece of the Cortex lineage and a reflection of Supernatural’s monster-of-the-week roots, it’s worth a look for fans. For me, it sits on the shelf next to Chill, NIGHT SHIFT, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer RPGa reminder of when urban horror TV and RPGs crossed streams in fun and exciting ways.

Supernatural RPGs


Expanding the Supernatural RPG Universe

I mentioned above Cortex in this version feels like the bastard child of Unisystem (Buffy, WitchCraft) and Savage Worlds (Rippers, etc.) so expanding the RPG options of Supernatural are fairly easy.

I even have a few posts about it already, back when this game first came out.

I have used these ideas at varying degrees to make some new characters, espeically expanding the Supernatural universe to include witches and even succubi

Each one uses a slightly different type of witchcraft/magic system, and that works fine with me. None is "perfect" as far as I am concerned, but I am sure I could craft one.

In truth if I was going to play Supernatural these days, I would just use NIGHT SHIFT

But, I'll give magic/witchcraft one last try for Supernatural/Cotrtex.

Larina "Nix" Nichols for Supernatural

Would my witch be in the Supernatural universe? I have to say honestly, not likely. Witches are generally evil or at least up to no good in Supernatural. And anything she would do in the game can already be done by the witch and future Queen of Hell, Rowena MacLeod. But hey, this is my universe.

Larina Nichols for Supernatural
Larina Nichols

Concept: Witch (Seasoned)

Attributes
Agility: d6
Strength: d4
Vitality: d6
Alertness: d12
Intelligence: d12
Willpower: d12+d2

Derived Attributes
Initiative: d6+d12
Endurance: d6+d12+d2
Life Points: 20
Resistance: d6+d6

Weapons
Knife d2
Arcane Blast d8, Range: 40 Ammo 6 (Vitality)

Skills
Animals d6, Artistry d4, Craft d6, Discipline d4 (Concentration d6), Influence d10, Knowledge d8 (Linguistics d10, Occult d10), Lore d6 (Demons d8), Perception d6 (Empathy d8, Intuition d8), Performance d4, Ranged Weapons d4, Science d6 (Social Sciences d8), Unarmed Combat d4

Traits
Allure d6
Witch d8 (Telekinesis, Arcane Blast, ESP)
Obsessed (Magic) -d2
Dark Secret (Witch) -d4

Honestly, I like this build. I need to refine the magic system further, but this will certainly suffice. I don't think she would show up on the main Supernatural series. Witches end up in a bad way when Sam and Dead are around. No, if she is going to be a "guest star," then it has to be on Wayward Sisters. Avoids her and Rowena from sharing the same scenes. The group would seek her out for occult advice, not knowing she is a witch. And in proper Supernatural fashion, she even has her own soundtrack to choose from!

I should post Rowena, but she is basically similar to this, only more powerful (as she should be). 

Doing this does make me nostalgic for the show. 

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Forgotten Realms Reviews: The Ruins of Myth Drannor (1993)

The Ruins of Myth Drannor (1993)
The Ruins of Myth Drannor is a 1993 boxed set for the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd edition role-playing game, immerses players in the perilous and ancient elven city of the Forgotten Realms. This supplement provides Dungeon Masters with the comprehensive tools needed to run epic adventures within the fabled, and now monster-infested, ruins.

It really isn't the Forgotten Realms' answer to Gondolin, but I am at a loss to come up with a better example.

Back in the early 90s, TSR was hitting its stride with big boxed sets for the Realms. The Ruins of Myth Drannor (1993) is a prime example, a sprawling campaign supplement that promised to take players deep into one of the most iconic fallen cities of D&D lore. Like a lot of the Realms material of this era, it’s packed to the brim, sometimes messy, always ambitious.

MY first encounter with this mythical Elven realm didn't come from this boxed set, but rather the Forgotten Realms novel Spellfire. I have been looking forward to checking it out on its own for some time, but the prices for it on eBay are all over the place. So, I am settling for the PDF and print-on-demand copies. 

The Ruins of Myth Drannor (2e)

1993. By Ed Greenwood. Artists: Erik Olson, Jeff Easley, Arnie Sweikel, and John Sattem

While I will refer to the "boxed set" here, since that is how it was originally published, I am working off of my Print on Demand version from DriveThruRPG.

The box itself comes with three books, a pile of maps, and the Monstrous Compendium monsters. The full “big box” treatment I have come to expect from 1990s Realms.

The Ruins of Myth Drannor Campaign Guide

The Ruins of Myth Drannor Campaign Guide

128 Pages. 

This book details the extensive history of Myth Drannor, from its zenith as the "City of Song" to its tragic downfall. It provides in-depth information on the various factions and creatures that now inhabit the ruins, offering a rich and dangerous environment for exploration. The materials include maps of the city and surrounding areas, new rules for the unique and fluctuating magical environment of Myth Drannor, and detailed descriptions of key locations within the ruins. Adventurers are warned that the city is a treacherous place, filled with deadly dangers and formidable monsters, making it a challenge even for the most experienced players.

Once a beacon of magic and civilization where elves, dwarves, gnomes, and humans coexisted in harmony, Myth Drannor fell to a great evil centuries ago, leaving it a despoiled and haunted place. The elves long guarded the ruins to contain the darkness within, but with their departure, the city's long-lost treasures and powerful magic are now a lure for adventurers from across the lands.

Of particular note here are the return of the Devils, aka Baatezu to the Realms. Myth Drannor is filled with them. But they are almost eclipsed by the Baelnorns and the Phaerimm. 

We also get some NPCs of note and a good collection of magic items. I am not 100% sure, but I think some of these have appeared in the pages of Dragon Magazine. Whether or not they did, it is always good to have them in their proper place here.

Myth Drannor Adventures
Myth Drannor Adventures

32 Pages.

One thing I’ve always appreciated about this set is that it doesn’t shy away from the scale. Myth Drannor isn’t just a dungeon crawl; it’s a blasted, cursed, haunted city where every corner hides a different threat. The designers clearly wanted this to be more than a string of rooms, it’s an entire sandbox of dangerous possibilities. There are magical zones, weird planar overlaps, and plenty of remnants of the elves’ glory days now twisted into something darker.

The adventures lean into that. You don’t just wander into a ruin and fight skeletons; you’re uncovering old elven magic, running into rival adventurers, and dealing with the ongoing fallout of Myth Drannor’s fall. For a 1993 product, it feels ahead of its time in terms of encouraging exploration and faction play.

Map Book

50 pages*

Ok this part of the PoD book likely differs a lot from the Boxed Set. I am assuming that the maps were done much like the maps of other Realms boxed sets with a guide book. Here they are all one big document. While the Realms maps art works of art in their own right, sometimes they work better on the walls than on the game table. These are easier to use at the table, but haver their own issues. I might need to print them all out and tape them all together. Less than ideal, of course, but beggars can't be choosers. 

Monstrous Compendium Monsters

This includes 18 new monsters to add to your Monstrous Compendium binders. That is if you don't mind the chaos the alphabetizing is already descending into. I detail that more below. 

Overall

Of course, it has its quirks. Like many TSR boxes from this era, the material can be overwhelming. There’s so much stuff that it’s easy to lose track, and unless you’re ready to put in the prep time, you’ll drown in details. 

Still, if you’re a Realms fan, The Ruins of Myth Drannor is a classic. It captures that sense of wonder and danger that defines the best Forgotten Realms material. It’s not just about elves and ruins; it’s about the weight of history pressing down on the present, and what happens when your adventurers dig too deep into stories that should have stayed buried.

Looking at it now, this set feels like a bridge between old-school mega-dungeons and the more narrative-driven campaigns that would come later. It’s very much a 2e product, but one that still has plenty of life for DMs willing to do the work. If you want your players to feel like they’re stepping into a legendary, doomed place, Myth Drannor delivers.

The Campaign guide is just fun reading to be honest. While I was looking forward to using this in my Realms game, it was also just a pleasure to read through.

Sinéad, Nida, Arnell, Jaromir, and Rhiannon

That sense of danger and epic quests fits in perfectly with where my own characters are heading. Sinéad, Nida, Arnell, Jaromir, and Rhiannon have been journeying eastward, leaving the safety of Sword Coast and the Dales behind. For them, Myth Drannor is less a tourist stop and more a trial by fire. 

I read the material and thought about what these characters might be thinking as they pass through. While Sinéad is overtly the "star" of my little adventure, it was the other characters that began to shine through. 

Sinéad feels the pull of her people’s legacy in the ruins; Arnell feels the same pull but along with a loss he can't explain; Nida says she is going to treasure but really she worries about what old magic might do to the weave of the world; Jaromir is simply wary of walking into a place where so many great adventurers have already fallen. And Rhiannon, well, she can’t resist the thought of lost lore buried beneath the rubble. Her quest really starts here.

Nida, Arnell, and Rhiannon come out of this most changed. Honestly, Arnell leaves the group, such is the weight of loss he feels for this fallen elven empire. Sinéad's reaction is more tempered by her human side. Nida, who I know I am going to switch over to wizard soon, feels a loss as well, but for the magic.

By the end of this, Nida is an 8th-level Rogue and will Dual-Class into a wizard soon. Sinéad is 7th level in Bard and Wizard Multiclass. 

Looking back on the sheets I have for them (and it is lot surprisingly) I had both Nida and Sinéad be different types of Witches. I am not sure that applies to them anymore. At least not how I have been playing them of late. I think I will keep Nida as witch, using the Witch-kit from The Complete Wizard's Handbook (which was what I had planned for Sinéad) and then use the Rashemaar Witch kit for Rhiannon (planned initially for Nida).  What I wanted was to try out all the witch kits that 2nd ed had to offer. I might still try that in some way.

About the Print on Demand

I have enough Forgotten Realms boxed sets now to know what to expect, and to know what I am not getting here. The maps are part of the book rather than being printed separately, which honestly limits their utility. 

The books are bound together in alphabetical order, which is not a huge help as "Adventures" comes before "Campaign Guide." It is a little odd though. 

The Monstrous Compendium supplement, while perfectly usable here in the book format, also comes as a PDF for my printing pleasure. So much that I accidentally printed two copies. One copy went into my grow Forgotten Realms Monstrous Compendium and the second copy was divided between my Core Compendiums and my Ravenloft one. 

The Ruins of Myth Drannor Monstrous Compenium pages

Final Thoughts

What really strikes me, reading this set today, is how much mythic weight and age it gives to the Forgotten Realms. Myth Drannor is not just another dungeon stuffed with monsters and treasure; it’s a reminder that the Realms had centuries of triumph and tragedy before any adventuring party set foot in it. The magic items scattered across Faerûn don’t come from nowhere; they’re the legacy of civilizations like this one, built by the elves and then broken by hubris, war, and time.

I know from reading online Ed had a tight deadline for this, but I wonder how much it he already had planned or even written. The feel is he had Myth Drannor in some form in his head and maybe on paper already. The result only adds to the mythic feel in my mind.

For Sinéad, Nida, Arnell, Jaromir, and Rhiannon, the ruins are a crucible, but they’re also a history lesson. Every shattered tower and cursed bauble is proof that even the mightiest fall. And that’s what makes Myth Drannor so compelling: it’s both a playground for adventurers and a gravestone for a lost golden age.

Running or reading The Ruins of Myth Drannor reminds me why I have come to love the Realms in the first place. It’s a world with scars, where the past is constantly pushing against the present, and where the future is written by those bold (or foolish) enough to venture east into the ruins.