Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Witchcraft Wednesday: Psychic Powers

Photo by  Anastasia  Shuraeva, edits by me: https://www.pexels.com/photo/woman-in-black-shirt-staring-at-the-clear-glass-ball-6014337/
 I have been going through my notes for my "Occult D&D" project and my list of potential movies to watch this October and they crossover at an interesting point.

Troubled Psychic Kids. 

I love the AD&D psionic system. Yes, I really do. But it is not without its problems. Ok. It has a lot of problems. I want a system that would allow me to do "Carrie" or "The Fury" or even "Scanners." Well. I don't have that yet. But I have started pencilling down ideas. Here is where I am at right now.

The Six Disciplines of the Mind

"The vulgar eye perceives magic where there is none. The vulgar mind dismisses the psychic because it is not magic. Yet to the trained investigator, these disciplines are neither miracle nor madness. They are the natural sciences of the unseen, awaiting only the patience to be catalogued."

 - Research Notes, Book I, Prof. Scott Elders

When I started sketching my ideas for Occult D&D, I wanted to treat psychic powers the same way I approached witches: something that feels like it could have sat on a hobby store shelf in 1986. These aren’t just mechanics; they’re the “folk science” of the strange, drawing from parapsychology, pulp fiction, and the endless debates of game tables where psionics were talked about but rarely used.

After sorting through decades of parapsychology claims, RPG precedents, and a few eldritch debates between Larina and Prof. Elders (yeah, characters argue in my head. It is worse than the tinnitus I have), I’ve settled on six core disciplines of the psychic arts… with a seventh, optional frontier discipline for those who dare.

Telepathy

The ability to communicate mind-to-mind, read surface thoughts, and in its higher expressions, dominate another’s will. Telepaths are the most feared of psychics, for no secret is safe.

Sub-powers: Empathy, Mind Link, Mental Domination.

Clairvoyance

The “second sight” of lore: perceiving hidden things, distant places, or future events. Often confused with prophecy, but rooted in the psychic’s own perception rather than divine revelation.

Sub-powers: ESP, Remote Viewing, Precognition.

Psychokinesis

The raw power of the mind over matter. From small acts of levitation to hurling objects across a battlefield, this is the most spectacular and physically demanding of disciplines.

Sub-powers: Telekinesis, Pyrokinesis, Kinetic Barriers.

Biopsionics

The mysterious link between mind and body. Practitioners can heal, alter their own form, or endure conditions no mortal should. It is whispered some can change shape entirely by thought alone.

Sub-powers: Psychic Healing, Trance, Body Control, Shape Alteration.

Mediumship

The spirit-bridge: channeling entities, communing with the dead, or casting one’s soul into the astral plane. In AD&D terms, this is where the occult and the psychic most clearly overlap.

Sub-powers: Astral Projection, Spirit Communication, Possession.

Precognition

Visions of things yet to come, sometimes crystal clear, more often symbolic and frustrating. True precogs are rare, and their gift is as much curse as blessing.

Sub-powers: Danger Sense, Probability Manipulation, Visionary Trance.

The Optional Seventh: Metapsionics

Where the others act upon mind, matter, or spirit, metapsionics acts upon psionics themselves. These rare gifts allow a psychic to alter the use of powers, dampen another’s talents, or amplify their own. Some say it is a discipline that shouldn’t exist at all, it is a loophole in reality’s design.

Sub-powers: Psionic Dampening, Psychic Harmonization, Probability Twisting.

--

None of this is written in stone, just in the pixels you see before you.

I also still need to figure out how psychic powers co-exist with witchcraft. 

Photo by cottonbro studio, edits by me: https://www.pexels.com/photo/woman-sitting-by-the-table-with-tarot-cards-holding-her-head-7181709/

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge: The Conjuring (2013) - The Conjuring Series

The Conjuring (2013)
The centerpiece of the Conjuring Universe, the one that started it all.

The Conjuring (2013) - Conjuring Timeline 1968-1971 

Ok. There is lot going on here. Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga star as real-life couple and demonic investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. The Warrens' investigations also gave us the Amityville Horror story and film franchises. Maybe I should have included them in this. Nah.  Lorraine Warren even makes a cameo appearance in this movie, before her passing in 2019. 

First off, Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are both fantastic. I have enjoyed everything they have been in even when the surrounding movie was terrible.  This movie is not terrible. 

And honestly, the whole cast is fantastic.  Ron Livingston and Lili Taylor as the Perron parents, and Joey King as one of their daughters. All also based on real people. 

The Annabelle sub-plot is only the prologue to the main tale. 

By 2013, the haunted house genre seemed played out, but this movie really revived it. Revived isn't right, it brought back to life. And there are a lot of great scares here. The demon grabbing Christine's leg is certainly going to give someone nightmares. 

We learn the house is cursed by an accused satanic witch who killed her baby and herself in a satanic ritual at 3:07 am, when all the clocks stop. 

What makes The Conjuring stand out is the execution. James Wan stages his scares with precision. Long takes, creeping camera movement, and subtle sound design build tension until it’s unbearable and then the hammer drops. The clapping game in the cellar remains one of the best set pieces in modern horror, not because of gore or CGI, but because of its timing and restraint. 

When things happen, they happen all at once. 

Oh this place is haunted haunted

Turns out the place is full of ghosts and demonic forces. 

There are a lot of parallels between this and Steven Spielberg's Poltergeist. You would be excused if you thought  they were based on the same story and told from very different points of view. 

NIGHT SHIFT & Occult D&D

There is no end of material for either my Occult D&D and NIGHT SHIFT. I mean, this is a NIGHT SHIFT campaign right here. Ed and Lorriane are by the rulebook occult scholars and a psychic. The scene where the occult investigators come into the house is fantastic and feels like found footage.  Not to mention, there are more secret rooms in this house than in a Gygax dungeon.


October Horror Movie Marathon 2025


October Horror Movie Challenge 2025
Viewed: 8
First Time Views: 6

October Horror Movie Challenge: Annabelle (2014) - The Conjuring Series

Annabelle (2014)
Now we come to the first proper sequel, or prequel to the Conjuring universe, 2014's Annabelle. 

Annabelle (2014) - Conjuring Timeline 1968-1970

Ok, now we are in the 1970s, the start of the modern Satanic Panic. 

There is an attempt here to connect this all to the Manson Family murders, which I understand was an inspiration for some part of this series.

John and Mia Form (Ward Horton and Annabelle Wallis) are a new couple and Mia is very pregnant. John gives her a gift of the Annabelle doll. 

We are treated to a scene later, Mia's point of view of the adopted Janice, aka Annabell, from Annabelle: Creation, killing her adoptive parents. The killers come next door and attack Mia and John. One of the killers kills herself, holding the Annabelle doll.  We do learn that the killer was Janice/Annabell. Is the doll the same one as in A:C? No idea, but we do know they were all made by Samuel Mullins.

The predictable spookiness starts. BTW, this series does a lot to make rocking chairs scary. The sewing machine was stressing me out, too. My mom was a seamstress, and she used to run needles through her fingers all the time. The TV going out was too much like Poltergeist. 

The actors are not great, save for Alfre Woodard and Tony Amendola, who are both always great. To be fair, Ward Horton and Annabelle Wallis are not given a lot to work with. 

I had heard that this was the weakest link in the series, and I can see that. It is certainly not as good as Annabelle: Creation. The movie is slow, unnecessarily so, really. Annabelle: Creation really redeems this series so far. 

NIGHT SHIFT & Occult D&D

You know I love 1970s occult horror, and there are plenty of ideas here, even if the movie itself didn't fully take advantage. 


October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge 2025
Viewed: 7
First Time Views: 6

Auction Scores Tuesady

 Last week was the semi-annual Game Plus auction in Mount Prospect, IL.

The RPG auction used to be huge and take up most of the day on Saturday. Now it is on Friday night and is done in a few hours. Board games now dominate the weekend. 

But that doesn't mean there weren't so good choices to be had. I went in looking for some Star Wars books for my oldest, but came home with just three new games for myself.

Games Plus Auction Haul

That is a brand new Runequest starter set, still in shrink. A brand new Dragonbane, also still in shrink. And an older, but still like new, Basic Set of The Dark Eye RPG.

Take home price? $42 for all of them.

I am pretty happy with them all to be honest. Dragonbane looks awesome. And my oldest has wanted a fantasy game that uses the BRP system for a bit now. 

Runequest

Dragonbane

The Dark Eye

I think given this. I am going to create a Duck/Mallard character for both Dragonbane and Runequest.  

And I think I know exactly what character I want to do.

Behold THE WIZARD!

But maybe more this vibe

Now for a good name.

Monday, October 6, 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge: The Nun II (2023) - The Conjuring Series

The Nun II (2023)
The next in the Conjuring chronological timeline is 2023's The Nun II. This time we move from an orphanage for girls to a boarding school for girls. 

The Nun II (2023) - Conjuring Timeline 1956

We start this one four years after the events of The Nun. This one starts with the death of a Priest in Tarascon, France (yes, where they defeated the Tarasque). We also find Sister Irene in an Italian Convent, and Maurice, aka Frenchie, is working at a school in France. Father Burke, we learn, is dead. 

Sister Irene is charged with investigating Valak again. This time, the setting shifts across Europe, with the demon’s shadow stretching into the French boarding school. That shift works: there’s something inherently creepy about children in peril, especially when Catholic ritual and dark demonic legend overlap.

The visuals remain the franchise’s strongest card. If you’re into ruined chapels, candlelit corridors, and sudden blasts of holy fire, this movie has you covered. Valak remains terrifying, arguably even more so here than in the first film. She looms larger, and the filmmakers lean harder into the iconography: shadowy halls, painted saints staring down, and that pale face waiting just past the edge of the light.

Where it falters is pacing. At times, the movie wants to be a detective story, with Irene piecing together the mystery of Valak’s hunt for a sacred relic. At other times, it just wants to throw another jump scare at the screen. The result is uneven. There are moments that feel like The Exorcist by way of Hammer Horror, and then there are moments that feel like a haunted house ride we’ve been through before. The shadow of the Exorcist looms large. 

Still, I found this one more satisfying than the first. It is a slower burn, and there’s a stronger sense of continuity, not just with The Nun, but with The Conjuring films overall. The lore deepens, and the stakes feel higher. Farmiga is still great, and she anchors the film with quiet intensity, and Storm Reid (as her ally, Sister Debra, and from A Wrinkle in Time) brings some fresh energy to the dynamic. Honestly, I want a movie of these two criss-crossing Europe as demon hunters. Psychic Irene and skeptic-but-looking-for-her-faith Debra in a trans-European romp. Doesn't fit the vibe of the series at all, but it would be fun. 

Is it perfect? No. But The Nun II knows what it’s about, and it leans harder into the occult Gothic aesthetic that made Valak such a standout villain in the first place. If you liked the first but wanted more, this delivers. If you didn’t like the first at all, this won’t change your mind.

Occut D&D and NIGHT SHIFT

From an RPG perspective, The Nun II plays out like a second act in a campaign. The first adventure introduces the villain; the second broadens the scope, drops hints of deeper lore, and raises the stakes with bigger set pieces. 


October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge 2025
Viewed: 7
First Time Views: 6

Monstrous Mondays: Haunted Dolls

Spider Baby. I was assured it was not haunted when I bought it.
Spider Baby.
I was assured it was not haunted when I bought it.
 I watched Annabelle: Creation last night, and it was fun. Like the rest of the Conjuring movies, it is based on "real" events and, in this case, a real doll. The real Annabelle is a "Raggedy Ann" doll that came into the possession of the Warrens. I am not surprised it is haunted; those things are creepy enough, completely mundane. My mom, who was a seamstress, had made them for people. Creepy-looking things. 

Haunted dolls are not a new phenomenon; they have been around as long as dolls have existed. Which is to say, forever. Shamans would use them to capture spirits, good or bad, and even the small idols of ancient religions could house the real soul of a god. Or so believers claimed.

Annabelle, both the movie version and the real life version, is said to house a demonic spirit, and because of its evil presence, other spirits are attracted to it. In the Warrens' home, Annabelle is locked in a box with glass from a church, and a priest comes out to bless it twice a month.

Of course, they make for great antagonists. 

Haunted Doll (NIGHT SHIFT)

Number Appearing: 1 (1-4 in some cases)
DV: 8 [4]
Move: 20ft [40ft]
Vitality Dice: 2 [8]
Special: Strangle attack, weapon attack (1d6-1), [summon Class 0 Demons**], telekinesis, Unique kill

A haunted doll is a doll possessed by a spirit, usually the ghost of a child or rarely a mother, or by a demon [stats in brackets].

These dolls attach themselves to families, in particular one with a young girl, and proceed to cause havoc. Often their goal is only mayhem and fright, but on occasions a doll will exist whose desire is to take over the soul of a child to replace it or consume the soul, or even just to murder all in the family so the child is blamed.

All Haunted Dolls have a unique kill and can only be destroyed in this manner. This is most often tied to it's creation.

** A Type 0 demon is a least demon with VD 4 and DV 6 and only 1 demonic power. 

Haunted and Cursed Dolls are given more details in the NIGHT SHIFT Night Companion book. NIGHT SHIFT is also on sale!

Sunday, October 5, 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge: Annabelle: Creation (2017) - The Conjuring Series

Annabelle: Creation (2017)
 Moving on to the next movie in the series, we come to the cursed doll Annabelle. There is something scary about creey dolls, so this should be fun.

Annabelle: Creation (2017)  - Conjuring Timeline 1955

Samuel Mullins (Anthony LaPaglia) and his wife Esther (Miranda Otto) are mourning the loss of their daughter Annabelle, nicknamed "Bee" (and played briefly by Samara Lee). Among the orphans is Janice (Talitha Bateman) and Linda (Lulu Wilson, no relation to Patrick Wilson of The Conjuring and better known for her role in Becky)

What works here is the slow build. Director David F. Sandberg (who also gave us Lights Out) knows how to stage a scare. Instead of cheap jolts, the movie leans into atmosphere: shadows moving just out of sight, doors creaking open on their own, the doll staring blankly from across the room or from under the staircase. When the horror finally ramps up, it feels earned. 

Our Nun in this one, Sister Charlotte (Stephanie Sigman), has a connection to the cloister in Romania from The Nun. 

The performances are solid, especially from the child actors. Lulu Wilson stands out, bringing both innocence and terror to the role. The kids feel like real characters, not just cannon fodder, which makes the haunting all the more effective.  There are not as many jump scares as in The Nun, but this film features a very effective slow-burning horror that works well.

The Raggedy Ann doll at the end was a nice touch.

Occut D&D and NIGHT SHIFT

Creepy dolls have long been a staple in Ravenloft and constantly come up in horror stories and movies, so adapting them NIGHT SHIFT is easy.

For my Occult D&D possession is always fun, and a haunted house is a time-honored classic.


October Horror Movie Marathon 2025

October Horror Movie Challenge 2025
Viewed: 6
First Time Views: 5