Sunday, February 8, 2026

Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 8

Day 8 - Local Peoples & Cultures

Day 8-Tell us about the local peoples and their cultures.
Describe the people and their Species, Nationalities, and other identifying features. 

West Haven Group

Elowen's Journal

"When I first arrived in West Haven, I could not stop staring. I had never seen so many different kinds of people in one place before. At home, everyone fit into neat categories. Humans, a few elves, the occasional dwarf passing through. Here, the streets felt like they were unfolding into something larger every time I turned a corner.

Now I do not notice it the same way. They are neighbors. Friends. People who wave when they see me and ask how my parents are doing. There are tieflings who look like devils but have never once been unkind to me. Goblins like Doireann, who splash through puddles and laugh too loudly. Gnomes everywhere, running inns and kitchens and making sure no one leaves hungry. I even know a trolla, Grýlka, who is bigger than most doorways and a lot smarter than she lets on. Esmé says she herself is from another world entirely and came here by magic. Aisling says the same, but she never talks about where she is from, and I have learned that some questions are better left unasked.  Larina even said she spent a month and a half as a fox, but I am not sure whether she was teasing me or telling the truth. Reality is different for witches. 

What still stands out most, though, are the dead. There are more ghosts here than anywhere I have ever seen. No one talks about it, and yet everyone knows. They linger at the edges of crowds, in doorways, near the fountain. The living make room without meaning to. I think West Haven draws in those who do not fit elsewhere, living or not. And somehow, it makes space for all of us."

Designer's Notes

West Haven is intentionally inclusive in both population and tone. While the mechanical roots may lie in AD&D 1st Edition, the social philosophy leans more toward modern sensibilities. This is a place where misfits, outsiders, and the unusual are not just tolerated but expected. If a species is sentient, whether living or dead, there is a place for it here. 

That inclusivity is not accidental. 

Witches are the cultural glue that makes it work. Their presence normalizes difference, manages spiritual overflow, and enforces boundaries without erasing identity. The unusually high number of ghosts in West Haven is a feature, not a bug. The town attracts the lingering because it knows how to live alongside them. In contrast, East Haven's population dynamics are more traditionally oriented, closer to a classic AD&D model. West Haven, by design, lets diversity run wild. It is a place where the strange can call home, and where players are free to explore identity, culture, and belonging without needing justification beyond the simple fact that West Haven exists.

West Haven is by intent and design a place where the strange, the exotic, and the wonderful can call home.


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Saturday, February 7, 2026

Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 7

Day 7 - Weather

Day 7-What's the weather like today?
Is there a particular climate or weather that's prominent in the region of the campaign? Does it vary? What is it like and how bad does it get?

Photo by Péter Kövesi: https://www.pexels.com/photo/dust-cloud-on-horizon-under-cloudy-sky-15211414/
Photo by Péter Kövesi

Elowen's Journal

"I have learned that the weather in West Haven is not something you check. It is something you listen to.

I feel the seasons in my bones now. Autumn hums, like the air itself is quietly singing. Spells settle more easily then, and even the ghosts seem more alert, as if they are paying attention again. Winter presses inward. Snow piles high against doors and windows, and everything turns quiet and close. Summer storms tear through the sky with no warning, stripping away weak wards and careless protections as if the land itself is reminding us not to be lazy. The weather here is never just background. It participates.

I love the storms best. Doireann always tries to drag me outside to dance barefoot in the rain, laughing like she is daring the sky to strike her. Most of the time, she can only convince Aisling to join her. I usually watch them laughing outside, from under the eaves, feeling the thunder roll through me anyway. Amaranth complains about the cold from Samhain until nearly Midsummer, while Grýlka thrives in it, claiming the snow makes everything honest. You can barely get Esmé away from her garden in the spring. I think she missed her calling as a druid. Larina is...radiant, resplendent in the autumn. Everyone has a season they belong to. I am still figuring out which one is mine."

Designer's Notes

I never wanted West Haven to exist in a single mood. A place that is always sunny or always bleak becomes flat very quickly, both in fiction and at the table. West Haven needed seasons that mattered. Winters that isolate. Springs that promise too much. Summers that remind you how fragile your preparations are. Autumns that feel heavy with magic and consequence.

From a practical standpoint, I draw inspiration from a mix of sources, including the Haven boxed set, various city supplements like those from RuneQuest, and real-world climate patterns. Sometimes, honestly, I just cheat and use whatever the weather is outside and let that be West Haven’s weather for the day. It keeps the setting grounded and unpredictable. Mechanically and narratively, seasonal shifts affect spellcasting, rituals, and ghost activity, reinforcing the idea that magic in West Haven responds to the world rather than ignoring it. The weather here is not favorable. It is part of play.


Join Adam Dickstein of Barking Alien, and his RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE 2026!

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Friday, February 6, 2026

Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 6

The Drunken Orc Inn
Day 6 – Where Shall We Start?

Day 6-Where shall we start?
Where did the campaign begin and/or where should a traveler to the region start their journey through it?

Elowen’s Journal

"The first place I ever went in West Haven was the Drunken Orc Inn, and I still think that tells you everything you need to know about this place. Mother and Father were not impressed, and I think they wanted to turn around and take me home at that moment. 

It is loud. It is crowded. It smells like old ale, wet cloaks, and poor decisions. Voices overlap in ways that make my head ache if I stay too long. And yet, for all that chaos, it feels strangely safe. No spells are cast inside its walls. Not openly, anyway. No grudges are settled there, and no one pretends otherwise. What happens in the Drunken Orc is remembered, and that alone keeps most people careful.

It sits just outside the village proper, along the Western Trade Road, far enough that the laws of West Haven loosen their grip without letting things spiral completely out of control. When I want to feel like I have stepped outside the careful rhythm of covens and quiet streets, this is where I go. Aisling comes with me sometimes. She doesn't like me calling her "Dreamer," but that is what all the ghosts call her. They give her a wide berth and nod in respect to her. I need to find out why. We sit, we listen, we watch strangers who think they are unseen. It is not a safe place, exactly, but it does not threaten the people of West Haven. And that distinction matters more than most travelers realize."

Designer's Notes

The Drunken Orc Inn is a deliberately familiar anchor point. It is the kind of tavern players instantly understand, and that is exactly why it works. By leaning into the cliché rather than avoiding it, the inn becomes a stable social landmark where adventurers, criminals, mercenaries, and outsiders naturally converge.

In practice, the Drunken Orc functions as a neutral zone between West Haven and the wider world. It is commonly run by the local thieves’ guild, who use it to identify marks, recruit talent, and quietly enforce boundaries. Some patrons are fair game. Others are absolutely not. Elowen falls squarely into the latter category. The guild has been warned, directly and without ambiguity, by the Witch Queen herself to leave her untouched. This unspoken protection is why Elowen feels safe there without ever fully knowing why. It is also where adventurers brush up against covens and witch politics without realizing how close they are to real power.

BTW. Ghosts give Aisling respect because, like Elowen, she is half in one world and half in another. Unlike the gentle re-awakening of Elowen, Aisling came back from the dead screaming and covered in blood. Someone else's blood. Her death was tragic, her rebirth was violent, but she wants to live her life to the fullest and is, in fact, a rather sweet and nice girl. She and Elowen are likely to become good friends. Both are good people; they just had terrible things happen to them. 


Join Adam Dickstein of Barking Alien, and his RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE 2026!

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Thursday, February 5, 2026

Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 5

Day 5 - Campaign History

Day 5-Can you tell us about the campaign's history?
In the real world and within the universe.

Chicago skyline
Sweet Home Chicago

Elowen’s Journal

"People ask about the history of West Haven as if it were something written down somewhere, bound in leather, and kept on a shelf. I suppose parts of it are. Dates, names, floods, fires. That sort of thing. But that is not how I learned it.

I learned West Haven’s history by listening.

The ghosts here remember things in pieces. Not years or reigns, but reasons. Why a wall was built thicker in one place. Why a road bends when it should not. Why a family stopped using a name. I have spoken with spirits who remember the first Haven, before the lake swallowed it, and with others who arrived long after, never realizing they were walking streets that no longer existed. They do not count time the way the living do. They remember what mattered to them when they were alive, and that tells me more than any ledger ever could.

I think the village is about three hundred and twelve years old, give or take a season or two. That is what the dead suggest, anyway. I sometimes wonder if I know its history better than Larina does. Not because she has forgotten anything, but because she lived forward through it, while I hear it all at once. The joy, the fear, the mistakes, the moments when someone chose to stay rather than leave. West Haven remembers itself through its ghosts. I just happen to be someone who can listen."

Designer's Notes

The earliest seeds came decades ago, walking through downtown Chicago and wanting a fantasy city that felt lived-in, layered, and resilient. Prior to this, I was working on something I was calling "The Urban Survival Guide" with my old DM R. Michael Grenda. We explored the idea of urban environments as equal to dungeons and wildernesses as adventuring landscapes. 

From those early notes came West Haven and East Haven, separated by Lake Haven and bound together by history, trade, blood, and tension. Over time, West Haven evolved into a witch-centered settlement, a place that outsiders might superstitiously call “Witch Haven” without quite understanding why the name fits. The town's history has since grown organically over decades of play across multiple systems, accumulating layers much like the ghosts Elowen listens to. In that sense, West Haven’s history is not static. It is remembered, retold, and still very much alive. 

Every system I have played it under has added something new. If not history-wise, then via its organic growth. 

While West Haven draws on influences from places like Lancashire, England; Zugarramurdi, Spain; and Salem, Massachusetts, it also owes much to my favorite city, Chicago.

While Grenda was working on his Riverton/Riddleholm, I was working on smaller places. I knew West Haven was the smaller of the two cities. We both wanted lakes, thanks to Lake Michigan, and I wanted to be able to see the lights of East Haven from West Haven. 

I figure that West Haven has a population of about 800-1,000 and East Haven is about twice that, 1,500-1,900. 


Join Adam Dickstein of Barking Alien, and his RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE 2026!

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Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Witchcraft Wednesday: Character Challenge Wrap-up

 Another Character Creation Challenge is in the history books.  Thanks again to Carl Stark, The TARDIS Captain, from TardisCaptain's Blog of Holding.  

Some of the playtest characters
Some of the playtest characters

In all, I made 41 characters (with 14 more unfinished), all witches for AD&D 1st Edition and all playtests for my new Advanced Witches & Warlocks: Occult Adventures. All witches from level 1 to level 31.

It has been a lot of fun. Here are all the character sheets (and linked):

Follow Timothy's board 31 Day Character Creation Challenge on Pinterest.

And all of the "Theme Songs" in a playlist:


I hope you enjoyed this as much as I did!

TardisCaptain 2026 Character Creation Challenge


Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 4

Day 4 - Is There a Map?

Day 4-Is there a Map?
Give us a visual! Show us a map of your setting! Don't have one? WHY NOT?!?

Map of West Haven

Elowen’s Journal

"I never cared much for maps before I came here. I grew up knowing where things were because someone told me, or because I walked there often enough that my feet remembered. I do not think I ever once looked at a map of my home village. It felt unnecessary, maybe even rude, like questioning something that had always simply been there.

West Haven changed that.

The first maps I saw were the ones made after the Great Flood. Clean lines. Familiar shapes. Lake Haven drawn the way it is now. Later, Esmé showed me the older ones, the maps from before the water rose. That was when things finally made sense. I had been seeing ghosts along the lake shore since I arrived. Quiet ones. Confused ones. People who seemed to be looking for doors and streets that were no longer there. When I saw the old maps, I understood. The original Haven settlement lies at the bottom of the lake now, and some of the dead never realized the world had changed around them.

Maps help me make sense of the land when the land does not make sense to me. They explain why a ghost lingers in the wrong place, or why a road feels older than it should. I have maps made by scholars, by merchants, and even by goblins, whose sense of distance and importance is… creative. I love all of them. Each one tells a slightly different truth. I think that is why I look at maps of West Haven so often. I am still learning how this place fits together. And maybe, by learning that, I am also learning how I fit here, too."

The Haven Valley

Designer’s Notes

So. I have maps of the Haven Valley, both current and prior to the "Great Flood," the disaster that destroyed the original Haven Settlement and created Lake Haven. I am not sure where they are at the moment. I knew one of them was in my car, but I can't seem to find it. ETA: Found it!

I really should get on commission someday. Better than the sketches I have on legal pads. There hasn't been much need for one, since I have a clear idea in my head of where everything is. 

The Broken Mountains are to the far north. East Haven is, naturally, to the east, on the other side of Lake Haven. It's not directly across, in some maps it is North East, other South East. I like the idea that the North East is slightly higher ground than West Haven. The Goblin Wood is to the North West of West Haven. It is old, once an elven forest until the elves abandoned it and the goblins moved in.  The Maiden Wood is to the South West of West Haven (and south of the Goblin Wood). Named for the dryads that still live there, but don't seek them out or even go into the wood unless you get permission from their leader, Mellenpei.  

The village of West Haven itself is divided into four quarters: Winter, Spring, Summer, and Autumn. The central plaza is dominated by a large fountain.  The central circle, named "Fountain Circle", is also often called "The Square" despite the fact that it is a circle, is home to the farmer markets during the day, and the goblin market at night. 

Join Adam Dickstein of Barking Alien, and his RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE 2026!

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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Barking Alien's RPG CAMPAIGN TOUR CHALLENGE! Day 3

West Haven
Day 3 - Where the heck are we?

What is the campaign's location and where is that location in related to other important places. 

Elowen’s Journal

“West Haven feels out of the way on purpose. Not lost, exactly, just set aside. Like someone took the world and folded one quiet corner inward so it would not be stepped on too often. I think that is why witches find it. And why so few other people do.

East Haven sits across the lake, larger, louder, always visible but never close. The Goblin Wood presses in from the northwest, dense and watching. Even when the trees stand still, which is rare, it sounds like a living breathing thing. To the north, the Broken Mountains rise like a warning no one remembers giving. Every direction feels different before it looks different, as if the land makes up its mind about you long before you arrive and decides how to appear. My friend Doireann looks to the Goblin Wood and calls it home. She looks at the Broken Mountains as if they were a holy land. Both places scare me a little. 

This place is on the far edge of everything. Far from where I grew up. Far from what people mean when they say normal. There are ghosts here, of course, but they are the quiet kind. They linger. They listen. They do not scream at me the way others do. It makes West Haven feel less lonely, somehow. Like, even the dead know this is a place meant to be left alone.”

Designer’s Notes

I intentionally keep the location of West Haven vague. I usually say it is "on the frontier." When I was using it in my Mystoerth games, it was west of Glantri City. In NIGHT SHIFT it was the far western portions of Massachusetts in the 17th Century. A place where witches could seek refuge. 

There is something about the place that normal folks ignore, but witches and other supernatural creatures find compelling and safe. 

In general if asked where West Haven is the stock answer is "out west." West has always been a standign for new lands, the frontier, the undiscovered country. It was also the metaphor of the lands of the dead for the Egyptians and Tolkien. Lands of discovery for the old Norse. West Haven is all of that. 

The history of the palce, which I am sure I'll get to detail more later on, has groups of settlers moving west and settling in a valley they call Haven. Naturally enough, for a place where disparate groups of people meet after a long, arduous journey. But their new home has troubles and it goes from my retelling of the invasions of Ireland to Salem, Mass. But like I said, there will be time to detail all of this during this challenge.

Since I use West Haven (and often East Haven gets dragged along with it) with many systems and games, its precise location varies, but they are all connected. In fact, due to places like "The Library," all West Havens are connected. 

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