From page 182 of the first edition Dungeon Masters Guide (click to embiggen):
I can't help but wonder if back in the day some nascent campaign was utterly ruined because some 1st level spellcaster threw a cure light wounds or detect magic and Orcus showed up.
I'm more confused by the idea of being on dry land, casting charm on somebody, then being accosted by a bunch of tritons (presumably wearing fishbowls).
"but imagine that happening to a group of rowdy junior high punks"
Most groups I played in as a junior high punk would have opened a can of whoop-ass on Orcus.
I am waiting for the day when the party comes face-to-face with a Demon Lord and rolls boxcars on the reaction roll - the campaign takes a new direction.
I get the jist, but would probably ignore the rule for psionic-like spells (just psionics proper).
That said, what if your shapechange into a minor demon attracted a minor demon? Of you feather falled into a nest of cerebral parasites? Most important - has *anyone* ever used a su-monster?
I love that chart. I think about a low-leveled psionic player zapping around the dungeon with his uber-cool powers only to have a Type V demon Gate in and play with him and the party for a few rounds before getting bored and moving on.
How much fun would that be to play out!!! Teach that little psionic punk the meaning of the word "moderation."
Verification word: Tiarb - the truename of the Type V demon in the above hypothetical.
I wonder, though, if that's really a Gygax-written table? Most of the psionic rules in AD&D were lifted wholesale from the ones Brian Blume wrote for Eldritch Wizardry.
That's actually totally hilarious. I could see adapting a table like this for skill challenges, nowadays. "Ok, you totally complete the ritual, because we need to for plot, but... *roll* oh you've attracted Orcus' attention. And he thinks you'd look FABULOUS in pink taffeta."
Carrier-er
-
I've just read the collection of Blood Hunt, Marvel's recent vampire
crossover event thing. It's not bad, although it seems to lose interest in
itself abou...
Dungeon 2025 update
-
Hello Dear Viewers! I’m a bit behind schedule on this, thanks to my
family’s vacation from a week ago. So, the January section of the Dungeon
focused on tw...
-
A Belgian Farmhouse
[image:
https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/513466/A-Belgian-Farmhouse?affiliate_id=361643]
My first self-published work is ava...
ShadowDark of Strahd - Game 2
-
If you're new to this series about running Curse of Strahd as a sandbox for
ShadowDark, there have been a few other posts (here). The previous post
rela...
Appendix Probi of the OSSR
-
Sandbox, not Any Box
Roll Tables, not Story Beats
Rumors, not Hooks
Character Progression, not Character Development
Scenario Generation, not Plot W...
The greatest horror game ever is here.
-
That's pretty much it, folks.
DEMON CITY can now be bought, both in printed format and as a PDF.
I've had the PDF for some time now, and I'm really hap...
"Ark Against Time" Submitted for DunDraCon #48
-
[image: A colorful thing seems to be made of several elongated pods]
(Ark of Time)
*GM: Matt MorrisonType: RPGSystem: D&D/Arduin GrimoireEditio...
Forgotten Homework
-
Ugh a boring bookkeeping post: I haven’t forgotten about my Stock-a-Dungeon
jam… it’s just taken more time than anticipated! I thought it would be a
[…] Re...
Imperium Maledictum Session 0
-
Warhammer 40,000: Imperium Maledictum is the new Warhammer 40,000
roleplaying game from Cubicle7. Unlike Cubicle7’s other Warhammer 40,000
RPG, Wrath &...
OBSCURE RPG – Free A4 character sheet
-
I recently made an A4 character sheet for the OBSCURE roleplaying game by
Tommy Sunzenauer. If you feel like using it – download it here for free.
What i...
The Time Bandits
-
Six boisterous dwarves, who, until recently, were employed by the *Supreme
Being* to fix holes in the space-time continuum. Then they had a
brainstorm: W...
cryptid in july poetry day 09, the enfield horror
-
a poem about the enfield horror
I’m an armpit leaping
around the woods on three
legs waiting
for police to arrest me
I’m the living
embodiment of cough...
Ãœbersiedelt
-
Dieser Blog ist Anfang des Jahres 2022 übersiedelt. Am Blog von
gazerpress.at schreibe ich weiterhin über Historisches und Aktuelles rund
ums Rollenspiel.
In Defense of Race As Class
-
Race As Class! Baffling to some, overly simplistic to others, gold to me.
Race As Class does what even AD&D didn't have the balls to do: it not only...
A Fresh Start
-
Morning Folks
I came across someone's blog the other day and I liked it's focus, focus is
something I could use so I'm going to steal it along with anyt...
Vengeful Cuckold and Cuckquean Generator
-
I submitted a table I made to Jeff Rients for his awesome Flame Princess
Cult Zine. I have already used it in several ways during games and have
enjoye...
REVIEW – Fish Fuckers
-
Fish Fuckers is a Lamentations of the Flame Princess Adventure with Text
and Art by Kelvin Green, Graphic Design by Alex Mayo, and Editing by
Jarrett Crade...
eXPerience
-
The following are some alternative ways I want to try out in my home LotFP
game. I already use Session Attendance & Carousing but I want to try the
...
La torre del Necromante (Sessione 5 - ToEE)
-
*La quinta sessione, dove i nostri si avventurano a Nord alla ricerca di un
luogo pericoloso...*
*T1-4 Il tempio del male elementale*
*Personaggi* *g...
How to read (and understand) Silent Titans
-
Originally published on Reddit. (Updated on 03/02/25; see at the bottom)
Yes, Patrick Stuart writes great books that require an extra effort from
the refer...
Knights and their Towers
-
Knight's towers were fortified self-standing buildings, several-stories
high, most often erected on a plan similar to a square. They contained both
livi...
Two Thieves
-
Jeff Easley's BECMI Thief I’ve recently decided to run an OD&D game. This,
of course, brings with it the age-old question of which version of OD&a...
[Review] – Kickstarter “Killer Rabbits”
-
Late last year I kicked in on a slightly less-disastrous KS than the usual
(where’s my damned Ref book, Raggi?). I’ve always been a big fan of
manuscript a...
Folk Horror Wyrdness in Traditional Low Fantasy
-
My Dreadful Ghoulies,
I think it started when I read an old blog post from Dreams in the Lich
House where John was combining Oerth with darker influence...
One page dungeon contest!
-
The one page dungeon contest's deadline is coming up on May 1st and I am
currently finishing up my rough draft and sketches on mine. It's my first
time giv...
New adventure
-
Finally got around to uploading a new adventure. You can find it under
the adventures tab or just jump right to it from the link below. The
adventure is...
Dark Sun for Lamentations of the Flame Princess
-
The wife and I have been hard at work preparing Dark Sun for Lamentations
of the Flame Princess. Whilst we didn't manage to complete this one over
the we...
Conformity is Easy but Often Unwise.
-
*"Trying to conform to frantic society is like trying to dance in rhythm
with an erupting volcano. The awakened see society's problems as
originating fro...
I don't know. Would it really be ruined? I want to be in a campaign where Orcus does show up. :) Good posts today, Jeff!
ReplyDeleteI'm not saying the situation lacks potential, but imagine that happening to a group of rowdy junior high punks.
ReplyDeleteThat wouldn't ruin the campaign---it'd make it the best campaign ever!
ReplyDeleteI'm more confused by the idea of being on dry land, casting charm on somebody, then being accosted by a bunch of tritons (presumably wearing fishbowls).
ReplyDeleteOh man, then you grab the reaction chart and see what goodies you can come up with!
ReplyDelete"Worse... or better." :D
ReplyDeleteYou'd have to roll on that reaction table. Maybe Orcus takes a liking to the party. Which probably isn't a good thing.
blizack: In my opinion that the reason for the note at the end.
ReplyDeleteThe thought of someone casting feign death only to be attacked by spontaneously appearing yellow mold strikes my fancy.
ReplyDeleteTake heed people: don't try to con the universe into thinking your dead. It has ways of balancing the natural order...
I know, I know, I just like riffing on Gary's seeming AD&D obsession with underwater stuff.
ReplyDelete"but imagine that happening to a group of rowdy junior high punks"
ReplyDeleteMost groups I played in as a junior high punk would have opened a can of whoop-ass on Orcus.
I am waiting for the day when the party comes face-to-face with a Demon Lord and rolls boxcars on the reaction roll - the campaign takes a new direction.
word verification: mudint... a dirty mutant
I get the jist, but would probably ignore the rule for psionic-like spells (just psionics proper).
ReplyDeleteThat said, what if your shapechange into a minor demon attracted a minor demon? Of you feather falled into a nest of cerebral parasites? Most important - has *anyone* ever used a su-monster?
I love that chart. I think about a low-leveled psionic player zapping around the dungeon with his uber-cool powers only to have a Type V demon Gate in and play with him and the party for a few rounds before getting bored and moving on.
ReplyDeleteHow much fun would that be to play out!!! Teach that little psionic punk the meaning of the word "moderation."
Verification word: Tiarb - the truename of the Type V demon in the above hypothetical.
" Most important - has *anyone* ever used a su-monster?"
ReplyDeleteYes, I love me some hateful grey mind blasting monkeys.
Hmm...I missed this one in the past.
ReplyDeleteHowever we ALWAYS rolled randomly the chance a demon prince would show up for speaking his name in vain...
; )
@JB hahahah that's amazing. I'm going to try that next time one of my PC's curses Belial. It seems to be a popular thing.
ReplyDeleteHa ha! I never noticed that.
ReplyDeleteI have no choice but to use that chart in my current AD&D campaign. Have fun with those cure light wounds, Mr. Fighter/Cleric!
ReplyDeleteOddly enough, Orcus did show up in the second or third session of one of our games. That was a bit frightening for a bunch of first levellers!
ReplyDeleteIt was fine though, because he was just there to abduct one of the player-characters and take him into the GM's other campaign.
Gods showing up wasn't that uncommon back-in-the-day. There were several deities where mentioning there name had a 1% chance of summoning the god.
ReplyDeleteCalling out for your god was a common tactic among characters about to die.
I wonder, though, if that's really a Gygax-written table? Most of the psionic rules in AD&D were lifted wholesale from the ones Brian Blume wrote for Eldritch Wizardry.
ReplyDeleteThat's actually totally hilarious. I could see adapting a table like this for skill challenges, nowadays. "Ok, you totally complete the ritual, because we need to for plot, but... *roll* oh you've attracted Orcus' attention. And he thinks you'd look FABULOUS in pink taffeta."
ReplyDelete