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"Go forth, Mount your Beasts, and into their Gullets stuff Bread Crumbs Of Divers Sizes, Part 3"

12 Comments -

1 – 12 of 12
Blogger Nagora said...

I wasn't expecting Numberwang to show up here.

Clearly the module designer had some strange Yojimbo notion in his head where the PCs could promise to find various dead monsters for the two bosses to stuff and thereby play them off against each other.

Having had this central idea for the module nixed by the main editor he's cleverly sneaked it in anyway.

For bonus points, he even managed to reference it in the title of the adventure without anyone realizing who's hand it was, and why it was red. The stirge, however, knows only too well.

April 7, 2013 at 1:39 PM

Blogger richard said...

Oh god I am dying here. The doom that came to dead stirge.

April 7, 2013 at 2:04 PM

Blogger Pekka said...

I want the prequel adventure where you play as the future wyrmlords who all try to impress Azarr Kull with their taxidermy. They have to find exotic creatures from Witchwood and fight teams of competing amateur taxidermists.

April 7, 2013 at 4:37 PM

Blogger CK aka Kronos said...

It's almost like this module was written for this review. So everyone would have a great laugh and then play a real adventure.
On the other hand: I never thought about the Taxidermy skill level my evil warlords had. Maybe that's the reason my players always won the adventures in my campaigns. A crucial element in every warlords skill set was missing...

April 7, 2013 at 4:56 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Gotta say, the Numberwang skit never made me laugh but the out of context reference here had me laughing out loud.

April 7, 2013 at 8:56 PM

Blogger krokodylzoczami said...

Red Hand of Doom is pretty bad, and it's a great read when you destroy a crappy module, but wouldn't you like to try reading a better adventure for change? From the 3e era, as far as I know, Silver Marches is pretty good. If you ignore the stuff on additional classes, monsters, etc, you get a decent - I think! - sandbox setting with a Sword&Sorcery feel.

-Squid

April 8, 2013 at 9:36 AM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

I don't believe you because I have, honestly, yet to see a decent published adventure of any size, ever, in history, from any company. But I have never seen Silver Marches so I'd look at it.

April 8, 2013 at 10:20 AM

Blogger javaapp@gmail.com said...

Have you (Zak) read any of the Pendragon adventures? On balance, I think the short ones, as well as Stafford's long ones, are really good.

April 8, 2013 at 11:35 AM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

I have read The Great Pendragon Campaign. It is a bunch of dead-simple railroads strung together.

But given the Pendragon structure I think that's somewhat the point. I don't see any use for them otherwise however.

April 8, 2013 at 11:37 AM

Blogger Blair said...

Ancient kingdoms: Mesopotamia

April 8, 2013 at 12:22 PM

Blogger Blair said...

Even though I laff at the the hippie Starsong hill elves, I can see myself DMing a similar portrayal of elves... albeit because I would find it a hilarious skewering of elf cliches.

I don't know if that was the case in this instance of just burning man otherkin crystal collectors writing for wotc?

April 8, 2013 at 5:20 PM

Blogger Rob_S said...

Silver Marches reads like an small font encyclopedia. It is not an adventure though it contains some short adventures (4 pages long I think). The short adventures are not good. Don't bother.

April 11, 2013 at 2:17 AM

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