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Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Gray Philosopher for 5th Edition

One of my favorite monsters from Cyclopedia-era D&D Creature Catalog is the Gray Philosopher. I never got a chance to use it back in the day, but I had an opportunity to include one in my recent 5th Edition game. It was pretty fun to adapt to the new edition. 



A gray philosopher is the undead spirit of an evil cleric who died with some important philosophical deliberation yet unresolved in his or her mind. In its undead state, this creature does nothing but ponder these weighty matters.

The gray philosopher appears as a seated, smoke-colored, insubstantial figure swathed in robes. It always seems deep in thought. Flying through the air surrounding the philosopher are a number of tiny, luminous, wispy creatures known as malices. They have vaguely human faces, gaping maws, and spindly, clawed hands. These vindictive creatures are actually the philosopher’s evil thoughts, which have taken on substance and a will of their own.

The gray philosopher cannot be turned by a cleric but has no attack of its own; it will not defend itself. Unlike the philosopher, malices constantly search for victims on which to vent their petty but eternal spite. Malices do not stray more than 120 feet from their philosopher but may pass through the narrowest of openings in their ceaseless flight. A malice normally attacks until destroyed or turned. However, all these creatures vanish instantly if their philosopher is destroyed.



Gray Philosopher
Medium Undead, Neutral Evil
AC: 13 (Natural Armor)
HP: 156 (24d8+48)
Speed: 0’


STR: 8 (-1), DEX: 10 (+0), CON: 14 (+2), INT: 18 (+4), WIS: 20 (+5), CHA: 16 (+3)
Saves: Wisdom +7
Skills: Insight +7
Damage Immunities: Cold; Necrotic; Poison; Bludgeoning, Piercing, And Slashing from nonmagical weapons.
Condition Immunities: Charmed, Exhaustion, Grappled, Paralyzed, Petrified, Poisoned, Prone, Restrained
Senses: Darkvision 120 ft., Passive Perception: 15
Languages: Understands all languages it knew in life, but does not speak
Challenge: 4 (1,100 xp)


Ethereal Sight: The Gray Philosopher can see 120 ft. into the Ethereal Plane when it is on The Material Plane, and vice versa.


Death Epiphany: When the Gray Philosopher falls to 0hp, it looks up with an expression of malicious enlightenment on its face, then vanishes with a lingering shriek of evil delight. All creatures within 60’ who hear this horrifying sound must make a DC: 15 Wisdom save or take 6d8 psychic damage and become frightened until they finish a long rest. On a successful saving throw a creature only takes half damage and is not frightened.


Magic Resistance: The Gray Philosopher has advantage on saving throws against Spells and other magical effects.


Turn Immunity: The Gray Philosopher is immune to the Turn Undead ability.


ACTIONS
Spawn Malice: The Gray Philosopher creates 1d4 Malices for every Malice that was killed in the previous round. A malice appears in an empty space within 60’ of the Gray Philosopher and acts on its own initiative. When first encountered, a Gray Philosopher will be accompanied by 6d4 Malices.

Malice
Tiny Undead, Neutral Evil
AC: 13
HP: 14 (4d4+4)
Speed: Fly 60’


STR: 4 (-3), DEX: 16 (+3), CON: 12 (+1), INT: 10 (+0), WIS: 16 (+3), CHA: 14 (+2)
Saves: Dexterity +5, Wisdom +5
Skills: Perception +5
Damage Immunities: Cold; Necrotic; Poison; Bludgeoning, Piercing, And Slashing from nonmagical weapons.
Condition Immunities: Charmed, Exhaustion, Grappled, Paralyzed, Petrified, Poisoned, Prone, Restrained
Senses: Darkvision 120 ft., Passive Perception: 15
Languages: Understands all languages the Gray Philosopher knew in life, but cannot speak
Challenge: ¼ (50xp)


Incorporeal Movement: The wraith can move through other creatures and Objects as if they were difficult terrain. It takes 5 (1d10) force damage if it ends its turn inside an object.


Turn Resistance: The lich has advantage on saving throws against any effect that turns Undead.


Actions
Bite: Melee Weapon Attack: +5 to hit, reach 5 ft., one creature. Hit: 6 (1d6 + 3) necrotic damage. In addition, a neutral aligned creature bit by a Malice takes an additional 3 (1d6) psychic damage, while a good aligned creature takes an additional 7 (2d6) psychic damage.

Thursday, January 25, 2018

The Old Penderghast House (Silent Legions Session Report)

My home group started our new Silent Legions campaign this past weekend, and it got off to a pretty great start.  I decided to start things pretty simple, with a haunted house adventure (but not the “The Haunting” adventure from Call of Cthulhu). I found the floor plans for an old Queen Anne house on the internet and prepared myself by rewatching a lot of Lucio Fulci and Roger Corman films.

There are a handful of things I wanted to accomplish with this first adventure:
  • Introduce the players to the game mechanics and display what their heroes can do.
  • Introduce the players to elements of the campaign’s mythos, magic, kelipah, etc.
  • Liberally sprinkle clues and hooks that the heroes can follow up on later and spark some sandbox play.
  • Maybe spook my players a bit.

I'm fairly sure I accomplished most of these.

The Set-Up
On the very remote chance that you’re one of my players, don’t read this. It gives away backstory and secrets.

The Old Penderghast House has been abandoned for 20 years, ever since Alistair Penderghast died. Penderghast was an antiquarian and occultist. In fact, he was part of an occult investigation group, not unlike a party of PC adventurers. While exploring an alien kelipot he met and married a woman named Ligeia, an accomplished sorcerer. In the course of their adventures, Penderghast and his companions fought and barely defeated a Walker Between that was in the service of The House of Broken Glass (a pantheon of alien gods, and the campaign’s main antagonists). Ligeia trapped the creature in a small prison kelipot with its connecting Way in the basement of Penderghast’s home.

Even trapped in a kelipot, the Walker Between’s time and space warping nature seeped out of its prison, causing weird distortions in the house. While alive, Penderghast and Ligeia could counter this corruption, but it has gotten worse in the years since their deaths.

Fast forward to today, and the Penderghast House has been abandoned for two decades. It has gained a reputation as a haunted place. The surrounding neighborhood has degraded as a side effect of the low-level psychic miasma.

Chase Kinkade is a young but ambitious cultist of Dagh-Othyg-Zoag, the Autarch of Unknowable Waiting. In his research, he learned of the Walker Between trapped beneath the Penderghast House. If he can release the creature and bind it to his will, it will be a valuable asset to the cult, allowing them to rebirth their unmade god.

Chase befriends a group of impressionable college kids and invites them to a party at the Haunted Old Penderghast House. He plans on sacrificing one of more of them in a ritual to open the Way to the prison kelipot and free the Walker Between.

One of these college students in the sister of a friend of the PCs. She’s been missing for two days, and the PCs are asked to find her. Essentially our heroes will be investigating the aftermath of a teen slasher movie, trying to find their friend’s missing sister.

The Investigation
Our heroes, the Khamsa Society, consist of:
  • Bernadette "Bunny" Kennedy (Tough/Bodyguard)--A former circus strong woman who turned to occult investigation "just like the old gypsy lady said."
  • Veronica Richardson (Socialite/Artist)--She's been having dreams about obsidian mountains under a red sky full of black stars, tentacles, and milky blind eyes. 
  • Lucian Stone (Scholar/Programmer)--A hacker who lives and breathes the occult sites of the Deep Web. An occult Alex Jones. 
  • Vinne Morg (Investigator/Business Owner)--A pawn broker who had to leave Atlanta after he sold the wrong piece of weird jewelry and attracted unwanted attention from mysterious forces. 
Right out of the gate, that's one hell of an investigation team.

Vinne gets a call from Christine Amberson, a friend of his from Atlanta. Her sister Ashley (a student at Washington State) has gone missing. On Friday, Ashley and her friends were planning on spending the night in the Old Penderghast House. Christine begged her not to go, but her little sister wouldn't listen. Now it's Sunday, and Christine hasn't heard back from Ashley. She begs Vinnie to try and find out what happened to her sister.

Vinnie gathers his spooky friends, and they immediately get to researching. 

A bit of advice for modern-day campaigns. Your players will check the NPCs' social media. Make sure you have something  prepared to tell them. Luckily I did. 

Checking Ashley's Facebook, they see her last post was on Friday night--a photo of her and her friends (Logan, Mackenzie, Amber, and Chase) in front of a boarded up old house. There's also several pictures of her and a guy named Kevin. On Friday night her relationship status was changed to "It's Complicated."

Digging up info on Alistair Penderghast, Lucian finds out that he was fairly well known in occult circles as a scholar and adventurer. After a long trip to the Levant, he returned with a mysterious wife named Ligeia, said to be an accomplished ritual magician. Ligeia died 25 years ago, but there are no records of where she was buried. Penderghast died 5 years later in hospital. The postmortem reports indicate that his eyes, heart, and tongue were removed with laser-like precision. No one knows how or why. With no heirs, the house reverted to the city. It's been condemned for 10 years, but the city has never gotten around to razing it. 

The heroes head off to Lake City in north Seattle and arrive at the Penderghast House in the afternoon. The skies grow dark gray, and a miserable winter mix of rain and snow begins to fall. Checking around the house, they notice that the overgrown lawn hides many shards of broken glass, even though none of the windows are broken. The PCs find the kids' SUV and discover that the battery has been molten to slag. They also check out the old tool shed and find several drawers full of teeth and glass eyes. They pocket some of the eyes and teeth (just in case) and head inside. 

Moving through the kitchen and pantry, they make their way to the dining room, where they spot a large faded rectangle on the wall where a paining obviously once hung. It's in the hallway, however, that they find their first really weird thing. 

It's some sort of grandfather clock, eight feet tall and shaped like an isosceles triangle. It's made of a weird black material almost (but not quite) like metal. The clock face has 17 symbols, irregularly spaced, and not all numbers. Five hands slowly move around the face. The clock is disturbingly warm to the touch, and it's still ticking--arrhythmical, like a diseased heartbeat. The thing is too heavy even for Bunny to move. Lucian's EMF detector is going crazy, and when he tries to take a picture, the clock is glitched out and pixilated, even though the rest of the image is clear (1 madness). 

They move on to the living room, where they find the college kids' party site. Blankets, candles, empty beer cans and booze bottles, and a strange black ouija board with a razor sharp metal planchette. Instead of a lens, the planchette has a curious symbol: a rough circle intersected by thee parallel lines. Veronica recognizes this symbol as something she's seen in her dreams (1 madness). Lucian's UV lamp shows that there's blood on the point of the planchette.

That's when the heroes hear the shower running upstairs. The water in the house was shut off decades ago, so that's troubling.  Up the stairs they go, nervously. In the hallway outside the bathroom they see light and steam coming out from under the door (the electricity's been off for years, too) and hear a young woman singing. They knock on the bathroom door and call out. No answer. Steeling themselves, they enter the bathroom. 

The well-lit room is full of steam, and the white and blue tiles are pristine. Behind the shower curtain, they see the silhouette of a curvy young woman bathing and singing to herself. Again they call out to the woman. Again no answer. Vinnie screws up his courage and pulls the curtain aside. Lying in the bottom of the tub is the body of a naked young woman--Ashley's friend Mackenzie. She sits in two inches of cold blood with a fireplace poker through her chest. The bathroom is dark. The tiles are all broken. There is no steam, yet the mirror over the sink is still foggy. Lucian notices that the words "HE WALKS BETWEEN" is written in the fog on the other side of the mirror. This double whammy of violence and horror nets them all 2d6 Madness. 

As Bunny turns to leave the bathroom, she discovers that the door doesn't lead to the upstairs hallway, but to the downstairs dining room! (1d6 Madness.) A figure stands at the end of dining room. It's Ashley's other friend Logan. He's stripped to the waist, bloody, and holding a croquet mallet. His empty eye sockets are full of broken glass. "Logan" opens his mouth and lets out a sound like a wailing infant and a feral bobcat. 

Vinnie opens fire and scores a head-shot! This absolutely fails to put Logan down. (Vinnie's player scored a Slaughtering hit, but semi-Logan is immune to slaughtering.) Bunny moves in with her baseball bat, but her wild swings fail to connect. Logan slams the croquet mallet into the side of Bunny's head, putting her down and knocking several parts of her skull loose. 

With Bunny down, Logan turns towards the rest of the group. Vinnie's shaky hands cause his shots to go wide. The creature totally ignores the lines of salt and iron filings the Lucian spreads on the floor. Desperate, Veronica the street artist fishes her can of spray paint out of her bag and grabs her lighter. This makeshift flame thrower blasts Logan square in the face. The burning thing turns and runs with a shriek of pain, even as the can explodes in Veronica's hand, mangling her fingers (failed Luck save).

Lucian uses his first aid kit to bandage up Bunny. One eye is swollen shut, her nose is broken, and she's missing some teeth, but she's alive for now.

And that's where we stopped! My players had a great time, especially my son (Veronica's player) who absolutely loved the whole bathroom scene and the impossible architecture. This makes me especially happy, since he's the one who requested the Lovecraftian game in the first place. We got in some good role-playing and problem solving, and the players got properly spooked a couple times. It was one of the best first sessions I've had in a while, and I'm excited to continue.

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Starting a Silent Legions Campaign

My D&D game recently died. Its not really anyone’s fault, just creative ennui and entropy, largely on the GM’s part (that’s me). Three years is a good run.

After taking a break for a couple of months over the holiday peak, I’m ready to start a new campaign with my home group. At my son’s request, I’m running some good old fashioned Lovecraftian horror. Instead of the old stand-by of Call of Cthulhu, I am going to use Kevin Crawford’s Silent Legions for some modern day sandbox horror. A couple of my players are super-versed in the Cthulhu mythos, so using Silent Legions’s mythos creation tools to create my own cosmic horrors should keep them on their toes. I had good success with Crawford’s sci-fi game, Stars Without Number, so I’m pretty confident about Silent Legions.

I’m setting the game in Washington State, centered first in Seattle. It took a lot of thinking, but I eventually settled of Washington because of the geographic variety it offers. You’ve got the ocean coasts, big tech-center cities, small rural towns, Indian reservations, forests, desert, mountains, and even volcanoes. All sorts of places to hide hideous cults and monsters.

The PCs will all be part of the Khamsa Society, a secret society dedicated to investigating the occult. The society has a cell-like organization, and individual cells are largely self-sufficient. Kind of like the Hunters in Supernatural without the firepower. It’s a loose organization mostly used as an excuse to get the PCs together and send them into ruinous places.

The main cosmic antagonists of the campaign will be an alien pantheon known as The House of Broken Glass. Broken glass both distorts perception and shreds the flesh. Gods of the Outer Dark, they were cast out in the days of Lemuria. Now they fester in the womb of hyperspace, awaiting rebirth. The Bleak Sigil of Dagh-Othyg-Zoag presages their arrival.

Lovecraft is an obvious influence on the campaign, along with Clark Ashton Smith by extension. But I’m also drawing ideas from Clive Barker and Lucio Fulci. I’m also tapping into some Grant Morrison, specifically The Invisibles and especially Nameless, a comic that profoundly disturbed me.


We do character creation this weekend, and if we’re lucky we can swing into the first adventure. The PCs will be investigating some missing college students and a haunted house. As I have it set up, the PC will be walking into the aftermath of a 1980s slasher movie, having to figure out what happened and what they can do make sure it doesn’t happen again. Should be fun!

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Mugato for Fate Accelerated

Despite my lack of recent blog posts, I've still been gaming steadily. In my on-going Star Trek Fate Accelerated game, the crew of the U.S.S. Skipjack recently had to fight a pair of Mugatos in an alien arena. These dangerous beasts were very difficult opponents for a three-man away team accompanied by a quartet of redshirts.

From Memory Alpha:
Mugatos were large, intimidating animals that could reach a height of two meters (not including their horns). Covered by a thick pelt of white fur all over their bodies with the exception of their faces and hands, they were similar to the great apes of Earth in their physical proportions and prehensile hands and feet. All of their teeth were sharp and serrated and their fangs contained a strong venom that was fatal to Humans and inhabitants of Neural alike within a matter of hours. Mugatos had large, thick horns projecting from the top of their craniums as well as smaller spikes running down the spine. They usually traveled with their mates.


MUGATO
Aspects

  • Killer space ape
  • Venomous fangs
  • Thick shaggy fur
  • Mated pairs

Approaches

  • Carefully: +0
  • Cleverly: +1
  • Flashily: +1
  • Forcefully: +4
  • Quickly: +3
  • Sneakily: +2

Stunts

  • Because I have thick fur and dense muscles, I get +2 to forcefully defend against physical attacks. 
  • Because I have venomous fangs, once per session, when I succeed with style on a close-combat physical attack, I can turn a "poisoned" boost on my target into a full aspect. 
Stress: OOO