Well, the group that went to talk to the Terrible Old Man were able to successfully ply him with rum to get him to tell them a little bit of info about Nyarlathotep's glyph in the Dreaming Stone. Once the old man realized that the investigators were treading on a path laid out by the Crawling Chaos, he ushered them out of his house and told them never to return.
They were able to successfully get out without him releasing his bottled crew upon them.
I'm still running
Ok, so I have recently begun running "The Dreaming Stone" as a play-by-post game over at Role Play Online, (www.rpol.net). The game is set in classic 1920's Lovecraft Country and has six investigators, and they are:
Amicable Mann (Hobo) - A drunkard and an old rascal, no one is quite sure where Amicable Mann came from or when he arrived. He just always seemed to be about, usually where there's a friendly hand holding out free drinks. The first to laugh uproarously at a
So I attended the KC Game Fair, www.kcgamefair.com, this weekend... one of the games I submitted to run was a Call of Cthulhu scenario I had written. When I posted the game on the website I clearly posted in the game description that this scenario was expected to run long, and thus I had scheduled it to be run over two consecutive 4-hour game slots. I posted in the description that no new players would be accepted into the second game slot because all of the players from the first slot would be
The new Keeper's Screen
or
More Adventures in Arkham County
or
Age of Cthulhu 4: Horrors from Yuggoth
or
Eye Classics: At the Mountains of Madness (Paperback), by Ian Culbard
Note: This last item is sold out, (according to Amazon), in the USA, but if my Secret Shoggie happens to be a Brit, then it might still be available via Amazon UK.
How did I not know about The Unspeakable Oath for so long? Ross Payton recently did a very interesting interview with Adam Scott Galancy. I'm really looking forward to the new issues of TUO.