This is a work in progress.
"For the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the moon, during the whole year.” So wrote Byzantine historian Procopius of the year 536 A.D., the year the first of three catastrophic volcanic eruptions in Iceland would drop global summer temperatures by 1.5 to 2.5 degrees Celsius and herald the beginning of the coldest decade on record in 2,000 years.... [click here for more]
A sleepy village in the Kingdom of Metz has been beset with strange happenings and nightmarish disappearances. Children have gone missing, phantasmagoria haunts the woods, and in the night and fog livestock is slaughtered, homes ransacked, and villagers dragged screaming into the hills. The comte Gunthigis has offered a substantial treasure to any who can rid his lands of this evil.
Death Walks the... [click here for more]
Upon her deathbed Inge, wife the comte of Augusta Treverorum, made a shocking confession: Dagobert, their young son, was not born of her husband Gunthigis but Ottmar, one of his trustis. Gunthigis waited until his wife was buried to bring this heinous accusation to his once-trusted advisor in private. Ottmar, heartbroken, could no longer deny he and Inge’s infidelity. The outraged comte challenged... [click here for more]
Creeping Death is the first module in the three-part “I” (for “Introduction”) series. It was written for use with the WORMWOOD historical fantasy setting guide; however it can be fitted with relative ease in any Dungeon Crawl Classics campaign, existing or new.
Creeping Death is designed for 16-24 0-level DCC RPG characters who should “funnel” down to a small group of PCs who will rise... [click here for more]
The Evil That Men Do is the second module in the three-part “I” (for “Introduction”) series. It was written for use with the WORMWOOD historical fantasy setting guide; however it can be fitted with relative ease in any Dungeon Crawl Classics campaign, existing or new.
The Evil That Men Do is designed for 6 to 12 1st-level DCC RPG characters. The adventure presents a variety... [click here for more]
"For the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the moon, during the whole year.” So wrote Byzantine historian Procopius of the year 536 A.D., the year the first of three catastrophic volcanic eruptions in Iceland would drop global summer temperatures by 1.5 to 2.5 degrees Celsius and herald the beginning of the coldest decade on record in 2,000 years. Migrations of Germanic, Hunnic, and... [click here for more]