Jon Hodgson
Explorer
Today (Tuesday May 27th May) at 5pm Uk time we will be closing late pledges for FiveEvil, and the PDF will go on general release this week. If you want to get the free stretch goal unlocks then time to pledge at Kickstarter is extremely tight!
If you get FiveEvil as a late pledge you'll also receive free as they are completed: PDF scenarios by Malcolm Craig, another by Gareth Hanrahan, and the BEOWULF FiveEvil cross-over by Jon Hodgson and Jacob Rodgers.
But we can't keep late pledges open for much longer - it just gets too complicated. If you want those free PDFs for free you need to act now.
About FiveEvil
FiveEvil is a set of roleplaying rules from Handiwork Games, the fiendish minds behind BEOWULF Age of Heroes, a|state second edition and Maskwitches of Forgotten Doggerland.
FiveEvil is designed to evoke the horror genre via a set of clever twists on the underlying fifth edition ruleset. Less a version of 5e, FiveEvil is a ruleset about 5e, making use of its subversion to defy expectations and intensify the horror.
Make no mistake: this book is not just some 5e stats for horror entities and a couple of rules tweaks. This is media-literate deconstruction of the primary RPG paradigm of the day! Whether it reads as a game about what 5e could have been in the hands of an extremely capable indie designer, or a celebration of just how far the rules of 5e can be stretched, is up to you.
The primary setting focus is modern day horror, inspired by the work of Stephen King, and moody, character-driven horror films like The Ritual, The Descent and Jacob's Ladder, alongside mini-series like Midnight Mass by Mike Flanagan, and the scariest of Twin Peaks episodes.
Rather than seeking out evil in order to vanquish it, or investigating clues to battle malign influence, characters in FiveEvil are regular people trapped in a terrifying situation attempting to survive and escape.
FiveEvil was created and written by Morgan Davie, features art by Scott Purdy and Jon Hodgson, and boasts graphic design and layout by Paul Bourne.