In the Shadow of the Devil

In the Shadow of the Devil is the second adventure in the Coryani Chronicles, a series of adventures that focus on the Romanesque Coryani Empire. From out of the murky centuries, the dastardly works of betrayal and heresy reveal themselves in a flurry of mysterious omens, theft, bloody murder, and open revolt. For a group of adventurers what began as a simple delivery to a prestigious wedding fast becomes a nefarious tangled web of lies. That which is discovered unveils subtle clues, hints, and tantalizing conundrums, all of which at first seem unrelated to the objective at hand: the return of the stolen
Orb of Saint Meritricus.
Delve into the mysterious and exotic League of Princes and uncover the terrible secret of Dhakavaar and the Vale of Shadows.

This scenario is perfect for Gamemasters seeking to challenge four to six player characters of experience levels 6-8.

• New monsters deadly enough for even the craftiest and most jaded adventurer
• New magic items certain to thrill your players
• A myriad of detailed NPCs with in-depth roleplaying notes to help make every session memorable
• Beautiful and detailed maps that can be enlarged to use as play surfaces
• A new and detailed Val family: The devil-dealing val’Baucisz
• New Prestige Class: The Mordant, the scourge of the undead
• Rules for the legendary blades of the Kio and other weapons of the exotic Western Lands
• New equipment
• Exciting new feats
• Rules designed for use with Living Arcanis, the largest member-run RPGA campaign
 

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In the Shadow of the Devil is the second in the Coryani Chronicles. Actually, though, you don't strictly need the first Chronicle to use in the Shadow of the Devil. Similarly the adventure is set in Arcanis - The World of Shattered Empires - but you can get a way with converting it to almost any setting. To get the best out of this good adventure you'd want to set it in Arcanis and you'll want to be able to use the rest of the Coryani Chronicles too. Arcanis, published by Paradigm Concepts is well supported and there are plenty of other juicy supplements. This is an important point, it makes investing in the Coryani Chronicles a safer bet.

In The Shadow of the Devil is Living Arcanis approved. It would be though, wouldn't it? Paradigm are strongly behind Living Arcanis and it isn't just a token effort.

I like the effort In The Shadow of the Devil makes. It divides encounters into two key groups; soft points and hard points. Soft points are ambience and atmosphere, put them in if you can and when you can. Soft points are plot critical and the DM shouldn't attempt to wrangle events too strongly here. On the other hand, hard points are closely tied to the plot and do need to happen. I think any plot twist which might happen is a liability in a game; you must either be prepared to railroad players or to let the plot point slip. However this pre-written adventure doesn't suffer too badly here as many of the plot points are encounters and events between two or more NPCs which will happen a way from the players. I think that's exactly the way to do things; I think a plot should have pre-planned nodes when NPCs do this and that except the PCs come along and throw a spanner in the works. If the PCs do X then one NPC has to change his plans and do Y. That has a knock on effect to the other NPCs... and the thrilling chain of In Character Consequences for In Character Actions starts to rattle.

This is a pre-written adventure, there can and will be spoilers beyond this point. If you're a player, especially if you're a Living Arcanis player, it's time to turn a way.

The premise is simple. The player characters get hired to get an expensive wedding present to an important wedding. What they don't know is that a monk hired them specifically because a deity told him to. That revelation will come as a surprise to the players as well as the characters. Any overtures of something bigger and much scarier are carefully hidden. The Chronicles have a carefully interwoven strand of plots; the second, that of secret horror is obscured, on purpose, by the investigative theme in the hope that the players are deeply involved before they know it.

I think it'll work.

The characters have to bring an ornamental egg to the wedding. If they're my players then I'll do whatever I can (without railroading them) to stop them discovering they're moving an egg around. I don't know about you - but my players are that cynical, that paranoid and that savvy. True to form - there's something in the egg, another relic. Oh, okay, it's called the "Orb of Saint Meritricus" but I don't think that's much cover. The orb gets nicked - not on the player's watch so it's not so bad - by the infamous bandit the Water Serpent. Yeah; it's a strange moniker for a bandit. She's been tricked, she thinks a deity has instructed her to do this but it was actually an illusion.

The relic the Water Serpent's been tricked into thieving relates to a suppressed heresy. This is a relic which the Church doesn't like but which seems to be entirely holy and accepted by their God.

The characters will wind up (most likely) chasing after the stolen goods and thus end up finding a hidden temple. Temple bits are predictably linear, as is the start of the adventure where the plot trundles along and picks up enough speed to sweep the characters along. The middle bit, or the third quarter more like, isn't linear and the characters really can potter around and do things in their order and meet people (or try to) when they like. This is great. It's this third quarter which could open out and take up a couple of sessions if the DM wanted. The DM needs to be prepared with world info and suitable NPCs though.

The adventure's own appendices do a good job of informing the DM. The first thing that I noticed - and this is a bit cheap of me - is that the illustrations for the NPCs show real people. The Water Serpent, female bandit extraordinaire would stereotypically be portrayed as a beauty. She isn't. It's not a wise idea to guess whether someone is a villain or not by whether they're scowling or not. More importantly the appendices have plenty of world info and describe the locale where the adventure takes place and there are less important (for this particular plot) NPC stats for people in interesting places too. There is a new Bloodline and new Bloodline powers - one of the reasons why In The Shadow of the Devil offers best value for money for Arcanis players.

This is a d20 adventure so there's a new prestige class (the Mordant; 6 levels of) and stats for an important new monster - the Ekimu (or Myrantian vampire) as well as spawns and other sundry undead.

In the Shadow of the Devil is best suited to four to six characters of about 6th to 8th level. There are 80 pages; good text density and even cartography on the inside cover so at US$17.49 represents excellent value. Regular readers will be fed up of my mandatory caveat that I don't particularly like pre-written adventures. I don't think they really work and are therefore fundamentally flawed - however, In the Shadow of the Devil makes a very good drive at proving me wrong.

* This In the Shadow Of The Devil review was first published at GameWyrd.
 

Thanks for the review.

I have a question about your rating. the text of the review reads better than the numerical rating, was the rating reflective of your general distaste for pre-printed adventures?
 

Gosh. Here's a delayed response - shows you how often I come and check the re-posts of reviews here!

3/5 at EnWorld is a 6/10 at GameWyrd. If we were at school then that's a B grade. Not bad at all. The overall grade does include an element of "How useful is this book?" and in that sense my opinion of pre-written adventures does come into play.

This should be a good score for any product (and I know there's the trend to rate highly) and I feel its certainly a good score for an adventure. I posted more guidelines behind my numerical ratings here: http://www.gamewyrd.com/review/guidelines.php

I've long come to hate the numeric ratings - not at ENWorld, but everywhere.
 

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