Andrew D. Gable
First Post
So. For a long time now, about four-five years, I've been working on this megaplot for a modern horror game. The groundwork for the story was laid back after WWII, and it involved the Babalon Working, which John W. Parsons, a student of Aleister Crowley, conducted, ending on January 15, 1946 (fact). Of course (also fact), the most infamous unsolved LA murder, the Black Dahlia, happened on January 15, 1947, exactly a year later. So I made it into a nifty horror plot, tying the two, saying while he was doing the Working, Parsons contacted some spirits (Grey aliens) and the sacrifice was needed to gate them through. Nice plot, right?
Then I tied in other stuff that happened in 1947: the finding of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the foundation of Israel, the starting of the UFO age and Roswell, and the death of old Aleister himself, who I said was offed by the aliens he helped gate through. Basically, I said Parsons succeeded in what he was trying to do. And, of course, now it would be up to the PCs to stop it from going any further!
Now what's frikkin' eerie.
It's almost all real.
Except for the bit about the Dahlia, it's all real pseudoreligious beliefs had by some latter-day Crowleyans. Independently, not knowing about these modern-day guys, I hit on the exact same thing they think.
Dangnabbit, that sorta freaked me out a bit.
Then I tied in other stuff that happened in 1947: the finding of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the foundation of Israel, the starting of the UFO age and Roswell, and the death of old Aleister himself, who I said was offed by the aliens he helped gate through. Basically, I said Parsons succeeded in what he was trying to do. And, of course, now it would be up to the PCs to stop it from going any further!
Now what's frikkin' eerie.
It's almost all real.
Except for the bit about the Dahlia, it's all real pseudoreligious beliefs had by some latter-day Crowleyans. Independently, not knowing about these modern-day guys, I hit on the exact same thing they think.
Dangnabbit, that sorta freaked me out a bit.