Sepulchrave II
Legend
Okay. In a nutshell.
The World: Feudal Japan meets Finno-Ugric Shamanism and Teutonic Myth.
The Premise: High level but low magic. Dark-Age / Low medieval technology.
Quirky magic: Sorcerers, bards, witches, enchanters, shamans. Runes, spirits, totems. Glamour. No 'civilized' magic, such as that exemplified by wizards and clerics. In fact, no distinction between arcane and divine magic at all.
The Characters: A wandering warrior-maiden named Sihu. A bard called Murme. Joalgh the Humourless, a dour forester. Ulf the Cunning, a seer.
The Plot: Sorcery. A voyage by sea. A giant. Oodles of deception, intrigue, plotting and betrayal - of course.
The Catch: No healing magic in the party. Of any kind.
I'll be happy to share this, if there is any interest out there. If it's all old hat, then I won't bother. I should mention in passing that this is the same campaign world as Wyre, albeit milennia before. It is also the world that I keep returning to, even after fifteen years. Of course, it's not finished - they never are, are they?
Opinions?
The World: Feudal Japan meets Finno-Ugric Shamanism and Teutonic Myth.
The Premise: High level but low magic. Dark-Age / Low medieval technology.
Quirky magic: Sorcerers, bards, witches, enchanters, shamans. Runes, spirits, totems. Glamour. No 'civilized' magic, such as that exemplified by wizards and clerics. In fact, no distinction between arcane and divine magic at all.
The Characters: A wandering warrior-maiden named Sihu. A bard called Murme. Joalgh the Humourless, a dour forester. Ulf the Cunning, a seer.
The Plot: Sorcery. A voyage by sea. A giant. Oodles of deception, intrigue, plotting and betrayal - of course.
The Catch: No healing magic in the party. Of any kind.
I'll be happy to share this, if there is any interest out there. If it's all old hat, then I won't bother. I should mention in passing that this is the same campaign world as Wyre, albeit milennia before. It is also the world that I keep returning to, even after fifteen years. Of course, it's not finished - they never are, are they?
Opinions?
Last edited: