S.E. Lindberg's Blog, page 24
March 2, 2020
The Thief of Forthe and Other Stories - Review by S.E.

S.E. rating: 4 of 5 stars
Thanks to the Goodreads Sword & Sorcery group for bringing Clifford Ball's The Thief of Forthe and Other Stories, with vintage cover art by Virgil Finley, to my attention; also, thanks to DMR Dave Ritlzin for compiling great collections like this one (and others like The Sapphire Goddess: The Fantasies of Nictzin Dyalhis).
As the introduction reviews, these tales emerged on the wake of the death of S&S "father" Robert E. Howard in 1936. Clifford Ball was one author stepping up to try and fill the void in pulp magazine collections (Weird Tales). He is relatively obscure, but I speculate that these tales may have been very influential to others (like Leiber and Wagner). There are six in this collection. Conan the Barbarian Marvel Issue #264 (1993, Roy Thomas and John Watkiss) reintroduce Karlk, the evil sorcerer, as an enemy of Conan in a tribute to Clifford Ball (along with Throll, and the white apes of Sorjoon).
The Sword & Sorcery Tales (stories 1-3): These occur in kingdoms adjacent to Ygoth, called Forthe and Livia. There are explicit call-outs to Burrough's white apes from Barsoom. In all three, the protagonist(s) are held captive or in jail and escape.
(1) “Duar the Accursed” May 1937 Weird Tales. 5-star
The mysterious barbarian king Duar battles Lovecraftian horror while searching for the powerful Rose of Gaon. This was dark, fun adventure that set the stage for lots more Duar...but that never seems to have materialized. As an immortal, intelligent barbarian, Duar seems to be a precursor to Karl Edward Wagner's Kane. Duar's companion is a female spirit, Shar, who monitors him via the ether and counsels him on demons.Unlike the following stories, Duar's capture is more intense and his escape more interesting.
(2)“The Thief of Forthe” July 1937 Weird Tales3-star ...and...
(3)“The Goddess Awakes” Feb. 1938 Weird Tales.3-star
The "Thief of Forthe" introduces us to the thief Rald. Rald is contracted by Karlk, an evil wizard, since a mission requires some sort of corporeal brawn, which is simply to lift a bar from a door. The melodramatic interactions with the King and Queen are full of incongruity; they seem to like Rald despite his criminal nature. The wizard and Rald are eventually caught and tied up, and then left alone to escape!
"The Goddess Awakes" continues with Rald, this time gaining a partner. Most S&S prior had a lead protagonist (ie Conan) and a semi-serious delivery, but here we have a humorous duo featuring a barbarian thief (Rald) and a sly, philosophical mercenary (Thwaine). This screamed of a Fritz Leiber's "Fafhrd & Gray Mouser" influence (ie The Swords of Lankhmar. However, Leiber's first story of his own duo was published the following year (1939, "Two Sought Adventure" in Unknown). The end-boss had a Sphinx quality to it, but was too easily dispatched. In any event, this was slightly better than the second tale, but still too shallow for my tastes.
(4)“The Swine of Ææa” Mar. 1939 Weird Tales.5-star
Having sought out this collection for the first three, these others were just unexpected fun. This one has a slow setup, but the characters are engaging. They include an author documenting a wild story from a drunk sailor. There are echoes of statuesque end-bosses (Buddha and the Sphinx) that began in "The Goddess Awakes". The story is delivered with care and the descriptions are cool too:
The mystery island
“That’s queer shrubbery for these parts, isn’t it?” It was. I never saw such strangely shaped trees, with limbs that twisted like writhing snakes, or such oddly formed, three-cornered leaves as those growing on this island. Now that we were closer, things did not appear to be entirely green; there was a red network through some of the leaves, a patter of tiny lurid veins running wild at strange angles. No two of them seemed alike. The influence of jungle odors which we now encountered must have affected me; for the thought came into my mind that the colors of the brush were continually changing, like some lizards I had seen that were readily able to merge their outlines and coloration with their surroundings. It gave me the creeps, I tell you."
Beautiful Goddess:
"It was her eyes. They burned with a submerged fire that might have been stolen from Vulcan after he pilfered it from Olympus. I can’t tell you what color they were; they must have taken on all the tints of the rainbow, for one minute I thought them to be blue and the next I decided they were either gray or green. Another look, and I was prepared to swear her eyes were as yellow as a panther’s. You can’t describe the color of flame-tips; they keep changing too rapidly. The next best thing is to discover the source and look at the fuel. It was her eyes, not her features, that registered the “here-I-am” invitations, yet the woman, or girl, owned an aura of virginal sweetness..."
Ruins:
The whole floor of the inner courtyard was strewn with projecting rock formations which might once have been statues, but were now worn so smooth by the hands of Time and changing climates that they had lost all bold outlines a sculptor may have executed upon them. Chunks of shapeless stone, some formed groups oddly suggestive of women gossiping in the market place, or leaned toward one another as men engaged in desperate struggle. I selected one piece, in particular, which resembled a crucified man with his head thrown backward as he stared in hopeless pleading toward a silent sky. All were so worn that any carven facial contours some ancient artist may once have been proud of had been erased forever, and perhaps my impression of lines defining corded muscles and rounded limbs was a fantasy of the brain alone.
...The worn images seemed to have recovered whatever original forms they had once enjoyed; they, too, were laughing and gesticulating with queer movements. The whole courtyard was a fantastic scene, such as may have been drawn by imaginative artists depicting lost souls in Hell.
(5)“The Little Man” Aug. 1939 Weird Tales.5-star
What's this? A noir mystery with a self-confessed serial killer walking the streets? Fast and very fun. Will you understand how a thin, lithe man murders bigger men? Well...to quote the story: "Men lack faith in a thing simply because they are not able to understand it."
(6) “The Werewolf Howls” Nov. 1941 Weird Tales. 4-star
Monsieur Etienne Delacroix has a secret, and a canine-cryptid to deal with. An obvious denouement ends a short story, but the delivery was enjoyable.
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Published on March 02, 2020 02:54
February 21, 2020
Tolkien and Oden Groupread - Mar-Apr2020 groupreads

The Sword & Sorcery Group on GoodreadsPlease join us as we host the Mar-Apr 2020 Groupreads:
A) Scott Oden - Link to Folder: Lots of Scott Oden fans here, and his sequel to A Gathering of Ravens called Twilight of the Gods was just released! Men of Bronze, Memnon, The Lion of Cairo are all fair game! Even his Conan pastiche in the Marvel Comics.
B) Tolkien Memorial Read - link to Folder: Christopher Tolkien passed away this year, so it is timely to delve into the many books he edited/extended on behalf of his father J.R.R. Tolkien. So the focus will be on books like the The Children of Húrin, but if you are inclined to discuss/read JRR's work, then do that too. It's all in the spirit of Tolkien.
Banner Credits:
Cover art by James Iacobelli for A Gathering of Ravens and Twilight of the Gods


Cover art by Alan Lee for The Children of Húrin (Interior art, the depiction of Hurin)
Morgoth seats the kidnapped Hurin on a throne in Angabad....
...taking Hurin back to Angabad [Morgoth] set him in a chair of stone upon a high place of Thangorodrm, from which he could see afar the land oh Hithlum in the west and the lands of Bereriand to the south. There he was bound by the power of Morgoth; and Morgoth standing beside him cursed him again and set his power upon him, so that he could not move from that place, nor die, until Morgoth should release him.
"Sit now there," said Morgoth, "and look out upon the lands where evil and despair shall come upon those whom you have delivered to me. For you have dared to mock me, and have questioned the power of Melkor, Master of the fates of Arda. Therefore with my eyes you shall see, and with my ears you shall hear, and nothing shall be hidden from you."

Published on February 21, 2020 15:40
February 12, 2020
The Sleeping City - Review by SE

S.E> rating: 3 of 5 stars
E.C. Tubb (1919 – 2010) was prolific, known mostly for his Sci-Fiction (i.e., his Space-1999 adaption and 33 volume Dumarest Saga . Thanks to the Goodreads Sword & Sorcery Group for having groupreads, I was able to learn about Tubbs’s two-volume heroic fantasy novels, The Chronicles of Malkar (both published in 1999):
1) Death God's Doom
2) The Sleeping City
I delved into The Sleeping City before I knew about the first volume, and there was no issue with that. This one starts with the mercenary Malkar assuming a throne for the city of Dashkit; he incidentally won the queen as a bride. Her name is Ishma, and, like the other few women in this book, are present only to offer their bosoms (excerpts below). The misogyny seems more suited to another era, but the book is unabashedly masculine. The men are at the forefront of all the characters of substance, and the few women exist as erotic decor or prizes. Two excerpts of many examples:
She stood at the rear of the ramparts dressed in a gown of flame, red silk flowing over the curves of her body, rubies adorning the waterfall of her hair. Her neck was bare, her shoulders, the upper swell of her breasts. On the naked flesh shone a jewel.It reads much like Michael Moorcok’s style, or even Lin Carter’s Thongor. In fact, it goes so fast, the plot stumbles over itself. It propels the action regardless of consistency. One example (a minor spoiler but explains the title): eventually, Dashkit is held in a sleepless state under a storm-like spell; Malkar avoids the effects and goes on a random walkabout away from the city for magic to retaliate; when Malkar returns from being gone for ~1week, it is completely unclear who has been under suspension and who has not. Whereas his citizens and friends are frozen, his enemy Jalthar was free to roam around—but Jalthar did nothing to the city as it lay vulnerable, but instead waited for Malkar to return to battle for it.
He felt the movement of her breasts, her hips, the enticing invitation of her thighs.
Whatever. Malkar is always on the front-lines of danger, and always being saved by coincidence and luck, so never fear for his safety. In fact, he accidentally evokes a secret power three times at critical junctures, with no explanation or engagement for the reader to anticipate. In fact, his latent, convenient powers undermine the reasons & risks for his adventures. A shallow reason is offered at the end by a magician who explains that those powers (paraphrased) were fitting for a king, not a mercenary. As if Malkar was granted powers by usurping the throne… I guess? Or he earned them.
Malkar’s exposition is noteworthy, since he has “gut feels” that enables him to use scarce data to explain to his loin-clothed buddies (i.e., Hostig) what his enemies are thinking & doing, and thus allow him to lay traps and respond proactively. Likewise, the melodramatic dialogue is laughable at times. Many times I envisioned Adam West playing him (the ~1960’s Batman TV show may have inspired the drama).
Example Melodrama: call me a dog? I’ll kill you
“Dog?” The Benowinian stepped close and lashed Malkar across the face with his gemmed hand.
“You call me dog!” He grimaced, vile in his rage. “For that I shall feed you the agonies of hell! You will be staked on the sand with your eyelids removed so as to stare at the sun. You will be stripped and lashed with whips of wire so that the ants will come to drink your blood and eat your flesh. You will scream while being roasted over slow fires. I will burn out your eyes and sear your tongue! I will –”
The strengths lie in the fight scenes and poetic descriptions. I really did enjoy these.
Fight Scene example:
He chopped and mail burst, a severed head rolling from spouting shoulders, eyes wide in the amazement of death. He beat aside a swinging blade, beat again, sent the steel in a whining arc which ended on a shoulder and clove through bone and flesh to bare the naked lungs. Wrenching free the weapon he turned, smashed aside reaching steel, thrust at a snarling face. He felt irresistible, metal, flesh, bone all yielding to the fury of his attack. A machine of destruction cutting its way through a dozen men.
Poetic descriptions:
A passage led from the chamber to the Temple, the Hall of Kings where statues of previous rulers stood in double line in a wide passage of gleaming marble and malachite. The glow of votive candles touched them with dancing light, drifting glows that gave the dead eyes the semblance of watchful life, the dead lips the hint of sardonic smiles.
It was naked, hairless, the skin a sere yellow, the ears shrivelled against the creased flesh of the skull. A tall jar of black metal rose from the floor to clasp it around the scrawny throat. Ancient hieroglyphics intertwined with a serpent motive covered the surface of the jar and the head had the dried, desiccated appearance of a mummy, the mouth a thin crease, the eyes sunken beneath heavy lids.
So if you are looking for a guilty-pleasure adventure, some juvenile wish-fulfillment that can be consumed like fast food (tastes good, but isn’t really nutritious), then have a go at Malkar’s chronicles.
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Published on February 12, 2020 15:31
January 31, 2020
Mar-Apr Poll for Sword & Sorcery Topics is Alive!
SWORD and SORCERY group on GOODREADS
The Anthology groupread is well underway, so it is time to select topics for Mar-April. The five options are really enticing... please check them out and vote: Tubb, Ball, Oden, Tolkien, and many lost continents await your judgment. Click to go to the poll on Goodread's Sword and Sorcery page
Poll March-April Groupread Topic Poll: top two topics get a 2-month focus . Thanks to Richard, Joseph, Bill and Stan for ideas.

Vintage S&S by Clifford Ball like Duar the Accursed and other Fantasies or The Thief of Forthe and Other Stories

Scott Oden's Grimnir returns this Feb!
A Gathering of Ravens or Twilight of the Gods

Christopher Tolkien memorial read The Children of Húrin or Beren and Lúthien

Follow Master Ultan (moderator) on an expedition to a lost continent, like The Magic of Atlantis or Heroes of Atlantis & Lemuria

Vintage S&S by E.C. Tubb like The Sleeping City or Death God's Doomcomments and details· show results· invite friends
The Anthology groupread is well underway, so it is time to select topics for Mar-April. The five options are really enticing... please check them out and vote: Tubb, Ball, Oden, Tolkien, and many lost continents await your judgment. Click to go to the poll on Goodread's Sword and Sorcery page
Poll March-April Groupread Topic Poll: top two topics get a 2-month focus . Thanks to Richard, Joseph, Bill and Stan for ideas.


Vintage S&S by Clifford Ball like Duar the Accursed and other Fantasies or The Thief of Forthe and Other Stories


Scott Oden's Grimnir returns this Feb!
A Gathering of Ravens or Twilight of the Gods


Christopher Tolkien memorial read The Children of Húrin or Beren and Lúthien


Follow Master Ultan (moderator) on an expedition to a lost continent, like The Magic of Atlantis or Heroes of Atlantis & Lemuria


Vintage S&S by E.C. Tubb like The Sleeping City or Death God's Doomcomments and details· show results· invite friends
Published on January 31, 2020 16:10
January 28, 2020
International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2020
January 27th 2020 - International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2020
Yesterday, I recalled the saddest and most beautiful book I ever read (thanks to my parents having a copy): I Never Saw Another Butterfly: Children's Drawings and Poems from Terezin Concentration Camp, 1942–1944 ....
From the book synopsis:
Just having on the bookshelf is enough after that. A simple glance at the title on the binder is sufficient to become reflective.
Yesterday, I recalled the saddest and most beautiful book I ever read (thanks to my parents having a copy): I Never Saw Another Butterfly: Children's Drawings and Poems from Terezin Concentration Camp, 1942–1944 ....
From the book synopsis:
"A total of 15,000 children under the age of fifteen passed through the Terezin Concentration Camp between the years 1942-1944; less than 100 survived. In these poems and pictures drawn by the young inmates of Terezin, we see the daily misery of these uprooted children, as well as their courage and optimism, their hopes and fears."This is the type of book which is great to peruse once, but then it may too powerful to read again.
Just having on the bookshelf is enough after that. A simple glance at the title on the binder is sufficient to become reflective.

Published on January 28, 2020 06:55
January 5, 2020
The Last Wish -- Being Helpful
Amazon: The Last Wish
Holy cow, every now and then there comes across a fun confluence of events.In this case, the recent 2019 Netflix series The Witcher increased interest in the Sword & Sorcery series. Of course, I moderate the S&S group on Goodreads (all are welcome to join), and we do a lot of reviews to help future readers. Turns out my 2016 review of The Last Wish is the highest helpful rank, at >300 helpful clicks.
Cool beans. It was ~2yrs ago when I captured a few rewarding feedback instances from my reviews (Good Feelings about HATE post).
So... Toss a coin to your Witcher!
Holy cow, every now and then there comes across a fun confluence of events.In this case, the recent 2019 Netflix series The Witcher increased interest in the Sword & Sorcery series. Of course, I moderate the S&S group on Goodreads (all are welcome to join), and we do a lot of reviews to help future readers. Turns out my 2016 review of The Last Wish is the highest helpful rank, at >300 helpful clicks.
Cool beans. It was ~2yrs ago when I captured a few rewarding feedback instances from my reviews (Good Feelings about HATE post).

So... Toss a coin to your Witcher!
Published on January 05, 2020 10:40
Death Dealers & Diabolists - Review by SE

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Reading anthologies enables readers to discover new voices and authors, and since short stories launched the Sword & Sorcery genre in the ~1920's, the Goodread's S&S Group has a 2-month groupread every Jan-Feb for this purpose. This is my first DMR anthology and I am impressed. This bodes well for many others (like Swords of Steel Omnibus, Warlords, Warlocks & Witches, and the The Infernal Bargain and Other Stories). I only knew of Keith Taylor from this set. Three of the four that stick with me are ones that had less forward-momentum than I normally expect, but they ended strong and surprised me. I star my favorites below. The genre may have started in the 1920's, but anthologies like this demonstrate that it still lives strong a century later.
“Q’a the Librarian” by Buzz Dixon
Many others on Goodreads enjoyed this the most. It is true to the theme of “Death Dealers and Diabolists”. You can root for the anti-heroine Q'a since the other characters are eviler than she. Involves plenty of sacrifice and murdering children, and Q’a could care less. However, her immorality wore off on me, so I wasn't as engaged with any of her antagonists/plight. This opening entry consumes 28% of the book too, which wasn't necessary. Would definitely appeal to Grimdark readers.
“The Man With the Evil Eye” by Keith Taylor
I adore Keith Taylor's work (i.e., Servant of the Jackal God: The Tales of Kamose, Archpriest of Anubis ). This one was ok. Three crusader buddies (Palamides, Chiron, Michael) save an alleged murderer, a runaway woman, from a bunch of thugs hired by an evil magician/collector. Was hooked up to the point when the merry men met Harmatius. The ending battle/climax ended abruptly and with less reader-engagement than expected.
* “The Vault of Geigar Varakas” by Kenneth R. Gower
The tale of the thief Kral Mazan starts slow and meandering, but it ramps up nicely. He's good at cards and doesn't like cheating (stealing is alright though), and a card match with the wealthy, cheating Varakas gets him tossed into a street. There, a conniving woman, Firien, hires him to break into Varakas' treasure trove to retrieve an heirloom item for her--and seek revenge for himself. An eruption of Lovecraftian-like horror explodes on the scene which made the build-up satisfying.
* “Lord of the Wood” by Geoff Blackwell
This tells of the hunter Ville returning to a ravaged home. He tracks the death-dealers of his family considering revenge. Not much sorcery/diabolists in here. Very, very grim. Beautiful wording drew me in:
“Cold azure glitter replaced warm red glow. Skies lay naked, the moon and stars shone like pinpricks in tough fabric. Trails of teal and rich violet whipped across the firmament. He whistled into the shimmering aurora as though to beckon it closer. The sky fox danced tonight. A beautiful night to start Ville’s last hunt.”
“Ranorax, Son of Tiger” by Mark Taverna
Haukan of the Tiger Clan is a real ass and hopes to lead his clan soon. A pesky prophecy from their shaman indicates the leader will instead be a strange boy emerging from the woods. An okay entry. Not sure if Death Dealing or Diabolism motivated it.
* “Intrigue in the Unassailable City” by Carl Walmsley
Menias returns to his island city/home after sailing abroad as a mercenary for over a decade. He has a slim hope of reuniting with Carwynn, a lady of higher class who had a crush on him before he trekked off. But to find her he has to climb up the strata of the island from the poor docks. Having been sailing with a bunch of pirates hasn't helped his network. Old "friends" slow his mission to his love interest. This is the second of three tales that were a slow brew, that delivered in a satisfying way. Nice milieu and characterization.
“Three Coins of Doom” by Bryan Dyke
This has humor in it, which many like. But I am more of a curmudgeon, enjoying the humor only if there is a deeper story. Mau-Keefe is a pirate on a cryptic quest to track down an acquaintance (Naravian), while his compatriot wizard-buddy Lucrutius drinks more than he helps. Levity was nice to include to break up the grimness of the other stories, but the purple pummich's silliness overshadowed any story arc.
* “The Age of Crows—The Return of the Swarm” by Jed J. Del Rosario
A slow start sets up the epic premise of Angel vs Demon warfare. For the first third, I wasn't sure about its direction. Duryodan is the protagonist, but he is driven by a higher power (which chimes in via first-person narrative) and was summoned by a fellow angel, Vidur, to tackle a big job. Another angelic immortal, Nakula, also meddles as they battle a corrupt Emperor. Weird corpse-possessing flies/insects play a dominant role. I’m a sucker for necromancy and angelic battles like this one.
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Published on January 05, 2020 10:20
December 29, 2019
Offutt's BS: The Black Sorcerer of the Black Castle - Review by SE

S.E. rating: 4 of 5 stars
The Black Sorcerer of the Black Castle is Andrew J. Offutt's parody of Sword & Sorcery. The one I read has illustrations from Jim Pitts, introduction by Wayne Warfield (editor), and an afterword by andrew j. offutt (who seldom capitalized his name).
It is intentionally overwritten with excess adjectives, and offutt referred to this as "BS" (short for many things, Black Sorcerer included.) The story has the common tropes of a lone hero fighting ~3 representations of something evil capped with a final confrontation with a malicious wizard. Plenty of silly call-outs to the S&S crowd are within (i.e., the wizard is named Reh after Robert E Howard).
I heard about this via the Sword & Sorcery group on Goodreads. My goal was further to understand how the use of color was applied in pulp fiction (S&S especially).
The afterword reveals the story's evolution. More importantly, it showed how multiple readers/editors preferred a particular balance of humor and action. In fact, offutt confessed he learned via working with BS of his Great Discovery:
"pornography and heroic fantasy have something much in common: both quite for different reasons, need to create a mood and a spell, and to make it last --and neither, can be overwritten.
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Published on December 29, 2019 09:05
December 26, 2019
Anthology Groupread 2020 - Jan Feb on S&S - Goodreads
Sword & Sorcery Group on Goodreads
Happy Yuletide, Xmas, etc... and especially Happy New Year.
The next two months are slotted for Anthology reading, the foundation of the S&S genre is formed from short stories... and plenty of new collections are out there. Classic or new, grab one from your TBR pile and join in.
The Jan-Feb 2020 Anthology discussion folder (link)
"What anthologies are people reading?", a list (disguised as a Poll): Link to list/poll , feel welcome to add your vote (or write one in)
The inspirational Image Banner credits (L-R)
Blackest Spells - cover by Max Shevchenko - Breaker MaximusLost Lore: A Fantasy Anthology - cover by Andreas ZafeiratosSwords of Steel - cover by Martin Hanford

Happy Yuletide, Xmas, etc... and especially Happy New Year.
The next two months are slotted for Anthology reading, the foundation of the S&S genre is formed from short stories... and plenty of new collections are out there. Classic or new, grab one from your TBR pile and join in.
The Jan-Feb 2020 Anthology discussion folder (link)
"What anthologies are people reading?", a list (disguised as a Poll): Link to list/poll , feel welcome to add your vote (or write one in)
The inspirational Image Banner credits (L-R)
Blackest Spells - cover by Max Shevchenko - Breaker MaximusLost Lore: A Fantasy Anthology - cover by Andreas ZafeiratosSwords of Steel - cover by Martin Hanford



Published on December 26, 2019 11:21
December 22, 2019
Deep Madness Scenario Guide - Chronology
I just submitted an updated Word file(Version 3) in the BGG Files for Deep Madness (Dec 22, 2019) to accommodate the Faces of the Sphere expansion.
I assume it will be approved soon by the admins.I think Version #3 will appear in place of #2 will appear here: https://boardgamegeek.com/filepage/178525/deep-madness-scenario-guide
And the Deep Madness Facebook crew (thanks Phil) actually has a Files section (I just learned) and it has a similar guide: https://www.facebook.com/groups/DeepMadnessFans/
Chronology Title Chapter Notes Earliest Rise of Dagon 1: Rite of Bile Ward Phillips 2: Virulent Whispers 3: Dagon Rising Pre Core Story Profundum PDF
(and/or The Faces of the Sphere) 1: Drowning in the Depths
Core Story Core Story of Deep Madness 1: Crawling Asphyxia
2: Last Shuttle to Hell 3: Bathphobia 4: Through the Looking Glass 5: Madness Within 6: Lost in the Mist 7: The Horror Beneath 8: The Substance of Terror Middle of Core Story Oracle’s Betrayal 1: Trimming Virtues John Murdock 2: Collecting Tissue 3: Lobotomy True Endingto Core Story Uncounted Horrors 1: Another Dawn
Post Core Story Profundum PDF
(and/or The Faces of the Sphere) 1: Faces of the Sphere
? Endless Nightmares 1: Fathoms Dark
2: Fevered Dreams 3: Expectant Terror
I assume it will be approved soon by the admins.I think Version #3 will appear in place of #2 will appear here: https://boardgamegeek.com/filepage/178525/deep-madness-scenario-guide
And the Deep Madness Facebook crew (thanks Phil) actually has a Files section (I just learned) and it has a similar guide: https://www.facebook.com/groups/DeepMadnessFans/
Chronology Title Chapter Notes Earliest Rise of Dagon 1: Rite of Bile Ward Phillips 2: Virulent Whispers 3: Dagon Rising Pre Core Story Profundum PDF
(and/or The Faces of the Sphere) 1: Drowning in the Depths
Core Story Core Story of Deep Madness 1: Crawling Asphyxia
2: Last Shuttle to Hell 3: Bathphobia 4: Through the Looking Glass 5: Madness Within 6: Lost in the Mist 7: The Horror Beneath 8: The Substance of Terror Middle of Core Story Oracle’s Betrayal 1: Trimming Virtues John Murdock 2: Collecting Tissue 3: Lobotomy True Endingto Core Story Uncounted Horrors 1: Another Dawn
Post Core Story Profundum PDF
(and/or The Faces of the Sphere) 1: Faces of the Sphere
? Endless Nightmares 1: Fathoms Dark
2: Fevered Dreams 3: Expectant Terror
Published on December 22, 2019 15:49