When I first proposed Prince Charming, Reanimator, to Mark Gedak at Purple Duck Games, I was imagining that we would use some of the
classic fairy tale illustrations in the project. After all, many of the really old images are
now in the public domain. As a reminder,
I am personally making no money on the project, and the pdf version will be
free. So, under circumstances like
these, keeping costs down is a logical step to take. That Mark would have to turn my sketch map
into something cool was a given…and I think you will agree that Kristian Richards did an excellent job
on the cartography, even without being forced to see the scraps I gave her to
work with!
Imagine my surprise this morning when I was “mentioned” by
Mark on Google+, and I caught a
glimpse of the artwork commissioned for the module! Wow!
The immediate result of this is that I had to post, if only
to share some of these wonderful illustrations.
I was lucky enough to be asked onto the Spellburn podcast (and that has not been released yet, but I’ll
drop a note here when it is), and we talked a bit about adventure
creation. In the case of the FT series (Faerie
Tales from Unlit Shores), I went about the process by choosing a number
of classic fairy tales, both known and less known, to draw from. Then I mated them with a number of Appendix N
stories, so that there is a synthesis between the classic material and nods
toward the material that Dungeon Crawl Classics is based
on. Then I re-read all the original
materials while making notes on images and themes I wished to use, considered
encounters and locations, and started doing some basic relationship sketches
that would later be turned into a sketch map.
An homage to other work does not simply re-use the material,
but rather re-imagines it in some fashion. While Prince Charming, Reanimator
includes many nods to H.P. Lovecraft’s
Herbert
West, Reanimator and Charles Perrault’s version of Sleeping
Beauty, it also uses other fairy tales for inspiration, as well as
other Appendix N fiction, and a healthy dose of just making things up.
Why should you plan on getting this adventure?
(1) It’s free in pdf.
(2) The artwork and
cartography are amazing.
(3) It is a 0-level
funnel with a dragon.
(4) It has a basic
write-up for a new patron.
(6) My older daughter
refused to playtest it because the idea stepped all over her cherished
childhood memories. To paraphrase, “Prince
Charming is supposed to be a nice guy, not somebody who marries dead people.”
(7) Did I mention
that it’s free in pdf? A Print-on-demand
option is also being planned for.
I’ll give a shout out when it is released, and hope you
enjoy it. For more H.P.
Lovecraft-inspired fun, and 0-level funnel mayhem, look for The
Arkham Grinder, coming soon from Crawl!Fanzine.
I am looking forward to it.
ReplyDeleteAlso, "The Arkham Grinder" is a very neat name for an adventure.
It's actually "Arwhich" not "Arkham"....my error. But the name is an amalgam of Arkham and Dunwich.
DeleteHello, as author of the above illustrations I can only thank you for the kind words and enthusiasm :-)
ReplyDeleteThey are excellent, sir. Absolutely top notch.
DeleteThose illustrations are great! Looking forward to seeing the final layout and I'll definitely be picking it up.
ReplyDelete