Home BlogOn Hobby Best Practices Other Blogs I Follow My Campaigns
As the primary use of my blog is to document my tabletop campaigns, I have decided to use this as an index for the individual campaign pages, just to clear up the navbar of my blog a bit.
The Greylands Campaign
Run using OSE, my most "generic D&D" campaign to date. It comprises two separate campaigns, one open table and one family game. Set in a magically damaged …
Home BlogOn Hobby Best Practices Other Blogs I Follow My Campaigns
As the primary use of my blog is to document my tabletop campaigns, I have decided to use this as an index for the individual campaign pages, just to clear up the navbar of my blog a bit.
The Greylands Campaign
Run using OSE, my most "generic D&D" campaign to date. It comprises two separate campaigns, one open table and one family game. Set in a magically damaged backwater province of the !not-Holy Roman Empire.
Between the Serpents of Smoke & Steel
Run using OD&D with extensive house rules (which are to this day some of the most popular things I’ve written), along with a custom made tabletop wargame I designed and created for it. The setting is a pulp fiction Mesopotamia, with Law and Chaos being very direct and present forces acting in the region.
Zandan
Run using a variant of Tunnels & Trolls, this was a pure megadungeon game - there was no town or indeed outdoors for players to return to. Unique among my OSR campaigns so far in that I did not hack preexisting modules or dungeons, but wrote and designed everything from scratch myself. The setting, such that it was, was very heavily inspired by Slavic folklore and myth, and is I feel the strongest part of the campaign.