Even though I go through various other games, sometimes for a while, sometimes for a brief spin, I keep on finding myself working my way back to a Call of Cthulhu game. I've recently just finished my first session using the newest incarnation of the game, the 7th edition.
Released, Title, Publisher, Code, Era, PDF? 1986, Call of Cthulhu RPG, 3rd Edition Rulebook, Hardback Volume Chaosium &. The Crack'd and Crook'd Manse. Press, 40025G, R, Solo, C (G, M), GE, yes, Call of Cthulhu, 6th Edition.
I've noted before in this blog that there's tons of shinier games out there. What I've found is Call of Cthulhu has the virtue of just being darn playable. One thing Call of CtThulhu has been known for is how little changes from edition to edition. An edition war in Call of Cthulhu is pretty much unheard of. I've used adventures from the 2nd edition of the game in a 6th edition campaign with conversion, even on the fly, being wholly unnecessary. So though I've talked about Call of Cthulhu here before, let's do a little recap. The Call of Cthulhu RPG is based on the writings of early 20th century writer Howard Phillips Lovecraft.
Lovecraft's central premise was that humanity is ignorant of its insignificant place in a vast and uncaring universe populated by beings so alien they may as well be considered gods. And this ignorance is a good thing, for those who learn too much tend to go insane. The Call of Cthulhu RPG got its start back in 1981. Looking at the stats for a Call of Cthulhu character and you see a lot in common with D&D of its day - characteristics like Strength, Dexterity, etc. In a range around 3 to 18.
Unlike older versions of D&D though the game is centered around a skill system, with your rating in a given skill based on a score of 1 to 100, giving your chance at success when applying a given skill. It sometimes needed to be emphasized that you only roll when failure is a realistic possibility - you don't need to roll a Drive Automobile skill to park at the local mall. On the other hand, to maneuver your car in a high speed chase - then you need to make a roll. Unlike most games Call of Cthulhu stayed clear of difficulty ratings. It used hit points, though even as you advance they don't go up - your hit points represent your ability to absorb physical damage.
They are not the abstraction they are in D&D. To avoid getting hit you would typically use your Dodge skill. Perhaps more important than hit points are your sanity points.
Run out of them and you are permanently insane. Indeed lose too many at once and you'll be facing bouts with insanity. You lose sanity from casting spells, seeing horrible things, etc.
And your Cthulhu Mythos skill, the only skill which defaults to 0%, places a maximum cap on your sanity points. The higher it is, the lower your sanity cap is. There's been some trepidation about this new version of the Call of Cthulhu RPG. It would be reasonable to say that this new 7th edition represents the largest change in the game since it was first released. Since I've been talking rules thus far, I'll continue to do so prior to giving a big picture view of the new game.
I'll preface this by saying that even with a change as large as this I was able to use a 5th edition adventure with no difficulty at all. I made changes to the adventure, but they were not based on problems with the rules but rather tweaks I made as GM that I felt would better fit the game. So what are the big changes as far as rules go?.
Characteristics are now ranked from 1 to 100, just like skills. You generate them the same way you did in previous editions (3d6 and 2d6+6) but you multiply the result by 5. The idea is to get everything to a percentile. Skills have three ranks. You've got your main skill rank. You've got your skill divided by 2 for Hard skill tests and your skill divided by 5 for extreme skill checks.
In addition to the above difficulty, specific circumstances can give you one or more penalty or bonus dice. Either way, you roll multiple instances of the tens digit of the percentile dice. With penalty dice, you keep the highest, with bonus dice you keep the lowest.
The resistance table is gone. There are two ways to handle matching against an opponent.
In most cases you make a skill roll. If your opponent's opposing skill is under 50 it is standard difficulty.
If it is up to 90 it is Hard and above that Extreme. Or you both roll. Whoever gets the better success wins, with ties going to the person with the better rating (except in certain combat situations). Bonus and penalty dice get used a lot in combat.
For example, if you are firing a semiautomatic weapon multiple times you get penalty dice. Spending a round aiming gets you bonus dice. Dodging multiple opponents gets penalty dice. Point blank range gets bonus dice. In hand to hand combat, you have two ways to defend.
You can counterattack. In such a case you also roll to hit your opponent. Whoever gets a better success does damage. Ties go to the attacker. You can dodge. In this case ties go to the defender. In most cases you can reroll a failed skill or characteristic roll by pushing.
In such cases you get a reroll though the keeper will warn you of some additional consequence of failure should that roll fail as well. The presentation is rather different.
There are now two main books. There is the Investigator Handbook and the Keeper Rulebook. The Investigator Handbook is built for players and centers around character generation, occupations, skills, how to adventure, organizations you might join/form, etc.
The Keeper Rulebook covers a lot of the same ground in the sense it has occupations, skills, etc. But it is far more geared towards keepers. There are less character generation options, discussions of adventuring organizations, etc. And instead sections on combat, task resolution, sample adventures, creatures, spells, etc. A keeper doesn't need the Investigator Handbook but it is very handy to have.
I'll focus on the PDF. It is a gorgeous book. For the first time the Call of Cthulhu game is presented in color in its English version (I believe the French and perhaps German versions have had color editions). The art is new to me and seems very nice.
The text is easy to read and the PDF files are nicely bookmarked with lots of internal linking. The mobi and epub versions keep all of the illustrations and are also nicely bookmarked and linked. Someone spent a lot of time preparing first rate digital versions and I am very pleased with the presentation. I've loaded them into Google Play Books for my Android devices and have also taken advantage of the mobi files on my Kindle reader. The only negative is the mobi files are a bit big - the rulebook being too big to add to my Kindle library (i.e.
The Amazon cloud storage) but I was able to transfer via usb easily. I'll talk more about these as my gaming with this edition continues. My main takeaway is that while it does represent the biggest change in the Call of Cthulhu rules since its inception, I consider those changes to be more along the lines of cleanup/refinements rather than the massive changes seen in different versions of D&D over the past few years. Combat is still incredibly dangerous, sessions can be played with a minimum of dice rolling, and intelligent play still works better than going in guns blazing. I'd have to say it's still my favorite RPG.
Shortly after I graduated from college R. Talsorian published their fantasy steampunk RPG, Castle Falkenstein. Having missed out on Space: 1889 when it first came out this was my first steampunk RPG, though I had been exposed to the genre by Gibson and Sterling's novel The Difference Engine (a novel which, though I though I found the setting compelling, I did not particularly care for - must reread some day).
Jules Verne was one of the authors in the inspirational reading section of Castle Falkenstein. Heck, the game also made him into France's scientific advisor, having him responsible for their massive Verne Cannons which formed a sort of nuclear deterrent. With that in mind, one Sunday afternoon I was at a Barnes & Noble bookstore my new girlfriend (now my wife of nearly 16 years!). On a whim I decided to pick up a Jules Verne novel. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. That night I started reading it, never having read any of his works before but having vague memories of t. Taking a look at the, it seems the Mythos kinda kicked ass.
I'm not certain if Lamentations of the Flame Princess Weird Fantasy Role Playing Grindhouse Edition is the longest title for an RPG but if it isn't, it's got to be awfully close. (Henceforth I'm going to abbreviate it as LotFP - originally I was going with WFRP but that lends to confusion with Warhammer Fantasy Role Play.) When I started my blog there were three RPGs that I knew I wanted to have for my first review - this, and.
When I've discussed the possibilities of doing an old-school game with my group one of the more common concerns is attempts to repeat what's been done before. That's clearly more of an issue for some than for others - for example, I know some people who'd gladly get their White Box edition of D&D out and start playing that. That said, there is something to be said for those games which put their own stamp on things. I believe this trio of games does just that. With DCC we get. I just received my backer PDF for the 2nd edition of Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyperborea.
Often when a backer PDF is released I'm playing something else so sometimes it may take days or even weeks until I get around to downloading it. Since I'm actually GM-ing an AS&SH campaign currently, I actually downloaded it right away. I've given the original version of the game a as well as a more recent. This isn't a full review of the new edition - I've only had time for a quick skim. But from that skim it's worth noting that the game hasn't changed - there's some rearrangement here and there, some tweaks, and a bunch of additions. So it's important to note that my earlier reviews are still very much applicable. Indeed, unlike many games, the fact that this is a new edition isn't even advertised on the cover.
This reminds me of the way revisions to the D&D Basic and Expert sets were released in the. For a number of older D&D players, their introduction to the game came from the D&D Basic Set as written by Eric Holmes. It wasn't my start - I began with the magenta set that followed it - but some of the people I gamed with had the Holmes Basic Set. The Holmes Basic is an interesting artifact, an intermediate step between the Original and Advanced D&D rules.
Michael Thomas a few years ago developed a retroclone of the Holmes Basic rules, called Blueholme Prentice Rules. Like the original Basic Set it was a low level game. With the Journeymanne Rules the game covers levels 1 to 20. It's a well done book that fits a lot into a slim volume - when I received it I was amazed how much it crammed into its 112 pages. This review will assume familiarity with D&D which I presume is a reasonably safe assumption.
Like every D&D game it has the classic six ability scores. As is often the case in older versions of D&D these scores aren't as important as they are.