Hi all,
I am skimming through all my campaign notes, these days, and thought - why not make a list like Havard has done? Words to the wise, don't make the mistake I made in my early 20s, and throw away all your campaign notes. :cry: It's really hard to remember stuff, even just a few years later.
Now, about the list below, it is important to know that the games are not always necessarily set within the same continuity; over the last ten years, "Blackmoor's Known World" has often been my first choice of convenience, especially, when I ran a module with no setting background specified. I retconned most of them later on, again out of convenience, into The Last Fantasy Campaign, but sometimes the timelines certainly overlap, or contradict each other.
The World (of my gaming table) before Blackmoor!
Gosh, I really don't remember! During my school days, lots of MERP, lots of D&D 2e, also lots of HeroQuest/Warhammer Quest. In 2002, I played in sort of an Al Quadim/Midgard hybrid, and ran a Dragonlance/Taladas campaign, which was sort of the my coming-of-age moment as a gamer. (I don't even remember the system, nor if the campaign concluded in '03, or '04. :oops: :D ) In 2004, I started DMing Ravenloft on a regular basis, and would go on doing so until, probably, 2011. I remain primarily a horror game DM, outside of the internet, but I usually use less specific environments than the World of Mists, nowadays. Some time during that time, I ran a game based on "The Lost City of Gaxmoor", set in the world that was later used as the basic setting for the C&C game: In great part, that game would become the blueprint for "The War of the Thieves", and later installments of the LFC.
Finally, Blackmoor: The Nuchar Continuity (Summer 2004 - Winter 2008)
A loose conglomerate of games with the same players, set around 1029-1030 NC. Based on the DA series, and on the BM d20 book alone, this game merely used BM as a backdrop for modules I wanted to run; I think bought the Blackmoor book because I thought it was a Greyhawk supplement, or something. ...And that's how the madness begun. :) Nuchar, in terms I apply today, was the tormented soul of a Sorcerer King, and one of the campaign continuity's BBEGs. He is, by my standard's today, not a very notwworthy baddie, being partly inspired by the child ghosts from the Silent Hill series, and Lysandus from the Daggerfall PC game.
The game itself, run in d20, evolved a lot around several of Atlas Games' Penumbra RPG books, namely "The Maiden Voyage" (no relation) which featured Rowell's first appearance, and "The Ebon Mirror". We also played out a couple of the AEG d20 modules ("Against the Barrow King" was used as Nuchar's Lair", for example), as well as some of the BM d20 adventures, namely "The Redwood Scar", Gawaine's first appearance, as well as "Ties That Bind", which was easily my favorite part of that specific campaign.
We didn't have an epic metaplot accompanying the adventures, and rarely interacted with any of the setting's VIPs. I also ran "Caverns of Thracia" for the group, as well as some other modules by Paul Jaquays, but I get fuzzy with the details, now that I think of it. Most of the games were not set in Blackmoor itself, though, but in the area around Boggy Bottom and Fairfield Abbey. The farthest north we went was, I think, Archlis.
The Last Fantasy Campaign - I promise, I'll keep this short. Running from 2005 to 2015.
“The Grim Winter”, PBP, 2005-2009. - The start of the epic, and the War of Ten with Teddybears. 1031-1032 NC.
“The War of the Thieves”, PBP, 2005-2008. - To a degree, the full merger between the LFC and the Nuchar timelines - in both games, the thieves guild conquers the old city of the moon goddess. 1032 NC.
“Die weiße Stadt/The White City”, PBP, 2009. - Silent Hill on the Egg's Island. Including a very, very nasty Pinhead demon. 1032 NC.
“The Road”, Collaborative Writing, 2009. - The Egg attacked, and Karl Winters had his bachelor party. Not sure what caused more damage. 1032-1037.
"Die Dämonen des Frühlings", Tabletop Game, 2009. Essentially, the German version of "The Ghosts of Summer", but with Marban closer to Ravilla. Fey are evil. Very.
“The Evil That Came To Jackport”. - Played in Person at RopeCon 2011, in Helsinki, Finland, with a viking, a bathroom troll, and an angry worm god. 1034 NC. (IIRC)
The Promised Land, PBP, 2010-2012. - The grand finale of the LFC. Skelfer is Ran, Uther's alive, and in the end, Sven will be king. 1037-1040 NC.
Games set in Blackmoor's future - until the start of the Demon Wars... :twisted:
The following may or may not be part of LFC continuity. - Some clearly are, but with some, I have not decided yet.
“The Stone Forest”, PBP, 2008. - Lamentably, all the files are lost. Based on the overworld map from Adventures in Fantasy. In short, gorgons ate the party. 1080 NC.
“The Ghosts of Summer”, PBP, 2011-2012. A haunted castle, and Gorileth spectre, a real pain the behinds. The first real introduction in my own expanded version of Blackmoor. 1120 NC.
"The Age of Theodore", PBP, 2013. The game that would not be. The descendants of the Company of the Maiden against the Green Emperor of Viridistan. Written out extensively, but never played. 1450 NC.
"Hexenkessel/"The Witches' Cauldron", Tabletop, 2014. A short adventuring sequence, set 80 years AFTER the "Age of the Theodore", and during the start of the Demon Wars. 1530 NC.
Related games
Where the connection to Blackmoor is evident, but never explicitly defined.
“The Tomb of Rahotep”, PBP, 2007-2015. - Run by Clarence. A replay of Gary Gygax' "Necropolis" adventure, featuring Sol, Sven's uncle, and Ivid, a relative to Rowell.
“Tales from the Vales, PBP”, 2012-Present. - Run by Havard. Sort of a prequel to the LFC, in that the connection is so far being left open, but that many characters are sort of related.
"Mordred - The Last Adventure's" Dark Tree and House of Lost Play. PBPs, 2012-2013. Two games, again, not anyway, canonically related, and set in a world I prepare for publication as an independent setting; now, since so many of the members of the Company of the Maiden joined, I decided to make the games two bridge-adventures, that would lead the descendants of the Company of the Maiden embark on new adventures in a new world... :wink:
"Firewater", Tabletop, 2014. - An adventure that retells the story of the awakening of BM dungeon - effectively retconning the start of the FFC; might see some sort of print publication, even. :) More on that, later. :)
"The House on Hangman's Hill" Tabletop, 2014. - The passing of the torch. Three youngsters, marvelled. An aging adventurer, content.
"Firewater II", Tabletop, 2015. - Set in the same continuity as the game of the year before, an attempt at Glendower dungeon, with LFC references galore.
"That Dreadful Incident with the Cow, Tabletop, 2015. - Last game in Blackmoor, ever?! Last game in Blackmoor, ever!
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