the players have been invovled in and are still invovled in saving the chruch while these two folks go at it. The two main villians you mention are duking it out in the middle of an undead assualt on a church. One of you are on each of the other wagons, and so far, the drive is looking like it will end peacefully. I ran the entire witch fire series for my players and they had loads of fun. The pack horses are tied to the last wagons. Gunner sits atop the lead wagon with his driver, a sour, quiet human called Viggo. The caravan consits of five wagons, with four pack horses bringing up the rear. "If only all my trips 'twixt Fellig and Corvis were so painless" "Easy money, aye?" shouts Gunner Wadock, the caravan's leader, from his position on the front wagon. The trip has been without incident so far. Corvis is only a half a day's ride away, though the widower's wood. For your services, you are being paid 25 each at the end of your journey.Īfter chasing the rising sun for many days, the ordeal is near an end. The journey takes more then two weeks, and passes through rocky passes, and swampy lowlands. You've been hired by the Merchant's guild in Felling to guard a caravan on the treachorous route to Corvis. But I doubt this day will come.(allright, this is my first time DMing online, so wish me luck. BUT shall I run it as it was intended (using D&D 3.5), shall I try to convert it to D&D 4th Edition (my group really likes the new system) or is converting the setting to a completly different system like Savage World, True20, GURPS, whatever the way to go?ĭeep in my heart I still hope that Privateer Press will surprise us with their brand-new IK roleplaying game that perhaps even is compatible to their miniatures line in the future. When I’ve concluded our current Pirates of the Spanish Main campaign returning to the Iron Kingdoms could be one of my possibilities. And I don’t believe they have the manpower or will to reinvigorate their roleplaying game line.Īnd although I own lot of the IK books I haven’t run more than the first part of the Witchfire trilogy. With WARMACHINE, HORDE and the new Monsterpocalypse they have three miniature game lines. Seller Rating: Contact seller Book Used - SoftcoverCondition: VERY GOOD US 4.39 Convert currency Free shipping Within U.S.A. The only way to reprint the books would be to make them compliant with the OGL, which in my opinion would be no impossible task.īut if you ask me, I am sure that Privateer Press is focussing on new projects and the IK campaign setting is more or less dead. Witchfire at Lammas Robert Neill Published byArrow (A Division of Random House Group), 1988 ISBN 10: 0099195607ISBN 13: 9780099195603 Seller: Discover Books, Toledo, U.S.A. But they can’t sell their existing material because the d20 System license is no more. IK was using the d20 System License, so you probably won’t find many copies in stores nowadays.īut alas there hasn’t been any new releases for the IK campaign setting for quite some time now and Privateer Press recently announced on their forums that they will not release an updated version with D&D 4th Edition rules. IK consisted of the beforementioned trilogy (the “Witchfire” trilogy), the IK: Character guide, the IK: World guide, two Monsternomicons and several smaller sourcebooks. For that matter The Witchfire Trilogy is not the worst I have seen in this regard, one of the White Wolf adventures for the Year of the Reckoning was absolutely horrible, dragging the PCs from scene to scene with no ability to influence events or even jump off of the railroad. In the beginning IK started as a trilogy of adventures that later even spawned the miniature games WARMACHINE and HORDE. Anyone have a 2nd edition conversion for the witchfire trilogy We are starting the witchfire trilogy with the 2nd edition books and I would like to have a conversion if there is one, just the stats for encounters would be amazing as I have the original books from 3.5. The people who followed my Dungeoncraft articles may already have guessed that the Iron Kingdoms setting by Privateer Press was one of the major inspiration for Asecia.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |