ROUND 2: THE DEMIURGE (gnosticism) VS CORALINE (coraline)
FIGHT
demiurge
coraline

seen from Denmark
seen from China

seen from France
seen from Guatemala

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Bolivia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Malaysia
ROUND 2: THE DEMIURGE (gnosticism) VS CORALINE (coraline)
FIGHT
demiurge
coraline
ive been nonstop playing hades 2 but tbh, the thing im the most not okay with has to be the tarot card set LIKE... supergiant games... you didnt have to do that.
you also get this message if you max out the oath of the unseen
Si no eres parte de la solución, te hace parte del problema
Portavoz
Edwige Fenech
i love coming home from far across the sea..
halloween II (2009)
H2: The Mines of Bloodstone (1986) calms the connection to Battlesystem. There are still a couple mass combat scenarios, but this isn’t a box, there are no chits; it is mostly a standard, if unusually high level, adventure module. It’s mostly a dungeon crawl, in fact, exploring the Deepearth laid out in the Dungeoneer’s Survival Guide (the module uses some of the rules from that guide, and the wilderness guide, as well; lots of synergy happening here which, I gotta say is both unusual and surprising for TSR).
The dungeons and caverns are…OK. The monster selection is all over the place. It feels much more like a fun house than I’m really used to seeing from this period of TSR’s history. You’d think it would settle down somewhat at the end, with mostly thematic encounters in a temple dedicated to Orcus, demonic lord of the undead. But no. It turns into a zoo of sorts, a kind of greatest monster hits playlist that includes a frickin’ Tarrasque. And Orcus himself could show up in person, if things go really badly. It’s a lot, but then I guess the module IS rated for levels 16 to 18.
Graham Nolan does the interior illustrations, which are pretty solid throughout. Keith Parkinson cover. Always loved it. I’ve been enamored of the priests of Orcus, with their goat headdresses, almost as long as I have been into D&D. The color palette is classic Parkinson and the composition anticipates some of his later work for Rifts. I also like his skill flex with the mirrored surface of the statue. A+ cover painting.