Advisory Note

Please Note: This blog contains poorly painted toy soldiers that may offend those of an aesthetically sensitive disposition.

Saturday 29 July 2017

4AD Adventure the Fourth


Adventure 4 – The Manse of the Mountain King


(illustration by John Blanche)
  


Emerging from the dense forest, Krud and Ildore find themselves at the foot of a long range of mountains. Directly in front of them is the entrance to a steep pass leading serendipitously to their goal, a ruined castle known as the Manse of the Mountain King.
 
“Damned good shortcut, eh?” enthuses Krud.
“Fantastic” replies the Hedge Wizard, pulling twigs and leaves from his beard. “Shall we get on with it?”
“Indeed, by the Gods! Onward to riches and glory!” the young warrior cries.
“Onward to Goblins, more like…” mutters Ildore.
Having climbed the precipitous trail, the adventurers peer through a ruined gateway into the shell of a squarish castle with a tower in the North-East corner.
 
 

 
What was once, presumably, a courtyard and internal buildings is now an expanse of crumbling walls and rubble. They cautiously enter…
1.       The inevitable band of Goblins are sitting by a fire eating what may (or may not) prove to be a roast Halfling. Krud attacks at once; Ildore grips his dagger and takes a defensive stance behind a large pile of rubble. Two Goblins fall to Krud’s sword immediately; three of the others put the fire between them and the warrior. The last makes a run for it, straight into Ildore’s dagger. Krud leaps the fire and wipes out the remaining Goblins. A set of stairs leads down into the Castle’s Dungeons (?) but Krud wants to continue searching above ground first…
2.        “Great” quips the Hedge Wizard, “A large stagnant pool. Bound to be stuffed with treasure...” “Hmmff” his companion grunts, “Let’s see what’s down those stairs…”
As our heroes pass the pool two quite large Vampire Frogs leap out croaking hungrily. A fight ensues. The amphibians lose. Krud swirls the cloudy water with his sword but can see nothing. Neither fancy taking a dip. “To the dungeons!” cries the over-eager Warrior and they descend...
 
3.       At the bottom of the stairs a passageway runs left or right. Turning left they move along another passageway that ends in a door…
4.       Krud listens at the door but hears nothing. He enters and finds a small apparently empty room. “Let’s search, there’s bound to be a hidden doorway to treasure” says Krud. Ildore stands back, suspecting there’ll just be a trap. Amazingly (2 lucky dice rolls later) there is a secret doorway to…
5.       A similar room that contains a mouldering chest. “Ah-ha!” cries the Warrior. The chest falls apart as Krud touches it but in the remains is a roll of vellum that contains an Escape spell. Ildore is impressed; Krud is not. They retrace their steps to…
6.       Find themselves at a cross-passage. Turning left they approach another door. Krud listens; a spectral figure floats through both the door and our heroes. Ildore is obviously affected but Krud ignores the ghost and opens the door and enters...
7.       A room in which 4 Hobgoblins are lounging around waiting for unsuspecting adventurers. There is a fight. Despite Ildore’s ineptitude the Hobgoblins are slain. Krud relieves one of the fallen of a gemstone. Exiting via another door they move South to…
8.       A room containing two trolls; they are aware of the approaching twain due to the noise of the fight with the Hobgoblins. (Note: these are trolls in the mould of those encountered in Tolkien’s “The Hobbit”. They are called Bert and Ernie).  Ildore sensibly uses a Fireball spell and blows Bert to pieces. Ernie is upset about this and swings his club at the adventurers. Krud parries the blow and attacks the troll. After a short scrap, he defeats Ernie and chops him up just to make sure. 6 Gold coins are found in Bert’s purse. Ildore investigates the purse but it oddly it doesn’t talk. Returning to the cross-passage the explorers move West…
9.       They enter a room with two other exits and 9 vampire bats hanging from the ceiling. The bats depart shunning the light from Ildore’s lantern. Taking the South door, they enter…
10.       A room full of a strange yellow mist. Ildore holds his breath and runs for the opposite door; Krud gets a lungful and chokes. His companion drags him out before the poisonous gas can do too much damage.
11.       In the corridor, they collide with a party of orcs. Eventually the Orcs are overcome. Ildore suffers an injury but is patched up and they move on…
12.   Through another empty room. As they head across it the jaws of an enormous “bear-trap” fly up through the floor. Krud’s quick reactions save them. The Eastern doorway leads to…
13.   A short passageway. More vampire bats fly out. Krud listens at the door at the end of the passage. All is quiet. They enter…
14.   The tomb of the Mountain King. A stone sarcophagus lies on a large slab in the centre of the room. Broken urns and crates line the walls – it appears that the tomb has been defiled in the past. There are also bones and corroded weapons lying about the floor. As they enter there is a rustling noise and a mummified corpse creakingly rises up from its resting place. “Fireball!” yells Krud raising his weapons. Ildore’s final Fireball spell does some damage to the Mummy; he then keeps guard behind the door whilst Krud does what Warriors do best. Soon there is nothing but smouldering bandages and broken old bones. A few coins are found among the wreckage of the King’s burial offerings. In the sarcophagus is a strange wooden staff; Ildore senses magic and keeps hold of it. Disappointed by the lack of more treasure, Krud leads the way out of The Manse of the Mountain King.
Ildore the Hedge Wizard
(illustration from Asgard Miniatures catalogue 1979)
 
 

 


6 comments:

  1. A great adventure, a bit of Blanche and a sesame st reference, whats not to love?!.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Why, thank you Sir. One of those trolls was doing his own thing....

    ReplyDelete
  3. All of a sudden I have a wave of misty memories of D&D and College in the 70's. Ahhhh

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ross

    About a year ago I had a similar nostalgic feeling about D&D. Over at Warwell's Wargames (http://warwellwg.blogspot.ie/) Kevin Kearney uses 4AD which is a simple Solo RPG so I thought I'd give it a try - great fun. I think I like it so much because for me Wargames are all about telling a story.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I know what you mean about story telling, for me the result is not important its the little incidents and details that bring the game to life. On 4AD, would it work well with kids?, i ask because most of my gaming for the next 6 weeks will be with the sprinklings and i'm looking for a more rpgish type ruleset to avoid their competitive natures!.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I think it would work with kids. It's simple RPG mechanics aimed at a solo game with 4 characters (hence 4 Against Darkness). I use 2 adventurers and less enemies as it's quicker. If you took the lead and did the describing and the kids said what their characters were doing I think it would work very well. Sounds like fun.

    ReplyDelete