tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7979259813687726542.post9125878780367509617..comments2024-01-07T07:48:19.278-08:00Comments on A Journal of Impossible Things: Campaign Notes : Our Second Season (so far)Olivier Legrandhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02199905638515843374noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7979259813687726542.post-38847939521320760692010-11-15T09:52:04.692-08:002010-11-15T09:52:04.692-08:00Hello Craig ! :)
I haven't read "Riders ...Hello Craig ! :)<br /><br />I haven't read "Riders of the Maelstrom" - but similarities are probably unavoidable when you transfer classic pirate tropes in space. "Space Princess" was really a classic pirate story with a few Whoesque twists. As for John Dee, well, I've always liked this character and found him very "Whoesque" too - he had already appeared in the heroine's prelude episode (a single, short scene) but I wanted to use him again as the catalyst of an adventure. As for the "Angel of Death", it was actually a psychomorphic manifestation of the unconscious (and not so unconscious) collective fears of 1608 London, animated by the evil Lloigor (yes, I've integrated them in my campaign - so far, as invisible forces acting behind the scenes).Olivier Legrandhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02199905638515843374noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7979259813687726542.post-18634150471883369452010-11-14T09:22:12.304-08:002010-11-14T09:22:12.304-08:00John Dee, you say? The Angel Of Death, you say? Oo...John Dee, you say? The Angel Of Death, you say? Oooh.<br /><br />(And is Space Princess borrowing anything from Riders Of The Maelstrom? Seeing how a Star Wars adventure adapts to Doctor Who would be interesting.)Craig Oxbrowhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16388821789251515974noreply@blogger.com