“The whole piece has a wonderful quality of movement that immediately evokes a sense of mysterious, cinematic adventure.“
Category Archives: Trail of Cthulhu
A new five-star review of Trail of Cthulhu by OBS staff reviewer, Megan Robertson. Overall, this is a masterful melding of the Gumshoe system with classic Cthulhu Mythos gaming, an inspired match. There’s so much goodness in this that I’ll be back again and again, not just to play but to mine for ideas whatever I […]
Dan Harms has written a review of DoSM. …this is a chilling scenario epitomizing Lovecraft’s cosmic horror. It not only recommends itself to Trail of Cthulhu purist players, but it’s also an excellent resource for Call of Cthulhu players who want more cosmic horror in their games. Also, Graham and I were also rather chuffed […]
Gamester At Large’s review of Trail of Cthulhu.
Trail of Cthulhu is a new standalone GUMSHOE system game under license to Chaosium, set in the 1930s. It supports both Pulp (for Indiana Jones, Robert E. Howard, thrilling locations sorts of games) and Purist styles of play(for intellectual horror and cosmic dread).
Trail Of Cthulhu goes to the movies. Pelgrane Press pays homage to the classic horror films of the 1930s with this 192-page page compendium of celluloid thrills and chills! Trail Of Cthulhu creators Kenneth Hite and Robin D. Laws team up, marshalling their deep mastery of cinematic lore to bring you a landmark collection of […]
James Semple has written four brilliantly composed atmospheric tracks to enhance your Mythos playing experience. Includes Trail of Cthulhu Purist theme, Trail of Cthulhu Pulp them, Aganorosis and Ruminations.
Trail of Cthulhu won two Ennie awards for Best Rules and Best Writing, as well as receiving an honourable mention for Product of the Year. Thank you for your votes. Sample pages from Trail of Cthulhu Trail of Cthulhu is a new standalone GUMSHOE system game under license to Chaosium, set in the 1930s. It […]
A review of the Dragonmeet special edition (paperback, not hardback).
Kenneth Hite Kenneth Hite claims to have bought the first copy of Call of Cthulhu sold in Oklahoma City, in August of 1981. Since then, he has moved to dread and night-haunted Chicago, written all or part of seventy or so roleplaying game books (including Nightmares of Mine, Dubious Shards, and Adventures Into Darkness), and […]