Editing
Lamentations of the Flame Princess
(section)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
===LotFP-Published Adventures by Other Authors=== Most of these have small house-rules supplements in the back, system tweaks, and other bonus content. * '''[[Adventure anthology Death]]''': * '''[[Adventure anthology Fire]]''': * '''[[Blood in the Chocolate]]''': Kiel Cheiner mixes Willy Wonka and his [[Magical Realm]]. [[FATAL|Which is apparently midgets gang-raping fat lesbians in knife wounds]]. Has potential as an industrial black comedy/horror factorycrawl if you strip out the LotFP. Was disowned by the author in 2020, and removed from publication a year later when the rights reverted back to him. * '''[[Towers Two]]''': Originally a fairly straightforward module where two wizards are duelling with their bands of pretty-boy soldiers and pig-faced orcs, with the "twist" that both of them are evil. Notable for being half-written by the frontman of GWAR, then taken over and made vastly grosser by a fanboy after his death. Includes "death-fuck" magic. * '''[[Forgive Us]]''': Tight, brutal little pastiche of ''Aliens'' and/or ''The Thing'' by way of [[Warhammer Fantasy]]. Cultists find a Nurgle idol, possession and [[/d/|tentacles]] ensue. Set in the real world, but easily converted to WHFRP or whatever else. The treasure room has some neat mechanics. * '''[[England Upturn'd]]''': Odin is fucking with the English Civil War, Evil Prince John is a liche trying to take over his idiot descendants, and the drow want him back to torture him forever. Has a fairly cool take on the alignment system based on religion and politics, though the execution is lacking. * '''[[Isle of the Unknown]]''': An astonishingly-generic hexcrawl, which is put together almost entirely with random generators. The Zodiac wizards are the only really interesting thing in it. * '''[[Scenic Dunnsmouth]]''': One of the best things to come out of the entire mess that is LotFP. Uses a dice-drop to create a map, then uses the values of the dice to generate a quick metaplot and set the power levels/treasure of various set NPCs. A quick playing card deal assigns the rotating cast of NPCs from 56 available households/characters. Then you just have to steal the Time Cube from Schrodinger's Spider-Cult while dodging an insane serial killer. It's like the card-generated plot from the original [[I6: Ravenloft]] module, or the [[Curse of Strahd| modern re-interpretation]] on steroids. * '''[[Deep Carbon Observatory]]''': One of the other great things to come out of LotFP. A 2-part short hex crawl with one small and one large dungeon to explore, centered around an ancient dam that breaks a hour before the party arrives and the chaos that follows from the flood. The writing is sometimes vague and flowery, but the copious amounts of art give a great feel for the setting, even if you have to fill in some of the gaps. Has a giant platypus, a poison that makes your wizard dyslexic, dinosaur hieroglyphics and pit trap bureaucrats with yellowed skulls. * '''[[Broodmother Sky Fortress]]''': Giant evil shark-elephants drop out of the sky and attempt to blow up your campaign setting. The players are encouraged to steal their ship. Tries to be full of 90's 'tude, just comes across as a bit desperate. Does provide a lot of alternative rules in case you don't want shark-elephant aliens but still want the crazy ass adventure over all. * '''[[The Cursed Chateau]]''': Haunted house adventure. A jaded demon-worshiping mage traps you in his funhouse and wants you to amuse him. Very much the Hammer Horror counterpart of Castle Amber. * '''[[The Punchline]]''': *'''[[Thulian Echoes]]''': When Titus sacked Jerusalem (A.D. 70), he made off with a load of silver. The players go on a classic dungeon dive to get it. The twist is they are working off the notes of a failed party of adventurers, so the game starts with the players running the dungeon with a set of premade characters, with their actions providing information to the "real" characters about the dungeon's traps and hazards, which is objectively a remarkable clever idea that's nonetheless rage-inducing, since it has to be associated with ''Lamentations of the Flame Princess''. * '''[[Lamentations of the Gingerbread Princess]]''': Halflings and an evil [[My Little Pony| Pony Prince]] imprison the party on a demiplane of diabetes-fuelled horror. If you're lucky, you can make wishes that the DM will then fuck you over on!
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to 2d4chan may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
2d4chan:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation menu
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
English
Views
Read
Edit
Edit source
View history
More
Search
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information