Hmm this Jeff Grub setting box set seems strangely familiar?! Over the weekend I've been doing a ton of thinking about Clark Ashton Smith's Zothique and I've been doing quite a bit of over the weekend reading. My reading was focused on the Al- Qadim the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons second edition Arabian Nights focused setting for Forgotten Realms. Since it came out I've always placed the Al Qadim setting in Greyhawk & yes I know that there are others doing so as well.
But maybe I've been going about using this whole Arabian nights inspired campaign all wrong!? What if Al Qadim is actually an Earth millions of years in the future!? "Campaign Journal: Scimitars Against the Dark" (by Wolfgang Baur, Dragon magazine 198) Is both my inspiration & not exactly my source book here. Zothique shares many of the qualities of Al Qadim but comes closer to the classic Ray Harryhausen's Sinbad series of films.
In Clark Ashton Smith's letter to L. Sprague de Camp, dated November 3, 1953 we get Smith's own enfolding description of Zothique; "Clark Ashton Smith himself described the Zothique cycle in a letter to L. Sprague de Camp, dated November 3, 1953:
The approximate location of the fictional continent of Zothique according to Clark Ashton Smith.
Map by Miihkali
So what is it about "Campaign Journal: Scimitars Against the Dark" (by Wolfgang Baur, Dragon magazine 198)? Well it goes through the following;
This article gives tips how to create a dark, Ravenloft-flavored version of the Al-Qadim setting. But it also gives several character classes that can easily be adapted into a Zothique campaign. But to really bring in the Harryhausen Sword & Sorcery 70's vibe I strongly suggest backing into Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyperborea.
Not only is this going to bring home the character classes but the rpg system is going to take things up several notches towards bringing in a far more 'PG' rated Zothique flavor. I would be remiss if I didn't bring in the fact that many of the Dreamlands cycle of H.P. Lovecraft's stories fit the same area of drift of CAS's Zothique.
So what is it about the Al- Qadim the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons second edition box set that makes it indespensible for setting up an Al Qadim campaign?! Well besides the maps, character classes, commentary, monsters, dungeon ideas, & quality of the product line?! Well there's a certain something about the material. Al Qadim wasn't as shoe boxed as some of the other campaign box sets of the 2nd edition era. The DM had a ton of lattitude to make the setting his own. This wasn't something I found with other 2nd edition product lines such as Ravenloft. I'm going to be diving further into this campaign course coming up in future blog entries.
Personally I think that the Al Qadim line was way ahead of its time in terms of content, ideas,material , & all of those glorious maps. Could this line be a perfect for CAS's Zothique?! I think so.
Personally I think that the Al Qadim line was way ahead of its time in terms of content, ideas,material , & all of those glorious maps. Could this line be a perfect for CAS's Zothique?! I think so.
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