Sunday, June 7, 2026

Using Adventurer, Conqueror, King Edition Second Edition Rpg & Castles & Crusades Rpg With B9 "Castle Caldwell and Beyond" (1985) by Harry Nuckols

 B9: Castle Caldwell and Beyond (1985) by Harry Nuckols is unique among classic TSR modules. Rather than presenting a grand, sprawling sandbox or a deeply integrated megadungeon, it is a compilation of five bite-sized, single-session mini-adventures designed for levels 1–3.



While famously critiqued for its surreal "grab-bag" ecosystem (where bandits, goblins, and giant shrews share adjacent rooms without a clear ecological layout), it provides an excellent testing ground for a referee running Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II). Its modular design allows you to easily drop these locations into your campaign map as local dynamic nodes or domain-level borderland problems.

Here is the comprehensive breakdown for converting and running B9 using the robust mechanics of ACKS II.

1. Setting and Regional Integration (ACKS II Style)

In the original module, the scenarios are mostly loose and disconnected. For ACKS II, you can ground them within a single regional sandbox or a newly claimed Marcher Barony.

  • The Power Vacuum: Treat the local region as an unmapped Borderland (Wilderness) hex. A local mercantile consortium or a rising Noble (the player characters or an NPC like Clifton) has recently purchased the deeds to the old Caldwell holdings to build a fortified Civilized enclave.

  • The Five Nodes: Instead of running them back-to-back as an isolated narrative, place them across your regional campaign map:

    1. Castle Caldwell: The actual fortified site chosen for the future casting of a Keep or Fortress.

    2. The Dungeons of Terror: The unmapped vault beneath the castle, masking a ancient, low-level underworld sinkhole.

    3. The Abduction of Princess Sylvia: An active Bandit Hideout/Fortified Camp nestled in a nearby forested hex, threatening trade lines.

    4. The Great Escape: A hostile border outpost belonging to a rival, uncivilized chaotic realm or humanoid faction.

    5. The Sanctuary of Elwyn the Ardent: A small, fortified Chaotic Sanctum or heretical cell run by a rogue Cleric disrupting local divine investment.

2. Converting the Five Mini-Adventures

Adventure 1: The Clearing of Castle Caldwell

  • The Hook: A wealthy merchant named Clifton has bought the castle but cannot clear the squatters. In ACKS II, this is a textbook Clearing the Wilderness operation for a Level 1 stronghold.

  • The Dungeon Ecology: The original map features random arrays of goblins, bandits, stirges, and giant rats. To map this to ACKS II conventions, treat the castle as a Lair shared by a splintered, fractious gang. The Bandits and Goblins are currently negotiating a tense truce to split the looting rights of the old estate.

  • ACKS II Mechanics:

    • Stirges & Giant Rats: Treat these as wandering hazards or pests nesting in the high towers and collapsed stables (utilizing the Beast Handling or Hygiene proficiencies if characters investigate the filth).

    • The Reward: Clearing this completely reduces the local wilderness savagery, allowing Clifton (or the PCs) to lay down the initial investments for a regular Market Settlement or Border Fort.

Adventure 2: Dungeons of Terror

  • The Hook: A trapdoor in the castle floor seals the party inside a small subterranean complex.

  • The Trapdoor: In ACKS II, standard heavy stone trapdoors require an Open Heavy Doors proficient check or a cumulative strength check. The "magically slamming door" can be attributed to an ancient, localized Mechanical Trap or a lingering Glyph of Warding left by the castle's original builder.

  • Key Conversions:

    • The Doppelganger: This is a lethal encounter for 1st-level characters. In ACKS II, ensure the Doppelganger utilizes its Surprise modifiers and mimics a captured retainer or a member of Clifton’s entourage to sow narrative discord rather than just acting as a brute-force combatant.

    • Green Slime / Yellow Mold: ACKS II handles these as environmental hazards. Green Slime destroys armor instantly unless scraped off or burned. Ensure your players have access to torches, oil, or a character with the Alchemy proficiency to neutralize these threats safely.

Adventure 3: The Abduction of Princess Sylvia

  • The Hook: A classic rescue mission inside a hidden canyon or woodland hideout. The captors are a mix of bandits, lizardmen, an evil wizard named Oliver of Horn, and a spear-wielding Owlbear.

  • ACKS II Mechanics:

    • Oliver of Horn: Convert Oliver into a 3rd-level Mage or Alchemist. Given the absurd nature of the original module's art (showing a bipedal owlbear with a polearm), frame Oliver as a mad specialist who treats the hideout as an improvised alchemy lab. The Owlbear isn't just a monster; it’s his prized, mutated Chimeric Creation.

    • Lizardmen and Goblins: Frame them as mercenaries hired via the Mercenary Recruitment rules, paid for by Oliver's illicit wealth.

    • The Rescue: Returning Princess Sylvia intact grants a massive boost to local Noble Reputation and can serve as a narrative justification for a land grant or an introduction to a higher-tier Urban Realm.

Adventure 4: The Great Escape

  • The Hook: The characters start captured, stripped of their gear, and locked in an enemy military outpost.

  • ACKS II Mechanics:

    • The Prison Break: This adventure leans heavily on attribute checks and player ingenuity. Characters with the Thievery proficiency, Escape Artist, or the Contortionism knack shine here.

    • Scavenged Combat: Because the PCs lack armor and weapons initially, utilize the ACKS II Unarmed Combat and Improvised Weapon rules. Striking an armed guard while unarmored requires leveraging tactical positioning and seeking Surprise values.

    • The Outpost: Treat the compound as a small Border Garrison holding 10–20 low-level mercenaries or conscripts. Clearing it yields a substantial haul of mundane military equipment (spears, leather armor, shields) perfect for outfitting a player's first unit of Garrison Troops or Peasant Levies.

Adventure 5: The Sanctuary of Elwyn the Ardent

  • The Hook: The party must infiltrate a fortress to recover a stolen sacred artifact (a mystical Chime of great power) from an evil cleric named Elwyn.

  • ACKS II Mechanics:

    • Elwyn the Ardent: Convert Elwyn into a 4th-level Chaotic Priest (or Priestess, keeping the original module's classic twist). Elwyn should have access to Dark Miracles like Blight or Cause Fear.

    • The Sanctuary: This location functions as a low-level Chaotic Sanctum. It generates a small radius of spiritual corruption, meaning any lawful or neutral Clerics in the party will find the atmosphere oppressive.

    • The Stolen Relic: Treat the stolen artifact as a low-tier Unusual Magic Item. If returned to the local orthodox church, it provides significant Divine Favor or can be used to offset the costs of establishing a future Sanctuary or Chapel for a divine PC.

3. ACKS II Economy, Treasure, and XP Alignment

Classic Basic D&D modules often have highly inflated coin placement that can warp the tightly regulated ACKS II gold-to-experience pipeline. B9 is a grab-bag of random coin hoards and powerful magic items (such as a Staff of Healing, Wand of Paralyzation, and Ring of Spell Storing).

To keep your campaign economy stable, apply the ACKS II Treasure Hoard Generation rules to adjust the modules as follows:

Adventure NodeRecommended Treasure Hoard Class (ACKS II)Adjustments & Placements
1. Castle CaldwellHoard Class VI (Shared among room clusters)Convert loose platinum and gold into trade goods left behind by the merchant Clifton or stolen caravan supplies.
2. Dungeons of TerrorHoard Class VII (Hidden in Vaults)Keep the magical traps, but replace excessive coin hoards with ancient, non-functional relics or valuable architectural blueprints.
3. Princess Sylvia’s RescueHoard Class VIII (Oliver's Lab)Convert a portion of the raw coin into Alchemical Components or valuable reagents worth their weight in gold for spell research.
4. The Great EscapeHoard Class V (Military Payroll)Replace random jewelry with a locked strongbox containing the outpost's military payroll, denominated primarily in silver and copper coins.
5. Elwyn's SanctuaryHoard Class IX (Temple Treasury)The high-tier magic items (like the Wand or Staff) should be treated as Relics of the Cult. Elwyn will actively wield them in combat if alerted.

The XP Scale

Because B9 is meant for characters of levels 1–3, the total XP gained from monsters and adjusted treasures across all five mini-adventures will perfectly push a standard party of 4–6 characters through their first two levels, preparing them to transition smoothly from localized dungeon-delving into early-stage domain management and wilderness exploration.

Yes, absolutely! In fact, B9 is an excellent bridge between ACKS II and Castles & Crusades (C&C), and running a hybrid game or using elements of both systems with this module is remarkably straightforward.

Because both games are direct descendants of classic D&D, they share the same mechanical DNA. However, they approach the tabletop from different angles: C&C provides a streamlined, fast-playing resolution system, while ACKS II provides a deep, simulationist world-building and economy engine.

Here is how you can use B9 to seamlessly blend the two systems, or choose how to leverage the best parts of each for this specific module.

1. The Mechanical Compatibility: Stats and Monsters

Because C&C and ACKS II both derive their math from early editions of the world's most popular RPG, converting monsters on the fly during a B9 session requires almost zero prep.

  • Hit Dice (HD) and Armor Class (AC): A 2 HD goblin or a 1 HD bandit in B9 translates perfectly to both systems. If you are using C&C's ascending AC, simply convert the module's descending AC (e.g., AC 7 becomes C&C AC 13 / ACKS II AC 2).

  • The Siege Engine (C&C) meets Proficiencies (ACKS II):

    • Adventure 4 (The Great Escape) requires characters to break out of prison. In C&C, you will resolve this instantly using the Siege Engine (a Dexterity or Strength attribute check against a Challenge Class, favored by Prime Attributes).

    • In ACKS II, you would look at specific character Proficiencies (like Thievery or Escape Artist).

    • The Hybrid Fix: Use C&C’s elegant attribute-based Siege Engine for the moment-to-moment action rolls, but grant a +2 or +4 bonus if a character possesses a relevant ACKS II proficiency.

2. Setting up the Sandbox: ACKS Domains with C&C Rules

The best way to combine them for B9 is to use Castles & Crusades as your primary ruleset for exploration and combat, while using ACKS II to manage the campaign world, economy, and endgame.

Step 1: Mapping B9 into an ACKS II Borderland Hex

Use the ACKS II wilderness rules to place Castle Caldwell on your regional map.

  • Define the area as a Borderland hex.

  • The players use C&C rules to delve into the castle and clear out the monsters.

  • Once cleared, switch to ACKS II mechanics to calculate how much it costs to clear the surrounding wilderness, establish a market, and attract peasant families.

Step 2: The Economy Clash (Gold vs. XP)

This is the one critical area where you must make a design choice:

  • Castles & Crusades defaults to a modern style where defeating monsters provides the bulk of XP, and gold is just for buying gear.

  • ACKS II relies heavily on a 1 Gold Piece = 1 XP model to pacing character leveling and fund domain management.

The Recommendation: If playing a hybrid game, use the ACKS II XP-for-Gold system. B9 has a lot of loose treasure. If you use C&C's monster-only XP, your players will level up very slowly in these short dungeons. If you give XP for gold, clearing Castle Caldwell will give them the exact financial war chest they need to hire the C&C equivalent of mercenaries and torchbearers.

3. Class and Magic Conversions for B9

The Spells

B9 features two prominent spellcasters: Oliver of Horn (Adventure 3) and Elwyn the Ardent (Adventure 5).

  • In C&C: Oliver is a 3rd-level Wizard; Elwyn is a 4th-level Cleric. You can use their standard spell lists straight out of the C&C Players Handbook. C&C's prismatic magic system makes Elwyn's unholy spells feel appropriately dark and dangerous.

  • In ACKS II: If you want a grittier tone, give Elwyn access to ACKS II Dark Miracles. Instead of a standard Cause Light Wounds, Elwyn can cast a lingering sickness that requires the party to seek out a high-level sanctuary to cure.

The Magic Items

B9 features high-powered items like a Staff of Healing and a Wand of Paralyzation.

  • C&C Approach: C&C handles these items classically. They have standard charges and work exactly as a veteran player expects.

  • ACKS II Approach: ACKS II views magic items as rare, volatile commodities. If the players try to sell Elwyn's Staff of Healing to fund their castle renovations, use the ACKS II Magical Commerce rules. Selling a major item requires finding a broker, paying taxes to the local realm, and risking the attention of thieves.

Summary: The Perfect Hybrid Blueprint

If you choose to run B9 using both systems simultaneously, layout your campaign structure like this:

Game ElementWhich System to UseWhy it Works
Character CreationCastles & CrusadesFast, intuitive, and highly customizable with the archetype system.
Dungeon Combat & TrapsCastles & CrusadesThe Siege Engine resolves trap detection and attribute checks in seconds without looking up tables.
Treasure and PacingACKS IIKeeps gold meaningful. The coin found in Castle Caldwell serves as direct experience and future investment capital.
Post-Dungeon CampaignACKS IIOnce Elwyn is defeated and the Princess is saved, the players use ACKS II to manage their new local reputation and build their own barony.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave’s Arduin Grimoires - ACKS II Domain Level Play

 Smashing Dave Hargrave’s hyper-gonzo, maximalist Arduin Grimoire into Autarch’s mathematically airtight, spreadsheet-driven ACKS II (Adventurer Conqueror King System II) is an incredible exercise in campaign design. You are taking a system designed for high-fidelity medieval demographic simulation and dropping it into a universe featuring multi-classed Techno-Mages, psychopathic Elves, and random tables where your flesh might literally taste bad to monsters.


To make an Arduin Domain work seamlessly within the structure of ACKS II, you have to map Arduin's chaotic high-fantasy tropes directly onto the economic, demographic, and structural engines of ACKS II. This blog post picks right up from Integrating Adventurer Conqueror King System II (ACKS II) with the legendary, chaotic, and maximum-gonzo DNA of Dave Hargrave's Arduin Grimoires - More In depth Details



1. Domain Types & "Investment Vagary"

In ACKS II, domains are strictly defined by class (e.g., Fighter Castles, Mage Sanctums, Thief Hideouts). Arduin introduces chaotic, highly specific archetypes that require custom ACKS II stronghold mechanics.

  • The Techno-Mage / Star-Powered Mage Sanctum: Instead of a standard ACKS wizard tower, an Arduin magical domain requires a Nexus Power Core or an astronomical observatory.

    • The ACKS II Translation: The stronghold cost remains standard, but Magical Research Rules must account for Arduin's volatile "Mana Point" and crystalline magic systems. Treat Arduin crystal attunements as custom Sacred Architecture modifications that grant a +1 to +3 bonus on monthly magical research throws, but a failed stabilization check triggers an explosive cascade, permanently lowering the investment value of the hex.

  • The Slaver Compound / Courtesan Salon: Arduin explicitly treats Slavers and Courtesans as core classes that generate mechanical value.

    • The ACKS II Translation: A Slaver's stronghold functions mechanically like an ACKS II Thief Hideout, but instead of running standard "Hijinks" (garreting, smuggling), their underlings execute Abduction and Trafficking operations. This treats captured monstrous or intelligent humanoids as "Trade Commodities" within the ACKS II mercantile system, modifying the local market's demand variables. Courtesan Salons act as espionage networks, substituting standard infiltration hijinks with Gossip & Political Seduction, generating Intel points used to manipulate rival domain rulers.

2. Populating the Hexes: The Chaos Demographics

Standard ACKS II assuming a classic, pseudo-historical baseline of human peasants, standard elves, and dwarves. Arduin throws Phantms, Deodands, Lizardmen, Throons, and multi-dimensional entities into the mix.

When measuring Land Value and Peasant Families per hex, introduce the Arduin Chaos Modifier:

Population TypeACKS II Growth RateMorale / Stability ImpactSpecial Economic Trait
Phantms / Shadows-50% (Slowest)Immune to standard plague eventsGenerates zero agriculture; taxes paid in Essence/Mana
Lizardmen / Throons+25% (Fast)-2 penalty to Civilized MoraleDouble standard food consumption; ignores winter terrain penalties
Arduinian HumansStandardHigh volatility (Roll domain events twice)Higher baseline literacy; +5% bonus to market trade values

The Integration Rule: When calculation of your Maximum Peasant Capacity per hex occurs, non-human Arduin races require you to alter the Land Yield. Sylvan or subterranean Arduin species do not farm standard cash crops—their labor yields alchemical ingredients, skystone, or monster parts, changing the domain's primary tax revenue from standard gold pieces to Specialist Raw Materials used in magical crossbreeding.

3. The Arduin Kill-Factor & Mass Combat

ACKS II features Domains at War, an incredibly robust mass combat system calculated using unit rosters, supply lines, and tactical advantages. Arduin is famous for its visceral lethality and "Kill Factors."

To combine them without breaking the game:

Unit "Kill Factor" Integration

In Arduin, characters and monsters have varying "Kill Factors" (inherent lethality). In ACKS II mass combat, translate this directly into Unit Traits:

  • Units composed of Arduin-native shock troops (like Amazonian Battle-Maidens or Berserkers) gain the Fearsome or Brutal traits, forcing enemy units to make morale checks at a penalty upon first engagement.

  • The Critical Hits Impact: If an embedded PC or major NPC commander rolls a natural 20 during a tactical engagement, roll directly on the infamous Arduin Critical Hit Table. If the result dictates "head decapitated" or "severed torso," that specific enemy hero or unit commander is instantly eliminated, causing an immediate, cascading morale check for their entire sub-division.

4. Taxes, Tithes, and "Gonzo" Domain Events

The monthly domain turn in ACKS II relies heavily on a predictable calculation:

$$\text{Revenue} = (\text{Families} \times \text{Tax Rate}) + \text{Market Tariffs} - \text{Garrison Upkeep}$$

To inject the flavor of Arduin into this formula, replace the standard ACKS random domain events table with a table that reflects the multi-dimensional chaos of Dave Hargrave’s world.

Custom Arduin/ACKS II Domain Event Snippets (Roll 1d20 Monthly)

  • 1–3: Void Rift Inversion. A localized tear in space-time opens over a random hex. 1d10% of the peasant population vanishes into another plane. Domain morale drops by 2. The hex produces no revenue this month, but magical research inside the domain receives a +4 bonus due to ambient extra-planar energy.

  • 4–7: Techno-Scavengers. A faction of outcasts carrying ancient technological artifacts (phasers, skyships, or power armor) passes through your lands. You may allocate up to 5,000 gp to buy alien technology. If you do, local clerical domains launch an immediate Inquisition event due to your reliance on "heretical machines."

  • 8–12: Draconic Alliance. A localized clan of Arduinian dragons requests a formal treaty. You must cede 20% of your monthly domain income directly to their hoard. In return, your domain gains a permanent aerial garrison unit consisting of 1d4 Young Dragons for mass combat defense.

  • 13–20: Standard Growth / Cosmic Alignment. The stars align perfectly for Star-Powered spellcasters. All domain income is standard, and any magical items crafted this month have their GP and XP costs reduced by 15%.

5. Structuring the Campaign Play

To keep the game manageable for the Judge, structure the domain phase using strict ACKS II timing protocols, but color the narrative choices with Arduin's flavor.

1.Population & Tax Resolution:Step 1: The Spreadsheet Base.

Calculate standard ACKS II peasant population growth, agricultural yields, and baseline taxes based on your current infrastructure.

2.Apply Race & Alignment Modifiers:Step 2: The Arduin Filter.

Adjust your numbers based on who is living there. If your hex is populated by chaotic Deodands, subtract 10% from your tax revenue due to infighting, but add 20% to your border patrol military efficacy.

3.The Chaos Event Roll:Step 3: The Hargrave Variable.

The Judge rolls on the Arduin Domain Event table. Interdimensional trade, technological discoveries, or rampaging demon hordes alter your calculated metrics immediately.

4.Resolve Hijinks & Magical Exploits:Step 4: The Outflow.

Run your Techno-Mage research, Slaver captures, or Courtesan political assassinations using the ACKS II d20 resolution system to lock in your final XP gains for the month.

Using this hybrid approach allows you to enjoy the sandbox mechanics of ACKS II without losing the psychedelic, high-stakes, skull-crushing atmosphere that makes Arduin legendary.