Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Meditations on the classic In Search of the Unknown (Module B1, written by Mike Carr in 1978) module Adapted To OSR Rpg systems especially The Adventurer, Conqueror, King Second Edition - Part Six

 Arriving at the iron docks of Krag-Ghar is a jarring sensory assault. The humid air smells of sulfur, stagnant lake water, and melting pig iron. Huge, soot-stained chains dangle from the cavern roof to steady the suspended stalactite city above, while the green glow of phosphorescent moss reflects slickly off the carapaces of the Chitin Regime guards. This blog post picks right up from Meditations on the classic In Search of the Unknown (Module B1, written by Mike Carr in 1978) module Adapted To OSR Rpg systems especially The Adventurer, Conqueror, King Second Edition -- Part Five Other adventure locations within the caverns of Quasqueton



When the party first guides their waterlogged skiff into the crowded slipways of this Underworld port, roll $1d6$ on the table below to determine their immediate reception.

Krag-Ghar Harbor Encounter Table ($1d6$)

RollEncounter / IncidentACKS II Faction Interaction & Mechanical Consequences
1The Extortionist Customs Overseer

A massive, scarred Troglodyte captain named Karg-Voz steps onto the wooden pier, flanked by four guards with iron halberds. He demands an arbitrary "Surface Vessel Surcharge" of $10\text{ gp}$ per crew member or 1 Stone of high-quality surface metal (such as a steel sword looted upstairs).



Mechanic: If the party complies, they gain safe entry and a temporary copper token. If they refuse, they are turned away. Attempting to bribe him with alcohol requires a Proficiency Check (Bribing or Diplomacy); success drops the tax completely, but failure causes him to seize one piece of non-magical gear as a "fine."

2The Escaped Laborer

A terrified Orc slave, wearing a heavy iron collar stamped with the seal of the Chitin Regime’s foundries, leaps from a nearby cargo skiff and scrambles into the party’s boat, begging to be hidden beneath their gear.



The Dilemma: Within seconds, three Troglodyte enforcers approach the slipway, whips drawn. Hiding the slave requires an immediate Thief Proficiency check (Hide Objects or Sleight of Hand). If caught harboring the runaway, the party's Reaction Roll with the Chitin Regime permanently drops by -2, and they are fined $100\text{ gp}$. If they turn him in, the enforcers offer a $10\text{ gp}$ bounty and a voucher for cheap docking fees.

3Agent of the Gloom-Weavers

A slender figure wrapped in a silk cloak of shifting gray-black hues steps out from the shadows of an obsidian warehouse. This is Aeloria, a spy for the deep elves of Vael-Thalar. She has felt the residual arcane ripple of Zelligar's items (like the Arcanist's Lexicon) or simply recognizes surface surface-dwellers as useful chess pieces.



Interaction: She offers to pay for the party's harbor entry fee and buys them a round of fermented mushroom ale at a local dive if they agree to a private meeting. She wants to hire them to sabotage a Chitin Regime iron shipment destined for a rival house in her city, offering $400\text{ gp}$ in uncut gems as payment.

4The Press-Gang Ambush

The party docks in a poorly lit, derelict slipway away from the main harbor watch. A gang of 4x Feral Bugbears (AC 3, HD 3+1, Morale +1), employed by local gladiator pits to source fresh blood, ambushes the party as they tie off their lines.



Tactics: They target lone or lightly armored characters first, using clubs to deal subdual damage rather than lethal wounds. If they successfully knock a character unconscious, they will attempt to drag them into a covered cargo barge. The harbor guards will intentionally look the other way unless the party screams or uses flashy magic (like a Light spell) to draw a crowd.

5The Drunken Brawlers

A rowdy squad of off-duty Troglodyte iron-miners, completely blind-drunk on distilled cave-lichen spirit, comes tumbling out of a waterfront tavern. They mistake one of the player characters for a surface raider or an escaped gladiator.



Mechanic: The leader attempts to shove the lead PC into the murky, leech-infested harbor water. The party must make a Reaction Roll with a -1 penalty due to the miners' intoxication. A result of Hostile triggers an immediate, chaotic fistfight. Using lethal steel weapons will bring the city guard down on the party within 2 turns; keeping it to unarmed brawling or subdual damage avoids legal trouble and earns the respect of the watching dockworkers.

6The Scavenger's Market Open

The party arrives just as a commercial barge from the deep mantle unloads. The docks are temporarily transformed into a chaotic open-air bazaar.



The Opportunity: For the next 2 hours, Krag-Ghar functions as a Market Class IV town instead of Class V, but only for buying weird subterranean gear. The PCs can buy specialized Underworld items at a 10% discount, including Water-Repellent Grease (protects torches from humidity for 4 hours), Cave-Crickets (trained to chirp when they sense gas pockets like Choke-Damp), or Underworld Rations (mushrooms and dried lizard meat that never spoil in damp air).

 Navigating Underworld Port Law

 The Code of Iron

  • The Weapon Bond: Inside the gates of Krag-Ghar, surface humanoids are required by law to "peace-bond" any large steel weapons with heavy iron wire wraps provided at the gatehouse. Drawing a steel blade inside the city limits without authorization from an Iron Baron is a capital offense, punishable by immediate enslavement in the foundries.

  • Subdual vs. Slaughter: The Chitin Regime views violence as an acceptable method of commerce, provided no property is permanently destroyed. Brawls, muggings, and honor duels that end in subdual damage or unconsciousness are completely ignored by the guards. However, a murder that results in a permanent reduction of the city's labor force is treated with absolute, immediate execution.

The Blasted Crucible is a cavernous tavern built directly into the hollowed-out base of a massive stalactite overlooking the boiling mud sumps of Krag-Ghar. The air is thick with the scent of sulfur, roasting cave-locust, and the acrid musk of the Chitin Regime’s ruling caste.

A heavy iron grate serves as the floor, venting heat from the sumps below while casting an eerie, flickering orange glow across the stone tables.

The Blasted Crucible Tavern Menu

In Krag-Ghar, food is scarce and highly processed to eliminate Underworld toxins. Surface rations are a luxury commodity here.

ItemCostACKS II Game Effect & Mechanical Properties
Fermented Spore-Ale2 cp / mugA thick, cloudy grey brew made from distilled shelf-fungi. Tastes like damp earth and copper. Effect: Bitter and highly intoxicating. Drinking more than two mugs forces a Save vs. Poison or imposes a -1 penalty to Initiative for $1d4$ hours.
Sump-Weed Wine1 sp / cupA pungent, oily red vintage imported from the outskirts of Vael-Thalar. Effect: Highly prized by magic-users. A single cup provides a soothing effect that grants a +1 bonus to saving throws against fear or despair for 1 hour.
Roasted Cave-Locust Skewer3 cp / plateTwo whole giant cave-locusts, salted and charred over a sulfur brazier. Crunchy and high in protein. Effect: Standard meal. Fulfills a character's food requirement for one day.
Slab of Blind Albino Catfish1 sp / plateA pale, gelatinous steak boiled in vinegar and cave-salt. Effect: Disgusting texture, but eating it completely removes the Humidity Penalty to natural healing for the night due to its moisture-retaining nutrients.
The "Surface Luxury" (Salted Pork & Hardtack)5 gp / plateA rare delicacy smuggled down from the surface world by desperate raiders. Effect: Eating this allows a character to make an immediate morale check at +2 for any surface-born hirelings currently in their employ; it tastes like home.

Underworld Hirelings ($1d4$)

These mercenaries use ACKS II companion metrics. Because they are adapted to the extreme conditions of the deep, they require upfront hazard pay and a guaranteed cut of any recovered surface treasure.

1. Xorvath the Blind Archer (Deep Elf Outcast)

Xorvath was exiled from Vael-Thalar for political subversion. His eyes are milky white, completely adapted to absolute darkness.

  • Stats & Gear: Level 1 Fighter (Elf). AC 3 (Chitin Leather), hp 6, Morale +0. Equipped with a Recurve Bow and a bone shortsword.

  • Underworld Adaptation: Echolocation. Xorvath suffers no penalties to hit when fighting in total, pitch-black darkness out to 60 feet, provided he can hear his targets. He cannot see light sources and is completely blind to written text.

  • Cost: 30 gp upfront + 1 half-share of treasure.

2. Grakka the Sledge (Beastman Thug)

A hulking, tusked humanoid with thick grey skin covered in scars from the Krag-Ghar fighting pits. He speaks very little Common but understands the language of gold.

  • Stats & Gear: Level 2 Thug. AC 4 (Piecemeal Iron Plates), hp 13, Morale +2. Armed with a massive Two-Handed Iron Sledge ($1d10$ damage).

  • Underworld Adaptation: Mantle Hardened. Grakka gains a +2 bonus to all Saves vs. Blast (such as collapsing cave ceilings or rockslides) and can carry an additional 2 Stone of equipment before suffering encumbrance slowdowns.

  • Cost: 45 gp upfront + 1 full share of treasure.

3. Sizz’lk (Chitin Regime Defector)

A renegade Troglodyte who was branded a criminal by the Warlords of Krag-Ghar for trading with human smugglers. He acts as a guide through the local fissures.

  • Stats & Gear: Level 1 Thief. AC 5 (Natural Scales), hp 4, Morale -1. Armed with two poisoned bone daggers ($1d4$ damage + Save vs. Poison for $1d4$ subdual damage).

  • Underworld Adaptation: Chameleonic Hide. Sizz’lk adds a +3 bonus to all Hide in Shadows checks when moving against bare, unworked stone cavern walls. He can track subterranean tracks with a 4-in-6 chance of success.

  • Cost: 25 gp upfront + 1 half-share of treasure. Note: His presence in the party will cause immediate hostility if the players encounter Chitin Regime patrol squads.

4. Malakor the Spore-Tender (Subterranean Apothecary)

A frail, elderly human mutant who has spent forty years studying the fungal forests of the deep water-ways. His fingers are permanently stained purple.

  • Stats & Gear: Level 1 Specialist (Apothecary/Healer). AC 1 (Robes), hp 3, Morale -2. Armed with a iron-tipped walking staff.

  • Underworld Adaptation: Fungal Immunity. Malakor is completely immune to the spores of Shriekers and Ochre Jellies. Once per day, he can spend 1 turn foraging in a natural cavern to create a poultice that neutralizes the paralyzing touch of a Carrion Crawler if applied within 3 rounds of a hit.

  • Cost: 50 gp upfront (requires a safe bunk on the party's skiff).

Because Krag-Ghar is built within a massive, hollowed-out stalactite suspended over a boiling mud sump, its geography is vertical and precarious. Space is a premium; every street is carved into the interior rock face or suspended by rusted iron chains over the churning orange sludge below.

In ACKS II, the city is stratified by power, wealth, and functional economy into three distinct tiers.

   =================== [ THE SPARK-SPIRE ] ===================
        (Top Tier: The Iron Baron's Fortress & Nobles)
                     |                   |
               Rusted Chain         Great Stone
               Lift Shafts          Staircases
                     v                   v
   ================== [ THE FOUNDRY ANCHOR ] ==================
        (Middle Tier: Foundries, Smithies, Markets)
                     |                   |
                     +---------+---------+
                               |
                               v
   =================== [ THE SUMP-RING ] ===================
        (Bottom Tier: Gladiator Pits, Docks, Slums)

1. The Spark-Spire (The High Tier)

This district occupies the uppermost, widest section of the stalactite where it anchors into the cavern roof. It is the coolest, safest, and most heavily fortified district in the city.

  • The Architecture: Vaulted stone chambers carved directly into the ancient granite ceiling. The air here is artificially scrubbed of sulfur smoke by basic ventilating shafts. The pathways are wide, smooth, and lined with iron guard posts.

  • The Crucible Citadel (The Iron Baron's Fortress): The absolute seat of power, ruled by Baron Vraka the Unbroken, a massive, ancient Troglodyte warlord who wears plate armor forged from black underworld iron. The fortress is built like a bunker, featuring massive iron portcullises and a private garrison of 100 elite Chitin Guards.

  • ACKS II Mechanics: This is the administrative heart. The Baron controls the city’s treasury, levies the water-tolls on the Sunless Sea, and issues trade writs. Accessing this district requires a High-Tier Pass (costing 100 gp or earned via high-level service) or a direct audience with the Baron's stewards. Humanoids found wandering here without a pass are enslaved instantly.

2. The Foundry Anchor (The Middle Tier)

The widest structural ring of the stalactite, this district is an industrial hellscape wrapped in a perpetual cloud of black soot and orange sparks. It drives the entire economy of Krag-Ghar.

  • The Architecture: A maze of soot-stained workshops, blast furnaces, and cramped stone tenements built into the outer edges of the tier. The central plaza is an open-air market suspended by massive, house-thick iron chains that groan constantly under the shifting weight of cargo.

  • The Great Foundries: This is where the Chitin Regime smelts the iron ore harvested from the surrounding deep-veins. The heat is oppressive, fueled by natural gas vents tapped from the cavern walls.

  • ACKS II Market Center: This district functions as the Market Class V exchange point. It is lined with weapon-smiths, armorers, and scrap-dealers. Because of the sheer volume of metal production, standard non-magical iron weapons and armor can be commissioned or repaired at 80% of standard surface book costs, though the quality is brutal, dark, and unpolished.

3. The Sump-Ring (The Bottom Tier & Slums)

The narrowest, lowest tip of the stalactite, hanging a mere 60 feet above the bubbling, sulfurous mud sumps. The air here is thick, wet, and caustic, causing surface eyes to water and sting.

  • The Architecture: A chaotic network of rotted wooden boardwalks, hanging shanties, and bone-meal warehouses built precariously along the outer lip of the rock. The hanging docks (where the players tie their skiff) are located on the western edge of this ring.

  • The Maw (The Gladiator Slave Pits): Carved directly into the hollow center of the stalactite's tip is a massive, circular vertical shaft. The bottom of the shaft is sealed with a heavy iron grate looking directly down into the boiling mud. This is the arena.

    • The System Economy: The pits are managed by The Flesh-Factors, a powerful criminal guild of Beastmen. They buy captured orcs, beastmen, and surface humanoids, forcing them to fight wild cavern beasts (like Giant Cave Locusts or captured Carrion Crawlers) for the entertainment of the upper tiers.

    • Tactical Hazard: Slaves who fail to entertain the crowd are dropped through the bottom grate into the mud sump below.

  • ACKS II Camp Value: The Sump-Ring is a lawless frontier. The Chitin Regime guards rarely patrol here unless a full-scale riot breaks out. It is the perfect place to secure black-market goods, hire desperate mercenaries like Grakka the Sledge, or pick up unvetted rumors about Zelligar's old surface fortress without paying state taxes.

 The Logistics of Verticality: The Chain Lifts

Movement between the Sump-Ring and the Foundry Anchor is restricted to two massive, iron-caged platform lifts driven by giant beastman-turned capstans. The Chitin Regime charges a 1 cp toll per passenger to use the lifts. Characters seeking to avoid the toll—or avoid the guards stationed at the lift gates—must climb the treacherous, vertical Sweat-Stairs carved into the wet exterior of the rock face, requiring an Acrobatics or Climbing proficiency check to navigate safely with heavy gear.

Monday, June 29, 2026

A 1d100 Random Prehistoric Swamp Encounters On Retro Pulp Venus Table For Cepheus Engine rpg & 2d6 Old School Science Fiction Rpg

 Welcome back to the steaming, perpetual overcast of Cytherea! Adapting this setting for the Cepheus Engine (and classic 2D6 sci-fi systems) means swapping generic fantasy descriptions for explicit mechanical hazards: Endurance (END) checks, Survival skill throws, vacuum/hazard suit tracking, and raw UWP-style planet side dangers.


The untamed, hostile wild of Pulp Venus — where planetary exploration meets prehistoric danger.. Source: Wikipedia

Grab your rayguns, calibrate your environment suits, and roll a 1d100.

The Cepheus Engine 1d100 Venusian Swamp Encounter Table

d100Encounter TitleMechanical Effects & Cepheus Engine Rules
01–04The Megasaur’s ShadowA massive 30-ton sauropod steps over the path. Every player must make a DEX check (8+) to avoid dropping gear into the muck. Failure means losing 1 random piece of unholstered equipment in the deep mire.
05–08Lizard-Men Ambush$1\text{d}6+2$ primitive natives attack. They use spears (Damage $2\text{d}6$) and blowguns with paralyzing venom (END check 9+ or be paralyzed for $2\text{d}6 \times 10$ minutes). They target characters without armored vacc suits or sealed flak jackets.
09–12The Sinking SpireAn ancient, pre-human marble structure is actively sinking. A successful Recon or Education check (8+) identifies a working ancient Radium Battery inside worth 50,000 credits. It requires a Strength check (9+) to extract before it goes under.
13–16Spore-Cloud MiasmaA patch of giant orange puffballs detonates. Characters wearing unsealed armor or with damaged suit filters must roll an END check (8+). Failure inflicts the Cytherean Fever condition ($-2$ to all characteristic checks for $1\text{d}6$ days).
17–20Crashing Rocket-ScoutA heavy whistle precedes an Earth Federation scout rocket crashing 500 meters away. Survival check (7+) to navigate the burning brush safely. Inside is a pinned pilot and an intact ship's locker holding 3 laser pistols and $2\text{d}6$ fuel cells.
21–24The Blood-Leech SoughAmphibious leeches swarm the party's legs. If characters are not wearing fully sealed environment suits, they take $1\text{d}3$ damage directly to their END characteristic from blood loss before the parasites can be burned off.
25–28Stranded Sun-GoddessA telepathic Venusian noble is cornered by $1\text{d}4$ swamp gators (Animal: Chaser, Hits: 20, Armor: 2, Damage: $2\text{d}6$ bite). Rescuing her yields a +2 DM to future Social Standing (SOC) checks when dealing with the native Venusian kingdoms.
29–32Vapor-Wyrm StalkerA translucent reptilian predator stalks the group. It tracks infra-red heat signatures. Characters carrying active power packs, thermal flares, or energy weapons are attacked first with a surprise DM of +2 to the creature's stealth.
33–36The Quicksand GulletThe lead character steps into liquid silt. To escape, they must pass an Athletics (Strength) check (9+). Other party members can assist, adding a +1 DM per person helping with a rope or branch.
37–40Rival Corporate Mercenaries$1\text{d}6$ corporate claim-jumpers wearing heavy brass pressure suits mistake the party for hostile competitors. They are armed with retrofitted submachine guns (Damage $3\text{d}6$, auto-fire capable) and will not negotiate unless outgunned.
41–44Titan Mosquito SwarmA cloud of fist-sized insects attacks. The swarm functions as a single hazard. Unless dispersed with a flame-thrower or chemical spray, every character takes 1 point of damage per round that bypasses soft armor.
45–48The Carnivorous CanopyA Strangler Fern drops vines onto a random character. Requires an immediate DEX or Melee (Blade) check (8+) to hack free. If failed, the character is pulled 5 meters into the canopy and takes $1\text{d}6$ crushing damage per round.
49–52Phosphorescent Bog-LightsChemiluminescent gas looks like an outpost's beacon. Navigating toward it requires a Navigator or Survival check (8+) to notice the path drops directly into a boiling sulfuric acid bog (inflicts $3\text{d}6$ acid damage to armor/suits per round).
53–56The Slime-CrawlerA multi-segmented monstrosity bars the trail. (Animal: Hunter, Armor: 4, Hits: 35, Attack: Acidic Mandibles $2\text{d}6+2$). Its acidic blood corrodes metal weapons or armor used against it in melee (reducing armor value by 1 per hit).
57–60Monsoon CloudburstA sudden torrential downpour completely blinds sensors and vision. All ranged combat DMs suffer a $-4$ penalty. The swamp floor floods within $2\text{d}6$ minutes; characters must make an Athletics (Endurance) check (7+) to avoid exhaustion.
61–64The Lost AutomatonA rusted, art-deco robot from an extinct civilization lies buried. A successful Engineering (Mechanic) check (9+) restores its power. It can map the surrounding $2\text{d}6$ hexes of swamp perfectly before its core burns out completely.
65–68Pterodactyl Dive-BombersFlying reptiles swoop down. They ignore the characters but target shiny exposed objects. Make a DEX check (8+) to keep hold of handheld items like binoculars, scanners, or sidearms.
69–72The Electric Kelp-BedThe shallow water is choked with bio-electric weeds. Wading through requires a Survival check (8+) to spot the voltage arcs. Failure inflicts $2\text{d}6$ stun damage (applied to END; if reduced to 0, the character passes out and begins drowning).
73–76Smuggler’s CacheA half-sunken cargo container sits in the reeds. Opening it requires an Engineering (Electronics or Mechanic) check (7+). Inside are 2 crates of illegal off-world luxury goods, a medkit, and 4 plasma-gun recharges.
77–80The Screaming FernsThe wind changes, causing a grove of hollow plants to whistle at a deafening frequency. All characters must make an END check (8+) or suffer a $-2$ DM to all tasks involving hearing or concentration for the next $1\text{d}4$ hours.
81–84Venusian Tyrant-LizardThe local apex predator emerges. (Animal: Killer, Armor: 3, Hits: 60, Attack: Massive Bite $4\text{d}6$). Its roar forces an immediate Morale/Leadership check (8+) for any accompanying hirelings or planetary guides to prevent them from fleeing.
85–88The Magnetic MudflatHigh iron-lodestone concentrations disrupt technology. All electronic sensors, comms, and energy weapons suffer a $-2$ DM to operate within this hex. Comms are completely cut off from the orbiting starship.
89–92Amoeba ShallowsThe water ahead is actually a single giant, transparent protoplasmic organism. Spotting it requires a Recon check (9+). If stepped into, it inflicts $2\text{d}6$ acid damage per round to armor seals.
93–96The Gas-Bubble GeyserA pocket of volatile methane vents near the party. If anyone fires a ballistic weapon (due to muzzle flash) or uses an unshielded plasma weapon, the gas ignites, dealing $3\text{d}6$ fire damage to everyone within a 10-meter radius.
97–100The Emperor of the DepthsA massive, semi-intelligent amphibian with powerful psionic capability blocks the waterway. It demands a toll. It communicates via telepathy, demanding one piece of high-tech machinery (TL9+) or it will capsize the party's swamp-boat.

Referee’s Note on Suit Degradation: The atmospheric conditions of Pulp Venus are incredibly harsh on standard spacefarer gear. For every 24 hours spent in the swamps, have characters make an Engineering (Mechanic) check (6+) to maintain their suit seals. Failure indicates that the acid mist has begun eating through gaskets, applying a cumulative $-1$ armor penalty until repaired at a proper starport or camp locker.