The House of the Rising Sun is the sixth volume of the Arduin Grimoire series, released in 1980. Authored by David A. Hargrave, it is a seminal piece of the "Old School Renaissance" (OSR) DNA, known for its kitchen-sink fantasy style, high lethality, and unapologetic weirdness. This picks up from
Diving into the Arduin Underworld - OSR Commentary On Winds of Chance (Arduin Grimoire volume 8) By David A. Hargrave
Like its predecessors, Volume VI is less of a cohesive rulebook and more of a chaotic, creative "data dump" intended to expand the Arduin Multiverse.
### Key Contents & Features
1. New Character Classes
Hargrave continued his trend of introducing highly specific, often overpowered or mechanically unique classes. Notable additions include:
The Amazon: A specialized warrior class with unique combat maneuvers and social restrictions.
The Medicine Man: A flavor of healer/shaman that operates differently from the standard Cleric or Druid.
The Wind-Walker: A high-mobility class focused on speed and aerial utility.
2. Expanded Combat & Critical Tables
Arduin is famous for its brutal critical hit and fumble charts. Volume VI introduced even more specific tables, including:
The "Social" Critical Table: Rules for critical successes or failures in social interactions.
New Melee and Missile Charts: Increasing the complexity and "gore factor" of combat results, which often included limb loss or instant decapitation.
3. Monsters and Bestiary
This volume introduced dozens of new creatures, ranging from high-fantasy tropes to sci-fi horrors. These included:
The Magno-Pede: A metallic, magnetic centipede-like creature.
Interdimensional Horrors: Various entities that leaned into the "Lesser Lovecraftian" vibe common in Arduin.
The "Rising Sun" Themed Foes: Creatures inspired by Eastern folklore (Oni, etc.), reflecting the title of the book.
4. Magic and Artifacts
The book added hundreds of new spells, many of which were designed to bypass traditional "Vancian" magic limitations. It also detailed several unique artifacts, often with extremely high power levels and devastating drawbacks for the user.
### Design Philosophy: "The Arduin Way"
The House of the Rising Sun exemplifies the Arduin philosophy that defined early tabletop gaming:
| Feature | Description |
| Multiversal Scope | It assumes your campaign isn't just one world, but a nexus where sci-fi, horror, and fantasy collide. |
| Lethality | Death is frequent, and the rules are designed to make every combat encounter feel genuinely dangerous. |
| High Density | The layout is famously cramped; Hargrave squeezed as much text, tables, and lists onto every page as possible. |
| Independence | While designed to work with Dungeons & Dragons (specifically OD&D), it was part of Hargrave's push to make Arduin a standalone entity. |
### Historical Context
By the time Volume VI was released, Arduin was at the center of a legal and cultural tug-of-war with TSR (the makers of D&D). The House of the Rising Sun represents a bridge between the early "zines" and the more professionalized Arduin Adventure boxed sets that would follow.