We pick right up from March 22 game session right here on the blog. We were racing against time as a rival party of adventurers was on their way to the "The Weeping Monolith of the Silt-King," We were right on the edge of the Ruined Ziggurat territory. Events and the jungle was tense around us.
Gemini said
This encounter, "The Weeping Monolith of the Silt-King," is designed for a party of levels 3–5. It leans heavily into the "weird fantasy" aesthetic of Sword & Sorcery: ancient, decaying technology, moral ambiguity, and visceral danger.
The Hook
While trekking through a desolate wasteland or a choked jungle, the party discovers a clearing dominated by a twelve-foot-tall block of translucent obsidian. Inside the stone, a humanoid figure is suspended in stasis, its face frozen in a silent scream. Black, oily liquid (the "tears") seeps from the base of the monolith, poisoning the surrounding earth.
The Encounter: The Guardian and the Greed
As the party approaches, they aren't met by a monster immediately, but by a scavenger-priest named Vaxen Ka (Neutral Evil Human Cleric) and his three mangy Wasteland Hyenas.
Vaxen is attempting to chip a "Sun-Gem" out of the monolith's crown. He views the party as competitors for the "God-flesh."
1. The Social Pivot
Vaxen is cowardly but silver-tongued. He will offer to split the "loot" if the party helps him stabilize the monolith, which is vibrating violently.
The Truth: The monolith is a containment vessel for a Void Wraith. If the Sun-Gem is removed or the stone takes 20 points of damage, the vessel shatters.
2. Combat Mechanics
If a fight breaks out or the stone is breached, use the following:
The Environment: The oily silt around the stone is Difficult Terrain. Anyone ending their turn within 5 feet of the stone must make a Constitution Save (CL 3) or take acid damage from the caustic fumes.
The Shattering: If the monolith reaches 0 HP, it explodes. Everyone within 10 feet takes piercing damage (save for half).
The Entity: A Void Wraith (Treat as a Wraith, but with a "Cold Aura") emerges.
The Reward (and the Curse)
If the party defeats the threats and recovers the Sun-Gem:
The Gem: Worth 800gp. It glows with a pale amber light.
The Twist: The gem is actually the "heart" of the prisoner who was inside the stone. The character holding the gem begins to hear a faint, rhythmic thumping in their mind. Every time they sleep, they must check against Charisma (CL 2) or have their dreams haunted, preventing natural healing for that night.
CK Note: In true Sword & Sorcery fashion, emphasize the smell of ozone and rotting vegetation. The "heroism" here isn't saving the world—it's surviving a brush with a cosmic horror that didn't want to be disturbed.
For a humid, vine-choked ruin (often called a "Crawl" in Sword & Sorcery), the environment should feel as dangerous as the inhabitants. In Castles & Crusades, lean into the Attribute Checks (the Siege Engine) to make the terrain feel oppressive.
The Choked Ruin: D100 Encounter Table
| D100 | Encounter | Description |
| 01-10 | The Strangler Vine | A massive, sentient creeper (HD 4) that blends into the canopy. It targets the rear party member. Str: CL 4 to break free. |
| 11-20 | Fever-Gnat Swarm | A cloud of stinging insects. No damage, but requires a Con: CL 3 check or the character suffers -2 to all rolls due to "Jungle Ague" for 1d4 days. |
| 21-30 | Sun-Drunk Cultists | 2d6 Cultists (HD 1) worshiping a headless statue. They are obsessed with "The Bright Silence" and will offer the party as a sacrifice. |
| 31-40 | The Lithic Trap | A collapsing stone archway. Dex: CL 5 to avoid 3d6 crushing damage. Beneath the rubble is a rusted bronze gladius (+1 vs. Reptiles). |
| 41-50 | The Serpent Sentry | A Giant Constrictor Snake draped over a stone lintel. It only attacks if someone carries heat (torches) or makes excessive noise. |
| 51-60 | The Quicksand Floor | A room that looks solid but is a slurry of mud and bone. Wis (Survival): CL 4 to spot; otherwise, Str: CL 6 to escape before sinking. |
| 61-70 | Basalt Idol of the Ape | A 10ft statue with emerald eyes (200gp each). Removing an eye triggers a Stone Golem (diminished, HD 5) that pursues the thief. |
| 71-80 | Withered Herbalist | An ancient man living in a hollowed pillar. He trades "Ghost-Leaf" (grants See Invisibility for 1 hour) for 1 liter of fresh water. |
| 81-90 | The Spore Cloud | Fungal blooms that burst when touched. Con: CL 4 or suffer hallucinations for 1 hour (treat as Confusion spell). |
| 91-00 | The Relic Hunter | A rival party of 1d4+1 NPCs (Levels 2-4). They are wounded and desperate, likely to betray the players for their supplies. |
Environmental Hazards
To spice up the "Vine-Choked" feel, apply these passive modifiers to any combat in the ruins:
Steam Breath: The humidity is so thick that heavy armor (Plate/Chain) imposes a -1 penalty to AC after 3 rounds of combat as the wearer fatigues.
Slippery Moss: Any natural 1 on an attack roll requires a Dexterity Check (CL 0) or the attacker falls prone.
The "Weird" Factor: Sword & Sorcery thrives on the inexplicable. If the players find a piece of loot, make it strange. Instead of a "Potion of Healing," they find a vial of translucent blue sap that smells like copper and causes their hair to turn white for a week after drinking.
Quick Stat: The Strangler Vine
AC: 13
HD: 4 (d8)
Attacks: 2 Tendrils (1d6 + Constrict)
Special: Constrict: On a successful hit, the target is grappled. Each turn they remain grappled, they take 1d6 automatic damage and cannot cast spells with somatic components.
The temple is not a separate building, but a hollowed-out, massive basalt ziggurat that has been swallowed by the roots of a colossal, ancient tree. The local tribe—The Pale-Claw Saurians (revolved around a degenerated, swamp-dwelling lizardfolk stat block)—treats the ruin as both a nursery and a slaughterhouse.
The Temple of the Calcified Maw
The air here is thick with the smell of wet earth and copper. Roots the size of ship masts coil through the stone halls, cracking the masonry and dripping with a phosphorescent, milky sap.
1. The Entrance: The Root-Gate
The "door" is a massive fissure in the ziggurat’s side, framed by two crumbling statues of warriors with elephantine heads.
The Guardian: A Giant Constrictor Snake (HD 6) is woven into the ceiling roots. It only strikes those who do not carry a "Scent-Marker" (a specific pungent herb the Saurians rub on their scales).
The Trap: The floor is covered in 6 inches of stagnant water. Under the surface lies a Hidden Pit (CL 4 to spot) filled with sharpened obsidian stakes.
2. The Main Hall: The Spore-Larder
The tribe stores its "meat" here. Humanoid captives (and animal carcasses) are suspended from the ceiling in vine-cocoons.
The Threat: 4 Pale-Claw Saurians (HD 2, AC 15) are busy "tending" the cocoons. They fight with jagged bone spears ($1d8$) and use the high roots to drop onto intruders.
The Complication: Breaking a cocoon might release a survivor, but it also releases a cloud of Yellow Mold (Con Save CL 3 or take $1d6$ Con damage).
3. The Sanctum: The Altar of the Petrified Heart
At the center of the temple, the tree’s primary taproot pierces a massive, glowing crystal heart embedded in a stone altar.
The Boss: S'shrak the Root-Speaker (Level 5 Shaman/Cleric). He wears a mask made from a giant beetle’s carapace and wields a staff that can cast Entangle at will.
The Ritual: S'shrak is currently "bleeding" the crystal heart into a stone bowl to feed the tribe's hatchlings.
The Statues: Two Ape-Idols stand beside the altar. If S'shrak drops below half health, he "activates" them (treat as Small Animated Objects, HD 3).
The Pale-Claw Saurians (C&C Stats)
These are leaner, more feral versions of standard Lizardfolk, adapted to the verticality of the vine-choked ruins.
Unit AC HD HP Attack Special Saurian Warrior 15 2d8 12 Bone Spear +2 ($1d8$) Prehensile Tail: Can climb at full speed. S'shrak (Shaman) 16 5d8 31 Staff +4 ($1d6+1$) Spells: Cure Light Wounds, Darkness, Heat Metal. The Loot: Tribal and Ancient
Because this is Sword & Sorcery, the treasure is a mix of primitive trophies and "high-weird" relics:
The Obsidian Dagger: A sacrificial knife worth 150gp. On a natural 20, it shatters inside the wound, dealing an extra $2d6$ damage but rendering the blade useless.
The Sap-Amber: Four fist-sized chunks of hardened tree sap. If melted down, they act as a natural glue or can be sold to an alchemist for 50gp each.
The Star-Metal Torc: Worn by S'shrak. It is cold to the touch and grants the wearer +2 to Saves vs. Fire, but causes them to speak only in a forgotten, clicking dialect for an hour after removal.
The Moral Choice
In the back of the sanctum, the party finds the Saurian Hatchery. Do they destroy the next generation of "monsters," or do they leave them, knowing the cycle of violence will continue? In a Sword & Sorcery game, the "right" answer usually depends on how much gold is in the room.