Saturday, April 25, 2026

D100 Random Sword & Sorcery Countryside & Blasted Heath Encounters tables For Castles & Crusades Rpg

 Sword and Sorcery is less about "random bears" and more about ancient ruins, desperate survivors, and the encroaching "weird." Here is a d100 table designed to capture that gritty, pulp-fantasy atmosphere for your countryside travels. 
This blog entry picks right up from 

OSR Commentary - Can Castles & Crusades rpg be played with The Primal Order Rpg?!




d100 Sword & Sorcery Countryside Encounters

d100EncounterThe "Twist" or Detail
01-05The Desperate Remnant$1d10$ survivors of a sacked caravan. They are dehydrated and paranoid; one carries a cursed idol they refuse to discard.
06-10Vulture Cultists$2d4$ cultists performing a sky burial. They view any interruption as sacrilege requiring a fresh sacrifice.
11-15The Monolith of WhispersA black stone pillar. Touching it requires a Charisma Save or the player suffers a Wisdom penalty but gains a cryptic prophecy.
16-20Slavers of the Waste$1d6$ slavers leading $2d6$ captives in chains. They are looking for "stronger stock" and eye the party's gear.
21-25Ghost-Lights$1d4$ Will-o'-Wisps bobbing over a marsh. They lead toward a half-buried silver chest that is, of course, trapped.
26-30The Fallen Sky-ShipWreckage of a bronze-plated vessel. $1d6$ clockwork guardians still protect the pilot’s glass-encased remains.
31-35Escaped Pit FighterA scarred warrior fleeing a local warlord. He offers his blade for a week in exchange for food and anonymity.
36-40Giant Scorpion NestOne is a rare albino variant whose venom is worth 500gp to the right alchemist—if you can harvest it.
41-45The Drunken SorcererAn eccentric mage attempting to "re-bottle" an Air Elemental. He smells of lotus wine and is highly unpredictable.
46-50Ancient Toll BridgeA Troll demanding a "tribute of beauty" (gems or art) rather than gold. It speaks an archaic, polite dialect.
51-55Mirage of the OasisAn illusion hiding a pit of $1d8$ Giant Centipedes. A keen eye (Intelligence Save) reveals the shimmering lie.
56-60The Crimson CloudA localized red mist. Creatures inside must save vs. Poison or become enraged, attacking the nearest living thing.
61-65Ruined Shrine of the Serpent$1d4$ Giant Snakes nest here. Searching the altar reveals a hidden compartment with $2d10$ gold "scales."
66-70Exiled NobleOffers a "Deed to a Keep" for a fresh mount. The deed is real, but the keep is currently occupied by a bandit army.
71-75Stygian BatsAttack only at twilight. Their bite causes a fever that drains $1$ HP per hour until a Constitution Save is passed.
76-80The Bone-PickerAn old woman gathering teeth from a battlefield. She offers to "read the marrow" of the players for a drop of blood.
81-85Mercenary Patrol$2d6$ heavy infantry searching for a deserter. They are bored and looking for a reason to "confiscate" goods.
86-90The Thirsty BladeA bronze sword stuck in a skull. It’s a $+1$ weapon, but on a natural 1, it drains $1d4$ HP from the wielder to "feed."
91-95Apex PredatorA Manticore or Chimera stalking the party from a distance, waiting for them to set up camp.
96-00The Rift OpeningA tear in reality. $1d4$ minor demons emerge. Closing it requires a sacrifice of something meaningful or a blood offering.

Tips for the Sword & Sorcery Vibe:

  • Resources Matter: In this genre, food and water are as valuable as gold. If they find the Fallen Sky-Ship, emphasize the weight of the bronze. Is the wealth worth the exhaustion?

  • Magic is Dangerous: Never let a "Drunken Sorcerer" be a simple quest-giver. Magic should feel volatile, rare, and slightly sickening to the uninitiated.

  • Moral Ambiguity: The "Slavers" might be the only ones with a map to the next town. Does the party kill them and get lost, or "trade" for information?

A "Blasted Heath" is the quintessential Sword & Sorcery locale—a place where the earth itself has been scorched by ancient sorcery or alien impact, leaving behind a jagged, purple-tinged wasteland where the laws of nature are starting to fray.

d100 Blasted Heath Encounters

d100EncounterThe "Twist" or Detail
01-10Glass-Fused EarthThe ground is literal obsidian. Fast movement causes $1d4$ slashing damage to boots/feet; however, the glass is reflective enough to reveal invisible stalkers.
11-20The Ash-Walkers$2d6$ undead coated in thick, grey soot. They are silent and only attack if the party creates a flame (which they find offensive).
21-30Leeching WindsA sudden gust that tastes like copper. Every creature must succeed on a DC 13 Con Save or lose their highest-level remaining spell slot (or $1d8$ HP).
31-40The Star-Iron MeteorA glowing hunk of space-metal. It is freezing to the touch. If harvested, it can forge a blade that ignores non-magical armor, but it "hums" loudly.
41-50The Scavenger KingA mutated hermit sitting on a throne of rusted shields. He demands a "story he hasn't heard" in exchange for safe passage through the sulfur pits.
51-60Crystalline GrowthA forest of jagged salt-crystals. $1d4$ Basilisks lurk here, their hides perfectly camouflaged against the translucent "trees."
61-70Mana-Storm SporesFungi that release glowing dust. Inhaling it causes $1d6$ minutes of "True Sight," followed by an hour of total blindness.
71-80The Hollow LegionA phalanx of empty suits of bronze armor marching in a loop. They ignore the party unless a specific "command word" (etched on a nearby rock) is spoken.
81-90The Well of Liquid SilverLooks like water but is heavy and toxic. If bottled, it acts as a powerful solvent that can dissolve any lock, but it eats through wooden containers in $1d4$ hours.
91-00The Chiming MonolithA spire that vibrates with a low frequency. It attracts $1d8$ Void-Hounds (teleporting wolves) every hour the party remains within $100$ yards.

Environmental Mechanics for the Heath



  • Arcane Interference: Whenever a spell is cast, roll a $d20$. On a 1, the spell triggers a "Wild Magic" surge as the unstable ley lines of the heath react to the caster.

  • The Hunger of the Land: Foraging is impossible here. Any rations consumed on the heath provide only half the usual sustenance due to the "taint" in the air that saps physical energy.

  • Mirage Terrain: Distances are deceptive. A ruin that looks a mile away might take four hours to reach as the warped geography stretches and compresses.

GM Note: Use descriptions of color that shouldn't exist—"sickly iridescent yellows" or "bruise-colored lightning"—to remind players that this land is fundamentally "wrong."

House name: The Iron Vein (The Rust-Eaters) Faction For Nightshift Veterans of the Supernatural Wars Rpg

 Welcome to the night shift. In the world of Nightshift Veterans of the Supernatural Wars, a "House" isn’t just a social club—it’s a survival strategy, a political faction, and a potential employer (or HR nightmare).


Here is a unique vampire house designed to fit the gritty, blue-collar aesthetic of the game.


House name: The Iron Vein (The Rust-Eaters)



The Iron Vein is not composed of brooding aristocrats in velvet capes. They are the industrial vampires: the night-shift foremen, the long-haul truckers, and the graveyard-shift demolition crews. They believe that immortality is a tool, and blood is the grease that keeps the world’s hidden machinery turning.

The Vibe

  • Aesthetic: High-vis vests over stained leather jackets, heavy work boots, and the smell of ozone and diesel.

  • Domain: Scrap yards, shipping docks, underground transit tunnels, and aging power plants.

  • Philosophy: "The world is built on the backs of those who don’t sleep. We own the infrastructure; we own the night."


House Traits & Abilities

Members of The Iron Vein have adapted their vampiric nature to the harsh environments of manual labor and industrial hazards.

TraitDescription
Lead-Lined BloodGain a +2 bonus to saves against radiation, chemical toxins, and industrial pollutants.
The Foreman’s EyeCan instinctively sense structural weaknesses in buildings or machinery with a successful Perception check.
Heavy Metal SiphonCan consume blood contaminated with heavy metals or "dirty" sources that would make other vampires sick.

Unique Power: Kinetic Anchoring

By spending a Blood Point, a member of the Iron Vein can "anchor" themselves to a solid metal structure. For $1D6$ rounds, they cannot be moved by physical force, and their melee strikes deal additional crushing damage as if they had the mass of the building itself.


Key NPCs

  • "Hard-Hat" Harry: The House Patriarch. He claims to have helped weld the foundations of the Empire State Building. He speaks in union metaphors and views all "unaffiliated" vampires as scabs.

  • Sledge: A former heavy-weight enforcer who lost his lower jaw in the 70s. It’s been replaced with a crudely enchanted chrome prosthetic that can bite through rebar.

  • The Dispatcher: A young, tech-savvy vampire who monitors police scanners and transit grids to find "discreet" feeding grounds for the house members.


Adventure Hooks

  1. The Scab Labor: A rival house (likely some "pretty boy" aristocrats) is trying to buy out the local docks. The Iron Vein wants the players to "discourage" the new management without starting a full-scale Masquerade breach.

  2. The Midnight Leak: A supernatural contaminant is leaking into the city's water supply from an Iron Vein-controlled refinery. Is it an accident, or is Harry trying to "season" the local human population?

  3. The Ghost Train: A decommissioned subway car, rumored to be an Iron Vein mobile vault, has gone missing from the tracks. It contains either a literal fortune or a very angry Elder.


Veteran's Tip: If you're negotiating with an Iron Vein vampire, don't bring wine. Bring a thermos of "High-Octane"—type O-Negative spiked with a shot of espresso and a pinch of iron filings.

 Since we're casting the Iron Vein as allies, they function less like a shadowy cabal and more like the supernatural world’s Union Local. They are the guys who know where the bodies are buried—mostly because they dug the holes and poured the concrete.

As allies, the Iron Vein provides the "blue-collar" support your players will desperately need when a mission goes sideways.


The Benefit of the Union Card

If the players earn the trust of "Hard-Hat" Harry or the House, they gain access to specific "Professional Services" that other, more elitist vampire houses wouldn't touch:

  • The Clean-Up Crew: Had a messy fight in a downtown alley? For a "membership fee" (usually a favor or a rare vintage of blood), a crew of Iron Vein ghouls will arrive in a garbage truck to steam-clean the pavement and dispose of any... evidence.

  • Safe Houses (The "Work Sites"): They can provide "off-the-grid" housing in half-finished skyscrapers or abandoned sub-basements. These spots are ugly, but they are physically secure and shielded from most magical scrying by layers of lead and steel.

  • Black Market Gear: They have the best "modified" equipment. Need a silver-plated crowbar? Or a shotgun that fires rock salt and industrial filings? The Iron Vein "Machine Shop" has you covered.


The Cost of Cooperation

The Iron Vein doesn't want money—they want solidarity. If they help the players, they will eventually call in a "Picket Line" favor.

The "Union Task" Hook

"Look, we’ll help you bury those werewolf remains. But next week, the city is trying to demolish the Old Miller Power Plant. That’s our territory. We need you to go into the city archives and 'reorganize' the paperwork so that building stays standing."


Key Ally NPC: "Gasket"

Every group of allies needs a point of contact. Meet Gasket, a mid-level Iron Vein member assigned to "manage the contractors" (the players).

  • Appearance: Always wearing greasy coveralls with "GASKET" embroidered on the chest. He’s perpetually smoking a cigarette that never seems to get shorter.

  • Personality: Gruff, tired, and surprisingly loyal. He treats the players like junior apprentices.

  • Utility: He’s a master of Industrial Alchemy. Give him twenty minutes and a toolbox, and he can turn a standard sedan into an armored, monster-ramming tank.


How they'll help in a pinch:

If the players are being chased by something nasty, they can head toward the Iron Vein Scrapyard. The moment the players cross the gate, the Iron Vein drops the heavy steel shutters, and suddenly the pursuers have to deal with a dozen vampires wielding welding torches and pneumatic hammers.

Note for the GM: Use the Iron Vein to ground the players. When the supernatural world gets too "high fantasy" or "gothic horror," have Gasket show up to complain about the price of blood-thickeners and the local zoning laws. It keeps the Nightshift vibe perfectly gritty.

Friday, April 24, 2026

Mission Profile: Operation Wolfsbane - Destroying the Protect Gear Prototype - Wretched Interbellum Adventure

 In the smog-choked, alternate-history landscape of the Wretched Interbellum, the line between man and machine is blurring. Rumors have reached your cell of a terrifying breakthrough by the Special Armed Police Force (The Kerberos): the Protect Gear prototype.


This isn't just armor; it’s a psychological weapon designed to turn a soldier into a faceless, unstoppable executioner. Your mission: Infiltrate, Sabotage, and Erase.


Mission Profile: Operation Wolfsbane

The Objective: Destroy the "Type-0" Protect Gear prototype and the metallurgical data required to mass-produce it.

The Location: The Eisen-Shiba Foundry, a fortified industrial complex disguised as a scrap metal refinery on the edge of the city’s neutral zone.

The Stakes: If this goes live, the resistance is finished. You don't just want to break the suit; you want to make the brass believe the project is a cursed, expensive failure.


1. The Infiltration: The Belly of the Beast

The Foundry is a labyrinth of steam pipes, red-hot vats, and armed guards.

  • The Approach: The characters can enter via the Sulfur Vents (requires Constitution checks against toxic fumes) or by hijacking a Supply Train (requires a high-stakes Stealth or Deception play).

  • The Complication: The Kerberos guards aren't standard police. They are veterans of the last Great War, equipped with MG42s and a fanatical devotion to the "Pack."

2. The Discovery: The MG-42 "Cerberus"

Deep within the sub-level laboratory, the players find it. The prototype is suspended in a pneumatic rig. It’s bulkier and more "monstrous" than the versions seen in the films—dripping with hydraulic fluid and smelling of ozone.

  • The Twist: The prototype isn't empty. A "Donor Pilot"—a lobotomized political prisoner—is wired directly into the suit's neural interface.

  • The Dilemma: Killing the pilot triggers a failsafe that locks down the lab. The players must decide whether to perform a "clean" extraction or a "messy" demolition while the pilot is still active.

3. The Sabotage: Engineering a "Malfunction"

Simply blowing it up is too easy. To ensure the project is scrapped, the players need to rig the suit to fail spectacularly during its final calibration test.

  • Technical Challenge: A character with Mechanics or Engineering must bypass the suit's cooling system.

  • The Math of Chaos: To ensure the core overheats without an immediate explosion, the player must calculate the thermal limit:

    $$T_{crit} = \frac{Q_{output}}{\kappa \cdot \Delta A}$$

    (Where $Q$ is the power output and $\kappa$ is the thermal conductivity of the experimental alloy.)

4. The Escape: Through the Red Eyes

As the sabotage takes hold, the sirens wail. The "Type-0" wakes up. It’s not fully functional, but it’s mobile. The players must flee the collapsing foundry while being stalked through the steam by the glowing red lenses of the prototype.

  • Environmental Hazards: Molten metal spills, narrow catwalks, and the "Wolf" hunting them in the dark.

  • Final Stand: The players reach the extraction point—a rain-slicked rooftop. They must hold off a squad of Kerberos troopers until the suit’s rigged core finally reaches critical mass and detonates.


 Key NPCs & Assets

NameRoleMotivation
Dr. ArisakaLead EngineerObsessed with "The Perfect Soldier." Will try to save his data over his life.
The DonorThe PilotA tragic figure who might briefly regain consciousness to help or hinder the players.
Unit 801Kerberos SquadElite hunters who use pack tactics to corner the players in the foundry.

Game Master Note: This mission should feel claustrophobic and "heavy." Emphasize the sound of the suit—the heavy, metallic thuds of its boots and the hiss of its pneumatic joints. The players shouldn't feel like heroes; they should feel like prey trying to break their hunter's teeth.

 Since you’re running a crew of hardened mercenaries, the tone shifts from a desperate struggle for survival to a professional, high-stakes heist. These aren't idealists; they’re specialists who know that the "Type-0" is a payday if they steal the specs, or a death sentence if they don't finish the job.

Here is how to tailor Operation Wolfsbane for a mercenary party:

The Contract: "The Red-Eye Clause"

The players were hired by a shady industrial rival (The Tatsumi Group) or a foreign intelligence agency.

  • The Pay: 50,000 Marks (half up front) and a clean slate for their previous war crimes.

  • The Bonus: An extra 10% for every gigabyte of metallurgical data retrieved before the demolition.

  • The Constraint: No "loud" explosives until the target is reached. If the city guard realizes what's happening too early, the extraction helicopter won't risk the airspace.


 Tactical Variations for Pros

As mercenaries, your players should have access to specialized gear that makes the mission feel like a tactical operation:

  • Thermal Masking Capes: To bypass the Kerberos infrared sensors.

  • EMP Breacher Charges: Designed to fry the Type-0’s neural link without damaging the physical hardware (allowing for data extraction).

  • The "Iron Man" Strategy: Instead of just destroying the suit, the players might try to remote-pilot it to clear their own path out of the facility.


The Encounter: Combat Professionals vs. The Wolf

In Jin-Roh, the Kerberos unit is famous for their Pack Tactics. Against mercenaries, they won't just charge; they will use the foundry’s architecture to pin the players down.

  • Suppressive Fire: The Kerberos guards use MG42s to keep the players behind cover.

  • Flanking: While suppressed, "Hounds" (lightly armored scouts) will move through the steam pipes to get behind the party.

  • The Prototype Boss Fight: The "Type-0" is a tank in a hallway. Standard small arms won't dent it. The mercenaries will need to use the environment—dropping a vat of molten lead or using a crane to crush the hydraulic legs.

The Mechanics of Professional Destruction

Since these are pros, the sabotage requires more than a simple roll. They need to induce a Specific Failure Point.

To destabilize the Prototype's internal power cell without a premature detonation that kills the party, the lead Mercenary must balance the voltage output $V$ against the internal resistance $R$ of the experimental battery:

$$P = \frac{V^2}{R_{fault}}$$

GM Tip: If the players fail this check by 5 or more, the suit doesn't just break—it enters a Berserk State, ignoring its pilot and attacking everything in the room with mechanical, unthinking efficiency.


Mercenary-Specific Objectives

To make the mission feel "authentic" to the Wretched Interbellum setting, give the players a checklist of secondary objectives that affect their final payout and reputation:

ObjectiveRequirementReward
Data GhostDownload the alloy schematics.Permanent +1 to Engineering checks.
No WitnessesEliminate Dr. Arisaka.Bonus payment from the "Silent Partner."
Scrap MetalBring back a piece of the red lens.Can be crafted into a "Wolf-Eye" HUD (+2 Perception).