Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Darkness From The Cultclassic film Legend 1986 For Sword of Cepheus 2nd Edition Rpg

 In the gritty, sword-and-sorcery framework of The Sword of Cepheus 2nd Edition, Lord Darkness from Ridley Scott’s 1986 film Legend functions perfectly as a lesser god, an arch-fiend, or a manifestation of absolute Eldritch Chaos.



True to the simulationist, highly lethal nature of the Cepheus Engine, Darkness is not just a high-stat brick to be fought in an open field. He is an environment-altering cataclysm who cannot be permanently harmed as long as night rules the world.

Lord Darkness, The Father of Night

"I am the Heart of Darkness. I command the night!"

Darkness is a massive, crimson-skinned humanoid towering over nine feet tall, sporting immense goat-like horns, cloven hooves, and a voice that shakes cavern walls. He despises innocence, light, and the sun, seeking to slay the world's last unicorns to plunge the earth into a perpetual, frozen winter.

Universal Personality Profile (UPP)

Darkness’s raw physical characteristics are immense. In Sword of Cepheus 2nd Edition, his pool tracks through standard physical attributes, followed by his mental capacity and social standing among the forces of the underworld.

  • STR: 16 (+3)

  • DEX: 9 (+0)

  • END: 15 (+3)

  • INT: 11 (+1)

  • EDU: 12 (+1)

  • SOC: 15 (+3) — Arch-Fiend / Demigod

Combat Pools & Defense

  • Stamina: 21 (END + Athletics)

  • Lifeblood: 36 (2x END + 2x Athletics)

  • Armor: 4 (Thick fiendish hide and dark majesty)

Skills & Traits

Skills

  • Deception-3

  • Intimidation-4

  • Leadership-2

  • Melee Combat (Greatsword)-3

  • Sorcery (Eldritch/Black)-4

  • Stealth-2

Traits

  • Immense Stature: Darkness is a giant-sized foe. He gains a +1 DM to all Melee attacks against normal-sized targets, but attackers gain a +1 DM to hit him due to his massive size.

  • Fiendish Vitality: Darkness recovers Stamina at twice the normal rate, recovering 2 points per hour of light rest.

  • Terrifying Presence: When Darkness steps from the shadows or displays his full unholy majesty, all onlookers must immediately roll an Average (8+) Willpower check (using INT or CHA/SOC depending on your exact tables) or stand frozen in fear for 1 turn, suffering a -2 DM to all actions for the rest of the scene.

Combat & Equipment

Darkness prefers to manipulate from the shadows, sending his chaotic minions (goblins, blix, hag-spawn) to do his dirty work. When forced into open combat, he relies on sheer, crushing force and unmatched black magic.

Attack / WeaponSkill DMDamageAspects
Gargantuan Greatsword+64d6+3Crushing, Reach, Two-Handed
Fiendish Claws / Horns+32d6+3Vicious
Black Sorcery (Eldritch)+5Varies by spellCorrupting, Perilous

Supernatural Abilities & Weaknesses

Because The Sword of Cepheus handles magic through high-risk, gritty mechanics, Darkness’s abilities function as reality-warping violations of natural law. He doesn't use "spell slots"; his powers are intrinsic.

Absolute Vulnerability: Solinvictus (The Sun)

Darkness cannot abide the pure, unfiltered light of the sun.

  • The Burning Dawn: If exposed to direct sunlight (whether natural or directed via mirror arrays), Darkness loses his Armor value entirely.

  • Degradation: Every round he remains in direct sunlight, he automatically takes 3d6 damage directly to his Lifeblood, bypassing Stamina. If reduced to 0 Lifeblood by sunlight, his physical form shatters, and his spirit is banished into the void of space for a millennium.

Shadow Meld & Regeneration

  • As long as he remains in total darkness or heavy shadow, Darkness regenerates 1d6 points of Stamina or Lifeblood at the end of every round.

  • He can step into any shadow larger than himself and instantly teleport to any other shadow within 100 meters as a moving action.

Eldritch Sorcery

Darkness can manifest reality-altering sorcery at will without checking for corruption (he is corruption). His signature magical tricks include:

  • Telekinesis: Moving heavy objects or throwing adventurers across the room with a wave of his hand (Difficult 10+ Sorcery check).

  • Illusion & Temptation: He can manifest a target's deepest desires (gowns of black silk, endless treasure, tables of dark feasts) to charm an adventurer. Breaking his illusion requires an Abnormal (12+) Insight or Willpower check.

Tactical Referee Notes

If your players try to fight Darkness with traditional steel, they will die. A single hit from his greatsword can instantly drop an average, unarmored adventurer straight into their Lifeblood pool.

To run this encounter in the spirit of Cepheus’s gritty, open-world survival, the adventure should be a puzzle-crawl through his subterranean dark palace. The characters must sneak past his chaotic minions, find a way to break his alignment with the cosmic dark, and construct or realign mirrors/light sources to force daylight into his inner sanctum before he can sacrifice the setting's source of pure Goodness.

In the gritty, survival-focused rules of Sword of Cepheus 2nd Edition, minions aren’t just bags of hit points—they are opportunistic scavengers, ambushers, and vectors for nasty diseases.

Blix and Pox serve as Darkness’s eyes, ears, and primary agents on the surface world. They are weak individually, but they use stealth, poison, and numbers to drag down overconfident adventurers.

Blix, The Goblin Captain


Blix is Darkness’s favored huntsman—cruel, sycophantic, and utterly devoted to his master's dark will. He sports a ragged coat of stolen feathers and furs, wields a wicked, curved goblin blade, and uses a blowgun loaded with paralytic venom to capture prey intact for his master.

Universal Personality Profile (UPP)

  • STR: 6 (–1)

  • DEX: 11 (+1)

  • END: 8 (+0)

  • INT: 9 (+1)

  • EDU: 6 (–1)

  • SOC: 3 (–1) — Outcast / Goblin Elite

Combat Pools & Defense

  • Stamina: 11 (END + Athletics)

  • Lifeblood: 22 (2x END + 2x Athletics)

  • Armor: 1 (Layered leather and filthy furs)

Skills & Traits

  • Animals (Riding Beasts)-2

  • Deception-2

  • Melee Combat (Blade)-2

  • Ranged Combat (Blowgun)-2

  • Recon-2

  • Stealth-3

  • Craven Tactics: Blix gains a +2 DM to Stealth checks when moving through dense forest or dark caverns. If he attacks from hiding, he gains a +2 DM to his hit roll instead of the standard +1.

  • Coward's Instinct: If Blix drops below half his Lifeblood pool, or if his companion Pox is slain, he must make an Average (8+) Willpower check or immediately flee the combat to save his own skin.

Combat & Equipment

  • Goblin Scimitar: Skill DM +1, Damage 2d6–1 (Aspects: Slashing)

  • Fiendish Blowgun: Skill DM +3, Damage 1 point + Poison (Range: 15 meters)

  • Night-shade Venom: Anyone struck by Blix's blowgun dart must immediately pass an Average (8+) END check. Failure inflicts a –2 DM to all DEX-based actions for 1d6 minutes as their limbs grow numb and heavy.

Pox, The Blunderbuss Minion


Pox is a grotesque, dim-witted brute who handles the loud, destructive tasks for Blix’s hunting party. Covered in warts and filth, Pox cares only for eating, sleeping, and firing his rusted black-powder weapon into crowds of enemies.

Universal Personality Profile (UPP)

  • STR: 10 (+1)

  • DEX: 7 (+0)

  • END: 11 (+1)

  • INT: 5 (–1)

  • EDU: 4 (–1)

  • SOC: 1 (–2) — Dregs of the Underworld

Combat Pools & Defense

  • Stamina: 13 (END + Athletics)

  • Lifeblood: 26 (2x END + 2x Athletics)

  • Armor: 2 (Thick, wart-covered hide)

Skills & Traits

  • Athletics-2

  • Intimidation-2

  • Melee Combat (Unarmed)-1

  • Ranged Combat (Black Powder)-2

  • Stealth-1

  • Foul Reek: Pox is so profoundly filthy that any character standing within 2 meters of him must pass an Easy (6+) END check or suffer a –1 DM to all actions for that round due to severe nausea.

  • Thick Skull: Pox’s dense bone structure grants him a +2 DM to resist any effects that would stun or knock him unconscious.

Combat & Equipment

  • Rusted Blunderbuss: Skill DM +2, Damage 3d6 (Aspects: Blast, Loud, Slow Reload)

  • Spiked Club: Skill DM +2, Damage 2d6+1 (Aspects: Crushing)

  • The Scrap Charge: Pox’s blunderbuss fires a spray of jagged metal, rusty nails, and gravel. It attacks all targets in a 3-meter cone. It takes Pox two full rounds to reload the weapon after firing.

Tactical Referee Notes

Blix and Pox should never fight fair. When running an encounter with them, use the following loop:

  1. The Ambush: Blix fires from total concealment with his blowgun, attempting to paralyze the party’s front-line fighter or spellcaster.

  2. The Shock: Pox steps out from behind a boulder or tree trunk, fires his blunderbuss to pepper the party with shrapnel, and relies on the Loud aspect to spook any riding beasts or pack animals.

  3. The Retreat: While the party deals with Pox’s loud distraction, Blix uses Stealth to reposition or slip away into the dark, preparing another poisoned dart.

This tactical wilderness ambush scenario is built around the gritty, high-stakes nature of Sword of Cepheus 2nd Edition. It emphasizes the lethal threat of ranged black-powder weapons, poison mechanics, and terrain advantages.

Scenario Concept: The Bramble-Choke Hollow

Blix and Pox have tracked the adventurers to a choked, low-lying forest valley where the canopy blocks out the sun. They have set a trap at a natural bottleneck: a stream crossing surrounded by dense briars and decaying timber.

Their goal is to capture or eliminate the party, securing any pristine beasts or pure-blooded captives to bring back to Lord Darkness's subterranean court.

The Opposing Force

  • Blix (Goblin Captain): Hidden in the high canopy, acting as the spotter and sniper. (See previous stats)

  • Pox (The Muscle): Concealed in a hollow log at the far end of the trail, waiting to seal the trap. (See previous stats)

  • Shadow-Hounds (3 Hunting Beasts): Sleek, lean, canine horrors with ink-black fur and glowing red eyes. They blend perfectly into the undergrowth and move without a sound.

Shadow-Hound Profile

  • UPP: STR 8 (+0), DEX 10 (+1), END 9 (+0), INT 2 (–2), EDU 1 (–2), SOC 0 (–3)

  • Stamina: 11 | Lifeblood: 22 | Armor: 1 (Shadow-infused hide)

  • Skills: Melee Combat (Natural)-2, Recon-2, Stealth-3

  • Traits:

    • Pack Tactics: Gain a +1 DM to hit an opponent for every other Shadow-Hound currently engaged in melee combat with that same target.

    • Dissolve into Dark: If in heavy shadows, they gain a +2 DM to all Stealth checks and can hide even while being observed.

  • Attack: Fiendish Jaws (Skill DM +3, Damage 2d6, Aspects: Piercing).

The Tactical Map & Environment

The encounter takes place on a trail that narrows to a 2-meter-wide path through a marshy stream bed.

  • Zone A (The Kill Zone - The Stream Bed): A 10x10 meter area of mud and shallow water. This counts as Difficult Terrain (moving through it costs double movement points). There is no natural cover here.

  • Zone B (The High Canopy): Giant, moss-covered trees loom 6 meters over the stream. Blix is perched here on a sturdy limb. Climbing these trees requires an Average (8+) Athletics check. Targets in the canopy have Partial Cover (+2 to Armor against ranged attacks).

  • Zone C (The Briar Thickets): Dense walls of thorny brambles line both sides of the path. They are impassable without heavy axes or machetes. Anyone forced into the briars takes 1d6 points of Stamina damage from the jagged thorns.

  • Zone D (The Hollow Log): A massive, fallen ancient oak sits at the far side of the stream crossing. Pox is wedged inside it, completely obscured from view (Total Cover until he steps out to fire).

Running the Ambush: Phase by Phase

Before the map grid is laid out, the Referee rolls a secret Opposed Check:

  • Blix’s Stealth-3 (+1 DEX, +2 Craven Tactics = Total +6 DM) vs. the party’s highest Recon or Observation skill check.

  • If the party loses, they enter the Kill Zone (Zone A) completely unaware and are subject to a Surprise Round.

    [Zone B: High Canopy] -> (Blix hiding with blowgun)
             |
             v
[Zone C: Briars] ---> [ Zone A: The Kill Zone ]
 <--- [Zone C: Briars]
                      [ (Difficult Terrain)  ]
                                 ^
                                 |
                    [Zone D: The Hollow Log] -> 
(Pox with Blunderbuss)
                    [  & Hidden Shadow-Hounds  ]

Phase 1: The Silent Strike (Surprise Round)

Blix initiates the ambush from Zone B. He targets the character with the least visible armor or the one holding a spell-catalyst/staff.

  • Blix's Turn: Fires his blowgun (+3 DM). If he hits, the target takes 1 point of damage and must immediately roll the Average (8+) END check to avoid the Night-shade Venom paralytic effect. Blix immediately uses his minor action to drop behind a tree trunk to remain hidden.

  • The Shadow-Hounds use their surprise movement to sprint silently out of the undergrowth, surrounding the paralyzed or distracted target but holding their bites until the next phase.

Phase 2: The Shock and Thunder (Round 1)

Once the party reacts to the blowgun dart, Pox triggers his weapon.

  • Pox's Turn: Pox steps out from the Hollow Log (Zone D) and fires his Rusted Blunderbuss (+2 DM) down the narrow path. The Blast aspect forces everyone caught in the 3-meter wide stream bed to face the 3d6 shrapnel damage.

  • The Morale Factor: The Loud aspect of the blunderbuss requires any mount or pack animal brought by the party to pass an Average (8+) Animals check or bolt into the briars, destroying gear or throwing riders.

  • The Hounds' Turn: The three Shadow-Hounds attack immediately after the blast, focusing on the weakest targets to drag them down into the mud. They use Pack Tactics to maximize their hit probability.

Phase 3: The Attrition and Skirmish (Round 2+)

  • Blix continues to fire poisoned darts from the trees, shifting positions between shots to keep the party from pinpointing his location with bows or crossbows.

  • Pox drops his empty blunderbuss (it takes 2 full rounds to reload) and draws his Spiked Club, wading into the mud of Zone A to bash anyone still standing. His Foul Reek trait now forces nearby adventurers to make END checks against nausea.

Defeat Conditions & Retreat

These minions do not fight to the death for a master who views them as disposable.

  • Pox’s Breaking Point: If Pox takes more than half his Lifeblood in damage (13+ points), he panics, swings wildly, and begins backing up toward the deep forest.

  • Blix’s Escape: If Pox falls, or if two Shadow-Hounds are slain, Blix drops a smoke packet or flashes a polished mirror to blind attackers for a brief second. He then uses his Stealth-3 to vanish through the upper branches, fleeing back to Lord Darkness to report the location and strength of the intruders.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Survive This!! Vigilante City & New Flesh Rpg = Survive This New Flesh City Campaign Part I

 Yes, they can be played together, and mechanically, they are a surprisingly smooth fit.

  • SURVIVE THIS!! Vigilante City (Bloat Games) is a street-level supers game built on an OSR d20 engine derived from the d20 SRD and classic B/X D&D foundations.



  • New Flesh (The Red Room) is a biopunk body-horror future-noir game built on the Red System, which is inherently designed to be compatible with OSR d20 games.


Because both games share OSR/d20 OGL roots (using the traditional six attributes, classic d20 task resolution structures, and standard OSR compatibility guidelines), you don't need to rebuild either game from scratch to mash them together.



Here is exactly how they intersect, where the friction points are, and how you can combine them for a gritty, Cronenberg-inspired superhero campaign.

1. The Thematic Fit: "Gonzo Street Heroics" meets "Body Horror"

Vigilante City excels at 90s-style street-level campaigns (think TMNT, X-Men, or Batman: The Animated Series). New Flesh leans heavily into Burroughsian transgressive fiction, corporate decay, and flesh-warping biotechnology.

Bringing them together gives you a campaign world reminiscent of Dark Angel, Prototype, or the darker side of Cyberpunk and Rifts. Your "Mega-Human" mutants aren't born with the X-gene; they are the escapees of Takeda Technologies labs, or underworld junkies mutating from illicit street drugs.

2. Character Conversion & Compatibility

Because New Flesh is OSR-adjacent via the Red System, bridging characters between the two systems is straightforward:

Attributes & Saves

Both games use the standard six-attribute layout. Vigilante City adds a 7th attribute called Survival. If you use New Flesh as the base system, you can treat Survival as a specialized saving throw or secondary stat, or map it directly to New Flesh’s internal resilience mechanics.

Classes as "Origins"

  • Vigilante City splits characters into Humans (Gadgeteers, Hardboiled Detectives, Martial Artists) and Mega-Humans (Borgs, Mutants, Psions, Super Soldiers).

  • New Flesh focuses on archetype roles like ZoneSec operatives, corporate scientists, and underworld fixers.

The Hybrid Approach: Use Vigilante City to define the character's physical abilities and powers, while using New Flesh to define their societal role, corporate ties, and fractional alignment within the Interzone. A Vigilante City "Borg" fits seamlessly into New Flesh as a victim of unchecked corporate cybernetic commodity testing.

3. Integrating the Mechanics

While the math aligns cleanly, you will need to establish a hierarchy for a few specific subsystems:

Power Scale vs. Lethality

Vigilante City features "Vigilante Points" (a form of heroic hit points/stamina) to help street-level heroes survive massive brawls. New Flesh treats the human body as fragile and disposable.

  • Verdict: If you want a gritty noir game where powers are dangerous and costly, use the New Flesh HP and damage scales. If you want heroic action with a horrific veneer, import Vigilante City's Vigilante Points.

Magic & Psionics

New Flesh features revised Psionic rules and replaces traditional ritual magic with volatile Chaos Magic. If a player wants to play a "Mystic" or "Psion" from Vigilante City, use the New Flesh rules for their power implementation. This ensures that using supernatural abilities retains the unsettling, reality-distorting themes of the setting.

Cybernetics & Mutations

Vigilante City uses modular independent rules for Mutant Animals, Borg Conversions, and Power Armor. You can lift these options wholesale and drop them into the New Flesh setting as specialized corporate gear or extreme "fleshcrafting" surgeries.

Summary Checklist for the GM

If you are running this crossover, structure your rule hierarchy like this:

System ElementRecommended Source SystemWhy?
Core Resolution / CombatEither (Both use OSR/d20 d&d style math)Seamless compatibility.
Character Powers / MutationsVigilante CityProvides robust, modular class structures for weird abilities.
Setting, Lore, & AtmosphereNew FleshExcellent tools for generating an oppressive, biopunk cityscape (Interzone).
Sanity, Chaos Magic, & StressNew FleshKeeps the thematic horror impactful and prevents powers from feeling trivial.

To merge the superpower toolkit of SURVIVE THIS!! Vigilante City with the high-transgression body horror of New Flesh, you need to inject instability, resource scarcity, and systemic decay into the classic d20 superhero framework.

In Vigilante City, a Mutant is a hero with a reliable power set. In the New Flesh Interzone, that same mutant is a "Chimeric Glitch"—a weaponized corporate project or an underground fleshcraft survivor whose very cells are rejecting their programming.

Here is a ready-to-use OSR-compatible class template that blends the raw mechanics of Vigilante City with the thematic horror of New Flesh.

The Chimeric Glitch (Class Template)

Hit Dice: d8 per level

Weapon/Armor Restrictions: Capable of using any weapons or armor, though heavy physical armor often interferes with organic adaptations.

Core Stat Priorities: Constitution (for mutation stability) and Dexterity (for street-level survival).

Level   HD     BBA     Saves    Class Features
1       1d8    +0      As Thief  Origin Power,
 1 Bio-Adaptation, Tissue Rejection
2       2d8    +1      As Thief  Bio-Augment, Survival Point Pool
3       3d8    +2      As Thief  2nd Bio-Adaptation
4       4d8    +3      As Thief  Stability Boost
5       5d8    +4      As Thief  3rd Bio-Adaptation, 
Accelerated Grafting

1. The Vigilante City Foundation: Origin Powers

Choose one primary Vigilante City Mega-Human archetype power at Level 1 to represent your core genetic deviation. However, in the Interzone, these powers carry a severe biopunk tax:

  • Biomechanical Borg: You have integrated cybernetics. The Twist: You don't heal naturally. You must consume scavenged raw tech, metals, and specialized chemical fixatives to repair Hit Points during rests.

  • Psionic Outcast: You possess telekinetic or telepathic powers. The Twist: Your brain undergoes massive swelling when you push your limits. Every time you use a major psionic ability, you must check for Interzone Brain-Bleed (Will/Wisdom save or suffer 1 point of temporary Intelligence damage).

  • Flesh-Warped Freak: Classic mutant (super strength, elemental projection, etc.). The Twist: Your appearance is highly unstable. Your Charisma is treated as 3 when interacting with un-augmented corporate citizens unless you actively disguise your tumors, extra joints, or weeping skin pores.

2. The New Flesh Integration: Bio-Adaptations

Instead of standard superhero level-up perks, your character undergoes ongoing cellular mutations or black-market surgeries. At levels 1, 3, and 5, choose one Bio-Adaptation.

To capture the New Flesh aesthetic, these adaptations are driven by Survival Points (from Vigilante City), but fueled by the character's physical toll:

Organic Carapace

  • The Look: Hardened, chitinous plating pushing through your torso, or a dense layer of calloused, scaly hide.

  • Mechanic: Gives +3 to Armor Class. You can spend 1 Survival Point to shrug off a critical hit, turning it into standard damage, as your plating shatters to absorb the blow. Regrowing the plates takes 24 hours and a heavy protein intake.

Glandular Overdrive

  • The Look: Visible, pulsating chemical sacks along your neck or forearms that inject glowing, illicit biotics directly into your bloodstream.

  • Mechanic: Once per encounter, you can trigger a frantic surge of adrenaline. You gain +2 to hit, an extra attack per round, and move at double speed for $1d4$ rounds.

  • The Cost: When the rush ends, you enter an immediate crash, suffering a -2 penalty to all d20 rolls until you rest or inject a fresh dose of New Flesh street chemicals.

Acidic Exudate / Necrotic Spittle

  • The Look: Your jaw is unhinged or your fingertips secrete a highly corrosive, sizzling bile.

  • Mechanic: You can make a ranged touch attack ($1d20 + \text{Dexterity}$) out to 15 feet. On a hit, it deals $1d6$ acid damage per two class levels. The acid melts through standard locks and thin metal doors over the course of 1 minute.

3. The Friction Point: Tissue Rejection & Cellular Glitch

The core balancing mechanic that keeps this class feeling like New Flesh rather than a clean comic book game is Tissue Rejection.

Every time you drop to 0 Hit Points, use an adaptation without spending a Survival Point, or are exposed to heavy industrial radiation/bio-toxins, your DNA begins to fragment.

When this happens, you must roll on the Cellular Glitch Table:

d6 RollMutation Decay Effect
1Necrotic Slough: One of your bio-adaptations rots off. It is useless until you spend $1d4 \times 100$ credits at an underground meat-shop to graft a replacement.
2Neural Tremors: Your nervous system misfires. You suffer a permanent -1 penalty to Dexterity checks as your fingers twitch with phantom signals.
3Chemical Dependency: Your body stops producing essential enzymes. You must consume 1 dose of corporate-grade anti-rejection meds every 48 hours or lose 1 point of Constitution per day.
4Hyper-Tumor: A massive, benign growth forms overnight. It provides +2 hit points but permanently reduces your speed by 5 feet due to the weight and asymmetry.
5-6Violent Adaptation: Your body violently fights off the infection. You gain a random cosmetic mutation (e.g., milk-white eyes, prehensile toes), but your current adaptations stabilize.

Setting the Campaign Scene

When introducing a character like this into your game, bridge the two manuals by using the Vigilante City rules for tactical combat tracking (Initiative, grid movement, and striking rules), but use New Flesh's equipment lists, price economies, and district maps to dictate where they get their fuel. Your hero isn't fighting to save the city from a supervillain's death ray—they're fighting the street gangs and corporate extraction teams just to secure the next batch of immunosuppressants.