Wednesday, June 24, 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 Five Other adventure locations within the caverns of Quasqueton

 While the Upper Bastion houses the military frontlines and the Lower Caverns hold the wild, subterranean wilderness, the Caverns of Quasqueton feature several isolated, deeply atmospheric sub-locales. This literally 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 Four



In ACKS II, these are not just empty rooms filled with random text; they are self-contained tactical puzzles, historical repositories, or economic choke points that reward careful exploration while threatening low-level characters with high-lethality traps and unique monsters.



1. The Garden of Phytomedicinals (The Hidden Greenhouse)

Located in an isolated northern pocket of Level 2, behind a set of double iron doors warped by moisture, lies Zelligar’s forgotten botanical conservatory.

  • The Architecture: A massive, 40-foot-diameter circular cavern. The ceiling features a massive crack that lets in a faint trickle of moonlight and rain. The floor is filled with terraced stone beds overflowing with pale, blind albino flora and thick, hanging vines.

  • The Sentry: 1x Ochre Jelly (AC 2, HD 5, hp 22, Morale N/A). It resembles a thick, golden residue coating the central irrigation stone.

    • ACKS II Combat Trap: Striking the Ochre Jelly with slashing weapons or lightning does not harm it; instead, it splits the creature into two smaller jellies (each with half the remaining hit points). The party must use fire (like their Dragon's Breath oil) or blunt weapons to destroy it.

  • The Economic Windfall: If the jelly is cleared, characters with the Healing or Natural Philosophy proficiencies can harvest rare alchemical roots.

    • The Value: Spending 2 turns harvesting yields 300 gp worth of raw materials that can be used by a Mage to brew Potions of Healing or sold directly to a surface apothecary.

2. The Sepulcher of the Iron Oath (The Burial Vaults)

Tucked away into a dead-end corridor on Level 1, behind a heavy stone slab requiring a combined Strength score of 30 to heave open, lies the resting place of Rogahn’s loyal vanguard.

  • The Architecture: A cold, dry tomb lined with six stone sarcophagi. Above each sits a carved effigy of a knight clutching a broken sword. A low, magical hum keeps the room completely free of dust.

  • The Peril: This area is a test of greed. If the players attempt to pry open the sarcophagi to loot the burial rings and armor, the air pressure in the room instantly drops, triggering a magical curse.

  • The Encounter: 3x Skeletons (AC 2, HD 1, hp 5 each, Morale N/A) animate from the stone beds.

    • ACKS II System Mechanics: Skeletons are completely immune to Sleep spells and take half damage from piercing and slashing weapons (arrows and swords). The party's Fighter or Cleric will need to switch to maces, hammers, or staves to smash them efficiently.

  • The Loot: If defeated, the tombs yield ancient masterwork gear: a silver-plated shield worth 150 gp and a Dagger of Quality (+1 to hit, but non-magical).

3. The Reservoir of the Sunless Sea (The Sunken Docks)

At the absolute lowest point of Level 2, the natural limestone tunnels break out into a massive, echoing void housing a dark, still subterranean lake.

       [ THE CAVERN REACHES ] -> [ SUNKEN DOCK ] -> [ THE WATERWAY ]
          (Natural Stone)           (Rotted Wood)       (Deep Water/Peril)
  • The Architecture: A rotted, moss-slick wooden pier extends out into the black water. A single, waterlogged flat-bottomed skiff is tied to an iron cleat. Zelligar used this waterway to travel deeper into the regional Underworld to trade with deep-dwelling races.

  • The Hazard (The Water-Dweller): 1x Giant Leech (AC 2, HD 2, hp 9, Morale -1) clings to the underside of the dock.

    • Tactics: It launches a surprise ambush against whoever steps onto the pier to inspect the boat. If it hits, it locks onto the character, inflicting $1d4$ points of damage automatically each round due to blood drain.

    • ACKS II Healing Penalty: A character drained by the leech cannot regain hit points via natural rest for the next 48 hours unless treated with an alchemical poultice.

  • The Campaign Bridge: The skiff is still functional if repaired (requiring 1 turn and a carpentry toolset). Rowing across the sunless sea provides the Referee with a perfect gateway to transition the campaign out of Quasqueton and into a sprawling, multi-level Underworld megadungeon.

4. The Grand Library of Quasqueton (The Ransacked Archive)

Located adjacent to Zelligar’s personal quarters on Level 1, this room was once a magnificent repository of regional history and arcane lore. It has since been heavily defaced by the Orc Vanguard.

  • The Architecture: Soaring 15-foot walls lined with charred wooden bookshelves. Thousands of shredded parchment sheets carpet the floor like snow.

  • The Operational Puzzle: The Orcs use this room as a latrine and trash heap, completely unaware of its systemic value. If the party dedicates a full Exploration Turn (10 minutes) to meticulously sifting through the filth, a character with the Knowledge or Language proficiency can recover intact lore fragments.

  • The Clues: A successful search yields an old architectural blueprint of the fortress. This document reveals the exact location of two hidden secret doors on Level 1 and grants the party a +2 bonus on rolls to locate secret passages while exploring the Upper Bastion.

Taking the skiff across the Sunless Sea transitions your campaign from a localized dungeon crawl into a sprawling Underworld Hex Crawl. In ACKS II, the Underworld functions as a dark mirror of the surface world, complete with its own hidden trade networks, strict territorial boundaries, and dangerous non-human market centers.

The black waters of the Sunless Sea feed into a massive network of flooded tunnels, or Water-Ways, that slice through the regional bedrock.

1. Underworld Travel Mechanics & Logistics

Traveling by skiff bypasses the typical encumbrance slowdowns of foot travel, but it introduces unique naval hazards in pitch-black tunnels.

  • The Vessel: The flat-bottomed skiff can carry up to 60 Stone of total weight (including passengers and cargo) before taking on water. It moves at an Underworld exploration rate of 3 miles (1 Underworld Hex) per 4-hour watch, assuming two characters are actively rowing.

  • The Light Rations Tax: Because there are no landmarks, the party must maintain constant illumination. Rowing in the dark forces a catastrophic 5-in-6 chance of crashing into jagged stalagmite reefs, ruining the boat and forcing Mortal Wounds checks from drowning.

  • Wandering Water Threats: Roll $1d6$ once per travel watch. On a 1, the party encounters a localized hazard: either a subterranean siphon (whirlpool requiring a Seamanship throw) or a predatory Giant Albino Catfish (AC 3, HD 4, Morale 0, attacks the hull to capsize the vessel).

2. The Underworld Factions

Two major subterranean factions contest the waterways directly adjacent to Quasqueton. Their relationships with surface dwellers are transactional, cold, and highly dangerous.

                  [ QUASQUETON LEVEL 2 ]
                            |
                     (The Sunless Sea)
                            |
         +------------------+------------------+
         |                                     |
         v                                     v
[ THE CHITIN REGIME ]                 [ THE GLOOM-WEAVERS ]
   (Deep Troglodytes)                     (Deep Elves)
   Subterranean Feudalism                 Isolationist Arcane Slavers

Faction A: The Chitin Regime (Deep Troglodytes)

Unlike their feral, scattered cousins on Level 2, these are civilized, iron-working Troglodytes who have formed a brutal feudal society under the stone.

  • Government / Posture: Subterranean Tyranny. They look down on surface humanoids as fragile, soft-skinned weaklings, but they covet surface steel and alcohol.

  • ACKS II Faction Economy: They control the iron-ore deposits along the western banks of the Sun Sea. They use enslaved orcs and beastmen to run massive, sulfurous foundries.

  • Key Asset: They enforce a strict Water-Toll along the northern shipping lanes. Passing their checkpoints requires a payout of 50 gp in surface metal goods or an official mercenary contract promising to raid their enemies.

Faction B: The Gloom-Weavers (Deep Elves / Shadow-Dwellers)

An insular, matriarchal cabal of long-lived humanoids who split from surface elves millennia ago to pursue forbidden cosmic geometries in the dark.

  • Government / Posture: Decadent Magocracy. They view surface dwellers as fascinating intellectual curiosities or raw materials for labor and alchemical experiments.

  • ACKS II Faction Economy: They deal primarily in rare fungi, glowing crystals, blind cave-beast mounts, and high-end magical components harvested from the deep mantle.

  • Key Asset: They possess deep networks of psychic spies. If the player characters carry any magic items looted from Zelligar's vault (like the Arcanist's Lexicon), the Gloom-Weavers will sense the arcane resonance across the water and dispatch stealth skiffs to intercept and bargain for—or steal—the prize.

3. Market Destinations & Travel Grid

By navigating the flooded vaults, the party can steer the skiff into two distinct Underworld settlements to sell their dungeon loot, secure exotic hirelings, or rest supply lines.

DestinationTravel Time (From B1)Market ClassMajor Imports (High Demand)Major Exports (Available for Purchase)
Krag-Ghar (The Iron Sump)12 Hours (3 Hexes West)Market Class V (Small Town)Surface Steel weapons, Grain, Salt, Strong Wine.Raw Iron Ore, Glow-Paste fuel, Mercenary Beastmen.
Vael-Thalar (The City of Glass)36 Hours (9 Hexes North)Market Class IV (Large Town)Ancient surface texts, Elven relics, Precious gems.Rare Alchemical ingredients, Scrolls, Blind Cave-Lizards.

Destination 1: Krag-Ghar (The Iron Sump)

A fortress city built directly into a massive, hollowed-out stalactite suspended over a boiling mud pit, ruled by the Chitin Regime.

  • The Harbor: A heavily fortified stone dock lined with ballistae. Humanoids are allowed entry only if they disarm and purchase a temporary "Trader's Writ" for 20 gp.

  • ACKS II Market Features: Due to its Class V status, the maximum value of items that can be found or sold here is capped at 500 gp. However, because surface iron weapons are scarce, the PCs can sell any swords, shields, or chainmail looted from the Orcs or the Bronze Vanguard upstairs at a 20% price premium.

Destination 2: Vael-Thalar (The City of Glass)

The regional capital of the Gloom-Weavers. A breathtaking, terrifying city carved from solid black volcanic glass (obsidian) that reflects the eerie light of thousands of bio-luminescent fungi fields.

  • The Harbor: A silent, deeply policed underground marina where skiffs are moored using silk lines.

  • ACKS II Market Features: As a Class IV market, it features a fluid economy with a gold limit of 2,000 gp. The PCs can trade Zelligar’s alchemical runoff or raw monster components here for high-level services. It is the only place within 100 miles where a party can hire an Underworld Sage to translate cryptic scrolls or buy exotic, dark-adapted mercenaries (such as blind subterranean archers) to help them return and completely clear the rest of Quasqueton.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Building The Red Planet Empire - Mixing Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP) with the Domain-level Architecture of ACKS II Rpg - d100 Random Martian Dungeons & Wilderness tables

 To truly capture the planetary romance aesthetic, a Martian megadungeon shouldn't look like a standard fantasy stone cellar. It needs towering, oxidized metal struts, glowing chemical vats, ancient stasis chambers, and subterranean canal networks. This picks right up from Building The Red Planet Empire - Mixing Warriors of the Red Planet (WotRP) with the Domain-level Architecture of ACKS II Rpg - How ACKS II market rules handle selling forbidden or ancient technology in a standard planetary romance city-state, including black market modifiers.



Here is a full d100 random location and hook table designed to stock your wilderness map with exploration sites for your ACKS II / WotRP campaign.



The d100 Table of Martian Megadungeons & Ruins

d100 Dungeon Site Name Architectural / Structural Style Key Inhabitant Group Core Faction Hook / Hidden Treasure

01–04 The Iron Spires of Thule Towering glass and rusted iron pillars piercing the sky. Blind Tech-Cultists A central terminal controlling regional weather patterns; contains 1d4 Radium Batteries.

05–08 The Sub-Canal Catacombs Slick, obsidian brick tunnels beneath a dead polar waterway. Albino Ape-Men A functional water-pumping node; guarded by a bio-engineered apex predator.

09–12 Vault of the Glass Jeddak A monolithic tomb sculpted entirely from melted crimson sand. Clockwork Phantoms The stasis tomb of a pre-cataclysm ruler wearing a Telepathic Circlet.

13–16 The Atmospheric Abyss A vertical ventilation shaft dipping miles into the planet's mantle. Winged Nomads The emergency air-scrubbing station; a Scientist can harvest ancient turbine alloy sheets.

17–20 Foundry of the Steel Worms A soot-choked underground factory with groaning conveyor tracks. Autonomous Drones Automated assembly lines ready to build Construct Troops if given raw ore blocks.

21–24 The Sunken Sky-Dock An ancient hangar buried inside a sheared canyon face. Desert Scavengers A halffunctional Light Scout Flier pinned beneath a collapsed crane girder.

25–28 Laboratory of the Flesh-Weavers Polished porcelain tiles stained with old chemical residues. Synthetic Mutants Vat-grown organ tanks containing a pristine vial of Biochemical Rejuvenation Serum.

29–32 The Radium Conservatory Domed brass structures housing crystallized, radioactive flora. Radiant Ghouls Strange glowing pods that function as fuel or components for Weird Science Gadgets.

33–36 Temple of the Red Oracle An amphitheatric complex carved from a hollowed-out asteroid chunk. Psychic Ascetics An ancient supercomputer projecting a map of an unlooted Imperial Vault.

37–40 The Dead Sea Necropolis A sprawling ghost town hidden inside a massive salt-flat rift. Green Horde Deserters A hidden armory containing 2d12 pristine Radium Ammunition Cores.

41–44 The Chrono-Static Sarcophagus A geometric pyramid where time inside passes at a crawl. Time-Displaced Knights An elite squad of earthborn soldiers locked in stasis; they hold 10,000 Barsoomian Bullion gp.

45–48 Outpost of the Crimson Star A militaristic bunker made of thick, reinforced alloy sheets. Imperial Defectors A defensive array of Radium Disintegration Turrets that can be stripped for parts.

49–52 The Bioluminescent Hive A network of damp caves lit by glowing fungi and organic mold. Insectoid Myrmidons Massive royal jelly vats that act as high-value, low-weight trade merchandise.

53–56 The Sunken Dome of Helium A shattered pleasure dome filled with toxic red dust pools. Roaming Bandits A private vault containing rare silk harnesses encrusted with raw Desert Opals.

57–60 Hive of the Silicon Crawlers Tunnels melted smooth by thermal boring mechanisms. Metallic Parasites Mineral veins rich in Forandus alloy; mining it generates tremendous domain revenue.

61–64 The Subterranean Agora An ancient trade plaza sealed beneath a mountain avalanche. Rogue Holograms Data-crystals projecting historical merchant supply routes across the dry globe.

65–68 The Echoing Amphitheater A massive sound-conducting basin lined with silver tracking ribs. Sound-Eating Beasts A heavy sonic weapon array capable of destroying vehicle hulls from short range.

69–72 The Gravity-Null Crucible A chamber where heavy stone blocks float loosely in the air currents. Levitating Wraiths A functional Gravity-Nullification Gyro spinning at the bottom of the pit.

73–76 The Clotted Canal Gate A massive iron valve block locking an ancient water system shut. Aquatic Abominations Cracking the gate restores water to an oasis, increasing local land value by 50%.

77–80 The Alchemical Siphon A refinery complex dripping with boiling blue coolant oils. Slime Cultists Storage vats of Lifewater Serum valued at over 5,000 gp on the open market.

81–84 The Obsidian Ziggurat A jet-black step pyramid absorbing all ambient light rays. Shadow Mentalists A training archive that teaches a character a new mentalist power or psychic skill.

85–88 The Wreck of the Levathan The twisted skeletal frame of an ancient dreadnought sky-ship. Scavenger Swarms The main engine compartment is intact, yielding a functional Radium Propulsion Array.

89–92 Crypt of the Four-Armed Kings A subterranean mausoleum lined with massive bone-thrones. Undead Warlords Ancient ceremonial weapons including a Greatsword that ignores physical AC armor points.

93–96 The Memory Lattice A glowing maze of thin fiber-optic wires woven into stone. Fractured AI Core An ancient database containing structural blueprints for building a Cloud-Leviathan.

97–100 The Core Ignition Vault A chamber centered around a blinding, artificial mini-sun. Plasma Elementals The true heart of the planet's network; controls the activation codes for all local vaults.

Running the Dungeon Environment

When using these hooks in your ACKS II campaign, remember that dungeon navigation rules apply to resource management. The thin air requires tracking Oxygen Reserves or filter mask degradation alongside standard torch and lantern durations. Heavy radium pistols fired in confined underground spaces risk triggering cave-ins or blinding flashes due to the energy bouncing off ancient alloy-plated walls.

An open-world sandbox across the dead sea beds and shifting dunes of Mars requires a diverse, highly dynamic wilderness encounter engine. Because ACKS II tracks travel by hex and day, encounters shouldn't just be isolated fights—they should represent moving factions, shifting weather patterns, and economic opportunities or risks for a travelling crew.

Here is a full d100 random encounter table built specifically for a wilderness trek or sky-ship crossing in your ACKS II / WotRP campaign.

The d100 Table of Wilderness & Sky Encounters

d100EncounterCategoryMechanical Threat / Interaction (ACKS II Framework)
01–04Roaming Green Martian Hunting PartyFaction$2d6$ four-armed warriors riding giant Thoats. They treat any outsiders as cattle or trespassers unless a character succeeds on a Horde Lore or high-stakes Intimidation check.
05–08Red Dust Sirocco (Storm)EnvironmentVision drops to zero for $1d4$ days. Sky-galleys must anchor or risk taking $1d6$ sHP of damage per day. Ground caravans must consume double rations as filtration masks clog.
09–12Desert Scavenger CrewNPC$1d10$ nomadic mechanics picking clean the structural alloy ribs of a crashed light scout flier. Willing to trade Radium Ammo for fresh food or water.
13–16Pack of Banths (Great Lions)Beast$1d4+1$ ten-legged, hairless predators stalking the caravan from the dune ridges. They hunt by scent and ignore light or fire deterrents.
17–20Imperial Tax SkiffFactionA small patrol boat from the nearest Jeddakate demands a 500 gp transit tariff or a look at the players' cargo manifests. Fleeing marks the players as smugglers.
21–24Unstable Radium GeyserHazardA brilliant emerald fissure erupting from the salt flats. Anyone passing within the hex must make a Saving Throw vs. Blast or take $2d8$ radiation damage. A Scientist can harvest 1 fuel cell.
25–28Merchant Caravan (Noble Jeddak)CommerceA massive, slow-moving line of pack-beasts transporting silks and lifewater. Functions as a temporary Class IV Market right in the wilderness hex.
29–32Ancient Broadcast StaticWeird ScienceThe players' communicators or mentalist senses are flooded with a rhythmic, piercing tone. It grants a +2 bonus to Navigation checks toward the nearest unlooted dungeon, but prevents natural sleep.
33–36Psychic MirageHazardA telepathic echo of a pristine oasis. The caravan leader must make a Saving Throw vs. Psychic Attack or guide the party $1d3$ hexes off-course into a treacherous salt sinkhole.
37–40Green Horde War-CampFactionAn entire clan ($1d4 \times 100$ warriors) gathered for a seasonal raid. If the players hold a position of high local status or strength, they can negotiate a mercenary contract for Domain Phase actions.
41–44Calidon Herd (Giant Game)WildlifeHundreds of massive, thick-skinned herding beasts crossing the dead sea bed. An excellent opportunity to hunt for fresh provisions, yielding up to a month's worth of meat rations.
45–48Crashed Cargo Sky-GalleySalvageA smoking wreck hanging precariously over a canyon edge. Roll 3 times on the Cargo & Personal Loot Table if the players can scale the rigging before it slips into the abyss.
49–52Rogue Automaton DroneAutomataA rusted, multi-legged mechanical worker wandering aimlessly, repeating a pre-cataclysm maintenance directive. Can be deactivated with a successful Mechanics check and salvaged for parts.
53–56Desert Ascetic / HermitNPCA lone, scarred Mentalist meditating atop a rocky spire. If offered rare water or a token of ancient lore, they will reveal the specific weaknesses of a local dungeon boss.
57–60Atmospheric Depressurization PocketHazardA sudden patch of vacuum or thin, unbreathable air. All characters must immediately secure oxygen masks or take $1d6$ damage per turn from suffocation.
61–64Escaped Slave CaravanNPC$2d10$ runaway laborers from a radium mining pit. They are starving and pursued by bounty hunters. Helping them provides a crew bonus but builds an immediate negative reputation with the local Jeddak.
65–68Nesting Site of the Apt (White Apes)BeastA cavern network housing $1d6$ massive, four-armed albino apes. The area is littered with the bone armor and metal equipment of past victims.
69–72Aptitude Test TerminalWeird ScienceA solitary chrome pedestal standing perfectly preserved in the sand dunes. Inserting an ancient data-key or passing an Intelligence throw unlocks a permanent +1 bonus to a random proficiency.
73–76Airship Pirate AmbushFactionA fast, sleek raiding vessel drops from a cloud layer. Transition immediately to the Sky-Ship Tactical Round at Short Range. They fight until their ship takes 4 sHP of damage.
77–80Migrating Silk-SpidersWildlifeWebbing structures bridging a canyon gap. The silk is incredibly lightweight and strong, worth 1,000 gp as raw trade merchandise if harvested without alerting the venomous weavers.
81–84Oasis Border Guard OutpostFactionA fortified tower monitoring the perimeter of a major city-state domain. They demand identification and check all travelers for signs of mutated infectious bio-plagues.
85–88Phasing Ghost-TowerWeird ScienceA shimmering citadel that structurally appears and disappears with the planet's moon phases. It remains tangible for only $2d4$ hours before shifting back out of reality.
89–92Territorial Sith (Giant Hornet)BeastA lone, horse-sized flying predator with a venomous stinger that can pierce light leather harness armor. It attacks sky-ship deck crews or caravan scout riders directly.
93–96Abandoned Mining PitSalvageA deep, open vertical shaft. A thorough search of the rusted elevators and lower levels reveals unrefined Radium Ore worth 2,500 gp, but requires processing in a city lab.
97–100The Warlord's ChampionNPCA renowned duelist from a rival city-state traveling alone to deliver a formal challenge of war to a local settlement. Will offer a non-lethal sword duel to any Fighting Man player for a wager of honor or items.

Integration Tip: The ACKS II Wilderness Scale

When rolled during a standard hex crawl, use the Encounter Category to guide your narrative framing. Environmental hazards or weather events should deplete the party's Stones of Supply, while faction encounters directly alter the local Domain Stability scores of any adjacent player kingdoms or city-state alliances.