Saturday, June 13, 2026

A Series of D100 Sword & Sorcery Table for Profane & Terrible Lovecraftian entities Encounters Tables For Castles & Crusades Rpg

 Here is a d100 random encounter and lore table tailored for a high-lethality Sword & Sorcery campaign. In classic pulp style, these entities aren't just blocks of hit points; they are reality-warping terrors that twist the landscape, corrupt the mind, and demand heavy logistics or clever tactical thinking to survive. This blog post picks right up from D100 Sword & Sorcery Profane & Black Magick artifacts table For Castles & Crusades Rpg



d100Entity TypeProfane Manifestation & Tactical Hazard
01–10The Star-Spawned OozeA bubbling, iridescent gelatinous mass that seeps from meteoric craters. Hazard: Corrodes non-magical metal on contact ($1d4$ armor class or weapon damage penalty per strike). It dissolves organic matter into a slurry that heals the ooze for the hit points consumed.
11–20The Chanting CarapaceA multi-limbed, chitinous horror resembling a massive, blind trilobite with human teeth. Hazard: It continuously drones a non-Euclidean chord. Any adventurer within 60 feet must check against mental corruption or find their encumbrance effectively doubled as gravity warps around them.
21–30The Void-StalkerA hound-like entity woven from absolute shadow and angled joints that shouldn't exist. Hazard: It steps through shadows, ignoring physical barriers. It targets the party's light sources first; if a torch or lantern is extinguished by its touch, the radius falls into a localized vacuum where breathing is impossible.
31–40The Faceless HierophantAn ancient, towering humanoid wrapped in tattered, star-patterned silks, possessing a shifting void where its face should be. Hazard: It offers terrible, forbidden cosmic knowledge. Accepting it gives a permanent bonus to lore checks but inflicts a terminal wasting disease that reduces maximum hit points by $1$ each day.
41–50The Lurker in the StoneA parasitic, semi-crystalline entity that infests local rock formations and dungeon walls. Hazard: It animates the very stone of the dungeon. Spikes emerge from the walls to impale passing hirelings, and iron spikes driven into the walls twist into snakes of rusted metal.
51–60The Gidim (Lunar Leech)A translucent, undulating sky-serpent that descends only during a full moon or under a clear night sky. Hazard: It feeds on psychic energy and historical memory. A character bitten loses $1d6 \times 100$ experience points as pieces of their past and training are literally dissolved from their mind.
61–70The Abyssal FungusA carpet of pulsing, bioluminescent violet spores covering ancient tomb floors. Hazard: Disturbing the patch fills the air with spores. Anyone inhaling them must check vs. poison or become a mindless, walking vector that attempts to grapple allies to expose them to the patch.
71–80The Crawling Chaos-ShardsA swarm of levitating, razor-sharp obsidian shards that move with a collective, insectoid intelligence. Hazard: They strike structural weak points. They ignore standard armor class, targeting shield durability and weapon integrity instead, fracturing steel in $1d3$ rounds of sustained combat.
81–90The Weaver of Non-TimeA massive, arachnid-like horror with clockwork mechanisms fused into its translucent flesh. Hazard: It warps the local flow of rounds. At the start of each combat round, it forces the party to roll initiative twice and takes its action on both the highest and lowest counts rolled.
91–00The Maw of the Outer DarkA localized rift in reality that manifests as a floating, tooth-lined tear in space. Hazard: It exerts a powerful gravitational pull, dragging everything within 30 feet toward its center. Items lost to the maw are gone forever; characters sucked in are scattered across the outer planes.

Running Cosmic Horrors in OSR Systems

When introducing these entities into a resource-heavy, high-lethality setting, consider these design principles:

  • Telegraph the Terror: Never drop a Lovecraftian entity on a party without warning. Use environmental cues—sudden drops in temperature, milk turning sour in rations, geometric patterns etched into dungeon moss, or animals fleeing the hex.

  • Logistical Corruption: These creatures shouldn't just threaten hit points; they should threaten the party's supplies. A blast of cosmic radiation might rot $1d6$ days of rations, sour water skins, or shatter fragile glass oil flasks.

  • Asymmetrical Combat: Fighting these entities head-on with steel should usually be a losing proposition. Encourage players to use the environment, search for specific silver or cold-iron weaknesses, or use structural engineering (like collapsing a tunnel) to trap the horror rather than trying to deplete its hit pool.

Here are the full monster profiles and statistics for all ten profane entities, fully formatted for the Castles & Crusades system.

In keeping with the system's philosophy, saves are categorized by Physical (P) or Mental (M) attributes. Because these are horrific, extra-planar abominations, many of their reality-warping abilities require Mental (Charisma, Intelligence, or Wisdom) or Physical (Constitution) saves.

1. Star-Spawned Ooze

  • Hit Dice: $6d8$ (HP: 27)

  • Armor Class: 12

  • Movement: 10 ft.

  • Attacks: 1 Slam ($1d6$ + Corrosive Slurry)

  • Special Attributes: Acidic Corrosion, Organic Siphon, Immune to Mind-Affecting Magic

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Large

  • XP Value: 450

Acidic Corrosion: Non-magical weapons striking the ooze, or armor worn by a target hit by its slam, must succeed on a Physical (Dexterity) save (CL 6) or take a permanent, cumulative -1 penalty to damage or AC. At -4, the item dissolves into rust and slag.

Organic Siphon: Whenever the ooze deals damage to a living target, it immediately heals itself for half the amount of damage inflicted (rounded down).

2. Chanting Carapace

  • Hit Dice: $8d10$ (HP: 44)

  • Armor Class: 20 (Heavy Chitin)

  • Movement: 20 ft., Burrow 10 ft.

  • Attacks: 2 Pincers ($1d8$) or 1 Bite ($2d4$)

  • Special Attributes: Dissonant Drone, Magic Resistance 15%

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Large

  • XP Value: 900

Dissonant Drone: The entity continuously emits a maddening, reality-warping hum. All creatures within 60 feet must make a Mental (Wisdom) save (CL 8) upon entering the area. Failure causes local gravity to distort around them: their current encumbrance is doubled, dropping their movement speed by half, and they suffer a -2 penalty to all physical attribute checks.

3. Void-Stalker

  • Hit Dice: $5d8$ (HP: 22)

  • Armor Class: 16 (Shifting Form)

  • Movement: 50 ft.

  • Attacks: 2 Claws ($1d6$), 1 Bite ($1d8$)

  • Special Attributes: Shadow Step, Suffocating Dark, Vulnerable to Fire/Bright Light

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Medium

  • XP Value: 380

Shadow Step: The Void-Stalker can step into any shadow and reappear from another shadow within 100 feet as a free movement action, giving it a +4 bonus to surprise checks in dim light.

Suffocating Dark: If the Void-Stalker hits a target carrying an active mundane light source (torch, lantern), the light is instantly extinguished. A 10-foot-radius sphere of absolute vacuum forms around the extinguished source for $1d4$ rounds; characters inside cannot breathe or cast spells with verbal components.

4. Faceless Hierophant

  • Hit Dice: $12d10$ (HP: 66)

  • Armor Class: 18

  • Movement: 30 ft.

  • Attacks: Touch of the Void ($1d10$ cold damage + Wasting) or Spells

  • Special Attributes: Forbidden Bargain, Spellcasting (casts as a 9th-level Cleric), Darkvision 120 ft.

  • Saves: Mental (M)

  • Size: Large (10 ft. tall)

  • XP Value: 2,400

Forbidden Bargain: Instead of attacking, the Hierophant can mentally offer a character cosmic secrets. If accepted, the character permanently gains a +3 bonus to all Legend Lore, History, or Arcana checks, but must make a Mental (Charisma) save (CL 12). Failure inflicts a terminal wasting disease: their maximum hit points drop by 1 every 24 hours. This can only be cured by a Remove Curse or Wish cast by an 11th+ level caster.

5. Lurker in the Stone

  • Hit Dice: $7d8$ (HP: 31)

  • Armor Class: 17 (Crystalline/Stone Camouflage)

  • Movement: 0 ft. (Immobile)

  • Attacks: 2 Wall Spikes ($1d6$) or Animate Iron ($1d10$)

  • Special Attributes: Dungeon Symbiosis, Hardness (takes half damage from piercing and slashing non-magical weapons)

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Huge (Spreads across a 30 ft. room)

  • XP Value: 675

Dungeon Symbiosis: The entity is completely integrated into the stone walls. It can cause stone spikes to erupt from anywhere within its room.

Animate Iron: Once per turn, it can target an iron spike, piton, or door hinge within the room. The iron twists into a rusted, snake-like construct that attacks a nearby target ($+7$ to hit, $1d10$ damage) before crumbling to dust.

6. Gidim (Lunar Leech)

  • Hit Dice: $4d8$ (HP: 18)

  • Armor Class: 14 (Translucent)

  • Movement: Fly 40 ft.

  • Attacks: 1 Parasitic Bite ($1d4$ + Memory Drain)

  • Special Attributes: Invisibility (under direct sunlight), Ephemeral Form

  • Saves: Mental (M)

  • Size: Medium (Long and thin)

  • XP Value: 240

Memory Drain: A character bitten by the Gidim must succeed on a Mental (Intelligence) save (CL 4). Failure means the creature has sucked away a fragment of their identity; the character immediately loses $1d6 \times 100$ experience points. If this drops them below their current level threshold, they do not lose the level, but their XP is set to the absolute minimum required for their current level.

7. Abyssal Fungus

  • Hit Dice: $3d8$ (HP: 13)

  • Armor Class: 10

  • Movement: 0 ft.

  • Attacks: Spore Cloud (15 ft. radius, special)

  • Special Attributes: Vector Spores, Immune to Bludgeoning and Piercing

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Small (Per patch)

  • XP Value: 120

Vector Spores: If the fungus patch takes damage or is stepped on, it bursts into a purple spore cloud. Anyone within 15 feet must make a Physical (Constitution) save (CL 3). Failure turns the victim into a mindless thrall for $1d4$ rounds. The thrall ignores enemies and uses all its actions to grapple their nearest ally, attempting to drag them face-first into the fungus patch.

8. Crawling Chaos-Shards

  • Hit Dice: $6d6$ Swarm (HP: 21)

  • Armor Class: 15 (Small, rapid targets)

  • Movement: Fly 30 ft. (Hover)

  • Attacks: Swarm Attack ($2d4$ automatic damage to anyone in the swarm's space)

  • Special Attributes: Sunder Equipment, Swarm Traits (takes half damage from single-target weapons, full damage from area effects)

  • Saves: Physical (P)

  • Size: Medium Swarm

  • XP Value: 410

Sunder Equipment: The obsidian shards deliberately target gear. Anyone who spends a full round inside the swarm must make a Physical (Dexterity) save (CL 6). Failure means their shield is fractured and rendered useless. If they lack a shield, their primary weapon or armor takes a permanent -2 penalty to hit/AC due to severe structural pitting.

9. Weaver of Non-Time

  • Hit Dice: $10d8$ (HP: 45)

  • Armor Class: 19

  • Movement: 40 ft., Climb 40 ft.

  • Attacks: 2 Fangs ($1d10$), 1 Clockwork Stinger ($1d8$ + Temporal Disruption)

  • Special Attributes: Temporal Fracture, Magic Resistance 20%

  • Saves: Mental (M)

  • Size: Large

  • XP Value: 1,600

Temporal Fracture: The Weaver exists across multiple seconds simultaneously. At the start of combat, everyone rolls initiative normally. The Weaver takes a complete set of actions on both the highest initiative count rolled in the room and the lowest initiative count rolled, effectively acting twice per round.

Temporal Disruption: A target hit by the stinger must succeed on a Physical (Constitution) save (CL 10) or be thrust 1 round into the future—they vanish instantly and reappear at the end of the next round, missing their turn entirely.

10. Maw of the Outer Dark

  • Hit Dice: $14d12$ (HP: 91)

  • Armor Class: 11 (A tear in reality)

  • Movement: Fly 10 ft.

  • Attacks: 1 Void Devourment ($3d10$)

  • Special Attributes: Singularity Pull, Planar Exile, Immune to Non-Magical Weapons and Elemental Damage

  • Saves: Mental (M)

  • Size: Huge

  • XP Value: 3,800

Singularity Pull: At the start of the Maw’s turn, all objects and creatures within 30 feet are violently pulled 10 feet closer to the rift. Characters can resist this movement by succeeding on a Physical (Strength) check (CL 14).

Planar Exile: Any creature reduced to 0 hit points by the Maw’s Void Devourment attack is not killed conventionally; instead, they are sucked through the rift and scattered across a random, hostile outer plane. Their equipment remains behind, pulled into the singularity and permanently destroyed.

 Here is a $d100$ table of profane, reality-warping treasures and artifacts for Castles & Crusades. In the spirit of cosmic horror and classic pulp fiction, these items are incredibly valuable—often counting as thousands of gold pieces for campaigns that award experience points for wealth—but they carry terrible risks, cursed attributes, or logistical burdens.

The Challenge Level (CL) for saving throws scales with the item's inherent cosmic potency.

d100 Profane Artifacts & Treasures

d100Item Name & GP ValueMagical Attributes & Prime BenefitThe Profane Cost & Tactical Hazard
01–10

The Obsidian Astrolabe


Value: 1,500 gp

Grants the user the ability to cast Find the Path and Locate Object once per day by aligning the brass dials with distant, dying stars.Star-Blindness: Every use requires a Mental (Wisdom) save (CL 3). Failure inflicts temporary blindness for $1d4$ hours as the user's retinas burn with alien light.
11–20

The Vitrified Idol of Tsathoggua


Value: 2,500 gp

Carved from a single, oily piece of meteoric glass. If anointed with fresh blood, it grants the party a $+2$ bonus to all surprise checks while underground.Slothful Weight: The idol weighs a crushing 50 lbs (5 stones) and actively alters its gravity. If the bearer runs or jumps, they must pass a Physical (Strength) check (CL 4) or fall prone.
21–30

The Flayed Codicil


Value: 4,000 gp

A scroll case made of human leather containing non-Euclidean geometry. Reads as a spell scroll containing Contact Other Plane and Dismissal.Mind-Bleed: Merely opening the case forces a Mental (Intelligence) save (CL 5). Failure causes the reader to babble incoherently for $1d6$ rounds, attracting wandering monsters.
31–40

The Chime of Frozen Seconds


Value: 3,500 gp

A silver hand-bell etched with spider-silk patterns. When rung, it casts a localized Hold Monster effect on a single target for $1d4$ rounds.Temporal Debt: When the effect ends, time catches up to the caster. The ringer is automatically Slowed (as the spell) for twice the duration the target was held.
41–50

The Crystalline Lung


Value: 5,000 gp

A pulsing, geode-like apparatus. If held in two hands, it allows the user to breathe perfectly in a vacuum, underwater, or in toxic spore clouds.Mineral Siphon: For every hour used, the bearer must make a Physical (Constitution) save (CL 6). Failure permanently converts 1 point of Constitution into brittle crystal.
51–60

The Chalice of Liquid Night


Value: 6,000 gp

A lead goblet that turns normal water into a thick, black draught. Drinking it grants Darkvision 120 ft. and immunity to fear for 8 hours.Light Sensitivity: While under the effect, exposure to direct sunlight or a Continual Light spell deals $1d6$ points of automatic damage per round.
61–70

The Sarcophagus of the Unborn


Value: 8,000 gp

A miniature gold coffin containing a preserved, multi-limbed embryo. Grants any wizard who sleeps near it an extra 1st and 2nd level spell slot.Nightmare Parasite: Each morning, the wizard must pass a Mental (Charisma) save (CL 8) or fail to regain hit points from resting due to horrific, waking night-terrors.
71–80

The Jagged Shard of Yuggoth


Value: 7,500 gp

A jagged, greenish-black dagger ($+2$ to hit, $1d4+2$ damage). On a natural 20, it injects a localized spatial rift, dealing an extra $2d6$ cold damage.Weapon Corrosion: The blade hates earthly metals. If sheathed in a normal scabbard or placed near iron gear, it dissolves $1d4$ random metal items overnight.
81–90

The Torc of the Faceless One


Value: 10,000 gp

A heavy platinum neck ring. The wearer can cast Invisibility at will, but only while moving at half their maximum movement speed or slower.Identity Dissolution: If worn for more than 3 consecutive days, the user's facial features begin to blur. They lose 1 point of Charisma permanently each week.
91–00

The Eye of the Outer Dark


Value: 15,000 gp

A massive, multi-faceted black diamond. Once per week, it can be uncovered to project a beam of pure void, disintegrating a 10 ft. cube of matter.Singularity Draw: Uncovering the Eye creates a minor gravitational anomaly. Everyone within 20 feet must make a Physical (Strength) save (CL 10) or be pulled into the beam.

Designing Lovecraftian Loot for Castles & Crusades

When your players successfully haul these items out of the deep dark, use these rules of thumb to maintain the pulp Sword & Sorcery atmosphere:

  • The XP-for-Gold Dilemma: In classic OSR-style play, finding wealth is the primary way characters level up. By giving these items massive gold values, you present a brutal choice: Do the players sell this highly dangerous artifact to a corrupt cult or merchant prince for massive XP, or do they keep its reality-warping power to survive the next dungeon level?

  • Identification Risks: Identifying these treasures shouldn't be as simple as casting a basic spell. A Detect Magic spell will reveal an overwhelming, sickening aura of alteration or necromancy. Actually learning how to use the item should require consulting ancient, forbidden texts or taking a risky Mental (Intelligence) check that exposes the identifier's mind to the item's curse.

  • The Burden of Selling: Finding a buyer for a 10,000 gp Torc of the Faceless One is an adventure in itself. Normal merchants will flee from it, law enforcement will confiscate it, and dark cults will actively hunt the party down to steal it back.



Friday, June 12, 2026

Adapting B2 keep on the Borderland By Gary Gygax be adapted Into The Victorious Rpg and Wretched Epoque role-playing game

 Yes, absolutely. In fact, B2: The Keep on the Borderlands aligns surprisingly well with the mechanics of the Wretched system. Because the Wretched system (including Wretched Époque) is built on an OSR (Old School Renaissance) d20 foundation heavily inspired by classic B/X D&D, the core math, monster stats, and dungeon-crawling loops require almost zero heavy mechanical conversion. This blog post picks right up from Adapting Two Githyanki-like races for the Troll Lord Games Victorious & Red Room Bella Apoque rpg- The Aether-Born & The Khaos-Bane



However, Wretched Époque isn't high fantasy—it’s a game of gritty, morally bankrupt, fin-de-siècle (turn-of-the-century) urban horror, secret societies, and anti-heroes. To make the jump from 1980s high fantasy to 1890s "Nouveaupunk," you have to shift the window from Tolkiendesque exploration to Late-Victorian gothic intrigue.



A complete blueprint to reskin the classic module for Wretched Époque is detailed below.

1. The Narrative Reskin

To fit the Belle Époque era, the geography of the wild "Borderlands" must be reimagined into something more fitting for 1890s grit.

  • The Keep - The Outpost / Sanatorium: Instead of a fantasy fortress, the "Keep" is an isolated military outpost, a luxury sanatorium in the French Alps/Transylvania, or a colonial extraction camp deep in a contested territory (like the Congo or the Ottoman frontier). The "Castellan" becomes a bitter, high-ranking military commander, an eccentric medical director, or a corrupt corporate bureaucrat.

  • The Caves of Chaos - The Labyrinth of the Cults: The caves are an ancient, subterranean network beneath the region—perhaps a forgotten Roman catacomb, an abandoned mining complex, or a series of glacial fissures. Instead of disparate humanoid tribes (Orcs, Goblins, Kobolds), the different caves house competing factions of a sprawling, multi-layered occult conspiracy or rival criminal gangs.

2. Faction & Monster Conversions

The Wretched system focuses heavily on cosmic horror, occultism, and the criminal underworld. The distinct monster tribes in the Caves can be translated seamlessly into historical/horror equivalents:

Original B2 MonsterWretched Époque EquivalentConcept / Narrative Motivation
KoboldsThe Sub-Human Dregs / "Apaches"Desperate, violent street criminals, mutineers, or locals afflicted by a degenerative physical rot.
Goblins & HobgoblinsAnarchist Cell / Radical CellMilitant bomb-makers and anti-state radicals who are unknowingly using occult materials provided by deeper cults.
Orcs & GnollsThe Corrupt MercenariesA rogue faction of foreign Legionnaires or ruthless cutthroats hired by a corporate syndicate to secure the caves.
Zombies & SkeletonsGalvanized Corpses / ReanimatedVictims of a mad scientist residing in the caves, reanimated via crude electrical galvanism and clockwork mechanisms.
The Evil Priest (Medusa/Acolytes)The Esoteric Order / Cult of the BeyondThe core antagonist group. A secret society of elite Occultists or "Animal Magnetists" using Mesmerism to control the other factions.

3. Adapting the Gameplay Mechanics

The Wretched Commandments (XP Progression)

In classic B2, characters earn XP by killing monsters and bringing treasure back to civilization. In Wretched, characters are fundamentally anti-heroes driven by vices, sins, and survival.

The Wretched Commandments change the entire vibe of the module:

  • Instead of "clearing the caves for the good of the realm," the PCs are likely there because they want to steal the cult's legendary wealth ("Thou Shalt Steal"), assassinate a rival mastermind ("Thou Shalt Kill"), or gather blackmail material on high-society figures visiting the Sanatorium.

  • The proximity of the "Keep" lets players return to engage in debauchery or manipulate NPCs, earning XP via "Thou Shalt Love Thyself" or "Thou Shalt Taint Thy Neighbours".

Sanity & Mesmerism

The Wretched Époque rules for Sanity and Mesmerism fit perfectly into the deeper sections of the Caves of Chaos (the Shrine of Evil Chaos).

  • Replace standard fantasy fear or charm spells with Mesmerism checks.

  • Discovering the bizarre, fleshy, or cosmic horrors in the lower levels requires Sanity checks, simulating the slow descent into madness that a gritty fin-de-siècle character would experience when confronted by the unnatural.

Gold - The Acquisition Roll

You don't need to count every gold piece in the hoards. When players find "treasure" (art, illegal chemicals, occult texts, bonds), assign it a material value. Back at the Keep, players use these scores to modify their Acquisition Rolls to secure better equipment, modern firearms, or opium reserves.

4. The Campaign Hook

Because Wretched characters need a personal motivation rooted in moral ambiguity, traditional altruistic hooks won't work. One of these options can be used instead:

The Investigation Hook: A prominent Paris politician's daughter has vanished, traced to a remote mountain retreat (The Keep). The characters are hired by a shadowy fixer to extract her—or silence her if she knows too much.

The Criminal Syndicate Hook: The characters are part of a criminal syndicate sent to the borderlands to eliminate the local "Apache" gangs and corner the market on an exotic, supernatural drug being harvested from the cave network's glowing fungi.

Adapting B2 this way preserves the iconic, dangerous exploration of the original module while infusing it with the grim, paranoiac, atmosphere that defines the Wretched universe.

Blending B2: The Keep on the Borderlands, Wretched Époque, and Victorious creates a distinct style of campaign: Gaslight "SuperMankind" Horror.

By layer-cakeing these systems, you are dropping street-level, Victorian-era superheroes, masked vigilantes, and supernatural investigators (Victorious) into a gritty, morally bankrupt, cosmic-horror conspiracy (Wretched Époque), using a classic, sandbox dungeon crawl layout (B2).



Because both Victorious (built on Troll Lord Games' SIEGE Engine/OSR framework) and Wretched Époque (built on d20 OSR) share a mechanical lineage with classic D&D, they mash together beautifully. The blueprint below outlines how to combine all three.

1. The Core Mechanical Integration

The challenge here is balancing the pulp heroism of Victorious with the lethal, sanity-draining grit of Wretched Époque.

  • The Character Engine (Victorious): Players build characters using the classes and superpower templates from Victorious (e.g., Vigilante, Contraptionist, Mesmerist, Strongman). They have the powers and the exceptional hit points required to survive an active warzone like the Caves of Chaos.

  • The Corruption & Sin Engine (Wretched): Overlay the Wretched Commandments and Sanity/Neurosis mechanics onto the characters. Sure, you are a "Paragon" with superhuman strength, but Thou Shalt Steal, Thou Shalt Kill, and Thou Shalt Give In To Vice. The PCs aren't boy scouts; they are flawed vigilantes whose powers might even stem from the very cosmic corruption they are investigating.

  • Resolution: Use the Victorious SIEGE Engine (Attribute checks against a Challenge Class) for physical feats, gadgets, and superhero combat, but use Wretched’s Sanity system whenever characters dive into the deeper occult horrors of the caves.

2. The Campaign World: "The Gilded & Grim Borderlands"

In Victorious, the GM selects an alignment for the setting. For this mashup, choose Grim (where the supernatural is terrifying and society is corrupt) and Gilded (where industrialization hides a rotting core).

  • The Keep adapted into The Outpost: Set this on a fog-choked, contested frontier—such as an isolated British military fortification in the Khyber Pass, a bleak penal colony on a desolate island, or a remote industrial mining settlement in the Carpathian Mountains. The "Castellan" is a brutal colonial governor or a cold military official who turns a blind eye to the town's vices to maintain control.

  • The Caves The Industrial Catacombs / The Fissures of the Unfleshed: A vast labyrinth of steam-pipe tunnels, ancient subterranean ruins, and mining veins that branch out beneath the wilderness.

3. Reskinning B2 Factions for Steampunk-Horror

With superheroes on the board, the standard goblins and orcs need a massive upgrade to remain dangerous. They become rogue scientific experiments, anarchists with weird-science weaponry, and occult shock troops.

  • The Kobolds $\rightarrow$ The Scrap-Dregs: Misformed, desperate underground dwellers armed with crude, leaking steam-tech, chemical-dipped daggers, and scrap-metal traps. They fight dirty to compensate for the heroes' superpowers.

  • The Goblins & Hobgoblins $\rightarrow$ The Dynamiters & Radicals: A heavily militarized cell of nihilistic anarchists. They are armed with prototype Victorian firearms, Maxim guns, and unstable nitro-glycerine bombs. They view the "Keep" as a symbol of oppressive empire that must be leveled.

  • The Orcs & Gnolls $\rightarrow$ The Galvanized Thugs / Bio-Constructs: The muscle. These are massive, suture-scarred brutes created by a rogue Contraptionist or Mad Scientist hidden deeper in the complex. They have been augmented with clockwork pistons and chemical injectors, giving them the physical stats to go toe-to-toe with a Victorious Strongman.

  • The Cult of Evil Chaos $\rightarrow$ The Esoteric Order of the Iron Dawn: Located in the deepest caves. This is a high-society cabal of wealthy aristocrats from back home who have traveled to the frontier to worship an ancient, cosmic machine-god or eldritch entity.

4. Rewriting Iconic B2 Encounters

  • The Mad Scientist (Replacing the Evil Priest): The cult leader is a corrupted, high-level Magician or Contraptionist who has discovered an eldritch text. He is using Wretched-style Mesmerism to coordinate the Anarchists, the Scrap-Dregs, and the Galvanized Thugs into an army to seize the Fort.

  • The Minotaur $\rightarrow$ The Steam-Golem / The Boiler-Beast: Instead of a fantasy monster in a maze, the central brute of the upper caves is a rogue, steam-powered mining automaton lined with razor-sharp gears and overheating boilers, driven mad by an occult artifact welded to its chassis.

  • The Medusa $\rightarrow$ The Hypnotic Siren: An elite occult assassin utilizing advanced Wretched Mesmerism. Instead of turning heroes to stone physically, her hypnotic gaze instantly inflicts a severe Neurosis or catatonic paralysis on a failed Sanity check.

5. The Campaign Loop: Pulp vs. Grim Reality

The gameplay mirrors the classic B2 structure but shifts the tone dramatically:

  1. Investigation at Fort Malakoff: The heroes use Inquiry Agent or Vigilante skills to navigate the dark alleys, opium dens, and corrupt high-society salons of the Outpost, hunting down clues about cult infiltration.

  2. The Raid on the Catacombs: The heroes suit up in their capes, trench coats, or clockwork armor to assault the Caves. Combat is fast, cinematic, and explosive as superpowers clash with dynamite and bio-monstrosities.

  3. The Mental Toll: When the heroes return to the Outpost to recover, they aren't just resting—they are dealing with the psychological scars of the cosmic horrors they witnessed. They spend their wealth indulging in Wretched vices (absinthe, gambling, secret societies) to stave off madness, which triggers the Wretched Commandments to earn their Advancement/XP.

This creates a brilliant juxtaposition: the characters are larger-than-life pulp heroes in combat, but fragile, morally compromised, and desperate human beings once the gaslight fades.

Blending B2: The Keep on the Borderlands, Wretched Époque, and Victorious creates a distinct style of campaign: Gaslight "SuperMankind" Horror.

By layer-cakeing these systems, you are dropping street-level, Victorian-era superheroes, masked vigilantes, and supernatural investigators (Victorious) into a gritty, morally bankrupt, cosmic-horror conspiracy (Wretched Époque), using a classic, sandbox dungeon crawl layout (B2).

Because both Victorious (built on Troll Lord Games' SIEGE Engine/OSR framework) and Wretched Époque (built on d20 OSR) share a mechanical lineage with classic D&D, they mash together beautifully. The blueprint below outlines how to combine all three.

1. The Core Mechanical Integration

The challenge here is balancing the pulp heroism of Victorious with the lethal, sanity-draining grit of Wretched Époque.

  • The Character Engine (Victorious): Players build characters using the classes and superpower templates from Victorious (e.g., Vigilante, Contraptionist, Mesmerist, Strongman). They have the powers and the exceptional hit points required to survive an active warzone like the Caves of Chaos.

  • The Corruption & Sin Engine (Wretched): Overlay the Wretched Commandments and Sanity/Neurosis mechanics onto the characters. Sure, you are a "Paragon" with superhuman strength, but Thou Shalt Steal, Thou Shalt Kill, and Thou Shalt Give In To Vice. The PCs aren't boy scouts; they are flawed vigilantes whose powers might even stem from the very cosmic corruption they are investigating.

  • Resolution: Use the Victorious SIEGE Engine (Attribute checks against a Challenge Class) for physical feats, gadgets, and superhero combat, but use Wretched’s Sanity system whenever characters dive into the deeper occult horrors of the caves.

2. The Campaign World: "The Gilded & Grim Borderlands"

In Victorious, the GM selects an alignment for the setting. For this mashup, choose Grim (where the supernatural is terrifying and society is corrupt) and Gilded (where industrialization hides a rotting core).

  • The Keep $\rightarrow$ Fort Malakoff / The Outpost: Set this on a fog-choked, contested frontier—such as an isolated British military fortification in the Khyber Pass, a bleak penal colony on a desolate island, or a remote industrial mining settlement in the Carpathian Mountains. The "Castellan" is a brutal colonial governor or a cold military official who turns a blind eye to the town's vices to maintain control.

  • The Caves $\rightarrow$ The Industrial Catacombs / The Fissures of the Unfleshed: A vast labyrinth of steam-pipe tunnels, ancient subterranean ruins, and mining veins that branch out beneath the wilderness.

3. Reskinning B2 Factions for Steampunk-Horror

With superheroes on the board, the standard goblins and orcs need a massive upgrade to remain dangerous. They become rogue scientific experiments, anarchists with weird-science weaponry, and occult shock troops.

  • The Kobolds adapted into  The Scrap-Dregs: Misformed, desperate underground dwellers armed with crude, leaking steam-tech, chemical-dipped daggers, and scrap-metal traps. They fight dirty to compensate for the heroes' superpowers.

  • The Goblins & Hobgoblins  adapted into The Dynamiters & Radicals: A heavily militarized cell of nihilistic anarchists. They are armed with prototype Victorian firearms, Maxim guns, and unstable nitro-glycerine bombs. They view the "Keep" as a symbol of oppressive empire that must be leveled.

  • The Orcs & Gnolls adapted into The Galvanized Thugs / Bio-Constructs: The muscle. These are massive, suture-scarred brutes created by a rogue Contraptionist or Mad Scientist hidden deeper in the complex. They have been augmented with clockwork pistons and chemical injectors, giving them the physical stats to go toe-to-toe with a Victorious Strongman.

  • The Cult of Evil Chaos adapted into  The Esoteric Order of the Iron Dawn: Located in the deepest caves. This is a high-society cabal of wealthy aristocrats from back home who have traveled to the frontier to worship an ancient, cosmic machine-god or eldritch entity.

4. Rewriting Iconic B2 Encounters

  • The Mad Scientist (Replacing the Evil Priest): The cult leader is a corrupted, high-level Magician or Contraptionist who has discovered an eldritch text. He is using Wretched-style Mesmerism to coordinate the Anarchists, the Scrap-Dregs, and the Galvanized Thugs into an army to seize the Fort.

  • The Minotaur adapted into The Steam-Golem / The Boiler-Beast: Instead of a fantasy monster in a maze, the central brute of the upper caves is a rogue, steam-powered mining automaton lined with razor-sharp gears and overheating boilers, driven mad by an occult artifact welded to its chassis.

  • The Medusa adapted into  The Hypnotic Siren: An elite occult assassin utilizing advanced Wretched Mesmerism. Instead of turning heroes to stone physically, her hypnotic gaze instantly inflicts a severe Neurosis or catatonic paralysis on a failed Sanity check.

5. The Campaign Loop: Pulp vs. Grim Reality

The gameplay mirrors the classic B2 structure but shifts the tone dramatically:

  1. Investigation at Fort Malakoff: The heroes use Inquiry Agent or Vigilante skills to navigate the dark alleys, opium dens, and corrupt high-society salons of the Outpost, hunting down clues about cult infiltration.

  2. The Raid on the Catacombs: The heroes suit up in their capes, trench coats, or clockwork armor to assault the Caves. Combat is fast, cinematic, and explosive as superpowers clash with dynamite and bio-monstrosities.

  3. The Mental Toll: When the heroes return to the Outpost to recover, they aren't just resting—they are dealing with the psychological scars of the cosmic horrors they witnessed. They spend their wealth indulging in Wretched vices (absinthe, gambling, secret societies) to stave off madness, which triggers the Wretched Commandments to earn their Advancement/XP.

This creates a brilliant juxtaposition: the characters are larger-than-life pulp heroes in combat, but fragile, morally compromised, and desperate human beings once the gaslight fades.