![]() Lastly, I will cover the extra unexpected bits which weren’t promised to us during the main campaign but we received anyway. Next, I will cover minor accessories and stretch goals, including items cancelled or only provided as PDFs, most of which are random bits of ephemera which don’t represent especially significant additions to the product range. These are all significant products in their own right which have filled out the 7th Edition product line as distributed to game stores as well as Kickstarter backers. Next up, I will cover major supplements and accessories that were part of the actual Kickstarter itself – Cthulhu Through the Ages, Pulp Cthulhu, the card decks, the Nameless Horrors adventure collection, and the Field Guide. These seem to be offered as central aspects of the game line. OK, this is a complex enough deal here that I think I had best order the reviews of individual items carefully.įirst off, I am going to review the core game books, and the Keeper screen and the stuff that came as part of that package, and the quickstart rules. Now, at last, we can turn to actually looking at the delivered goods. In part 1 of this article (which contains the usual note on methodology which you should read to understand where I’m coming from), I recounted the hideous gestation period of this project, which saw the old Krank regime at Chaosium departing in favour of new blood from Moon Design Publications, with elder gods Greg Stafford and Sandy Petersen supervising things. ![]() This article was previously published on Ferretbrain due to the imminent closure of that site, I’m moving it over here so that it can remain available. ![]()
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