![]() Cover by
Steve Purcell, 1984. | |
Designers | Keith Herber |
---|---|
Publishers | Chaosium |
Publication | 1984, 2004 |
Genres | Horror |
Systems | Basic Role-Playing |
ISBN | 0-933635-05-2 |
Trail of Tsathogghua [1] is a Horror tabletop role-playing adventure, written by Keith Herber, with art by Steve Purcell, and published by Chaosium in 1984. It was released in PDF format in 2004. [2] Three horror adventures set in Greenland, Canada and Grand Rapids, Michigan for Call of Cthulhu, based on author Clark Ashton Smith's god-like literary creation Tsathoggua.
Trail of Tsathogghua is an adventure in which the player characters investigate a stone slab and its unusual markings which was discovered inside a glacier in Greenland by Eskimos. [3]
Rick Swan reviewed Trail of Tsathogghua in The Space Gamer No. 75. [3] Swan commented that "If you've been happily devouring Chaosium's Cthulhu releases, rest assured that Trail of Tsathogghua is another top-notch effort. This is roleplaying at its finest, and I'm ready for the next one. And who knows . . . maybe it'll even have a title I can pronounce." [3]
![]() Cover by
Steve Purcell, 1984. | |
Designers | Keith Herber |
---|---|
Publishers | Chaosium |
Publication | 1984, 2004 |
Genres | Horror |
Systems | Basic Role-Playing |
ISBN | 0-933635-05-2 |
Trail of Tsathogghua [1] is a Horror tabletop role-playing adventure, written by Keith Herber, with art by Steve Purcell, and published by Chaosium in 1984. It was released in PDF format in 2004. [2] Three horror adventures set in Greenland, Canada and Grand Rapids, Michigan for Call of Cthulhu, based on author Clark Ashton Smith's god-like literary creation Tsathoggua.
Trail of Tsathogghua is an adventure in which the player characters investigate a stone slab and its unusual markings which was discovered inside a glacier in Greenland by Eskimos. [3]
Rick Swan reviewed Trail of Tsathogghua in The Space Gamer No. 75. [3] Swan commented that "If you've been happily devouring Chaosium's Cthulhu releases, rest assured that Trail of Tsathogghua is another top-notch effort. This is roleplaying at its finest, and I'm ready for the next one. And who knows . . . maybe it'll even have a title I can pronounce." [3]