The Net Book of Plots



Volume 1

Editors Note:

This book was converted to a new format, made for conversion to HTML

and for indexing. My enormous thanks go to Alexander Forst

(alex@complang.tuwien.ac.at) and to Soh Kam Hung (h.soh@trl.telstra.com.au)

for their dedicated efforts in designing this tagging scheme and help in

tagging and editing the plots. I hope all enjoy this new collection and

dont forget to tell the authors how it went if you run a plot.

———————————————————————–

One-Liners

One-line

Fantasy

Any

Any

Lich

Dragon

-Help the local good, but dying, wizard to attain lichdom.

-Prevent evil nasties from overcoming the local good lich.

-Find the lost good lich and get help to cure a generic plague.

-Go to kill the lich only to find it’s actually good.

-Save the Dragon from the Evil Princess.

=========================================================================



The Bankrupt Alchemist

One-line

Fantasy

Quest

Any

An alchemist hires the party to recover a shipment of supplies that

was hijacked enroute. If he doesn’t get them back, he faces bankruptcy.

The Punished Thief

One-line

Fantasy

Quest

Affliction

Any

Caught while stealing from a mage, the thief in the party is sent on a

geas to steal an artifact from a colleague as punishment.

Unknown Protection

One-line

Any

Guarding

Any

You are assigned to protect a person, but don’t let them know you’re

protecting them. Defer to them in all things, but don’t let them know

you’re deferring to them.

What have you got?

One-line

Any

Fantasy

Investigation

Affliction

Any

An obscure sect of a dark church is seeking the eight necessary

parts/items used in summoning a sleeping demon. Just so happens that one

of the PCs inherited one of the items (it should be something innocuous

like a simple pendant with inscriptions) from a dead relative.

Who is Who?

One-line

Any

Investigation

Intrigue

Any

Doppelganger

Shapechanger

The party uncovers a plot to replace high-ranking officials with exact

lookalikes (shapechangers). Nice little conspiracy theory action. Which

one of your trusted patrons is really an evil doppleganger? Who can you

trust? Who will believe you? Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean

someone ISN’T out to get you.

The Renegade Wizard

One-line

Fantasy

Quest

Any

The party is hired by the local Mage Guild to find and capture (and/or

kill) a renegade wizard who is breaking Guild laws (selling magic items

to criminals, assassinating the previous Guildmaster, attempting to

assassinate the current Guildmaster, etc.). Local law enforcement is not

involved because the Guild likes to solve its problems internally.

Good Lich vs. Evil Lich

Jeff Vogel

One-line

Fantasy

Investigation

Quest

Urban

Lich

There’s a battle going on between a good lich and one or more evil

liches. The players have to protect a town that’s caught in the

crossfire. The lich need not even appear in the campaign; you could just

have dark noxious clouds blotting out the sun, undead armies marching

back and forth, dragons eating the livestock, and other bits of large-

scale magical fallout. Or, if you want to bring the lich in personally,

you could send the party on a quest to plead with the lich to stop the

war, or to fight elsewhere.

Improvised Defenses

Phil Scadden

P.Scadden@gns.cri.nz



Short

Any

Any

Guarding

Castle

Dungeon

Cave

PCs get caught in hole (old castle, cave?) with overwhelming numbers

against them. They have some warning and a time period when they will be

relieved if they can hold on. Idea is that PC improvise with what is

around and hold out for siege. Turns the GMing on its head. They have a

plan of defenses, not the GM, and GM leads his baddies against it. Players spring their surprises in traps etc. Must have a map agreement on

what can be done in time available. Players tend to cheat outrageously

but great fun for all concerned with a change of pace for both GM and

players.

Collection of VERY short descriptions

One-line

Any

Any

Urban

Here’s a bunch of REAL short descriptions of adventure ideas that work

well in a city: Second-story jobs, picking a pocket and finding a map, searching the

tunnels under the city for a tomb or catacombs, competing with the

Thieves’ Guild, smuggling arms into the city, spying on foreign

officials, helping an orphan fight against cruel thugs, racing another

party in a city-wide search for a magical artifact, investigating a

corrupt church, wooing a noble lady, searching for your weapons

instructor who has been abducted by a rival, trying to get apprenticed to

a truly weird mage, etc.

The False Good Lich

Jeff Vogel

Short

Fantasy

Investigation

Urban

Invert the “bad-lich-turns-out-to-be-good” idea: A really sinister

lich would probably love to have people convinced that he’s just a

kindly, helpful old gent. Suppose one such lich has been working hard on

his image for a century or two…he saves people from natural disasters

(which he created himself), gives out magical gifts (which are cursed in

some nonobvious way), kisses babies, the whole shebang. The players come

to suspect him of actually being evil (“Hey…two centuries old? That’s

before Second Edition came out! He must be evil!”) and have to stop him.

But first, they have to convince the locals, who love the old guy, that

they’ve been wrong about him all this time. (“Gandalf? The old coot with

the fireworks? Evil? Get outta here.”)

The Absent Minded Wizard

Jeff Vogel

Short

Fantasy

Quest

Any

Lich

Go to kill the evil lich, get captured and put at his/its mercy only

to have it ask “Why are you bothering me?” Apparently it was/is a good

wizard who got kind of absent minded as he died and sort of drifted off

into lichdom without noticing. Since he’s quite powerful, none of the

various local monsters that he’s geased into serving him have given him

any trouble, nor have they pointed out the problem of his lichdom… Play the lich as an absent minded old british gentleman, sort of

surprised that anybody would want to kill him and having considerable

trouble grasping the idea that he’s a lich. A few accidental pats on the

back while the players are held by some sort of spell should be amusing. P.S. If you can’t figure out how to set things up so a lich can

capture and hold helpless a bunch of PCs, SHAME on you! Liches are

something like 30th level M-U/Clerics, not to mention the hordes of

followers, servants, summoned monsters and demons and elementals and the

like…

Find the Right Man

Short

Any

Quest

Guarding

Wilderness

Desert

A caravan is travelling through the desert. The party is hired to

capture a man who is in the caravan, and it must be done quietly, so that

nobody else knows. They are given the man’s name, and the fact that he

is a mage, but no other information about him. The catch is that the

caravan consists of ten wagons, with at least thirty or forty guards

(when I used this adventure, the caravan was travelling through Brin

Pass, a VERY dangerous area), and everyone’s wearing the standard desert

gear: a white robe, with a hood and a veil. This makes it very difficult

to tell who’s who. The party should investigate the wagons. If they do,

they will find that only one wagon doesn’t have an obvious reason for

existance (i.e. belongs to the caravan master, carries supplies, or

carries cargo). A man is living in that wagon, and only comes out to get

food. Raiding the wagon will obviously cause noise and commotion, two

things to be strenuously avoided. This is a very difficult scenario;

I’ve run it twice, and both times the party failed. Once the guy got

killed and the party was arrested and held in custody by the caravan

master, and once the guy ran away and the party lost him.

The Insane Dragon

Short

Fantasy

Quest

Startup

Any

Dragon



REWARD

(very large sum mentioned – for your world)

BRAVE Adventurers Needed!

To Kill the DRAGON of Eastmark, Kingdom of Arcadia.

(fill in location and kingdom name as necessary).

Apply at the Royal Palace.

All that made that adventure interesting (aside from the nearly 1000

mile overland journey, differing cultures, side-adventures, et al) was

the fact that the “DRAGON of Eastmark” was a golden dragon, and the party

was mostly Good characters. The Gold had become insane when humans had

attacked and slain his mate, and spent his time laying waste to the local

kingdom, which finally began posting notes (after the first three

expeditions failed) to hire outsiders to come in and try to destroy the

genius-intelligence, magic-using and physically awe-inspiring dragon.

Since the tattered posting does not mention that the “DRAGON” is a Gold,

the party had already travelled the very long way, and then had a lot of

discussion before finally deciding that grief did not excuse the dragon’s

excesses, and that he must be destroyed.

The Election

Medium

Any

Intrigue

Urban

Most campaigns have a player who loves to play politics, involve her

in this. Assume for the sake of argument that the goal is the office of

district attorney. Enigma has ambitions to be the DA, the chief force for

justice in Gotham. He is opposed by Buck Stevens, son of the founder of

Stevens Brick Co., which is the second largest employer in Gotham. Darla

Stevens is in love with the Enigma’s alter ego, Bing Strawberry, and

keeps telling him he ought to get in politics and make sure her slimy

brother doesn’t achieve political office … etc etc etc you get the

idea. Some complications that suggest themselves are: a) Enigma discovers that candidates must turn in petitions with 1000

names in order to register for the election, and he blew it off so long

that he needs to get them all *tonight*, to be turned in at 8 am tomorrow

morning (where do you get 1000 valid signatures at this time of the

night?) b) the primaries are a good time for enemies to show up with

embarassing photos in hand c) election season can be complicated by reporters who circle,

vulture-like, over the troubled campaign HQ, and by a televised public

debate between the candidates d) the election and the aftermath — did the PC win? What will happen

to the party now? What if the press finds out about the vampires the

party staked a few years ago in the abandoned buildings in the ghetto?

what about the crook who recognizes Enigma’s voice and threatens to

publicise his secret identity?

The Lich vs. Evil

Jeff Vogel

Medium

Fantasy

Investigation

Urban

Dungeon

Lich

The lich is a good wizard who was forced to become a lich in order to

remain around to counteract some powerful evil force. He/it spent the

last years of his life directly restraining some powerful evil demon

(make it something not quite physical, for example a demon of madness

that manifests by making victims psychotically insane…evil human

sacrifice cults start springing up all over the place and random people

on the road start attacking out of the blue with no provocation, sort of

like…gasp! PCs!) So the Lich is at the bottom of some dungeon complex using spells and

powers that are so far beyond the party’s understanding that they can’t

perceive them, to hold the evil imprisoned. He/it is also keeping random

strangers from wandering in and interfering. After so long a time, the

lich just sort of drifted into undeath without really noticing (keeping a

set of spells up constantly for years will do that to ya). The PCs

manage to get the drop on the Lich when he’s weakened and… a) the evil gets loose. b) the good lich’s wizardly spirit manifests before it moves on to

another, higher plane, and commends them for their actions in releasing

him from his unwitting servitude to to undeath. He also says, “Well, I’m

off to my retirement in elysium, the job’s all yours, boys!” c) If you’re feeling charitable, give the players an inkling of what’s

going to happen, or some magic to help them to combat the madness demon

(personal protection against the madness would be nice, although you

could have lots of fun with blackouts and sleepwalking and the like if

the PCs were as susceptible as anyone else). If you’re not feeling

charitable, have them find out the HARD way what the ol’ spook’s

mysterious comments were in reference to. Maybe stick a scroll (that

must be laboriously deciphered) in with the treasure, describing the

madness demon and perhaps some ways that it can be fought.

The False Vampire

Medium

Horror

Quest

Investigation

Affliction

Urban

Vampire

The party is on some sort of extended vacation, staying in an inn/bar.

A frequent visitor is a tall, dark, suave, charming man dressed in formal

evening wear, accompanied by a different woman every time. He comes in

every 2nd or 3d night. He always orders bloody marys and doesn’t drink

them. He is quite wealthy and very pleasant. There is something almost

magnetic about him. He has fascinating eyes. (DM should do everything

he can to make it believable that he could be a vampire, despite the

unusual setting (city)). Either he charms (charm gaze) a female party member and takes her

away, or a beautiful dancer comes in looking for her missing sister, who

was last seen coming to this bar with the tall,dark gentleman. She tries

to convince a party member to help her look for her sister being

seductive about it. Both are eventually charmed by the Gentleman. In any

case, make a party member disappear into this Gentleman’s lair. He has a gothic style house in a nice part of town. There is nothing

obviously amiss here. If the party asks around, this guy is a pillar of

society, a kind, philanthropic fellow, well respected by his peers. He

runs a magic shoppe. He is a mid-level wizard with a head for business,

who gave up adventuring to start a business. His house looks just like a vampires house might look (black velvet

curtains, etc). He has a private sanctuary inn his basement, the only

entrance to which is a rune-encrusted door (trapped or enchanted in any

way appropriate to the party). He supposedly has a chapel down there,

but really has a large complex, where various vampiric rituals, and all-

night parties take place. All of the missing people have been charmed

into believing that they have been turned into slave vampires. They will

aid their master if at all possible. The party must break in and forcibly take their companion away from

this place. Again, make the evidence somewhat contradictory whether the

Gentleman is a vampire or not. Most evidence should say yes, but make

some things contradict this. The gentleman has a cursed ring of the vampire, a powerful evil

artifact which makes him believe he is a vampire and gives him many of

the powers of a vampire, as well as some of the drawbacks. Make him

dislike things that cause a vampire harm, but don’t make it obvious

whether is works. Make him have a reflection, but have a dead vampire

victim show up. Etc. At the end, have the party realize that he is not

a vampire at all but rather is a cursed fellow with an intrinsically good

nature.

The Magic Dwindles

Medium

Fantasy

Quest

Magic

Any

Dragon

The magic energies (derived from outer space :-)) are dwindling,

slowly but surely. At this time only the most advanced magicians have

noticed that their most powerful spells are beginning to fail more and

more frequently. My explanation is that there is three kinds of magic in the world: 1) White magic: creative magic, healing, alteration. The white-

magicians are generally the good guys, mostly elves, priests (Gods of

Light) and fairies. 2) Black Magic: Necromatics, destructive magic, summoning. The black-

magicians are generally the bad guys, mostly humans, black-elves, trolls

and the demons & devils. 3) The Old Magic: The magic that rules it all; but now almost a

forgotten art, only used by the extinct race of Wizards (yes, wizards are

a distinct race in my world) and the dragons. Unfortunately the magic energies are only dwindling for the white-

magicians, since the black-magicians derive their power from the negative

dimension and have opened the gate, so that negative energies flow freely

into this dimension blocking the white-magic. The objective is to close the gate, before even the simplest white-

magic is rendered useless and impotent. This cannot be done with the use

of white-magic, but only with the use of the Old-Magic (use of black-

magic will only worsen the situation). The problem is to find someone or something that have access to the

Old-Magic and is sufficiently skilled in this art, to reverse the

situation. (this is what the players must think is the objective for them

or initially be let to believe). The real problem is that the division between black- and white-magic

is artificial, and will always lead to this problem sooner or later, and

only the Old-magic can prevail (since the white- and black-magic is

derived from the Old-magic, but the separation will corrupt both

branches). So the players are to be the prophets of the new world order

of magic (or front-runners), after being taught the basics of this by the

only Wizard left on the planet (unless they destroy him in their

folly!!!). But to find the information that there is such a creature

alive should be very difficult and only referenced by vague hints in old

legends etc. My suggestion for the Wizard is that the group can find (after lengthy

research) the place he is rumored to live (e.g. inside a volcano). And

when they arrive he is there, but frozen inside a huge iceblock, by a

pair of Ice-Dragons that he once forced to humiliate themselves to assist

him, and this is their revenge. Once every 100 year they let him free

for a day to scorn him, and then deep-freeze him again. And they will

not take it lightly if the players are to take away their sweet revenge.

================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================

Long Summaries

—————

=========================================================================



Traders

Phil Scadden

P.Scadden@gns.cri.nz



Long

Any

Any

Guarding

Exploration

Any

In my experience, PCs will guard a hundred caravans before it occurs

to them that trading on their own account could be more fun and

lucrative. Part of this is I guess a lack of interest in the “tie-downs”

that trading could imply and in the boring detail of buying and selling.

There are however some good advantages. It encourages a sense of group

identity – all partners of Fast and Risky Quality Merchant Co. – and can

have some great “plot lines”. It also changes the world outlook when

strangers are first thought of as “Hey CUSTOMERS!” rather then “Arm up,

enemy approaching”. If you ever need to lure your players in a

particular direction then a rumour of profit should be easy to manage. PCs can be tempted into the business a bit at a time. For example: At

conclusion of other business a friendly tribesman notes “Your people make

good iron. If you are back this way, bring us one of your fine steel

blades and I’ll trade two snow leopard skins for it”. $$$$ in characters

eyes! The trick is to avoid the boring bits. 1) Give them good NPC warehouse men etc that they really can trust

except perhaps once, later rather than sooner, for a plot. If they feel

they can safely leave a load in trusted hands for a fling then so much

the better. 2) Have NPC’s offer to retail so they are doing the wholesale transit

stuff and dont get lost in selling detail. “Hey, I’ll take all of this

stuff you can get here at xxxx – leave you free to get another load

moving eh?”. Failing that declare, “after 2 hours you are sold out for

xxxx reward”. Forget detailing trading except for casual encounters with

a train. 3) Forget the unwieldy caravan bit – encourage them into the small

mule train style. They’ll have more fun. “Yup, de mules certainly de

way. You see dat caravan train – takes 2 month to move dat round de Gap.

Sheez dat costs! I ken move dis stuff over Hawk Pass on mules in meebe

tree weeks on a good run.” 4) Emphasize the exploratory opening up of new country rather then the

big-haul routes. If they start into going back and forth on the same

lucrative route too often, send in a big merchant with a massive caravan

to drop the prices. They’ll thank you for it in terms of game interest. Some typical sorts of plots. -Guarding the goods train. They’ll really do it in earnest.

-Spying on the side under their legit cover.

-Involvement in local politics

-Exploration

-Building of fortified outposts and defense thereof

-Very dangerous goods! (i.e. magic)

-Recovery of stolen goods

-Dealing with a protection racket

-High risk winter route to relieve a starving outpost. One potential problem is the possibilty of too much coin. Relax.

Early in their career get them used to the idea that high profits come

from real high risks and sometimes its better alive poor then rich and

dead. (“You are surrounded by 20 young mounted warrior louts looking for

trouble. They request ‘presents’ with broad grins. All are bow armed

(and they’ve been training since 3 years old)”. Remember that elaborate

trading has high overheads in paying NPCs etc. If there is somehow got a

money excess then introduce credit offered by bankers – on risky routes

they will sooner or later lose a train bought on borrowed money and the

overheads will put them on the back foot!

The Wizard’s Game

Long

Fantasy

Exploration

Startup

Dungeon

A powerful wizard and his apprentice (also powerful) are after an

artifact which is carefully guarded (by various traps, magics, etc) in a

labyrinth. Put in there years ago by various leaders and since

forgotten. They cannot think of a brute force way to get it, but they

are clever enough to have figured out some loopholes which will allow a

low-level bunch of adventurers with various characteristics (tailor to

your players, one obstacle per player or combination of players) to get

in safely and escape with the artifact. The wizard cooks up a long term plan (perhaps he is an elf) to obtain

such a party of adventurers. This plan is subtle and tricky as that is

the style of this wizard (he likes to manipulate and deceive people, like

a game). He has his apprentice disguise himself as an old

storyteller/bard who takes a liking to a young pc or npc and tells

stories of the PC/NPC’s grandfather who stopped a great evil by

sacrificing himself, sealing the evil and himself into a labyrinth (yes

THE labyrinth). The grandfather was lost with his family sword and more

importly an amulet which signified the family’s power and destiny as

heroes of the realm. Various stories of the grandfather, sword, and

amulet should convince the PC/NPC to go after this stuff. The storyteller also tells of the PC/NPC’s family talent for dowsing,

and helps him cut a dowsing rod and casts various covert magics to make

the character believe he has such power. Eventually he replaces the

dowsing rod with an identical duplicate which is set up to find the other

characters who are needed to get the artifact back (yes, the party). The

character recruits or finds the party and they go and get the amulet

back. The wizard and apprentice appear at the exit from the labyrinth and

reveal the hoax (part of the fun), demanding the amulet. The apprentice

is either given or takes the amulet for the wizard, then gets a greedy

look in his eyes and makes to put it on. The wizard vaporizes the

apprentice and takes the amulet. You might want to put some sort of treasure in this labyrinth so the

party won’t be too pissed that they have been deceived.

The wizard invites the characters to join in his “games” (see below). If they decline, he does various things to convince them to comply. If

that fails, he cooks up another complicated deception to get them to join

in. He will not force them to join, unless he feels that he has

sufficiently deceived them.

————————————————————————-

The party is asked to go on a quest by an older man, a merchant, to

save his daughter’s life. She has the dreaded Indigo Flu, usually fatal.

The only known cure is to make a medicine out of the Caiman stone, an odd

fruit that grows out of a mineral/plant hybrid only in the most obscure

places. The party is referred to the sage who told the merchant of this

cure, for more info. The sage is of course an agent of the Wizard of the

previous segment. He cooks up a quest designed to bring the party eventually to a spot

at which the wizard has planted a “Caiman Bush”. The Caiman stone and

the Indigo flu are complete fiction. The party will not find anybody

else who knows about these even if they ask around. The Caiman Bush is

an elaborate magic item, which will teleport the party into the Wizard’s

lair. The wizard will then inform them that the only exit from his lair

is to win the game. The game is versus another party which has been in suspended animation

waiting for opponents. (Losers of the game are suspended and continue to

play until they win, whereupon they are released). Make the game

whatever you wish. You should maybe allow the party to acquire some limited magic items

from the game, so they won’t be quite so pissed to have been manipulated.

Riddle Maps

Phil Scadden

P.Scadden@gns.cri.nz



Long

Any

Any

Any

Riddle-maps (idea based on “song-maps” that the old time Maori people

used to describe journeys). Basically sage-type person translates a song-map that someone earlier

had written down in its original form. Lots of scope for errors. It’s a

translation so no need for poetry. Sage identifies one point in song as

being nearby and wants the map followed. Fit into your world. The

characters can only “see” what you describe so very careful descriptive

work is necessary but red herrings can be fun. An example of full riddle map.

“here the VALATAS people live above the halls the congress of tide and

land, thence two noon suns cross your face and take you to the silver

path. Up the path you onward go past three cold threads in summer still,

then into the shadows of RAMATIS realm till the path is crossed at the

weeping rock. Shortly the path splits at last, so turn your face and

walk two sunsets till RAMATIS greets with open arms again. The laughing

braid just in the shades, leads high to towers of earth, and there above

the last falling tears, find the gates of night. No moon to light the

halls of night but ochre stars will mark a path to those who walk in

here. Pity you who have no meat to sacrifice to the Old Ones hidden

within. Once met and your offering received dash for life to the halls

of teeth. Beyond there lies the ribbon of red, rushing fast to meet the

sun again, then bounding down past flaxen steps, to greet the ghost in

its bed of gold.” Translation:

Capitalized bits are phonetic translation of unknown words. The sage

has identified VALATAS so begin here. The party walks towards the noon sun for 2 days and finds…

GM: “Towards end of second day you climb to top of ridge and look down

on large river valley with the river glistening in the sun.” Following it upriver past three side-creeks that would wet you even in

summer you get to woods. RAMATIS is the old people’s God of forests but

the PC’s or sage wouldn’t know this. They should easily guess though

when you announce forest in the way. The river hits a gorge and a

crossing is forced where a waterfall comes down a cliff face. After that

the river divides at two big tributaries and you take the west one for

two days. Should encounter woods again…however, the puzzle can be

sharpened by woods that are no longer present (keep talking about NEW

building in the area – ruins of a saw mill ??? etc). A quick flowing

tributary is traced up into the mountains and above the top waterfall is

a cave mouth. A path through the cave is marked by ochre crosses on the

floor but it is also the lair of monster worms that fall on any meat.

The travellers of old would carry a sheep up and run like hell for the

cave of stalagmites (which block the worm) while it is devoured. Hope

the PC have something ready…torch light will shortly show an

underground river flowing the other way (no more ochre) which will lead

to high mountain basin. Geologically an inlier of gold-bearing basement

capped by limestone. Problem – it exits over a sheer bluff and the rope

ladder has long since rotted away. The creek joins a larger creek with

the disconcerting habit of disappearing an hour or two after rain (the

“ghost”) leaving a dry bed. And yes, this is based on real place in NZ.

The creeks are gold-bearing if PC ready to dig for it the hard way.

Remnants of digging all over the show. You get the general idea. Quite a bit of work and you can lead

characters by the nose through it if so inclined. Mis-translations can

also help.

The Mages’ Contest

Long

Fantasy

Magic

Dungeon

Every ten years, the Mages’ Guild holds a contest. The prize of the

contest should be left fairly vague, unless one of your PC’s is a high-

ranking member of the Guild…I usually use some statement about

“material considerations…well, it’s politics mostly…” However, since

Guild mages tend to be not particularly active types, the contest is

structured as follows: each mage hires a group of adventurers (here’s

where the PC’s come in), who then compete for the prize in a maze set up

and run by the Guild. The party should be hired by a mage, who tells

them basically the information above, plus the number of other groups

competing (I usually use four groups total, since in my maze they tend to

meet up at the end for a final battle, and dealing with more NPC’s than

that would get hellish). The mage gives each PC a magical “token”;

basically just a little one-use magic item. The tokens can have effects

like Levitate (for a duration), Light (ditto), Invisibility (as the

spell); just go through the PH and pick out spells to use. Make up a

maze to put the party though, and don’t forget that several other groups

are doing this at the same time! The way I run it is that I have a map

of a maze, with four relatively distinct paths to a final room. They do

cross over, but not very often. Each has several large empty rooms on

the map, and some marked spots in the corridors. Then I have a list of

rooms to use, and corridor tricks, and I just insert whichever ones I

feel like when they come to a room or a corridor spot. The four groups

race through the maze, and the objective is to find a large flashing gem.

I usually set it up so that when the party reaches the last room (where

the gem is), most of the other groups arrive at the same time. If the

party tries to hang back and let them fight it out, I have some of the

NPC’s start going for the gem. Remember that this was set up by a Mages’

Guild, so you can put in almost anything you want…some examples of

rooms I use are: 1) The room has a chasm cutting it in two. There is another door on

the far side, and a bridge across the chasm. (The chasm is actually an

illusion, but falling in will take the PC out of the contest) On the

bridge, there are two “knights”. These are merely animated suits of

armor, and they have orders to prevent anyone from crossing the chasm.

They will react predictably to actions by the PC’s, and so can be lured

into traps; for example, a thief tries to climb across, one of the

knights moves to block him, the party tosses oil onto the bridge where

the knight would stand, then the thief goes back. The knight walks back

and slips in the oil. Make the bridge very narrow and no handrails. 2) Another room with a chasm, but this one has a maze of invisible

paths crossing it. The party would have to move very slowly, feeling

their way along and probably mapping the maze as well. Therefore, you

put a monster (I usually use a nonafel, or cat-o’-nine-tails, from the

Fiend Folio, or else something called an amorph hopper which I made up)

on the bridges to mess them up. Let the monster leap infallibly from one

spot to another (it knows the maze perfectly), or else let it fly. 3) A circular room with a pillar in the center. As soon as one person

enters the room, tell them that they see the door slam behind them and

the room begins to spin. They are plastered against the outer wall by

the centrifugal force, and are slowly being crushed. Then send them out

of the room, and tell the other players that they see the guy enter the

room, and then throw himself against the outer wall. It’s an illusion,

of course, and the other players can do whatever they want, but whatever

they do, the trapped character will interpret it as something that would

be happening, or else just something weird happens and he can’t figure

out why. For example: they tried slapping the “trapped” character across

the face. He felt the blow, but had no idea where it came from.

However, there’s a catch: the crushing is real. After a little while,

ribs begin cracking…the idea is to try to get the “trapped” character

to disbelieve his surroundings.

Good or Bad?

Long

Fantasy

Exploration

Investigation

Urban

Dungeon

Lich

The PC’s have been meandering around differant continents, and they

wind up at this town. The people of this town are very suppressed, and

do not like strangers. It seems as though the strangers they have dealt

with in the past are pretty dangerous. There is however a thriving community in this town…centered around a

magic users guild. I admit, a very rare thing indeed. As the PC’s begin to find out things about this town, they find out

some of the following things: 1) A powerful MU “owns the town” whether by money or power nobody

knows. 2) The town government is set up similar to a company: mayor at the

top, and vice presidents below him each in charge of some community

welfare. This group of people votes on decisions concerning law,

including trials. 3) There are one or two members from “the guild” on the council. 4) Some others of the council are suspected of being influenced to

abstain or cast a certain vote. 5) Every three months people with handicaps, the aged, and the dying

are removed from this town. 6) The town is located at the base of a cliff against the sea. The

only way to the top is a dangerous road with several hairpin turns. 7) Criminals are put to work mining a roadway through the cliff wall

up to the surface above. 8) The rocks from the mining are quarried in blocks and are valued in

some lands for building. The rock is very hard, and has a uniform black

color. If the party tries to find out what happens to those who get taken

away, they will find they are taken to a dead volcano, with a large

valley inside. This valley does not go through seasons, and the trees

are fruit trees, which always bear fruit. There is a portal into this

valley. The portal of mourning. It opens up every three months on the

soltice dates. Can you guess what time of day? At sunrise. Written on

the archway of the portal is the purpose of the portal, valley, and since

it is old and worn, when the portal was dicovered thirty years ago there

was a loss of translation of the portal of “The Morning.” There is an evening portal too. But that one is the entrance to an

old abandoned dwarven kingdom. It opens up every night. Each night,

undead skeletons emerge with two tasks. Gather fruit. Look for

newcomers, and “welcome” them to shelter. Skeletons will try to capture

anyone alive with nets. Inevitably the PC’s will want to go dungeoning and kill off hoards of

skeletons, and free lots of supressed people. Insert your own dungeon in

this part or use a prefab. Eventually, they will meet the lich in the dungeon. He will ask

several questions about why they killed the skeletons. Now the poor

people will starve… and so on and so forth. It will be increasingly

aware that the lich is a good lich. The lich became a lich to forever

take care of the orchard. It turns out there is another lich. The Good lich is in fear of the

Bad one, who happens to live in the town… heading the MU guild. The

guild is a structure in which the Lich collects power, items, spells…it

is great if the party has an MU who joined the guild without knowing.

The guild is structured like a membership thing. Access to libraries is

based on level of membership. Level of membership changes based on

donations of magic items, artifacts, spells and of course money. The possibilities branch out from there… But the deal is to free the

good lich from the wrath of the bad. They could… 1) Infiltrate the guild to a level at which it will topple.

2) Kill the bad lich.

3) Ignore the Deal.

4) Rally the town.

5) Retrieve the good liches talisman from the bad one’s possesion. Any option is bound to piss someone off. Good or bad lich, or the 40

or so MU’s who have invested their life’s savings into the guild. But

think of all those magic items that must be in there.

The Sage’s Plan

Phil Scadden

P.Scadden@gns.cri.nz



Long

Any

Guarding

Intrigue

Any

Cave

Part 1: Chief honcho feeling old, needs to test suitability of daughter as

heir. A crafty sage NPC called to help. Sage’s plan: A honcho’s man will pretend to turn traitor and with

PC’s will kidnap daughter. (Big deal – everyone is cooperating). They

will tell daughter she is to write note saying father to come alone with

ransom. He will be bumped off by ambush and they will see daughter

confirmed as heir but she will take orders from rival evil honcho. They

have permission to scare her with anything short of real torture. She

passes test if she refuses to write or finds a way to warn, or manages an

escape. A largish group is hired as daughter normally well protected and

PC will really be acting as a guard and protect her whatever her

choices…Pretty boring easy money for players huh since all set up? Catch:

The man chosen to play traitor really is a traitor in pay of uncle.

The opportunity to dispose of daughter and become heir is seized. The

traitor will suggest a cave in isolated area (which just happens to be

moderately fortifiable – not by design; he just likes the isolation) as

place for the hold-out and the father (anxious to be fully informed)

agrees. PCs may have a better idea but unlikely they will be in a place

unknown to the traitor or father. Traitor is a coward and won’t attempt

on the life of the girl himself but will use any excuse to leave PCs with

girl. Uncle will bring large force to bear on the PCs to wipe her out.

(and them). Traitor to blame the PCs. The daughter:

Really a good choice. Will not at first agree but will grovel and

pretend submission. Will write note but encoded to warn. If no other

opportunity has arisen, the traitor will say he will take note. If the

players later tell her its a setup (when trouble begins), she will

demonstrate fine combat skills. Baddies:

Whatever number to test your PCs. Will (treacherously) offer free

passage if they will hand over girl. (PC’s may think the daughter

worthless and be tempted to hand her over – mine were! If they do, they

will not be allowed to leave alive since they are to be blamed with it.

Dead men tell no tales. Fortunately mine remembered orders to protect no

matter what and girl will reveal the actual contents of her note when she

realises the PC are on her side). The negotiation delay will give some

time for setting up defences if it occurs to players to hedge. Too bad

if they don’t.

If the PCs can hold out 2 days, a concerned father will arrive with

relieving force.

————————————————————————-

Part 2: [This was an extension as players grumbled about tiny pay (it was

supposed to be an easy job) and here the sage helps.] I made an earlier

post on the net frp conference on moral dilemmas and here is the detail. In reward for services, a sage offers this little test to a group of

PCs. This is a variation of the famous Prisoner Dilemma based on an

essay by Douglas Hofstadter in Metamagical Themas. This will work best

with a group that are really involved with their characters and have

played them for some time. Players given a counter which is red on one side, black on the other.

They are to hand it secretly to the sage either red side up or black side

up. They will be rewarded according to how all play. If a PC returns the piece BLACK side up he/she gets:

For every other player turning in a RED side: A Big reward.

For every other player turning in a BLACK side: Nothing or very small If a PC returns the piece RED side up he/she gets:

For every other player turning in a RED side: A moderate reward

For every other player turning in a BLACK side: Only a small reward It is important the player really understand the reward system before

they make the choice. It is also very important that they can’t discuss

with each other what they will do and the returns are made in secret.

When I did it, I had the sage claiming (quite wrongly) he could magically

increase basic attributes and the matrix was: BLACK choice:

For every RED piece: Attribute of choice increased by one unit.

For every BLACK piece: nothing. RED choice:

For every RED piece: 50s in money

For every BLACK piece: 5s in money The advantage of offering an attribute change, is that to the players

(more than the PCs) it was a very real temptation to offer BLACK. Of

course, if they all chose black, nobody would get anything. If only one

chose red, that player would be fairly annoyed while the rest get one

attribute bumped up. If you were the only player to choose black, then

you sit very pretty…the details of this dilemma are well discussed by

Hofstadter. He tried it for real money on his friends, here’s your

chance to do the same. For once, the game is as interesting if the

player is trying to choose for a PC or doing it for him/herself. Of course, all hell breaks loose when the sage reveals he is lying and

just gives each a little more than if all had chosen red….. The GM should decide what reward matrix the game balance can handle

and whether the sage is honest, but do recommend the attribute lift as

bait.

Vendetta

Phil Scadden

P.Scadden@gns.cri.nz



Long

Any

Any

Intrigue

Any

One obvious device for side-line action is the good old vendetta, or

Even Orcs Have Mothers. Sooner or later, (sooner usually) PC’s will by

their actions have ruined someones plans, killed someone favourite

son/uncle/mother/etc and be due for a spot of revenge. This brings that

most dangerous of monsters up against the PCs – another thinking human.

If the GM looks at the world from the Offended One’s point of view, lots

of ways for to get even should suggest itself but here are few ideas.

Toss them into the game at the same time as other action – the vendetta

may become the main gaming focus but it shouldnt start that way. The hired thugs:

Predictable, common but not a bad opening shot anyway to start the

players going. Chances are this will tell the Offended One (OO) that it

wasn’t luck and these guys are good, while telling the PCs that life

isn’t that simple. The Trap:

Can be variation of above but much more creative ways around. How

about a desirable NPC that spends some time winning the PC’s confidence

(helping out on a couple of expeditions say?) before some suitably

creative putting the boot in? (from the unsubtle knife in back through

poison to “inadvertantly” leaving the wrong door open). Using their greed to send them against a strongly defended position

with a totally false plan about a supposed way in? (This got my players

past thinking of the vendetta as an sideline nuisance. They were mean and

cold and looking for blood when they returned). Or how about when the player are off to visit an unfamiliar culture,

making sure they get stunningly wrong information on cultural

sensitivities. (I havent play-tested this one, but I imagine could be

very good in a light-hearted game) My favourite is close to above: On an expedition to tribesmen, a

functionary they hadn’t much noticed offers them an ornate tribe weapon.

He/she tells them this is could be the key to getting close to the chief.

Tell any barbarian that they can talk to, that they got it by

“Melstilatuk” from a barbarian chief. He/she further explains that

melstilatuk (use your own languages) is a ceremonial battle and winning

against a chief accords them high status. In fact the functionary is the

in employ of OO and will quickly vanish. The weapon was obtained from

the father of current chief in a particularly cowardly ambush that the

tribesmen know about. If the PCs are curious about the word, a non-

tribal linguist can only translate it as “raven work”. A tribal linguist

if they even bother to find one, would them that melstilatuk is a

colloquial abusive term for corpse-robbing – regarded VERY badly by

tribesman. The weapon will be instantly recognised by the close

tribesmen to the chief and effect of the characters proudly reciting

their claim can be imagined. The Frame up:

Often PCs leave themselves very wide open to being framed and dealt to

wrongly by the law. This should make it a good option for the OO. The

trick to playing this so your PCs have a chance is to very thoroughly

think out how the OO sets it up – exactly who is talked to, bribed,

where, who could see it. PC’s will have to pursue what really happened

and they need good detail. I failed at this on first attempt really but

made up for it belately working in a lot of detail. The lying witness or false complaint: This is the simplist by far if

a bit obvious. Remember that if all or part of the PC party are free to

investigate then the OO is likely to take measures to protect the

implicated. My PCs actually utilised this. They figured the witness

would be guarded so looked out for the guards and followed them (and a

few false trails as well) to locate the OO. Doubles: Illusion magic to make the others look like the PC in a

witnessed crime? I haven’t actually tried it but sounds good. Here’s a complex one that the players may tumble at any stage but will

land them in serious trouble if they don’t. Baddie in employ of OO poses

to players as a rich jeweller from within a city. He meets them at a

location outside the city and describes some imaginary double-dealing in

the trade. The upshot is that he thinks a rival has wrinkled him out of

a distinctive ruby necklace. His mission for the PC is to probe or watch

a house in the outskirts to see if any sign. He tells them that the

necklace has a vague enchantment (improve looks, raise charisma that kind

of thing) and could be picked up by detect magic abilities. Small reward

for successful location. Big reward if they can get it. He tells them

he doesn’t want them anywhere near his city shop. They pass a message to

him via person in local pub in writing. It mustn’t mention the goods,

just say party of extra people needed if they can’t get it, else tell him

to come alone to a meeting point if they have managed it all themselves. The house is the real jeweller’s house and the necklace is not heavily

protected as the rubies are fake (which the jeweller knows) but the magic

isn’t (of which he is unaware). The reward should tempt the PCs to go

for it. They will then send a note to the appropriate place. Make sure

they write down what it says. The note goes of course to the OO who then

murders the real jeweller, places the note on his body, then tips off the

watch on where to find the PCs. Chances are the PCs have written a

highly incriminating note and in addition will be holding property know

to belong to the jeweller. Final Vendetta notes:

If a prolonged vendetta is plaguing the players then a certain amount

of paranoia is liable to set in. You may be accused of inventing ways

around their precautions because they tell you them in advance. If you

are, I hope they string you. If otherwise, don’t get angry – suggest a

play fair system. They write down their precautions when you warn them

that you need to know. You write down your attack. At the moment of

truth, notes are compared and a very enjoyable game can be held BETWEEN

GM and players. This assumes enough maturity on your players that they

build protection that they reasonably could manage by their skills and

money without going through you. If so have some fun. This play really

only applies to the Hired Thug approach – the others shouldnt really be

open to abuse.

Ashburn Man

David F. Nalle

Long

Horror

Investigation

Building

For this adventure a group of younger but promising members of the

Odyssians are invited out for a weekend at the country estate of Sir

Henry Ainsford, one of the older members of the club. Sir Henry is noted

as a hunter and explorer, but he is getting on in years and spends most

of his time at his estate outside of the town of Ashburn in Kent. Sir Henry regularly invites Odyssians out for weekend visits, but this

particular weekend is special, because he believes he has made a

discovery of great scientific importance on the grounds of his estate.

This means that he will make sure that Odyssians of particular interests

will be in his group. He will invite archaeologists, paleontologists,

physicians, historians and ethnologists in particular, plus an assortment

of others who are interested. He will also invite his two oldest friends

in the Odyssians, Professor Milton Morrisson of the Language and

Ethnology faculty at Oxford and Admiral Sir Joseph Porter (retired). All

he tells anyone in advance is that he has made a discovery which may

revolutionize the history and science of human origins. —–

Ashburn House Sir Henry’s ancestral manse is a 16th century monstrosity, somewhere

inbetween a manor house and a castle, ornate and over decorated. It is

located on the edge of the range of hills known as the North Downs. The

trip from London to Ashburn by train takes around two hours. When they

arrive in the town Sir Henry will have several carriages waiting to take

them to Ashburn House. When they arrive they are greeted by Sir Henry, who excuses himself

and seems rather agitated. They will then get a short tour of the house,

conducted by the major domo, Burton. Burton shows them the gun room and

the trophy room (lions and tigers and bears, oh my!), the game room,

several parlors and dining rooms, and eventually he shows each of them to

their bedrooms. Each of the bedrooms is decorated in a different motif,

reminiscent of different parts of the world. The American Room is

decorated with trophies of caribou, beaver and bears. The East African

room features lions and giraffes. The Egyptian room has crocodile and

rhinoceros hide chair covers and the like. The Indian room has a

beautiful tiger skin rug. The Amazon room has a giant stuffed anaconda

on the wall. The Orient Room has elephant tusks and panda fur rugs.

There are many more along the same lines. After they’ve settled in, Burton will call them down for dinner. At

the meal Sir Henry seems agitated, smokes a number of cigars, and barely

touches his food. When asked about his discovery he is evasive and tells

everyone to wait until after dinner. Once the meal is concluded, they

retire to the Smoking Room, where a large, coffin-like box, about 2 by 5

feet is waiting on a table in the middle of the room. Cigars are handed

out, and Sir Henry launches into a speech to the effect that he has

travelled far and seen many things, but that he has made his greatest

discovery literally in his own back yard. He goes on to tell how one of his groundskeepers, a man named James

Dearing, was mowing in a grove of ash trees on a hill behind the house,

when he discovered a series of depressions in the ground, all very

regularly spaced. He reported them to Sir Henry because he was

suspicious that they might be deadfalls set by poachers. Sir Henry

investigated, had one of the holes dug up, and in the hole they found —

at this point he opens the box — a small, manlike skeleton buried in the

fetal position, surrounded by garlands of what appeared to be extremely

well preserved wild flowers. The skeleton he reveals is in rather good

condition, completely bare, about 4 and a half feet tall. What makes it

remarkable is that while generally manlike in appearance, it has an

elongated lower jaw, pronounced cranial ridges and elongated upper and

lower canines, all characteristics of great apes, rather than man. Everyone crowds around, and Professor Morrison, and possibly others,

declare that it must be a hoax. Someone is clearly trying to put

something over on Sir Henry, taking the jaw of an ape and the body of a

deformed human child and putting them together. But on closer

examination it is clear that the jaw fits perfectly with the rest of the

skull, and the skull clearly fits the spine, and all the bone appears to

be of the same age. Professor Morrison can’t be sure, but given the

style of burial and the condition of the bones he believes that they

predate the early Celtic settlement of the British Isles, and if it is

not a hoax, he theorizes that this might be one of the ‘Dark Folk’, the

aboriginal inhabitants of Britain who were wiped out by the Celts and

survive only in legend. As Morrison seems to have become convinced, Sir Henry becomes even

more excited, and explains that there are 7 more burial shafts and that

he intends to excavate them all in the next few days with the help of his

fellow Odyssians. That said, he closes up the box, leads everyone out of

the Smoking Room and locks the door. At this point some of the guests

are probably tired and retire, and others go to the game room or to the

Library for some recreation. —–

Night at Ashburn House During the night several things will happen. One of the characters

with a relatively high PSI will happen to peer out of his window late at

night. Off in the distance he will see a round hill with a grove of grey

ash on the top of it. The ash are swaying in the wind. Then he notices

that none of the other trees in the garden or beyond seem to be swaying

at all, and he gets the feeling that there’s something almost conscious

about the movements of the ash. Another character will have a dream during the night. He will dream

of a procession of thin, regal looking women bearing glowing spheres of

light passing through his room, passing through the door as if it or they

were immaterial, and moving on into the hallway. —–

In the Morning When they awaken in the morning they notice that Professor Morrison

doesn’t join them for breakfast. Then Sir Joseph mentions that he was up

late with Morrison drinking brandy in the library and that when he went

to bed at 2am Morrison was still there reading. He suggests that

Morrison might want to sleep late. Sir Henry is a bit non-plussed by

this, but is ready to set out to the wilds of the backyard anyway. Burton brings picks, rubbers and shovels after breakfast and everyone

heads out to the burial site. It is a small clearing in the middle of an

ash grove on top of a hill. The ashes are of a miniature variety, but

healthy and well established, clearly well cared for. In the middle of

the clearing is a 6 foot high, very worn menhir surrounded (after some

searching) by eight depressions in the ground, spaced evenly in a circle,

one of them recently filled in. The digging commences. In each of the burial shafts they will find a skeleton similar to the

one already found by Sir Henry. It is unlikely that anyone will dig in

the shaft which the first skeleton was taken from, but if they do, they

will find the mangled body of Professor Morrison there. It will take most of the day to dig out the shafts. And at noon or so

Burton will bring out tables and campaign chairs for a leisurely lunch at

graveside. Professor Morrison never joins them, and as they prepare to head back

to the house, Sir Henry tells Burton to make sure the Professor is

feeling well and have him meet them in the Smoking Room. When the grisly trophies are gathered in the Smoking Room, Burton

arrives with the announcement that Professor Morrison is missing, and not

only that, but it is clear that he didn’t pack up and leave, because his

clothes are still there and his bed has not been slept in. The last place the Professor was seen was in the Library, and a close

inspection of the Library will reveal an open copy of Tacitus on the

floor, some dots of blood around it, and the fact that the tiger skin rug

which is normally there is missing. —–

What’s Going On? The grove of ash trees is an ancient holy place. Each of the eight

largest ash trees contains a powerful guardian spirit which can manifest

as a young woman (as in the dream above) or can possess and animate non-

living flesh (tiger skin rugs, etc). These Ash Maidens will attempt to

get the skeletons back, or replace them with new sacrifices, like

Professor Morrison. If they go and dig out the original burial shaft, they will find

Professor Morrison’s body, mauled as if by a tiger, wrapped in the tiger

skin rug from the Library, and garlanded with wild flowers. It may take

them a while to figure out to do this, so let them stew and be mystified. The spirits can only be placated by returning all the skeletons and

maintaining absolute silence about their existence. In fact, if they go

to re-bury the skeletons they will find that there are now ten holes

instead of eight, eight for the skeletons, one for Professor Morrison and

one for Sir Henry. The spirits will do all they can to make sure that

hole is filled. The powers of the spirits are limited. They can only operate in

darkness. They cannot travel more than a mile from the grove. Each

spirit can only animate one thing per night. Passing through solid

objects is relatively strenuous for them, so they do it as little as

possible. —–

The Second Night Most likely, by the second night they will either be working on or not

have solved the mystery. That night as they sleep, several things may

happen. Most likely one or more of the characters will be awakened by the

sound of pounding and rending as an assortment of elk and gorillas and

the like attempt to break into the Smoking Room. Someone, or maybe even two of the characters, will find that the

stuffed anaconda or bearskin rug or boarskin bedspread will come to life

as they are drifting off to sleep and attempt to attack them and drag

them out to the grove. The same character who saw the ash swaying the night before will look

out the window at midnight and think that he sees the ash transformed to

women who then move in a procession towards the house. Someone who is relatively susceptible to such things will be visited

by two of the Ash Maidens who will attempt to seduce him, take him to the

grove, manipulate his mind and will, essentially enslave him, and then

send him back to the house to get the skeletons and Sir Henry for them. —–

Can they Save Sir Henry? Most likely not. The only way to save Sir Henry would be to keep the

Ash Maidens and their animated creatures away from him throughout the

second night and then get him away from Ashburn House immediately in the

morning, never to return. In fact, in that situation the house would

have to be permanently abandonned because the Ash Maidens would keep

looking for sacrifices. Alternatively, they could burn down the grove. This would be sick,

cruel and immoral, but would get rid of the Ash Maidens until saplings

which escaped the burning grew to maturity in several years, at which

point the problem would reemerge. Finally, they could offer someone else in sacrifice, but finding a

willing victim is unlikely, and giving an unwilling sacrifice would be

inappropriate. Regardless of how they deal with the situation they will face moral

dilemmas which will not be easily resolved, because the Ash Maidens

should really be preserved as an invaluable paranormal resource, and

though their demands of sacrifice are justified by their lights, it will

be hard for reasonable people to go along with them.

Joe Amato Paul Brinkley (Don't look now, but you did give a summary or two...) Richard L. Butler (The amazing forgotten man...) J. D. Frazer Evan A.C. Hunt Gwen Johnson (The only contributor with references) Kim Chr. Madsen Loren J. Miller David F. Nalle (Do you do Call of Cthulu? :-)) Chris Racicot (LOTS of good stuff, thanks) Phil Scadden (Again, and again, and...thanks a lot!) Aaron Sher (Couldn't let this go by without adding something myself...) Brett Slocum (A late addition to the credits) Jeff Vogel (Originator of the lich theme, author of most of the lich stuff) "Sam" (Who is this?)

=======================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================================————-

Plus several others…if you contributed, and you’re not listed, send

me your name!

—————————————————————————-

Phil Scadden, Scadden Research

55 Buick St, Petone, Lower Hutt

New Zealand

ph (04) 568-7190, fax (04) 569 5016

