The Dreaming Stone

The Dreaming Stone is an adventure published by Chaosium in 1997 for the horror role-playing game Call of Cthulhu.

Plot summary

The Dreaming Stone is a 64-page softcover book designed by Kevin Ross, with illustrations by John T. Snyder, Jason Eckhardt, Drashi Khendup, and Earl Geier. The book contains a complete Call of Cthulhu adventure set in H.P. Lovecraft's Dreamlands.[1] In the adventure, the players' characters find themselves trapped in the Dreamlands, and in order to escape, must seek out a rival and repair the damage he has done to the Dreamlands.[2]

Reception

In the March 1998 edition of Dragon (Issue #245), Allen Varney noted that Chaosium's first four supplements set in the Dreamlands "fail to offer any vision of what to do there." With this fifth Dreamlands adventure, Varney felt Chaosium was finally on the right track, saying, "The Dreaming Stone is more than a pretty good adventure; it's a demonstration of how to adventure in the neglected Dreamlands. The scenario goes wrong in encrusting its dream-fantasy with obsolete random encounters and gratuitous Christian imagery, but it still establishes a characteristically Lovecraftian atmosphere amid gaudy wonders." However, Varney was disappointed in the production values, pointing out "poor layout, skimpy artwork, and lousy proofreading." He concluded that "Though Stone compares well with some other recent Call of Cthulhu products [...] Chaosium’s flagship line needs a graphic overhaul and a visionary line editor to restore the glory days of the 1980s."[2]

gollark: Wrong one...
gollark: (WHY is an esoteric/joke programming language; see esowiki for further information)
gollark: WHYYY.
gollark: You should try writing very simple things in the most overcomplicated way possible.
gollark: Unless you have developed an efficient way to store potatoes.

See also

References

  1. "The Dreaming Stone". RPG.net. Skotos Tech Inc. Retrieved 2020-01-17.
  2. Varney, Allen (March 1998). "Roleplaying Reviews". Dragon. TSR, Inc. (245): 102–103.
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