The Great City remains an ever-growing conurbation whose opulent aristocracy is fueled by the influx of international, free-market trade. Dreams of wealth draw transients to the city like avaricious vultures to the flesh of a fallen calf, but the free-market is only one of the many ways to get rich in the Great City.
A Pound of Flesh is a d20 adventure designed for use with the 3.5 version of the world’s most popular fantasy role-playing game. A low-level urban adventure, Pound of Flesh is designed to introduce players to 0one Games' Great City Campaign Setting and is most appropriate for a group of four 3rd-level characters.
The module includes beautiful artwork by Eric Lofgren and Hugh Vogt.
Additional material about the Great City and the Dock Ward can be found in the following titles:
This adventure for levels 1-3 is 58 pages long, 1 page front cover, 1 page blank inside the front cover, 1 page editorial, 1 page ToC, 1 page SRD, 2 pages of advertisements, 1 page back cover, leaving 50 pages for the plots afoot to unfold, so let's check it out!
The first thing you'll notice is that the adventure is extensively bookmarked, layout is clear and printer-friendly b/w.
That's as far as I can go without going into details. This being an adventure review, SPOILERS will now continue to abound - potential players, please jump to the conclusion!
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SPOILERS
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Still here? All righty, so let's check out what the PCs will be up against!
"A Pound of Flesh" is an investigation-heavy adventure that focuses on mystery and players acting smart and subsequently kicks off via several possible hooks, all centering on the PCs investigating disappearances in the dock ward. After some careful probing, their first lead (possibly provided by a half-orc pimp) is an old crone and her bugbear-lover, who are responsible for killing the missing persons.
This is where you'll realize that this adventure is both complex and cool - the NPCs have strategies to cope with investigators, secret light signals the PCs can analyze and even have a whole interrogation section. Have I mentioned that the PCs in this section might encounter a she-male warrior and a traumatized soldier. Oh, and there's this serpentine-affine guy and a noble in session with a dominatrix. Seedy, iconic locations abound and the lead sends the PCs to a seedy bar and the saltshacks, a dock of halfling houseboats. It should be noted that both the seedy bordello and the shacks and even a fish-processing boat get their detailed maps, which really helps envisioning the areas. The halfling-accomplice quickly rolls over and the PCs are led to a mortuary (again, with its own map) and which could see the PCs trying to escape with clues from the burning building. Moreover, if the players screw up, there are always more ways to get them back on track.
After the blaze, the PCs reach a supposedly haunted shipyard (again with a detailed map) and enter the dungeon/infiltration-section of the adventure. Via the sewers, the PCs can infiltrate a cult of cannibalistic, depraved hunger-cultists and infiltrate they should - the defenses of the cult are superb and smart, showcasing that NPCs don't have to be too mechanically strong when they fight smart. The cultist-temple and the grimlock-servants are supremely creepy, featuring e.g. harnesses with animated zombie-arms. How cool is that? Oh, if the PCs screw up royally, they can fight a cthulhoid, extremely deadly entity. And no, that's NOT the climax. The climax of the adventure actually starts with the PCs climbing from the cultist's base to participate in the masque-ball of the main antagonist, mingling with the guests while trying to root out cultists, not get assassinated by them and collect the final clues and confront the villain. Who actually uses INTELLIGENT tactics and is not just another stat-block. Suffice to say, both the cultist hide-out and the mansion feature their own detailed maps and the masquerade is among the coolest things I've seen in any low-level adventure.
On the rules-side, we get 2 new monsters, a new ritualistic spell, the cannibalism domain and 2 new items.
Conclusion:
Layout adheres to the two-column standard, the b/w-artworks are nice and formatting is, as far as I could glean, flawless. Editing is not, unfortunately: There are some minor glitches, that while not impeding the overall quality of the adventure, is the only thing that will sometimes rip you out of the brilliant writing. If you haven't gathered: That's my only point of criticism with regards to this adventure. You get an awesome piece of adventure writing, perhaps one of the best adventures ever released for 3.5, and a LOT of adventure. When PFRPG came along, this one was top-priority on my convert-list and both I and my players had a HUGE blast running this smart, well-crafted investigation chock-full with cool characters and disturbing details that are sure to be remembered for years to come. There simply aren't that many adventures out there that deserve the predicate "superb" and this is one of them - the enemies aren't too strong, but fight smart, the scenes are just plain awesome and the infiltration of the cultist hide-out rocks.
Hard.
This adventure gets the Endzeitgeist seal of approval and, for me, nit-picky as I usually am with regards to typos etc., a full 5 star-rating. If you're concerned about ~10 glitches over 58 pages of awesome adventure, detract half a star. If you haven't played it yet, give it a try. It's pleasantly different from almost any 1st-level adventure out there in both details, structure and genre. Smart players and ROLEplayers deserve more such adventures.
Designed to get a campaign in The Great City off to a flying start, this adventure embroils the characters in an investigation of the disappearance of a drunk pearl merchant that leads them to places they'd probably rather not go and people they'd rather not meet, with a spot of arson, evil cultists and revolutionary plots for good measure!
From the very beginning, there is a lot going on and the characters have cause to explore a lot of the city - in particular, the seamy side of the docks - and interact with many different people. It's not all talk, of course, and there is ample opportunity for combat as well, while the finale involves the need to defeat the enemy against the backdrop of a very high-society party - preferably discreetly! The adventure is probably not suited to players whose main interests lie in fighting and acquiring loot - but if a rich tapestry of varied characters all leading their own lives within the setting appeals, you have picked up the right adventure.
Overall, it is an outstanding adventure with a depth that - despite what might seem a simple plotline - should keep your players well-entertained and their characters challenged and intrigued. Thoroughly recommended both as an adventure in its own right and as a way to introduce characters to The Great City.
Not only a fantastic adventure... I had the pleasure of watching Tim Hitchcock run it at Gen Con. The man's explosive energy could reignite a dead star, but knowing how bent Tim is, I'm sure he'd rather just munch popcorn and watch it die again.
Man, I love the Great City. :) It's just so... What's the word I'm looking for?
Not only a fantastic adventure... I had the pleasure of watching Tim Hitchcock run it at Gen Con. The man's explosive energy could reignite a dead star, but knowing how bent Tim is, I'm sure he'd rather just munch popcorn and watch it die again.
Man, I love the Great City. :) It's just so... What's the word I'm looking for?
Tim's play test for "Pound of Flesh" is responsible for what just might be my favorite quote from Gen Con 08.
As Nick Logues' famed barbarian-in-denial suddenly discovers his true self and enters his first and most gruesome of his blackout rages in an alley in the heart of the Great City. . . a voice could be heard to utter:
Tim's play test for "Pound of Flesh" is responsible for what just might be my favorite quote from Gen Con 08.
As Nick Logues' famed barbarian-in-denial suddenly discovers his true self and enters his first and most gruesome of his blackout rages in an alley in the heart of the Great City. . . a voice could be heard to utter:
"Uh oh, here comes character development!"
I'm still traumatized.
We'll have to finish the rest of that game next year...
Tim's play test for "Pound of Flesh" is responsible for what just might be my favorite quote from Gen Con 08.
As Nick Logues' famed barbarian-in-denial suddenly discovers his true self and enters his first and most gruesome of his blackout rages in an alley in the heart of the Great City. . . a voice could be heard to utter:
"Uh oh, here comes character development!"
I'm still traumatized.
We'll have to finish the rest of that game next year...
Hehe, so I should really get to GenCon next year... :)
I recently bought this adventure. It looks real good.
Hey Iron Sentinel!
I'm super proud of this adventure (perhaps because its probably the closest thing I've ever written to the way I typically run a game).
Any questions you might have about running it, feel free to ask.
Finally updated my once very basic review to reflect my approach and bring some publicity to this gem. Also posted on RPGaggression and sent to GMS magazine.
Finally updated my once very basic review to reflect my approach and bring some publicity to this gem. Also posted on RPGaggression and sent to GMS magazine.
Thanks for the update. I'll have the PF conversion of this wonderful adventure available for free download as soon as editing is done...
Thanks for the update. I'll have the PF conversion of this wonderful adventure available for free download as soon as editing is done...
Awesome news! I'll also be doing the Road to Revolution/updating the reviews and some of your other stuff. I as of yet haven't regretted purchasing any of your adventures. :)