Intrepid seafarers seeking glory and gold need look no further than the vast and untamed
island chain known as the Shackles. Throughout these isles, undead cyclopes guard
eons-old treasure vaults, lycanthropic pirates maraud the waterways, and cannibalistic
natives sacrifice trespassers to their otherworldly god-queen. On the treacherous
seas surrounding the Shackles, a bold sailor may even rise to become one of the
realm’s infamous Free Captains, second only to the bloodthirsty Hurricane King
himself—though the rapacious pirates who raid the archipelago’s ports ensure
that only the cunning and swift survive for long.
Isles of the Shackles provides a comprehensive overview of the verdant islands that
make up this region, complete with buried treasure, dastardly corsairs, and ominous
ruins of a fallen empire.
Inside this 64-page book, you will find:
An expansive overview of the six civilized regions of the Shackles, from the mainland’s
sprawling seaside metropolis of Port Peril to the sahuagin-plagued shores of Shark
Island, complete with details on histories, notable rulers and personalities, and
gazetteers of each region’s varied locales.
Detailed entries on more than 20 of the Shackles’ most dangerous and mysterious
islands and islets, each with numerous plot hooks, helpful or treacherous NPCs, and
unique locations for brave adventurers to discover and explore.
Stat blocks for each island, detailing the region’s notable settlements and denizens, as
well as possible plunder and resources, such as hidden harbors and shipwrecks.
A huge bestiary of new monsters and villains that roam the islands of the Shackles
and the high seas around them, including the three-headed lusca, undead pirates
and ghost captains, and the degenerate kuru cannibals of the Blood Queen.
Stat blocks for a wide range of seafaring NPCs, from humble deckhands and
smugglers to pirate captains and shipboard sorcerers.
Isles of the Shackles is intended for use with the Pathfinder Roleplaying
Game and the Pathfinder campaign setting, but can easily be used in any
fantasy game setting.
by Mike Shel
ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-408-5
Isles of the Shackles Web Supplement
The downloadable web supplement below is a huge PDF map of the Shackles featuring tags for all of the locations heretofore mentioned in Pathfinder products.
Originally Posted on www.throatpunchgames.com, a new idea everyday!
Product- Pathfinder Campaign Setting: Isles of the Shackles
System-Pathfinder
Price-~$15
TL;DR- An amazing textbook of the Shackles 97%
Basics- It's time to set sail in the most lawless island of all Golarion! This book discusses the different major populated islands of the Shackles, the pirate islands of the Inner Sea of Golarion. The first part of the book give a major island by island run down of each isles people, towns, races, languages, religions, and what you can plunder from the towns there. Each island gets its own story seeds for your game. After the islands, the book shows different random encounter tables as well as new Shackles specific monsters for you to throw in your home game ranging from a CR 1/2 pirate to the CR23 Blood Queen.
Mechanics- This book is only about 1/4 mechanics with new monsters and random encounter tables. I the monsters and well done and most of them are flavored for high seas battles. Don't read this book expecting new crazy rules, but what's presented is done well. 5/5
Theme- Most of this book is stories of fantasy places. It does read like a geology and history text book, which can get a little boring even at the best of times. What's there is great and the seeds that are set in the book do give you a lot of places to run with if you want to run a Shackles campaign. I'd have liked a section on the Isle of Empty Eyes since that's where the players end up in the Skull and Shackles adventure path. 4.5/5
Execution- The book is well put together as you would expect from Paizo. I'll admit I did take a few breaks to read this as it is primarily a history textbook of a fantasy place. Don't get me wrong, this is an amazing textbook of a fake place and its well written with a nice layout so I can read it easily. But, it does get a bit long as you march from one island to the next. 5/5
Summary- If you want to play in the Shackles, this is the book for you. I liked this one a lot. It will take a bit to march through, but if you can pull through you will enjoy what you fine. Most likely though, this is a GM only book. 97%
An Amazing Amount of Material for so Limited a Space
For an explanation of how I use the five star review method, see my entry on So What's the Riddle Like Anyway?HERE.
The Isles of the Shackles supplement for the Pathfinder Campaign Setting covers the archipelago south of the Eye of Abendego in the world of Golarion. It is a mix of Caribbean and African style culture all centered around piracy. If you were to take the Caribbean in the 17th and 18th centuries and put them in a fantasy setting, this would be pretty close. The Shackles are a loose pirate led confederacy ruled by a pirate council out of the capital city of Port Peril. This supplement tries to do what should be impossible: cover an area roughly 80,000 square miles with hundreds of islands in decent detail. The author trying this Olympian task is Mike Shel, an experienced writer with a solid background, so he might pull it off.
The book is in two parts. The first is the Shackles Gazetteer. This makes up more than two-thirds of the material in the supplement. It starts with a quick introduction to the Shackles and the nature of their government—such as it is—and their source of "trade": piracy. We then move on and get a description of the six "civilized" centers of the Shackles—Port Peril & the Mainland, Bag Island (Halfling anti-slavery community), Devil's Arches (Ruins of the ancient cyclops empire of Ghol-Gan now held by Chelaxian ex-pats), Motaku Isle (A pirate haven run freely by a popular half-elf pirate lord), Shark Island (Sahuagin infested land rules by a werewolf), and Tempest Cay (an island constantly battered by the eternal hurricane to the north and ruled by a powerful druid). Each gets two full pages and a piece of art the goes with the island in question. The detail here is really great, with many plot hooks and adventure ideas built in. From tentacled horrors lurking in Methoth Lake on the Devil' Arches to the lover's rift threatening Oyster Cay, almost every form of adventure imaginable has been placed just within these six regions. This is classic gazetteer style, with simple outlines and community descriptions for a GM to build adventures upon.
But where are the maps? There is a small scale map of the Shackles on the inside front cover, but this doesn't show most of the locations described in the various entries. This makes it hard to understand the relative distances and the like when constructing adventures. One of the things that I have always loved about fantasy campaign settings was when I could locate an entry on the map provided. Being unable to do that really limits the functionality and enjoyment of this work. A free web supplement with what may very well be one of the best maps for a fantasy campaign setting ever was added after the fact, which sadly means the print version has no reference to it. You have to download the map with all the detail you could want off the website. Not an issue for me, but it does leave those with just the book with limited usability. Remember what I said about this being impossible to do? This is where we have come up against it. Still the info in the gazetteer is phenomenal, so with the download I can forgive a lot of this.
The next part of the gazetteer covers an island a page, and there are a lot of them! Twenty-two islands in all, each with its own history, lore, and adventure hooks. The variety is amazing, from cannibal tribesmen and ancient ruins, to an Asiatic port of call where a daimyo rules, to elven supremacists, to raging volcanoes, it's all here in loving detail. You could run multiple campaigns in the region without ever duplicating yourself. This is great stuff, and all with just enough detail for a GM to run with it. This is exactly what a gazetteer needs to be. The final pages of the gazetteer give a brief overview of eighteen islets, rocks and atolls of the Shackles. All in all, a very thorough accounting of the archipelago.
The second part is a Bestiary for use with the Shackles. It starts with wandering monster tables, an essential ingredient to any sandbox style campaign. This bestiary is huge for a supplement this size! It has twenty-three entries, not counting variants ranging from CR 1/2 to CR 23. Add the variants in and you have another five adversaries. Some of the entries are NPCs written up specifically for the Shackles (mainly pirates) and the undead pirate entry has three direct variants plus a description of ghost ships and haunts. It's all great pirate themed material, with a certain ridiculous movie monster made over into a true terror of the deep (the lusca is a three-headed gargantuan sharktopus. I'm not sure if that is cool or really ridiculous. I'm going with cool!).
Final Thoughts: All in all, this is an amazing piece of work. Mike Shel pulls off a minor miracle, packing this thing from cover to cover with absolutely astounding material. Whole campaigns can be made out of any four or five pages of material here, and the gazetteer covers a full thirty-eight pages. The bestiary is massive and offers threats for any level of campaign. This is a near perfect supplement with a significant flaw: because of the size of the campaign setting books, there was not enough room to include maps. This is offset by the gorgeous downloadable map, but not having that ready to go at printing and a reference to it in the printed version was a glaring oversight. The download does reduce the usability of this supplement a bit as well. So I will have to drop a star from what I consider one of the best campaign setting source books ever written. Four out of Five Stars.
I purchased this to help flesh out the individual isles in the Skull and Shackles Adventure path. I was happy that the writing encompassed the isles, but unfortunately there are NO maps of the isles in the gazetteer. A gazetteer without some maps is like a pirate ship without a crew. The Inner Sea World Guide is how each campaign setting supplement should be written. Yes, making maps of the isles and of the major ports of call is tedious; however once the work is accomplished, it is done forever and the world gets more detailed and more fleshed out. If it is too difficult to map from scratch, use Google maps to overlay existing locales on Earth like the Marshall Islands, and illustrate the overlay into a map for the guide.
I really don't need more monsters. Between the Bestiaries, the AP's and the campaign settings, we are being overwhelmed by monsters. Save those monsters for the AP's or for campaign specific bestiaries and flesh out the campaign resources with more MAPS.
2 entries
Shackles Gazetter
page 2
Threats of the shackles
page 40
It would of been great to have.
Shackles Gazetter
page 2
Port Peril and the Mainland 4
Bag Island 6
Devils Arches 8
Motuko Island 10
ETC...
Threats of the shackles
page 40
I like the fine folks of Paizo, but really should we need to know ALL these credits.. But we have 25 names listed, and only 2 table of content entries. While the first name sells it for me as a consumer, Mike Shel.
-1 Game Mastery settlement info modifier's, totally lacking. This I think is another major fault of this product.
I am currently running Skulls and Shackles. Another source book I have been using is Heart of the Jungle.
So I will be comparing the two products. I find as a GM, Heart of the Jungle is much better suited as a GM aid. As a sample compare the Bloodcove section to that of Port Peril in this book, I have as a GM sailed my players into Blood Cove with-in about 20 minutes. I can generate treasure and such for players to buy. Figure out quickly what plot hook I can use. So while I own the complete AP line, I am still forced to carry most of these books around just to reference city's, such as Port Peril, which is included as a source setting for this book.
-1 general formatting, after comparing this book with the Heart of the Jungle it is clear, that this book has 2 formats to use. A 1-page and a 2-page layout for each section. This is a terrible choice compared to a book like Heart of the Jungle. Pictures, there are allot, some seem just to be page filler. Compare to pictures or maps that would help a GM.
+1 Random encounters
+1 Bestiary, allot of good material here for all gm's, still allot of big pictures.
Being a GM making my own campaign in the Shackles, I found this book to be invaluable. The random encounter tables were perfect and the bestiary has several important monsters that I plan to use immediately. The detailed descriptions of the islands and places were like those of the inner sea guide. They contained plot ideas and good description. Great resource for game masters
On a more relevant note...we hear you guys regarding the maps. During development of Isles of the Shackles, we simply found it impossible to include all of the map tags we wanted while (a) keeping all of Mike Shel's awesome content, and (b) making sure the map was still legible. So we had to compromise and only tag the islands that show up in the Gazetteer. Mapping is one of the hardest parts of developing a book, not only because it relies on a unique synergy between the art and writing sides, but also because it's so difficult to strike a balance between what locations to include and what locations to leave for GMs to place as they see fit.
Might the "better" tagged map be the one that's showing up it the Skull and Shackles Map Folio?
Check today's Paizo blog post. :)
Tom Qadim
RPG Superstar 2010 Top 16, 2011 Top 32, 2012 Top 4
gbonehead wrote:
It's funny, I kept on expecting to see a reference to Eightfingers' Tomb or the Gloomspires, even though I know that would actually be impossible. But it would have been very, very cool.
Oh wow. You honor me, gbone. Thanks!
Technically, the Gloomspires aren't actually in the Shackles. I set them midway between the Shackles and Mediogalti Island. So, the Gloomspires would really need their own module/supplement ... which I could, you know ... write ....
Pathfinder Battles Case Subscriber; Pathfinder Maps, Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Charter Superscriber; Starfinder Charter Superscriber
Taliesin Hoyle wrote:
Why, by the puckered keyring of Asmodeus, did you not put the PDF supplement place-names on a separate layer?
I really liked the bestiary part of the book, but had my problems with the gazetteer, as the positions and relations between the locations were missing. But that is fixed now.
The map really helps to bring the content of the book more to life. The only thing missing now would be an image how port peril looks as you head towards it from the sea. I know, I know, but you can always ask for more. ;)
I only had to redefine one of the isles, as a player choose it as his home isle and wrote a great background article about it. ;)
Heh, I've just thought this -- if Port Peril is anything like Port Royal, does that mean it'd be a fine place to eventually set a major earthquake (which would doubtlessly be caused by some monstrous horror, sitrring beneath the sea)?
Heh, I've just thought this -- if Port Peril is anything like Port Royal, does that mean it'd be a fine place to eventually set a major earthquake (which would doubtlessly be caused by some monstrous horror, sitrring beneath the sea)?
Well there is an implication that an earthquake had happened previously, as there are remnants of a previous settlement in the Sunken Plaza of Port Peril...Just sayin'.
Actually Tempest Rising was added to my downloads yesterday. ;)
But I started my Skull & Shackles campaign already and it would have been nice to show them an image of the town they started right at the beginning instead of a month later.
Spoiler:
I actually played an interesting intro how the PCs came on board the Wormwood and also used the intro to show the PCs how powerful the NPCs are without just plainly telling them.
Actually Tempest Rising was added to my downloads yesterday. ;)
And yet again Paizo fails to treat me as there #1 most important customer and ship my stuff out first. Scandalous!! ;)
I can tell you how that goes!
At Paizo Warehouse...
"Who's on the top of the list for shipping for today?"
"Kajehase"
"It's that guy with a ship avatar on forums?"
"Yeah that's him"
"So..*chuckles*...wouldn't be it funny if we didn't SHIP his parcel promptly?"
"Hehehehehehehehehehe *snort snort* sure!"
Actually Tempest Rising was added to my downloads yesterday. ;)
And yet again Paizo fails to treat me as there #1 most important customer and ship my stuff out first. Scandalous!! ;)
I can tell you how that goes!
At Paizo Warehouse...
"Who's on the top of the list for shipping for today?"
"Kajehase"
"It's that guy with a ship avatar on forums?"
"Yeah that's him"
"So..*chuckles*...wouldn't be it funny if we didn't SHIP his parcel promptly?"
"Hehehehehehehehehehe *snort snort* sure!"
After a couple months dry, I finally hit the comic/gaming store, and among other things, picked this up.
I love how many different 'adventure biomes' got squeezed into this area. Almost any sort of adventure I'd want to run is available *somewhere* in the Shackles, with different sorts of themes and aesthetics. I probably would have focused more on Garundi dominated islands (religious folk driven out of Rahadoum, for instance, or dispossessed Osirioni upper-class nobs who fled during the Qadiran satrapy and never returned), or surviving remnants of Lirgen astrologer-priests or something more local, instead of the two Tien lands, but obviously the book wasn't written for me specifically. :)
Having a single writer on the book probably helped avoid the (IMO) muddle that was the River Kingdoms (another 'dozens of different areas in a single country' sort of product), and the recurring theme of the Ghol-Gan ruins helped tie things together nicely.
I've got fairly odd tastes, and, so far, Gods & Magic and the Faction Guide are my favorite two 'floppies' from Paizo. Isle of the Shackles has just replaced Dragon Empires for my third favorite. I just love how versatile it is! This book is crawling with adventure hooks and flavorful encounter areas, and had an uphill climb for me, since I'm not a huge fan of pirate-y stuff.
But the point of a map is to find things on it, not just be pretty art of an archipelago. Like I say, I can understand that on the islands, but the mainland is a big lump of green, the other coastal cities couldn't go on there?
It's about the Isles of the Shackles. We made a conscious decision to focus 100% more or less on the islands, and that is reflected in the mainland portion of the map.
Thanks very much for listening and putting out that pdf map supplement, it raises my rating of Shackles as a book from 3 to 5. It had usefulness without it, but now it's super useful!
To be honest, I was really disappointed, that there was neither a map of Port Peril, nor a detailed descritption included. It is the capital of the whole region, a bustling pirate haven like Port Royal with some whopping 45k+ inhabitants. Actually there was more information on anything other than Port Peril (which stretched about just half a page, if you substract the illustration) in that book. I like the gazetteer style and I love the huge bestiatry and the descriptions of those small islands. This pours fuel in the fire of my GM-imagination. But the infos on Port Peril are nearly non-existent.
And why do I have to buy an adventure path supplement to get the decription that belongs into the regional gazetteer?
Like I write a travel guide on Britain: "A well, an then there is that capital city named London with several million inhabitants and a queen... let's move on to Westbrookshiretonstead"
All in all a fine product, but I am a bit disappointed.
To be honest, I was really disappointed, that there was neither a map of Port Peril, nor a detailed descritption included. It is the capital of the whole region, a bustling pirate haven like Port Royal with some whopping 45k+ inhabitants. Actually there was more information on anything other than Port Peril (which stretched about just half a page, if you substract the illustration) in that book. I like the gazetteer style and I love the huge bestiatry and the descriptions of those small islands. This pours fuel in the fire of my GM-imagination. But the infos on Port Peril are nearly non-existent.
And why do I have to buy an adventure path supplement to get the decription that belongs into the regional gazetteer?
Like I write a travel guide on Britain: "A well, an then there is that capital city named London with several million inhabitants and a queen... let's move on to Westbrookshiretonstead"
All in all a fine product, but I am a bit disappointed.
Hey! Thanks for the input. Comments like these help us figure out what fans are looking for so we can improve future products.
Unfortunately we weren't able to fit everything about Port Peril into Isles of the Shackles, but there's a whole article about this city of pirates in Pathfinder AP #57 if you're looking for more!
Thanks for the answer! That is what I love about Paizo. You care about your customers and show it.
I picked up AP #57 now and hey! All what I wanted is in there. A map of the city an a short breakdown of important places. Just too bad I had to put down that extra money.
Thanks for the answer! That is what I love about Paizo. You care about your customers and show it.
I picked up AP #57 now and hey! All what I wanted is in there. A map of the city an a short breakdown of important places. Just too bad I had to put down that extra money.
And they're responding pretty quickly, especially in terms of publishing schedules. For instance, the upcoming Irrisen gazetteer has maps and juicy write-ups of Whitethrone, four provincial capitals, and a peasant village called Riba.
I figured this would be the best place to talk about the Blood Queen.
I think it is totally awesome, and I want to include some of the Kuru surrogates in an upcoming game... my question is how to play of the possession of the Kurus. I want something cinematic to happen so make it obvious they're no longer acting under their own power.
Anybody have ideas on how to make it a creepy awesome transition?
Would the Skull/Shakles or any other supplement incorporates detailed rules on ships and especially for Naval Combat? The Advance/DMG/CRB have useless and limited information.
Isles of the Shackles is really designed for GMs, focused on providing a gazeteer of the islands and a pretty substantial bestiary. I'm very excited for this to get published, even though my Shackles sea shanty did end up on the cutting room floor.
The Skull & Shackles AP should addressing the issues you're concerned with since players will themselves engage in some lovely piracy on the high seas. The AP promises to be packed with plenty of piratey goodness.
Arrrrh!
Mike, I'm late to the game, but want to thank you for the "Isle of Shackles" Campaign setting -- Excellent book. I came searching for the more detailed map which is now available as PDF. Any chance that this will be available in an updated version of the Map Folio for Sk & Sh ?
Also -- can you make available your "Shanty's" -- there was one you posted, but I'd love to use them as bard/bar room material !! Thanks much !
Mike, I'm late to the game, but want to thank you for the "Isle of Shackles" Campaign setting -- Excellent book. I came searching for the more detailed map which is now available as PDF. Any chance that this will be available in an updated version of the Map Folio for Sk & Sh ?
Also -- can you make available your "Shanty's" -- there was one you posted, but I'd love to use them as bard/bar room material !! Thanks much !
Jim
Glad you liked the book! As always: post a review!
Alas, I didn't save the other shanties as there didn't seem to be much interest in the one that I posted (though at least that one remains available here in my list of Paizo credits.
I doubt that the very much improved PDF map of the Shackles will be included in an updated Map Folio, but the Paizo folks are the final authorities on such matters. Of course, it will always be available for download on the product page.
Regarding the gholdako in the bestiary:
Blinding Breath (Su): Shouldn't the save DC be 21? [10 + 7 [1/2 HD (15)] + 4 [Cha mod]]
Disease (Ex): Shouldn't the save DC be 21? [10 + 7 [1/2 HD (15)] + 4 [Cha mod]]
Dread Gholdako: Shouldn't the paralysis DC be based on its Cha instead of its (non-existent) Con?
Blinding Breath (Su): Shouldn't the save DC be 21? [10 + 7 [1/2 HD (15)] + 4 [Cha mod]]
Disease (Ex): Shouldn't the save DC be 21? [10 + 7 [1/2 HD (15)] + 4 [Cha mod]]
Dread Gholdako: Shouldn't the paralysis DC be based on its Cha instead of its (non-existent) Con?
1. Yep, looks like it!
2. Yep!
3. And yep!
The gholdako's HD or Charisma must have changed last second and the DCs were missed in dev/editing. Thanks for pointing these out!