May 22, 2026 View Online
myconids
Prepare to Die!
There's an argument to be made that the groundwork for the OSR was laid in the late '90s by...TSR and Wizards of the Coast?
But first...

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This Week's Posts
2EShrine1
The Lost Shrine of Bundushatur (1998)
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I have to admit, the Fred Fields cover painting for The Lost Shrine of Bundushatur (1998) doesn’t inspire much confidence. The adventurers look like college kids LARPing in hoodies and bedsheets at the university library. The ghost being both in front of the chair and behind the shelves really throws off the composition for me. The name Bundushatur is asking a lot as well. Too much? Maybe.

Anyway, this is one of the many latter-day “generic” D&D modules, indicated by the black trade dress, that were not bound to any particular campaign setting. By 1998, independent TSR was dead and Wizards of the Coast had not yet sold to Hasbro; there was a general sense of return to an older mode of design, as in A Paladin in Hell. Lost Shrine is a little different because it actually was old, originally written in 1987. It was resurrected as a larger push to get little-seen RPGA adventures in front of a wider audience (the RPGA logo on the cover started popping up a little earlier in 1998 and would return here and there until 2E wrapped up).

As the other cover branding indicates (so many fonts), this is primarily a dungeoncrawl into shrine of Chaos. It’s a relatively small space, made larger-seeming in its reality-subverting weirdness. The idea is to go in, find the twelve parts of the chaos key, assemble it and use it to destroy the place. Bold to assume the players aren’t in the sway of Chaos, really. There are lots of shrines to Chaos lords and goopy monsters and interesting environments (an M. C. Escher-inspired staircase is a highlight, as is the room with 50 tiny, hostile skeletons).

With the exception of White Plume Mountain, I can’t recall another D&D adventure quite so, uh, enamored of the work of Michael Moorcock. The chaos key is his eight-pointed cross, there’s a sword meant for a champion of chaos, there’s the many chaos lords and the winged apes and other stuff that seems lifted directly from the Elric and Corum stories. I don’t mind! But it does seem somewhat incongruous since D&D already had a supply of powerful agents of Chaos and I know, deep down, none of these lot will ever be heard from again.

Arnie Swekel interiors. Arnie got a lot of work during this period, I think because his style seems old school without feeling old, if that makes sense. I enjoy his work generally, but I don’t think the material plays to his strengths. Best illustration: the tiny skeletons.

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The Dancing Hut of Baba Yaga (1995)
A tour of Baba Yaga's chicken-legged house.
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Labyrinth of Madness (1995)
Intentionally designed to be the most difficult dungeon ever, and largely succeeds in more ways than one.
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The Gates of Firestorm Peak (1996)
First appearance of the Far Realm. Goopy!
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TSR Jam 1999 (1999)
Not a game jam at all.
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Podcast
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Abattoir Hymnal
Yes, meat sorcery!
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Local Hero
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The Jersey Devil came up in conversation recently, and I wanted to show whoever I was talking to the earliest of my Ed Sheetz postcards featuring New Jersey's own cryptid (and, for my money, the best cryptid). But I couldn't find it! But then I did! But in the meantime, I visited eBay and searched for "Ed Sheetz Jersey Devil Postcard" and found one I have never seen before. And now I am showing all of them to you, because I doubt they will show up on the site proper any time soon. How much can I possibly write about a postcard, really?

The first Sheetz drawing of the Leeds Devil appeared in 1969. I can't find much info on Sheetz, but he seems to be a resident of Smithville, NJ, and produced some art cards promoting the town's quaint shopping center and historic inns. The Jersey Devil illustrations constitute what I believe is the first commercial use of the monster. In addition to the postcards, Sheetz' version has appeared on shirts, posters and mugs. I've seen some knock-offs too (like this NJ Jaycees pin!). I think they're delightful work. The new addition is the cider illustration, I've had the others for a while. 

Speaking of knock-offs, I got the orange card from the gift shop at the Batsto Village historic site in the Pinelands National Reserve when I was a kid. If I recall correctly, there was some association with the Devil and the Tenniel illustration of the Jabberwocky in the Philadelpha newspapers during the spate of Devil sightings in 1909. This postcard goes a step further, completely redrawing the original, adding a forked tail and replacing the head with a horsier one, to bring it in line with the popular conception of the monster. I love that the artist didn't know what to do about the Jabberwocky's vest, so this guy still sorta looks like he's wearing pants and a sweatshirt.

Finally, I got the New Jersey Air Force postcard at the same place. It still makes me laugh. (click the pics to make 'em bigger)

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Next Week: Modern Books, Random Tables!
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