Falkrest Abbey is a level 1–3 dungeon adventure for Old-School Essentials. Written by Andrea Tupac Mollica and Giuseppe Rotondo, with original art by Zaira Diana.
We've just released it, and for now it's marked $1.
The legend: The forlorn Falkrest Abbey in the icy Lune Mountains is where the Queens and Kings of Yore used to be crowned and buried, along with their treasures. According to legends, the Fountain of St. Brynedd still pours its miraculous water somewhere inside. But what caused the fall of the blessed Abbey?
Content:
- A 19 room dungeon with exploration, combat, mystery, puzzles and NPCs
- Encounters and events along the way on the icy Lune Mountains
- Several hooks and alternate outcomes with possible repercussions on your campaign
- 3 new monsters
- 2 new magic items, plus one almighty magic vial of miraculous water
- Original art by Zaira Diana
- Map drawn with dungeonscrawl
Utility:
- Treasure & monsters overview sorted by room
- Interactive hyperlinked map and index
- Interactive hyperlinked map snippets accompanying room descriptions
- Printable hand-outs (optional)
- Extra files: VTT friendly maps without room numbers, monsters, secrets doors etc
Why $1: While we've done our best to create a professional product, at this time we are happy to share our adventure with as wide an audience as possible. If you want to support us, please consider rating or reviewing Falkrest Abbey on DrivethruRPG or your socials, and maybe check out the other Axian Spice products!
Content warning: Contains graverobbing, necromancy, flayed zombies (trying to kill you), golden nose prosthetics, and a pool of clotted blood. Oh and a frozen dwarf.
Media & Reviews
Andrea and I talk about Falkrest Abbey with awesome host Logar the Barbarian at the Wobblies & Wizards Podcast"The adventure is a cornucopia of gleefully executed dungeon crawling stables. Falkrest Abbey is not an exotic module, and it doesn’t try to be. It is a brilliant piece of earnest, uncomplicated, and utterly joyous classical fantasy adventure purity. In a way, it almost feels like something from another age, reformatted to modern OSE standards." - Augury Ignored blog review
"Fuck that thing. Errr, I mean, yeah, uh … Good Job! This is a decent adventure." - Tenfootpole blog review [scored a glorious "No Regerts"]
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