View Full Version : New T2k 4e Mini-Adventure: The Poisoned Chalice
Raellus
05-15-2023, 04:55 PM
I whipped up a mini-adventure module using the 4e rules (but campaign history agnostic, since I much prefer v1 in that regard). I hope you like it!
https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/437864/Twilight-2000-The-Poisoned-Chalice?affiliate_id=61048
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Heffe
05-15-2023, 05:05 PM
Just picked it up. Definitely looks like a fun little adventure! Though I don't know how I feel about you copping "All that glitters..." from Armies of the Night. :P
Raellus
05-15-2023, 05:11 PM
Just picked it up. Definitely looks like a fun little adventure! Though I don't know how I feel about you copping "All that glitters..." from Armies of the Night. :P
Oh, shiz. I wasn't aware. I should probably change that. Thanks for the catch, and the sale. :)
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Heffe
05-15-2023, 05:32 PM
Lol you're fine, Rae. I don't think 2 expansions multiple versions and 30 years apart sharing a similar line are going to be caught by many people. Plus, it's a fairly well known and common idiom made famous by Shakespeare, so it's been around for a minute.
Tegyrius
05-15-2023, 06:24 PM
Nice work, Rae. This looks playable and enjoyable, with a solid framework that should enable the referee to hang all manner of improvisation off of it. There's easily several sessions worth of material here if the players choose to engage with it, or it could readily adapt to a four-hour convention game slot if someone wanted to use the basic setup for a demo game.
- C.
Tegyrius
06-17-2023, 07:44 AM
Reviewed on my blog:
https://libellus.de-fenestra.com/?p=478
- C.
kcdusk
06-17-2023, 06:32 PM
I haven't bought the module yet, but have read the description on drive through.
Why a focus on the cup of christ? In a T2K world, it feels like the cup would be worthless? Feels more like a Dan Brown novel than apocalyptic.
Not a criticism. Any maybe there's more to it (plot spoilers even). But an odd topic in my view. Or perhaps my role playing is still a little immature re survival!
I need to go back and read more into the Black Madonna module, because i had similar thoughts about that module also. Not as practical as say Pirates of the Vistalla.
Raellus
06-17-2023, 07:42 PM
Why a focus on the cup of christ? In a T2K world, it feels like the cup would be worthless? Feels more like a Dan Brown novel than apocalyptic.
I totally get where you're coming from, KC. I too prefer a T2k rooted firmly in reality. The location of Templar riches in Chwarszczany, Poland is based on real-life local folklore. There really is a Templar commandery there, and it is a reputed location of a hidden treasure trove. The cup in my module, however, is not necessarily the Holy Grail. This is from a sidebar on p 7:
Amongst the treasure is a carefully wrapped golden chalice. Amidst the linen that surrounds it is a piece of parchment with a faded legend in Latin that reads, Calicem Cristi (the Cup of Christ). Could this truly be the actual Holy Grail? Legend has it that anyone who drinks from the cup that Christ used at the Last Supper will have eternal life. This claim is difficult to verify scientifically, but faith is a powerful thing and many people dream of living forever. Regardless of whether or not the Grail has any supernatural powers, its symbolic value is immense. As a sacred relic recognized by all of Christendom, the Cup of Christ possesses a broader appeal than the Black Madonna of Częstochowa, making the Grail a powerful rallying symbol for whoever possesses it. Whether or not the chalice is indeed the fabled Holy Grail is entirely up to the Referee.
The Grail in the story could be a counterfeit relic, like the Shroud of Turin. It could just be a fancy golden cup in a treasure hoard. So, whether or not the chalice in the module is the Holy Grail is basically moot. What's important, plot-wise, is that the chalice could be the legendary Cup of Christ. It's a McGuffin, a hook to set up a conflict between the PCs and various potential antagonists (the module provides three).
Only one of the three featured antagonists in the module is after the treasure for its potential symbolic power- he believes that possessing a legendary Christian relic will help legitimize the Fourth Reich he dreams of building. Maybe he secretly wishes that it has some supernatural power (again, that is up to the Referee). The other featured antagonists simply want the treasure for its monetary value.
In pre-war dollars, this treasure would be worth over $10,000,000 by weight alone (given its age and historical significance, it would be worth even more to the right people). Even in the ruined global economy of mid-to-late 2000, this treasure has immense monetary value. Whoever possesses it would be very wealthy by any conventional standard. With this wealth, PCs could buy a ship (or even an airplane!) to take them home, or set up their very own fiefdom in the region. One piece of the treasure, a simple golden chalice, could have an even greater symbolic value. However, such a substantial treasure will be challenging to move and/or hide, and possessing it places a very big bull’s eye on the PCs’ backs.
It's not a particularly large module, so I shouldn't give away any more for free. ;)
I do hope that you pick up the module and give it a look. I think you'll find that it's worth the $1.99 US.
As a neat aside, Chris Lites (writer of much of the 4e material) told me that he almost used the Holy Grail instead of the Spear of Destiny in Urban Operations.
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