Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Call of Cthulhu: The Card Game (formerly the Call of Cthulhu Collectible Card Game) is an out-of-print card game produced and marketed by Fantasy Flight Games from 2004 to 2015. It is based on Chaosium's Call of Cthulhu role-playing game , the writings of H. P. Lovecraft , and other Cthulhu Mythos fiction.
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Cthulhu Mythos card games" ... Call of Cthulhu: The Card Game; Cthulhu 500; G.
Elder Sign is a cooperative card and dice game, based on the Cthulhu Mythos of horror writer H.P. Lovecraft and Chaosium's Call of Cthulhu roleplaying game.It is published by Fantasy Flight Games, which also produces the Cthulhu Mythos games Arkham Horror, Call of Cthulhu: The Card Game, Mansions of Madness, and Eldritch Horror.
Mythos was designed to include a high level of player interaction, in the vein of some traditional card games like rummy. [4] Game play borrowed concepts from previous CCG titles, but also introduced new, innovative mechanics.
S. Petersen's Field Guide to Cthulhu Monsters is a 64-page sourcebook that details 27 creatures of the Cthulhu mythos, each with a full-page full-color painting and clues to help characters recognize them, and the supplement includes a key to help identify the monsters and a chart displaying their relative sizes. [1]
Each enemy cultist killed earns the active player's cult the number of "Fuggly Points" listed on the dead cultist's card. A certain number of Fuggly Points are required to win the game, but can also be spent to gain bonuses to die rolls, or to achieve desired effects on a few special cards. The active player can discard any number of cards if ...
Fantasy Flight Games published the Nocturnum trilogy of adventures over a span of three years as Long Shades (1997), Hollow Winds (1998) and Deep Secrets (1999). [1] These adventures were set in the contemporary times, as opposed to the core Call of Cthulhu game's 1920s setting, and introduced a new mythos race and created a darker background atmosphere for the adventure. [1]
Chaosium first released the horror role-playing game Call of Cthulhu in 1981, and regularly refreshed it with new editions containing revamped rules. The fourth edition's release in 1989 sparked a line of superior products that game historian Stu Horvath called "the golden age for the line". [3]