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A parodic dating sim and horror visual novel wherein the player obtains a pink Necronomicon, and begins performing rituals to summon moe anthropomorphic beings from the Cthulhu Mythos, such as Ln'eta, a female version of Cthulhu. Terraria: Re-Logic: 2011 Eye of Cthulhu and Brain of Cthulhu are two prominent boss characters.
The Twin Spawn of Cthulhu: Twin daughters of Cthulhu, imprisoned in the Great Red Spot of the planet Jupiter. They both appear as huge shell-endowed beings, with eight segmented limbs, and six long arms ending with claws, vaguely resembling their "half-sister" Cthylla. Ngirrth'lu The Wolf-Thing, The Stalker in the Snows, He Who Hunts, Na-girt-a-lu
In the March 1996 edition of Dragon (Issue 227), Rick Swan admitted that the book "boasts an amazing amount of research", and that the set of maps was "perhaps the best-ever in a Cthulhu product." But he found that the book did not go beyond being a basic guidebook — he was disappointed in the lack of supernatural phenomena ("as scarce as ...
Chaosium Inc. (/ k eɪ ˈ ɒ s i ə m / kay-OSS-ee-əm [1]) is a publisher of tabletop role-playing games established by Greg Stafford in 1975. [2] Chaosium's major titles include Call of Cthulhu, based on the horror fiction stories of H. P. Lovecraft; RuneQuest Glorantha; Pendragon, based on Thomas Mallory's Le Morte d'Arthur; and 7th Sea, "swashbuckling and sorcery" set in a fantasy 17th ...
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Cthulhu's Dark Cults is an anthology edited by David Conyers, containing ten Cthulhu Mythos short stories set in Chaosium's Call of Cthulhu role-playing game setting. All the stories take place during the 1920s and 1930s, the era in which the game is set.
A shoggoth (occasionally shaggoth [1]) is a fictional monster in the Cthulhu Mythos. The beings were mentioned in passing in H. P. Lovecraft's sonnet cycle Fungi from Yuggoth (1929–30), and later mentioned in other works, before being described in detail in his novella At the Mountains of Madness (1931). [2]
The following is a list of miscellaneous books—both real and fictitious—appearing in the Cthulhu Mythos. Along with the use of arcane literature, texts which innately possess supernatural powers or effects, there is also a strong tradition of fictional works or fictionalizing real works in the Mythos. The main literary purpose of books in ...