Halloween in the Caribbean
November 3, 2016Halloween came and went, and it brought a nice chance for some horror-themed gaming. I obviously wanted to do something a bit more pirate-y this year, so the theme was obvious.
Putting together a game to play with my friends, I went with my go-to ruleset, Flashing Steel by Ganesha Games. I tweaked and simplified it at places for ease of gaming, and then wrapped it in a nice little cocoon of story. The story was a suitable genre piece, with the dread undead pirate captain Armitage Shanks (last seen bothering the Orient) coming to claim charming young Rosalie Underwood for his bride for all eternity at the strike of midnight. To make things easier for him, Shanks decided to bring along an army of the dead as well as two horrible, imaginatively named lackeys, Ghost and Crab man. Luckily a group of heroes was there to thwart Shanks’ evil scheme! The protagonists consisted of dashing captain Pemberton Smythe and his two redcoats, pirate queen Valeriana de Torres with her voodoo priestess Madame Labadie and first mate Benson, Rosalie Underwood’s father with his priestly friend Father Wexcombe and trusted servant Belinda, and Daring Dragoon, the people’s swashbuckling hero.
What followed was an epic battle, with poor Rosalie’s fate hanging in the balance almost up to the last dice rolls of the game. What did we get to see? Our heroes cut down waves upon waves of zombies. Father Wexcombe banishing the ghost with holy water, only to get shot down by Shanks just moments later and brought back as a zombie. The terrifying Crab man crushing poor Daring Dragoon after the hero’s valiant charge. The pirate queen and His Majesty’s captain fighting side by side to buy more time before falling to the claws of Crab man and Shanks’ blade. The voodoo priestess dueling magically with Shanks, pulling the enchanted Rosalie this way and that…and finally, first mate Benson putting a pistol bullet in Shanks’ skull just as the witching hour passed and the forces of darkness withdrew.
It was a blast! We laughed a lot, we rolled a lot of dice, imitated death groans and roars of frustration (thanks Joonas!) and pushed little toy soldiers across the board, all the while overdosing on sugar. What more could you want from a Halloween game?
Shown below are photos of various quality from the game, taken by the various participants on their phones. You can click on any of them for a larger view.
I think ending this post after that photo is appropriate.
Marvelous! Sounds like you had great fun. The terrain and the minis are top notch, and a bit of Innsmouth can never hurt… wait, it can, but you wouldn’t know, because you’d already be crazy 🙂
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by cptshandy November 3, 2016 at 10:05Thanks! Nothing wrong with a little Innsmiäiäpffflui’gh…
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by Mikko November 3, 2016 at 13:37I thoroughly enjoyed this and I want more please!!
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by imperialrebelork November 3, 2016 at 11:12Thanks, glad you liked it! Probably need to game more then 🙂
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by Mikko November 3, 2016 at 13:37That photo of the Daring Dragoon atop a fountain made my day 🙂
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by sho3box November 3, 2016 at 13:36Ha-HA! Glad to help, thanks for introducing us.
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by Mikko November 3, 2016 at 13:39Excellent fun 🙂 Can’t beat a good halloween game, I ran one with the kids – Indiana Jones and Shortround vs. zombies using stripped down Frostgrave rules… it was a hoot!
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by Alex November 3, 2016 at 15:32That sounds brilliant! How old are the kids?
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by Mikko November 3, 2016 at 23:1310 & 6 mate, perfect ages to get them into games 🙂
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by Alex November 4, 2016 at 02:03[…] This post showcases two of my lately painted miniatures that you may have already glimpsed in the Halloween game report. […]
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by From the painting desk #45 – Special characters | Dawn of the Lead November 10, 2016 at 01:04