Brotherhood of the Bolt
Brotherhood of the Bolt is a generic fantasy horror role-playing game supplement published in 1983 by The Companions, the third in the five-part "Islandia Campaign" series. Plot summaryA wizard of the evil Brotherhood of the Bolt, Morlach the Malicious, plans to break into the Barrow of Shaltor Plain in order to find something that will either allow him to become a powerful lich, or to rise to power in the locality. Several scenarios are detailed that a game-master can develop into a series of adventures.[1] Plots include including an expedition to a tomb and an attempt to enter a guarded castle undetected. The book also includes new traps, monsters and detailed histories and descriptions of non-player characters.[2] The scenarios are not keyed to any particular role-playing game system, so the game-master must choose a game system and adapt the material to it.[1] Publication historyPeter L. Rice and Wm. John Wheeler, through their company The Companions, had previously published two adventures in the "Islandia Brotherhood Campaign", The Curse on Hareth (1982), and Plague of Terror (1983). Brotherhood of the Bolt was the third in this series, a 40-page book with three maps published in 1983,[3]: 160 written by Rice and Wheeler with additional material by Ray Estabrook, Donna McKinnon, William R. Mohler, Matthew Needham, and Dennis O'Brien. The artwork was by Rice and Wheeler as well as John Carlson, Tom Cobb, Mary Coman, David J. Hutchins, Kevin LaChance, Matthew Needham, and Eric Pfusch.[4] Later in 1983, Rice and Wheeler followed this book with two more adventures in the Islandia Campaign series: Streets of Gems and Gems for Death.[4] ReceptionKen Rolston reviewed this product twice in the pages of Dragon:
In Issue 23 of Imagine, Mike Dean pointed out that because of the adventure's complexity and the necessity of adapting it to a role-playing system, it "will provide your group with many sessions of play, but only if you are prepared to put in the necessary time and work for conversion and full understanding of the plots running through each of them."[6] Ken Rolston reviewed Brotherhood of the Bolt in White Wolf #40 (1994) and stated that "In Brotherhood of the Bolt, everything is described in this detail, so important bits aren't clumsily telegraphed to players. The piquant charm of dangerous exploration retains its delicious suspense and uncertain mystery."[7] References
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