Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Cities of Bone

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Publication date
  
1994

Originally published
  
1994

Genre
  
Role-playing game

Media type
  
Boxed set

Author
  
Steve Kurtz

Publisher
  
TSR

Cities of Bone httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbd

Similar
  
A Dozen and One Adventures, Ruined Kingdoms, Corsairs of the Great Sea, Golden Voyages, City of Delights

Cities of Bone is an accessory for the 2nd edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, published in 1994.

Contents

Contents

Cities of Bone is an Al-Qadim boxed set that includes six dungeon crawls, mostly portable anywhere in Zakhara, half for beginning characters and the rest for mid-to high levels. The text offers advice for creating a spooky atmosphere, and the historical reasons behind the construction of each dungeon.

Half the text makes up the adventure, "Court of the Necromancers", where in the undead city of Ysawis, the player characters get involved in the intrigues of a couple of repugnant wizards and a senile lich.

Publication history

Cities of Bone was written by Steve Kurtz.

Reception

Allen Varney reviewed Cities of Bone for Dragon magazine #219 (July 1995). He comments: "The indefatigable Kurtz returns with another mixed lot of adventures in ruined cities. The Al-Qadim line had been held over a year beyond its original plan by the time of this 1994 sourcebox, and this may explain the set's flagging inspiration." He calls the dungeon crawls "mostly routine" and says that the historical reasons for each dungeon "make interesting reading, but these are basically numbered rooms with traps and monsters. These are endlessly popular in other AD&D worlds, but in Zakhara they fit awkwardly, for (as the text remarks) 'robbing the tombs of enlightened creatures is considered a base and dishonorable profession.'" Varney considers "Court of the Necromancers" to be the set's best adventure, commenting: "There's an interesting plot and one well-staged, creepy dinner scene with the two necromancers, but the storyline works only with players who behave with cautious restraint — yet the same adventure's dungeon crawl, like all the others here, belongs to the kill-everything-that-moves school of adventure design. It's an unfortunate mix."

References

Cities of Bone Wikipedia