Rahul Sharma (Editor)

The Throne of Bloodstone

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Code
  
H4

Character levels
  
18 - 100

First published
  
1988

Preceded by
  
The Bloodstone Wars

3.8/5
Goodreads

TSR Product Code
  
9228

Campaign setting
  
Forgotten Realms

Originally published
  
1988

The Throne of Bloodstone httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen336H4

Rules required
  
AD&D (1st Ed.) Battlesystem (optional)

Authors
  
Michael Dobson, Douglas Niles

Similar
  
Douglas Niles books, The Bloodstone Pass Saga books, Other books

H4 - The Throne of Bloodstone is an Official Game Adventure or "module" for the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game.

Contents

Plot summary

In The Throne of Bloodstone, the player characters take a trip to the Abyss to steal the wand of the demon prince Orcus.

This module is recommended for characters between levels 18 and 100. They play the rulers of Bloodstone Pass. A war against the Witch-King of Vaasa has come to a standstill. The players venture into the Abyss, destroy a mighty demon, steal the Wand of Orcus and take it to the Seven Heavens to be destroyed.

The battle between the mighty undead army of the Witch-King of Vaasa and the forces of Bloodstone has come to a standstill. As long as the source of the Witch-King's power is at work, his evil forces will never be defeated! This module requires the player characters, as the rulers of Bloodstone Pass if following the series, to find the true power behind the Witch-King and defeat it.

The module requires the players to journey to the Abyss, confront Orcus, one of its greatest demons, steal the Wand of Orcus, and destroy it.

The wide range of levels the module is for is dealt with in several ways as well as the general principles described above for dealing with 100th level characters. For some encounters either the number and/or type of opponents vary or the NPC's reaction to the characters vary depending on the total level of the party. Some areas in the module like the city of liches or the city of 100,000 demons, are really too difficult for any party to overcome directly and require approaches other than brute force.

Publication history

H4 The Throne of Bloodstone was written by Douglas Niles and Michael Dobson, with a cover by Keith Parkinson, and was published by TSR in 1988 as a 96-page book. Interior art was by Graham Nolan.

This module is part four of four, though it is not required to have played the previous three modules. While this is the fourth adventure in the Bloodstone pass saga, and the second that sets the saga in the Forgotten Realms, it is the first publication that bears the official Forgotten Realms logo.

At 96 pages the module is larger than was common at the time of publication and is the longest in the Bloodstone Saga. It comes in a loose cardboard cover; the maps are not printed on the inside but in the book itself, and on a foldout poster.

This module is listed as being intended for character levels 18 - 100. The upper end of this range is by far the highest level specified for any D&D module. The module includes a substantial section on running games with 100th level characters. The guidance rests on three principles:

  • 100th-Level characters are not ten times more powerful than 10th-level characters
  • Apply all the rules strictly
  • Never give a 100th-level character an even break
  • The module includes two sets of pre-generated characters. The first set is the same seven characters that have run through the Bloodstone Saga, most of which are now 19th level. The second set are based on great characters of mythology and all have at least one class at 100th level. These characters, who are much more powerful than the versions appearing in the Legends & Lore manual are Perseus, Circe, Hermes and Artemis.

    Reception

    Lawrence Schick, in his 1991 book Heroic Worlds, found it strange that the module purports to be usable for character levels 18-100, "considering there are no rules for character levels above about 25 in AD&D".

    Credits

    Design: Michael Dobson and Douglas Niles
    Editing:
    Brand Manager:
    Cover Art: Keith Parkinson
    Interior Art:
    Cartography:
    Typesetting:
    Art Direction:
    Electronic Prepress Coordination:
    Playtesters:

    Distributed to the book trade in the United States by Random House, Inc., and in Canada by Random House of Canada, Ltd. Distributed to the toy and hobby trade by regional distributors. Distributed in the United Kingdom by TSR UK Ltd.

    product number 9228
    ISBN 0-88038-560-X

    Opponents

    To complete the adventure players will need to defeat many opponents. Those difficult or impossible to avoid include:

  • Arctigis, a huge, ancient White Dragon.
  • The Witch-King Zhengyi - a Lich with 30th level magic-user ability.
  • 100 Type III Demons.
  • Fyrillicus, the Abyssian Dragon - a Red Dragon larger than any found on the Prime Material Plane.
  • Baphomet, a Demon Lord.
  • Orcus, Lord of the Undead.
  • Tiamat, the Chromatic Dragon.
  • Other major opponents characters may face include:

  • Large numbers of Demons of all types, including large cities of hundreds of thousands of demons.
  • the Tarrasque
  • 10,000 Zombies
  • 100 Liches, 12 Demiliches & 12 Death knights
  • Various Lesser Gods and Demon Princes including:
  • Pazuzu, Prince of Lower Aerial Kingdoms (Demon Prince)
  • Charon
  • Demogorgon, Prince of Demons
  • Yeenoghu, Demon Prince of Gnolls
  • Lolth, Demon Queen of Spiders
  • Juiblex, the Faceless Lord (Demon Prince)
  • Urdlen, the Crawler Below (Lesser God)
  • Zuggtmoy, Demoness Lady of Fungi
  • Graz'zt (Demon Prince)
  • Fraz-Urb'luu, the Demon Prince of Deception
  • Kostchtchie (Demon Prince)
  • Kali, Goddess of Destruction
  • Vaprak, demigod of Trolls and Ogres
  • Laogzed, demigod of Troglodytes
  • References

    The Throne of Bloodstone Wikipedia