![]() ![]() "Acceptance was once the shed body of Razor-Worn, and served as her most devoted follower. ![]() Its patron magic will mutate the casters' bodies and gift them with all the auxiliary limbs they could hope or dream for." Acceptance started out as the body of the decapitated Razor-Worn (see below). There are:Īcceptance, The Root Organ-Fractal: This is "a patron that is best described as a headless body of bodies of bodies of bodies. The issue then provides two full patron entries, complete with invoke patron results, spellburn, patron taint, and patron spells. The judge may wish to impose size limits as to what traps can be animated enough to move around. Spells and Patrons: We gain the animate trap familiar spell, which is necessary for the Comm-Artist, but which could potentially be used by other classes. The adventure would be awesome, mind you, but it would require some serious calculations to work for the main classes in this milieu. Through deals they have brokered with the Orbital Intelligences, they've been gifted the ability to channel this data and bring life to machinery specifically traps."Īdding this class to the ones we had in Issue #1, I am again struck by both the creativity of the author and the logistics of devising adventures for these characters. Radio waves course through their veins, and exposure to data in all forms amplifies their nervous systems. Most communities would collapse without them, and even the most basic of trade would fall through. And, yes, that is her on the cover.Ĭlasses: Human Comm-Artist: "The Comm-Artist is a rogue engineer that excels at setting up information relays, turrets, and long distance networks. The publisher is Orbital Intelligence.Īs packed as it was with material, Terror of the Stratosfiend #1 apparently didn't cover everything that the author wanted it to, because a #1.5 issue came out before #2! Like the first issue, it is pretty impressive, so we might as well jump right in!Īn Introduction to Elevators: An introduction And, of course, notice that there is a god of elevators. Art is by James Everett Jackson (including cover), Krzysztof Bieniawski, and Shane O'Neil. Terror of the Stratosfiend #1.5 Preamble to the Melancholic Terminal Ascent was written by Sean Richer. My best advice is to start cataloguing every DCC and MCC product in existence, and perhaps someone will take pity upon you. I am not sure where you can find a copy of this. You can find another review on Flammable Hospital here. Just be aware that you will have to build it yourself you will only be getting the skeleton of a skeleton here! Here, I could see some of the background as a setting for a Country Crawl Classics or even an Umerica adventure where the Flammable Hospital is inhabited by the kind of insane beings who created it. Usually, I try to figure out some way to use an unusual product within a regular Dungeon Crawl Classics campaign. At best, it is a way to roll dice and role-play without much of an actual "game" involved, which may be perfect if you want to get the silliness out of the way at the beginning of a convention or if you don't feel like anything more serious one night. ![]() This is not an accident.įlammable Hospital does not take itself seriously. ![]() There is no clear indication of how to use the material provided. Abilities are taken from a combination of D&D and DCC (although "Sexy/Charmisma" is a bit different), but they are percentiles, apparently generated by rolling 10d10 x 10. For one thing, your level is random, and you might be "Star Jackson" level. This listing is honorary because Flammable Hospital is more of a " DCC-adjacent" product than something directly tied into Dungeon Crawl Classics. Was it though? Or was he just trying to exorcise his games collection? I am told that the copy he sent me was an extra. While he is not credited with this product, he has done other writing which appears, or will appear, in the DCC Trove of Treasures. sent me a copy of this zine so that I could create this listing. There is no publisher listed.ĭisclosure: James Pozenel Jr. Art is by Terra Frank, Michael Raston, Doug Kovacs, Christian Kessler, and Chris Thomas (logo). Flammable Hospital was written and/or inspired by Jason Kielbasa, Acep Hale, Debbie Deaver, Chris Thomas, Richie Cyngler, Dan Domme, Reece Carter, Brenda Wolfe, Paul Wolfe, Terra Frank, Wayne Snyder, Gabriel Perez Gallardi, Anthony Fournier, Michael Raston, Nik Wolfe, Christian Kessler, Ashley Mensinger, Harald Wagener, Kathryn Muszkiewicz, Michael, Noah Stevens, James McGeorge, Alex Roberts, Harley Stroh, Soriah Esquivel, Doug Kovaks, and Jarrett Crader. ![]()
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