Castle Greyhawk (module)
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Castle Greyhawk | |
Code | WG7 |
---|---|
Rules Required | 1st edition AD&D |
Character Levels | 0 - 25 |
Campaign Setting | Greyhawk |
Authors | Various |
First Published | 1988 |
Linked Modules | |
WG - World of Greyhawk |
Castle Greyhawk is an adventure module for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy roleplaying game, set in the game's World of Greyhawk campaign setting. The module bears the code WG7 and was published by TSR, Inc. in 1988 for the first edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons rules.[1]
The product contains many references to contemporary popular culture, along with a bitingly satirical treatment of TSR's approach to earlier Greyhawk publications. The module's back cover states "The common theme of this dungeon is that no joke is so old, no pun is so bad, and no schtick is so obvious that it can’t be used to confuse and trip up PCs!"
Thus, although the adventure purportedly concerns Castle Greyhawk, most fans of the setting consider it to be a "joke" module. In 1990, TSR released a more definitive and serious treatment of the Castle itself in module WGR1 - Greyhawk Ruins[2]. Greyhawk: The Adventure Begins, one of the late '90s Greyhawk publications meant to revamp the campaign world, explicitly states that Greyhawk Ruins is to be considered the definitive castle layout and not Castle Greyhawk.
Contents |
[edit] Reception
Fan reception of Castle Greyhawk was mixed but generally negative. Many dedicated fans of the Greyhawk setting were bitterly disappointed by the long-awaited work. Some interpreted the publication as being a direct insult to Gary Gygax, who had recently left TSR in a dispute over ownership of the company, and by extension to early fans of the setting and D&D players in general. These issues continue to be discussed and debated on various fan sites and chat rooms. [3] [4]
Game designer John D. Ratecliff wrote in an article published on the Wizards of the Coast website:
Despite being intended in fun, the unrelenting mayhem of Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror creates a sense of bedlam, and the parody element opened the door for the later WG7, Castle Greyhawk (1988) -- thought by some at the time to be a deliberate attempt by TSR to destroy Gygax’s reputation in the wake of his departure from the company. The truth, especially given the freelance talent involved, is more likely to be that someone thought it a good idea at the time. They were wrong. Castle Greyhawk’s assortment of villains -- Col. Sanders, the Pillsbury Doughboy, the cast of Star Trek, and others -- would be more in keeping with a bad episode of Scooby Doo than a dungeon crawl. Unfortunately, the Castle Greyhawk collection of unconnected parody adventures tainted the mystique of D&D’s original dungeon so badly that not even the astonishingly deadly killer dungeon presented slightly later in WGR1. Greyhawk Ruins (1990) could reclaim its lost prestige. [5]
[edit] Table of Contents
Chapter | Designer | page |
---|---|---|
What's Happening Now at Castle Greyhawk | by Chris Mortika | 2 |
Level I: Against the Little Guys | by Steve Gilbert | 12 |
Level 2: It's My Party and I'll Die if I Want to | by Rick Swan | 21 |
Level 3: Too Many Cooks | by Guy McLimore, Greg Poehlein, and David Tepool | 32 |
Level 4: There's No Place Like Up | by Paul Jaquays | 44 |
Level 5: The Name of the Game | by John Terra | 54 |
Level 6: The Temple of Really Bad Dead Things | by Greg Gorden | 63 |
Level 7: Queen of the Honeybee Hive | by Grant Boucher and Kurt Wenz | 73 |
Level 8 : Of Kings and Colonels | by John Nephew | 83 |
Level 9: Vices 'N Virtues | by Scott Bennie | 92 |
Level 10: Fluffy Goes Down the Drain | by Rick Reid | 102 |
Level 11: Mordenkainen's Movie Madness | by Ray Winmnger | 111 |
Level 12: Where the Random Monsters Roam | by Steve Perrin | 119 |
[edit] Credits
Editing: Mike Breault with Jon Pickens
Cover Art: Keith Parkinson
Interior Art: Jim Holloway with Jeff Easley
Typography: Kim Janke
Cartography : Stephen Sullivan
Keylining: Stephanie Tabat and Dave S. LaForce
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 9222XXX1401
ISBN 0-088038-530-8
[edit] Back cover reads
Deep beneath the keep of Castle Greyhawk, a really nasty device is creating all of these gross mutated and unpleasant monsters that are running wild throughout the Castle and the 12 level dungeon beneath the Castle. The call has gone out for heroic, fearless, and kind of foolish adventurers to out-hack, out-slash and sometimes even out-think hordes of dough mn, headless mice, manic bee queens, really bad did things, Burgermen, crazed chiefs, and movie moguls. If they survive these and much odder obstacles, the characters still have too fine a nasty monster creator and put it out of business.
Castle Greyhawk contains 13 detailed levels for adventuring and expiration. Each level is a separate adventure written by a different author and each has its own unique brand of insane and baffling weirdness. Some levels involve solving puzzles and some require good old hacking and slashing the adventures can be played separately are altogether as a grand quest to free Castle Greyhawk from the evil, rotten boards that are plaguing it. The common theme of this dungeon is that no joke is too old is too bad no snhtick is so obvious that it can't be used to confuse and trip up the PCs!
13 adventures for characters levels 0 to 25
[edit] Notable nonplayer characters
- Herzog Akitrom
- Poppinfarsh the Dough Golem
- Gingerbread Man
- Inflated Ego
- Miss Gulch
- Ye Secret Tom of Inestimable Knowledges
- Driderman, The Inedible Bulk, Da Ting,
- Captain Kork, Mees Taspark, Bones
- Indiana Gnome
- Prof. Why, Baba Yaga [6]
- Elfin John
- Hack and Slash
- Captain Cheer Eo
- Marvin Grape
- Aunt Bee
- Tela Vision, Bunny
- Gross Profits, Net Profits, Profits of Doom
- Jak Briddon
- Penny & Fluffy
- Crystal Lite Ooze
- Mordenkainen
- Voyeux
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ (1988) Castle Greyhawk, WG7. World of Greyhawk: TSR, inc., 128. 9222XXX1401. ISBN 0-088038-530-8.
- ^ Mobley, Blake (1990). Greyhawk Ruins, WGR1. World of Greyhawk: TSR, inc., 128. 9292XXX1401. ISBN 0-88038-860-9.
- ^ "Rate WG7 - Castle Greyhawk". World.org EN World.org. (Web link).
- ^ "Is Castle Greyhawk obscene?". Forums Canonfire!: Forums. (Web link).
- ^ John D. Ratecliff (Undated). EX1-2. Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror. Retrieved on 2008-04-20.
- ^ Moore, Roger (March), “The Dancing Hut”, DRAGON magazine #83 VIII, No. 9: 31–52
[edit] References
- Mobley, Blake, and Timothy B Brown. Greyhawk Ruins (TSR, 1990).
[edit] External links
- World of Greyhawk Series at the Acaeum
- Castle Greyhawk at Pen-Paper.net
- Castle Greyhawk at the TSR Archive