Stormbringer (role-playing game)

Stormbringer

Stormbringer 4th edition box cover, 1990.
Illustration by Michael Whelan, 1977.
Designer(s) Ken St. Andre, Lynn Willis et al.
Publisher(s) Chaosium
Publication date 1981 (1st edition)
1985 (2nd edition)
1987 (3rd edition)
1990 (4th edition)
1993 (Elric!)
2001(5th edition)
Genre(s) Fantasy
System(s) Basic Role-Playing, d20 System

The Stormbringer fantasy role-playing game published by Chaosium puts the players in the world of the Young Kingdoms, based on the Elric of Melniboné books by Michael Moorcock. The game takes its name from Elric's sword, Stormbringer (though one edition was published as Elric!) and uses the Basic Role-Playing[1] game system, a percentile-dice-based system used in many role-playing games designed by Chaosium.

History

The game has evolved through several editions over the years:

In 2001, Chaosium also published a d20 System version of the game as Dragon Lords of Melniboné, with cover art by Brunner.

As of November 2007, “Chaosium no longer [p]roduces new books for the Stormbringer roleplaying game”, [2] but in August 2007, Mongoose Publishing published the Elric of Melniboné RPG[3] by Lawrence Whittaker, which is based on the RuneQuest rules system.

Translations

System

Versions 1–3 are functionally similar, version 4 changed the magic system extensively, Elric! was a substantial reworking of the game, and version 5 is a new layout of the Elric! rules, with additional material from several older game supplements that are no longer in print. The Spanish version also includes excerpts from the Dragon Lords of Melniboné book.

Bibliography

References

  1. Writtle, Murray (February–March 1982). "Open Box: Stormbringer". White Dwarf (review) (Games Workshop) (29): 15. ISSN 0265-8712.
  2. "Stormbringer – Chaosium Inc.". Chaosium. Retrieved 2007-11-06.
  3. ISBN 978-1-905850-13-6, see Elric of Melnibone RPG series
  4. Psnrol.com. Psnrol.com (9 August 2013).

External links

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