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Role Playing (Games)

Return to Arkham CC Comic Book 31

ChristopherA writes "There's a new Cthulhu Mythos comic out called "Return to Arkham". It's set in 1933, and includes beautiful, moody black & white art depicting H.P. Lovecraft's town of Arkham. In support of Lovecraft's belief in stories developed by Divers Hands, this comic has been released with a Creative Commons license, allowing anyone to create and release their own versions of the comic. This new comic is the second that online game company Skotos has released in a recent months, part of a new trend of turning games into stories. It's available for free at Skotos' website in a variety of formats."
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Return to Arkham CC Comic Book

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  • I still get a little spooked by some of his stories. I like it when so much is left up to the imagination.

    Also, there has yet to be a good serious movie made around the Cthulhu mythos yet. Sorry, none of the Stuart Gordon crap counts. They're played more for laughs than anything else...and Lovecraft was anything but laughs.

    I also get a kick out of all the fringe people that believe a bunch of this stuff...like the existence of a real Necronomicon. Give me a break. The stories are spooky and cool...but they'
    • Also, there has yet to be a good serious movie made around the Cthulhu mythos yet.

      Maybe you'll discount it as a movie, as it was made for Canadian TV, but the best Lovecraft adaptation I've seen by far is Out of Mind [imdb.com]. It's not based on any single one of his stories, but blends elements of a few of them along with excerpts from his letters. In my opinion, it's the closest thing to the spirit of Lovecraft's stories that I've seen on film.

      If you want to give it a shot, it's available on DVD [lurkerfilms.com] along with

    • Lovecraft is hard to do right on film. Much of the mood of his stories comes from his use of archaic and unusual words in his descriptions (e.g. squamous, cyclopean), and his love of ancient myths and legends. It's hard to have a comprarable effect on the big screen where little can be left to the imagination.

      My favorite film adaptation of one of his stories is Dagon [imdb.com]. Despite the title, it's based on the story The Shadow Over Innsmouth, except it is set in a Spanish fishing village instead of New Eng

    • How do you convert stories which rely on and base most of their power from your own imagination to come up with the scariest most horriable things possible, to a medium which bases most of it's power and relies mostly on leaving nothing to the imagination?

      Some things are just better when read by flashlight under the covers of your bed instead of being projected on a silver screen.
      • Oh I agree...though to some extent, I think "The Blair Witch Project" came close to leaving much up to the imagination. While many people outright hated this movie, I thought that it captured the "feel" of a Lovecraftian theme.

        And actually, I think they could capture the mood and feel of a Lovecraft story. IF they did it right. But things of this nature never get done right as the money men in Hollywood will want to put the latest computer effects on the screen.

        An example of this would be "The Haunting". Th
    • Cast a deadly spell was rather Lovcraftian, but it was also darkly humorous.
  • Images are gigantic (around 5 mins for cover over 256kbps) or you already started bringing it down?
    • The cover is bigger because it's color. The rest should load faster.

      But, yeah, partially a slashdot effect. I've moved somethings around to spread out the load.

      Shannon

  • Fantasy Flight Games just released a revised version of the Cthulhu board game, Arkham Horror [fantasyflightgames.com]. It's gotten high praise for its theme and immersion in the mythos (and mixed praise for difficulty, with some thinking its too easy).
    • Actually, that is somewhat deliberate. Skotos ressurected the original Arkham Horror board game [wikipedia.org], cleaned it up, and licensed it to Fantasy Flight Games, who made further improvements. It was hoped that both would be released around the same time.

      The new version has quite a few favorable reviews at Board Game Geek" [boardgamegeek.com].

    • A buddy of mine recently reviewed the Arkham Horror boardgame on his new podcast at Pulp Gamer [pulpgamer.com]. It's a podcast focused on paper gaming, both discussions and reviews. Overall, they gave it a pretty positive review.
  • Since there seems to be some dispute [wikipedia.org] as to how much of Lovecraft's work has lapsed into public domain, should there be any concern over potential accusations of derivative work? How well would a CC hold up allowing for further expansion if the source CC work is on shaky legal ground?
    • Skotos takes the position that whomever may or may not control the rights to Lovecraft's actual stories, derivative stories have always been widely accepted, with notable authors like Ramsey Campbell, Robert E. Howard, and Stephen King being just a few of those who have built upon Lovecraft's ideas over the years.

      Lovecraft actually actively encouraged such derivation, believing that by "wide citation" he could give his works an "air of verisimilitude". Even this year's move "Batman Returns" refers to Arkh

      • Well, Howard was a contemporary of Lovecraft and likely had permission, if not encouragement from the man himself. It appears that much of Campbell's work is published by Arkham House, and if they're the copyright holders, it makes sense that they'd grant him permission as well. I don't have a copy of any of Chaosium's game books, but it seems to me that a look at the language on their copyright page might be a good indicator of current status on things like this. (ie, if it's a battle that needed to be fo
      • Even this year's move "Batman Returns" refers to Arkham Sanitarium, a setting of many Lovecraft stories.

        It's "Batman Begins", Batman Returns came out in the early 90s... and it's "Arkham Asylum" in the Batman comics AND movies... It is a place that has figured in the comics for decades.
  • I'd love to post a mirror, but it's gonna be awhile before I can finish grabbing the PDF version. I both bless Slashdot for showing me such great stuff and curse it for holding it out of reach.
  • While there is a prominent Lovecraftian roleplaying game, that doesn't seem, to me, like enough reason to put this non-game comic in the Games section....
  • Is that where the name 'Arkham Asylum' (from the Batman comics) came from?

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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