Aug 31, 2016 4:23 am
London, 1888-1897. The world recoils in horror at an ongoing series of horrific slayings in London's east end. Caught between the interests of the elders who make this ancient city their home, and the explosion of new ideas and philosophies of the modern world, two deadly threats bracket a period of vast change.
Enter, if you dare, the court of Mithras.
This post is to gauge interest in a game of Victorian Age Vampire. VAV is a small release from White Wolf, a three book alternate setting for their flagship Vampire: The Masquerade, except set in the dying days of the 19th century.
The story would take place in two parts - the first in 1888 following the murders attributed to Jack the Ripper. The second in 1897, when the most famous vampire of all moves to London. Both events are catalysts for change in a world that struggles mightily to not.
The players would be middling vampires, motivated to uncover the murders before the world's media sheds light into London's every shadow. Mithras has kept London neutral ground, but it definitely leans more to the Camarilla than the Sabbat, though neither operate openly.
Players would only need access to basic V:TM rules. The rest is straight forward.
Enter, if you dare, the court of Mithras.
This post is to gauge interest in a game of Victorian Age Vampire. VAV is a small release from White Wolf, a three book alternate setting for their flagship Vampire: The Masquerade, except set in the dying days of the 19th century.
The story would take place in two parts - the first in 1888 following the murders attributed to Jack the Ripper. The second in 1897, when the most famous vampire of all moves to London. Both events are catalysts for change in a world that struggles mightily to not.
The players would be middling vampires, motivated to uncover the murders before the world's media sheds light into London's every shadow. Mithras has kept London neutral ground, but it definitely leans more to the Camarilla than the Sabbat, though neither operate openly.
Players would only need access to basic V:TM rules. The rest is straight forward.