Origins 79, sponsored by Strategy and Fantasy World, was held at Widener College in Chester, Pennsylvania in June, 1979. The AD&D tournament was "Lost Tamoachan: The Hidden Shrine of Lubaatum" by Harold Johnson and Jeff R. Leason.
Con reports were published in The Dragon #29 (September, 1979) "Report on Origins '79" by Jim Ward and The Dragon #30 (October, 1979) "Origins: Chaos with a Happy Ending" by "Fantasysmith".
As with Origins 78, the tournament adventure was made available for sale at the convention, although as a numbered collector's edition as opposed to the monochrome version, published the following year (together with an 8-page illustration booklet).
Johnson envisioned three series of nine encounters each, one for each round of the tournament. Leason provided additional ideas, and the adventure was playtested by the TSR design department prior to its finalization.
Sources of Inspiration:
Johnson minored in History, and had taken a course in Mesoamerican cultures. He was inspired by mythical places, such as Tamoanchan, as well as archeological sites, such as Lubaantun in Belize and Palenque in the Yucatan.
Johnson discusses the development of "Lost Tamoachan" in this interview on Grogtalk (January 17, 2021; from 02:57 to 03:09). In it, he mentions a specific National Geographic article* as another source of inspiration.
*this may have been "China's Incredible Find" in the April, 1978 issue, which contains the painting of a room in a Chinese emperor's tomb. The photograph appears to have been used in turn by Jeff Dee as the basis for illustration #9 in the illustration booklet (see this post)
Sequels and Derivative Works:
Hackmaster published "The Hidden Shrine" by Paul Glozeris in 2003.
Lost Tamoachan reappeared in "The Sea Wyvern's Wake" by Richard Pett in Dungeon #141 (December, 2006), an adventure in the "Savage Tide" adventure path for 3e.
A 4e version by Stephen Radney-MacFarland was published in 2011 and reprinted in Dungeon #209 (December, 2012).
A 5e version was published in the "Tales from the Yawning Portal" collection (2017).
*see also C1.5 "Ghost City of the Hidden Shrine" (Pacesetter Games, 2019) for 1e, by Bill Barsh.
Finally, in 2019, Johnson himself released "Return to Tamoanchan".
Other Settings:
The original adventure was shoehorned into the World of Greyhawk, but also fits well in the Savage Coast setting on Mystara, as discussed in this thread on the Piazza.
Site of the lost city of Risilvar in the Forbidden Highlands of Orc's Head Peninsula, from module X9 "The Savage Coast", a fitting location for the Hidden Shrine of Tamoachan.
The description for the lost city of Risilvar takes up less than two pages in module X9, with very little detail regarding the central Mesoamerican-style temple.
Nice work! This module (along with Tomb of Horrors) was really influential on my early dungeon design style, with inhabitants and challenges that made sense to the sealed-tomb setting.
ReplyDeleteThe cultural flavor always made this difficult to insert into my northern European-style campaign, but it is a masterpiece in thematic dungeons.
Are you aware of any substantial differences between the convention version and the published versions?
It's a masterpiece. I think it works really well on the Savage Coast, which was originally conceived as a bit of a "new world" setting, removed from the rest of the Known World.
DeleteI don't have a copy of the original tournament version, but would love to compare with the later published versions.