B8 "Journey to The Rock" (1984) by Michael Malone is a wilderness adventure culminating in a climactic set-piece encounter, for character levels 1-3.
Module B8 "Journey to The Rock" (1984) by Michael Malone. Cover illustration by Larry Elmore.
The party is hired to discover the secret of The Rock, which includes recovering one piece of a two-part magical talisman.
Eight pregens with mini-bios are provided, also suitable for use as a handy roster of NPCs.
Players' Map to The Rock. Cartography by David S. LaForce.
The trail to The Rock splits into three different paths, hearkening back to its origins as a tournament scenario.
The adventure is difficult for a group of 1st level characters to complete, and better suited for 2nd or 3rd level characters.
Devils Tower in Wyoming. Photo by Pattys-photos/Flickr
Q. Where is the basic module Journey to the Rock based?
A. Nowhere. It was a "suitable with any campaign" design. Journey to the Rock was not set in any particular area of the Known World. Should you need to place it, perhaps the best place would be in the vast unexplored region northwest of the Known World.
The City of TumaAn ancient city, which disappeared, centuries ago. Its mysterious buildings, some of them hundreds of feet tall, lack any doors or windows.Looking for the OceanThis hook suggests "a series of light-hearted, humorous adventures" as the lead-in to modules X1, X6, X7, or X8 (none of which are light-hearted or humorous).Adventures with the Chameleon MenThe basis for a subterranean adventure, as a possible introduction to the Underdark.Using Optional EncountersSide adventures involving the elves of Sylvanhome, the dwarves of the Krayzen Mountains, or the gnomes of the Barkel Mountains.The Horror of Lake NeshonanA "Loch Ness"-type monster is terrorizing the area.
Mystery Origins:
According to the supermodule "In Search of Adventure" (1987), the module was based on a one-round tournament scenario, with three different trails to the Rock.
Malone might have designed his adventure for a con in San Diego in the early 1980s. I've noted similarities with an earlier tournament scenario, as posted on Dragonsfoot back in 2015, here.
The module was brilliantly lampooned in Something Awful (July 22, 2010).
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