project-image

Ernest Gary Gygax Jr.'s Marmoreal Tomb Campaign Starter

Created by Ernest Gary Gygax Jr

The Marmoreal Tomb Campaign Starter is Ernest G. Gygax Jr.'s opening module for fantasy tabletop RPGs in The Hobby Shop Dungeon series.

Latest Updates from Our Project:

Marmoreal Tomb Update
almost 6 years ago – Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 12:52:42 AM

This post is for backers only. Please visit Kickstarter.com and log in to read.

Marmoreal Tomb Kickstarter Update
about 6 years ago – Thu, Apr 02, 2020 at 08:33:45 PM

A note on Troll Lord Games, the Kickstarter releases, and General Production from our CEO, Stephen Chenault

This is a long one folks. Skip to  the end: “Finally the Important Part” if you don’t want all the blather  and blah blah in the middle!

As you all know, our collective  countries are suffering from this horrid pandemic that has caused  personal loss and economic hardship the likes of which we’ve not seen in  some time. In the past several months, we have watched this virus  spread from its point of origin in China (Wuhan) to cruise ships, then  Japan, Korea, and then in a sudden wave into Italy, the United States,  and the rest of Europe. It continues to spread. The health care industry  along with various governments, the military, and other organizations  are working overtime to stem the tide. Part of this stemming has  included shutting down trans-oceanic travel and commerce, international  travel, national borders, domestic travel, and whole sectors of the  economy. This is having a devastating impact everywhere, not the least  of which is the TableTop RPG and Board Game industry.

Many of you have supported Troll  Lord Games in the past, and continue to do so, through Kickstarters,  purchasing at various stores, online or through digital outlets like  OBS, so I feel it’s important to put some information out there on how  TLG is managing this and what impact it has on games you have already  purchased via Kickstarter or had intended to do through other channels.

First, a few Ongoing Programs:

1) In order to help you pass the  time while locked up in various homes, apartments, motels, hotels and  vans down by the river, we are offering the C&C Players Handbook,  Digital, for free. Follow this                                      link here to get your copy.

2) We continue to offer a veteran’s  discount for all veterans of the five branches of the U.S. military, the  Reserves and National Guard. Please email us at [email protected]  for more information.

Okay. Here we go.

As you may or may not know, TLG  produces all its books and boxes using domestic sources. We have never  outsourced our production to China, India, or anywhere overseas. I’m a  huge fan of farmers markets and supporting local economies where  possible.

There are multiple reasons for this,  not the least of which is that I love my country and want to keep hard  earned money here. This is not a judgement on those who do outsource, if  you believe it best to do so, more power to you, welcome to America,  that’s what freedom is! Haha. But…

1) Economy: It is good for the local  economy. It gives my neighbors jobs, so they can pay their bills and I  think that's pretty cool. (and keep in mind, you are the root of that,  your support allows that to happen and we are all very thankful!)

2) Safety Net: It safeguards TLG  from international incidents (I had a spiel here about the study and  purpose of history and some other stuff but everyone made me delete it.  My real passion is history and everyone is like “No one cares, Steve.” I  might bring it up on twitch tomorrow!).

3) Environment: It is good for the  environment as it cuts down on trans-oceanic shipping and pollution (I’m  a huge fan of leaving the space you occupy cleaner than when you found  it... That and whales. I've always loved whales, and my brain pan still  hurts from the idea that all those cargo ships carrying all this stuff  back and forth over the oceans causes so much noise that the whales  can’t see/hear straight), and so on and so on. It’s just a environmental  policy to produce domestically.

Does it cost TLG more than using  manufacturing overseas? Yes, it costs more. There is no doubt about  that. But that’s okay. That’s between me, Davis, Tim, my wife, the check  book, and banks. 😊

Afterthought: I check regularly with our local manufactures to see where they  purchase their raw materials. Paper, headbands, board, litho wrap and  other materials are all purchased from local sources, except some  specialty paper (that TLG never uses) from South Korea. So even the raw  materials are domestic.

Second Afterthought: Dice are sometimes made in China. Sometimes domestically.

Third Afterthought: We have produced books in Canada. In fact, our first books were printed  at Preney Print and Litho in Canada. That was in the long-ago times.  And we will probably do so again in the future. But Canada, like Mexico,  is just in the neighborhood. I love my neighbors.

With that in column A… We have column B….

Years ago, TLG invested in its own  print shop. We produce a mountain of soft cover books for ourselves and  various publishers and entities. As with our outsourced production, our  materials are all bought locally with the sole exception that  occasionally some of our paper, though purchased from a local company,  is manufactured by a German Company (who in turn has the pulp turned to  paper in Finland). This is replacement paper when our normal domestic  supplier runs out, which is not very often. So by and large all our  materials for the print shop are made in the U.S. with an occasional  deviation to Germany/Finland (Won’t somebody think of the whales!).

I Don’t Care Steve. This is the longest brief I’ve ever read. What about my Kickstarter Pledge?

Almost there….

Printing domestically has a very  positive outcome on our production in most circumstances. Recently the  tariff wars caused supply issues. And now our current crisis has done  the same. China’s closing up shop has had almost no impact on us, and  the impact it has had was indirect and easy to navigate.

As soon as the virus jumped from  China to Korea, we anticipated an interruption in the international  trade and supply chain. I wasn’t worried so much about not getting books  printed as we print domestically, but in the availability of domestic  supplies. As soon as China shut down her provinces and closed shop I  suspected that we would begin suffering from short term supply  shortages, largely because everyone else - printers and publishers in  all fields - as soon as they saw the overseas supply channel was shut  off, would turn to local supply sources, causing some disruption and  shortages for TLG. (You watched this play out in the toilet paper rush.  There was no real panic buying. It was just normal buying, but everyone  did it at once, and your local grocer was in no way prepared for that.  Their normal stocks were depleted immediately, then they restocked as  they always did and those were depleted immediately as well. This causes  the illusion of shortages to the consumer...because the shelves are  empty...so they buy more. Its a vicious cycle. Grocers are having to  adjust a decade’s worth of habits and knowledge about their inventory  control to accommodate a sudden rush from all their customers. The  supply channel is only now shaking itself out).

With this supply channel threat in  mind, as soon as this virus jumped the Korean border, we began stocking  up on materials needed to manufacture books. We have at present about a  three month’s supply of paper, a year’s supply of glue, extra parts for  the equipment, and two Kickstarters and two month’s supply of packing  material and boxes (all this was based on a slightly higher than average  monthly sales to accommodate any upward fluctuations in our sales).

Finally the important part...

So, in short, we should experience  no shortages in supplies to print or manufacture your books. We have  more than enough materials to complete and ship the Amazing Adventures  5E Kickstarter, Codex Egyptium, Codex Celtarum, Gaxmoor and other  Kickstarters.

Government Shut Down

This we have no control over. If our  domestic producers are shut down by State or Federal order, then we can  do nothing about that. However, that has not happened as of yet. We  have already received the hardcover version of Amazing Adventures 5E  from the printers so it is in the bag. Egypt and Celtarum should be  print ready in the next short while. But on this point, we’ll keep you  posted.

Wrapping up

In  short, the unfolding economic crises and the pandemic has not impacted  our production or release schedule. Any product that is late can be laid squarely on us here!

April 2, 2020

He Who Sits on the Elephants Back

Stephen Chenault

Marmoreal Tomb Update
about 6 years ago – Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 01:41:34 AM

Greetings form the Dens!

An update on Marmoreal Tomb. The edited files are on my desk. I've kicked them over to Benoist for a final look see. It's nothing egregious so I suspect we'll get the thumbs up very soon. Despite that I am kicking these to Peter Bradley as well, so he can get a good assessment of what he needs to do to lay this book out. The art is here as well, and Benoist separated it all into sections, so placement should be fairly easy.

So in short, we are at the layout stage of the main book. This is our primary job right now, getting this book done. And we are at the final stage. Trollzah! I do hope to see the digital version of this in your hands in the coming weeks.

Once this book is done, I'll get a good assessment of where we are on everything else, contact people to convert to the various systems for the stretch rewards and give you all an update. 

Steve & The Troll Lords

Thank you all for you continued patience! And if you are interested, check out our ongoing Kickstarter for the C&C Castle Keepers Guide. It is funded and on to a host of stretch rewards! Join us at the table! Trollzah!

Marmoreal Tomb Update
about 6 years ago – Fri, Mar 06, 2020 at 07:48:31 PM

Greetings from the Dens!

Way overdue for an update. No real excuse, we've just been running all over hell's half acre (that's become my sobriquet for the Troll Dens).  In other words, busy. 

So I talked to Mac yesterday. He had three things to say about this project. I will impart them all here with some explanation. 

First off, he said, "The old school guys are going to love this book." Mac is an old school guy. He loves gaming as it was in the 80's, the Golden Age as it were. He went ape shit over Stranger Things, if that gives you an idea.

The next thing he said is going to sound odd, but its not. Mac doesn't buy very much gaming stuff anymore. Since he co-wrote C&C and started Troll Lord Games with me he is kind of grandfathered in to any product we produce so he hasn't wanted for new stuff. He only buys material he is REALLY keen on. So the above statement was followed by "I would lay money down for this. No, Steve. I'm serious. I would buy this. This is really good." He said it in the same tone as he has when he speaks about the movie, The Godfather (a movie he loves).

The third thing he said was "I know the backers are anxious to get this, but I'm not going to rush the editing." 

I can't speak to the first two points as I've not read it (reference Hell's Half Acre comment above and my lack of time), but to third I agreed with him.

All that said, he is almost done. He thinks he can have it to me next week. With art and maps in hand, we should have it laid out in short order. With a little luck, just a little, we'll have a mock up at Garycon and for those who aren't going, we'll showcase it on twitch like a mofo.

Backerkit is set up and ready to launch, Tim is just waiting the green light from me. Which will come when the book goes into Layout and I'm confident we can deliver.

Thank you all for you crazy as hell patience.

Steve & The Troll Lords

Marmoreal Tomb Kickstarter Update
about 6 years ago – Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 01:06:20 AM

This post is for backers only. Please visit Kickstarter.com and log in to read.