Project Nemesis is a fan driven website for games that use the One-Roll Engine (like Nemesis, Wild Talents, Reign and Monsters) or Chaosium's Basic Roleplay System (BRP) (like Call of Cthulhu) and the Delta Green setting.
Feijong is a game similar to Mahjong with a slightly varient rule system, but which like Mahjong uses a combination of skill, luck and strategy for success. The tiles resemble Mahjong tiles superficially but the characters and symbols appear to be derived from Aklo, Tchotcho and other blasphemous tongues.
A collection of folders in a zip file, normally given some innocuous or random name (stuff.zip or HSKDfjeik.zip). Most of the images are pornographic, but they have a tendency toward the more extreme, internet-based fetish pornography. These are often focused around extreme physical changes to the human body, hermaphroditic qualities or animal-human hybrids, and often in violent situations.
A collection of dubplates recorded with reggae, drum and bass or other
forms of electronica. Most are labelled with dates (ranging from 1997
to 2002) and locations (of which the most common is an often misspelled
'Club Apacolypse'.) and the names of the tracks ("Ya! Ya! Ya! Fadder in
de Ocean!", "Faces of God", "Sky-Devils", "ReverbElation").
Dating from the early second century CE this was the most singular find
at the site of any of the twenty-two expeditions undertaken before the
founding of the modern state of Israel. Israeli authorities have closed
the ancient mound to all scholars, possibly because of security
concerns, since the founding of their state.
The Bell is easily the largest item in the Collection, nearly as large
as the Great Mingun Bell of Myanmar, weighing 88 metric tons and
standing over 20 feet high. At the top, the massive rings where it
would attach to its mount have been torn half away from the body of the
bell, and one of the rings is split, indicating that some flaw allowed
the bell to tear away from its mount under its own weight.
Packed up in seven large wooden boxes marked with the swastika are tens
of thousands small tiles; coloured black, white and green. A closer
look reveals that the black ones seems to be made out of obsidian, the
white ones out of bone (though it can be contested that any bone this
old should be unable to stay white) and the green ones from some
unknown, but slightly soapy to the touch, mineral.