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.
The book is a collection of journals of Jim Morrison, starting in 1958,
until 1967. The book does not include stories of drugs, music, or
anything one might think of when thinking of Morrison. Also this
journal was writen long before Morrison started using the 'Lizard King'
persona.
The "Paranormal Advance Research Association." A message board used by
various occultists, most of the information has nothing to do with the
mythos so much as local myths, magic and paranatural events. While any
mythos event that makes the papers will likely be linked here, so will
plenty of non-mythos or wierd stories. The analasys of events provided
by the members tend to be more "rational" then mythos.
Hidden Info: The inscriptions in the 1976 film (The World, Part 3 by a Mr. Li) are related to the Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan
(Chinese check). The young man interviewed in the 1954 film (an
untitled reel apparently by a man named van der Meer) is a former
member of the Brotherhood of the Yellow Sign (Dutch check).
Bill Kirkby was an Anglican vicar in a small town in the English
countryside at the end of the 19th century. His life is relatively
unremarkable except for the fact he was also legal guardian to his
brother Alex, a former cultist badly injured in a police raid on his
sect's headquarters and declared unfit to stand trial by the courts.
A series of twelve home-made pornographic film reels shot in 1922 by
land developer Donald Cardiss, featuring his friends, a nephew and his
daughter. The films were made in Cardiss' home for distribution among a
close-knit circle of 'cinema enthusiasts', in semi-open defiance of the
authorities while he was awaiting trial on an obscenity charge.
This is the journal of a 15 year old girl named Megan. It is badly
burnt on its covers and around the edges, as though somebody tossed it
onto a fire that petered out before it could entirely consume the
little book. In spite of the scorching, the entries are at least 80%
legible. The journal begins with a few unremarkable entries in which
Megan details her thoughts and experiences as an ordinary high school
freshman. Apparently, her interest in the journal wanes rapidly, and
soon many weeks pass without an entry. Then a long series of very
strange entries begin.
This anonymous looking book has a number of very unusual properties if
examined closely. It is fastened with a heavy metal clasp, which
contains metals completely unknown to science. The lock is near
unbreakable and the mechanism very hard to open (half Locksmith rolls).
The covers and paper are similarly weird, containing fibres from plants
no botanist can identify.
This work is known in academic circles only by reputation and by the
precious few fragments recovered from the tomb of a Chinese noble. It
supposedly represents the condensed wisdom of an obscure sect with
Toaist roots dating back to at least the 8th century. Members of the
highly exclusive sect were accused of political intrigues and
repeatedly persecuted by various regimes.