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 dvd starts with sevral actors dresses in 19th century nobel clothing descussing the theater. A small urchin tells them of a troop of performers all the way from Carcosa.
The acting is horrid, but then it begins to get "better".
Sheet of LSD soaked blotting paper, a nauseous yellow in colour with black symbols. 8.00 x 10.00" subdivided into 0.50" x 0.50" squares or "trips". A rough
square approximating to 9 half-inch squares has been torn from one
corner of the sheet. Originally manufactured in San Francisco circa 1966
These mysterious texts are anonymous, probably written by a Buddhist
monk during the 1200's or earlier. The manuscript, equivalent to a good
54 pages, is a philosophical/mystical dissertation regarding a
legendary temple city in the north, Lau-Isar.
Originally entitled “Efnograficheskiy Obzor Tunguskikh Narodnikh
Tantsev” (“An Ethnographic Survey of Tungus Folk Dances”),
anthropologist Vitali Vulfevich Dolinin compiled these recordings to
preserve the shamanistic dances of numerous tribes in the Siberian
wilderness. According to data collected by the reorganized Academy of
Sciences, a majority of the native population north of Lake Baikal were
rumored to continue animistic worship despite their outward acceptance
of Russian Orthodox Christianity.
This obscenely thick portfolio constitutes a wealth of bizzare minutia
regarding various obscure and enigmatic Roman tribal deities. Its
authors were mostly graduate students at various universities banding
together to write one mammoth paper, the doctoral thesis to trump all
others.
Following the death of his wife in 1671, the griefstricken Duke of
Buccleugh , Sir George Rothmere, commisioned one of Englands most
prominent architects to provide a fitting memorial to her memory.
At first blush, this is an unremarkable example of a late 19th century
parabaik or "folding book" from Burma. It is essentially one long sheet
of black paper, folded seventeen times accordian-style and slipped
between plain, laminated paper covers for protection. Unfolding the
long paper sheet reveals the white soapstone writings and
illustrations.
Professor Athanasius Bly, father of Severus Bly, grandfather of the
infamous S. Rowling Bly, was the head of the Classics Department at
Miskatonic University with a Doctorate in the subject and Batchelors in
Psychology and Metaphysics (the former under which he was the pupil of
one Harkness Locrian).