Round up
It’s been a little while since I did a list. It’s a good format to use when you are not totally sure what you want to write. And, yep, that’s how I’m using it today.
So, what’ve I been backing and kicking? Since the last one of these sorts of posts back in September 2024, quite a lot, actually.
On Kickstarter
Here’s the list. I’m going to write a bit about each of them down below.
- Solarcrawl
- A Perfect Wife: TTRPG Adventure + Fundraiser
- Glumdark
- A Feast for a Sphinx
- Terry Pratchett’s Discworld RPG: Adventures in Ankh-Morpork
- Royal Blood – A Tarot Heist RPG
1. Solarcrawl

Let’s start with the one that is still available to back on Kickstarter. Solarcrawl is an OSR exploration game set in a fantastic space age. It’s created by Galen Pejeau, an “illustrator and occasional game designer” according to their itch page.
I absolutely love the look of this one. The artwork seems to suit the subject matter so perfectly, its’ clean lines and definite, scientific style give it the right sort of vibe for a planet exploration game. I am excited to try it with the Death in Space rules but it is designed for any OSR game.
The idea is that your homeworld is dying and you are needed to go out and explore beyond the gravity well. So off you go to try to find new planets to explore and help you to revive your own.
The game is split into two phases, Mission Phase and Homeworld Phase. Mission allows you to go out and find planets, explore them and hopefully avoid their unique dangers. Afterwards, you have the Homeworld phase, when you do research, build and improve your ships, “regreening their world.” That sort of thing.
Take on dual roles: as the astronauts journeying forth to the other worlds within their solar system, and as the heads of the space agency that builds their rockets, chooses their destinations, and hopefully, work together in hopes of rekindling their fading world.
It funded very fast but I am sure the creator will appreciate any and all further backers. Go check out the campaign here. There’s still 10 days to go.
2. A Perfect Wife

One of the big Zine Month projects, this one caught my eye almost immediately. The project was created by David Blandy of Eco Mofos fame, but the creators of this scenario zine are Zedeck Siew, Amanda Lee Franck and Scrapworld.
It’s another OSR project. One of their stretch goals was to make it specifically compatible with the Liminal Horror RPG but, as I understand it, it should still be easily useable in any other OSR game.
The adventure is described as “urban horror” and explicitly involves a Malaysian mythical creature known as the Pontianak. This is the spirit of a woman who died in childbirth. According tot he wiki I have linked to, the spirit seeks out her victims by sniffing out their drying laundry. Apparently this is why Malays will not leave clothes out to dry at night.
This one is very interesting since the main aim of it was to pay the airfare and living expenses of the creators on a trip to Nottingham, England.
The purpose of this campaign is twofold. It seeks to fund:
1: The publication of a tabletop RPG adventure zine in print and PDF.
2: The air tickets and living expenses for Amanda Lee Franck, Scrap World, and Zedeck Siew to spend one week in Nottingham.With the former, we hope to entice you to help us with the latter.
You get: a complete mystery- and horror-themed adventure with evocative art based on an iconic-but-underrepresented Southeast Asian monster.
We get: an opportunity for three TTRPG designers to cross oceans and meet their peers, and each other, for the first time.
This will give them the opportunity to attend the Weird Hope Engines art exhibition, focusing attention on indie game creators, in Nottingham. They will be exhibiting works there themselves.
Curated by Dying Earth Catalogue (David Blandy, Rebecca Edwards, Jamie Sutcliffe), running from March to May 2025 at Bonington Gallery, Nottingham, UK.
In fact, you can already get the online version of the scenario published by Zedeck on his blog.
But the campaign was a success and it should fund both the publications and the trip. I can’t wait to get the physical object.
I’m sorry I didn’t write a bit about this one a lot sooner as it is such a worthy campaign but I am glad to see they were completely successful and I would even hope to get over to see the exhibition in Nottingham during its run between March and May this year.
3. Glumdark

You know, there are a few companies/creators that I would probably back no matter what the project. In the case of Glumdark, it wasn’t the creators themselves but the company, Exalted Funeral. I’ve gotten a few things from them in the past, although I don’t buy from them much because of the shipping. They published Between the Skies, for instance, and I think it’s pretty clear that I like that a lot. So, when the Glumdark Kickstarter was repeatedly slung at my face from Instagram, I paid attention. I knew nothing about it but I took a punt. I am quite glad I did.
Glumdark started as a website. It was built as a resource for GMs running dark fantasy games. It’s got a plethora of useful tables . You can go and check them out right here, at glumdark.com. What’s nice is that you have tables for GMs, of course, but also for players.
As a dungeon master, you may choose to punish your players with some fresh doom, or just amuse yourself with the joy of randomness. As a player, you can expand your backstory or seek inspiration for new adventures.
It’s system-agnostic, making it equally useful as a resource to players of D&D 5e and Troikans alike.
Here’s a few of my favourite things from the site:
- The Location Generator is probably the best bit for me. You can click on a location name such as, “A Mysterious Tower,” and you will get three paragraphs about such a place under the headings of “The tower,” “The access,” and “The occupants.” If you are not a big fan of any given paragraph, for instance, if you don’t like the description of the tower itself, “A tower built from stacked round stones in a dense, loamy forest,” then you can just click on it to generate a new one. Or you can just click on the Location name again to generate a whole new tower. Go and try it out!
- The “Bad Omens” table starts with this entry at number 1: “A black cat starts to cross your path, but is crushed by a falling ladder.”
- Number 13 on the d20 “Defining Life Events” table is: “You bear the mark of Goonfun, the savior.”
So, now they’re making a book with similar goodies in it, along with some art that is very pretty indeed, in a nasty sort of way. It’s also going to come with a soundtrack! Here’s the Kickstarter page.
4. A Feast for a Sphinx

I just really like Evelyn Moreau’s art style. I have been following her on Instagram for a while and now on Bluesky and I’m always delighted by the work she shares. And she has been pretty prolific. Just go have a look at her itch.io page here. The only piece of TTRPG work I knew, though, was Goblin Mail, for Troika! And it is a really original work with a fun premise and beautiful design elements. So, when she announced her new Kickstarter project with the same collaborators, Sofia Ramos (writing) and Luna P (layout,) I obviously backed it.
A Feast for a Sphinx is an adventure for Mörk Borg. Now, I have yet to run a Mörk Borg game but that didn’t stop me. It is a revamp of a dungeon formerly published on itch and the promise is that
Everything was rewritten, balanced or added to make this the best version of the module while keeping the central idea the same.
It is going to be produced in a zine format of 30 to 40 pages (which is on the long side for a zine.) It will describe the dungeon and deliver some new creatures, adventure seeds and a bunch of tables for randomly generating encounters, rumours, etc. Go have a look at the campaign page here.
5. Terry Pratchett’s Discworld RPG: Adventures in Ankh-Morpork

So, I was very suspicious of this one, I’ll be honest. I’ve read most of the Discworld novels, and I know the irreverent, comedic, satirical tone Terry Pratchett set. I never felt like you could really replicate that at the gaming table, exactly. No, that’s not true. It’s one of my favourite ways to play RPGs, in fact. I like to have fun with them. Puns come as second nature on dungeon crawls, silly NPC names are my bread and butter. My worry was more that it would seem somehow forced or unnatural if that’s what the game was explicitly trying to get you to do.
As the campaign went on, though, I began to think the creators understood that worry. To prove it, Modiphius did one of the bravest things I have seen in some time, they made an actual play to show off the game. It couldn’t have been in any sort of finished format at the time they released the video, but clearly they had enough to make a fun and funny one-shot. Now, they had some of the more recognisable faces on the RPG actual play scene involved, which helped. Quinns of Quinns Quest was the GM and the players were Josephine McAdam, Abubakar Salim and Liv Kennedy. Go and check out the video on Youtube here. They really managed to highlight the ways in which the rules encourage play that will generate genuinely comedic moments without it feeling like you’re being fed a bunch of “hilarious” prompts.
Anyway, that got me to back this one. And I wasn’t the only one to back it, dear reader, oh no. They raised almost two and a half million pounds! Whew! Can’t wait to get my hands on it in the summer. In the meantime, go take a look at its Kickstarter page here.
6. Royal Blood – A Tarot Heist RPG

I wrote that I would back almost anything from some creators. This is another one of those. It’s Rowan Rook and Decard. I’m an unashamed shill for Grant Howitt and don’t really need any reasons to buy something he’s involved with. But this game looks so beautiful as well. It’s a tarot based game.
Royal Blood is a tabletop roleplaying game about heists, tarot cards, magic, fate and desperation. It uses a deck of tarot cards to build characters, plan a heist and determine opposition, and to resolve every risky action the players make in an attempt to claim power.
This game has actually been around since 2016 but it was not crowdfunded or given much support by RRD either for that matter. This time, the kickstarter campaign did really well so they have some money to throw at it and they have a partnership with Mana Project Studio, the Italian TTRPG creators who are responsible for some of the best looking games out there, including Cowboy Bebop.
As for all of these projects but Solarcrawl, the Royal Blood campaign is over but you should still go and check out the Kickstart page here. You can actually pre-order it there now too.
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