Introduction
The Isle of Dread adventure is more of a campaign setting, full of interesting locations, encounters and treasures. While it contains adventure hooks to get things rolling, they are a bit bare bones. In this post I'll talk about what the adventure gives you, what other things you could try and what I ended up doing.
I'll be referencing the Goodman Games reprint for 5th edition. If I switch to the original printing, I'll let you know.
Starting using the Module
Alternate cover ahoy! |
This adventure was written in 1980, and makes the assumption that your player characters are seeking treasure so they can level up. Back then, experience points were given based on treasure, and that was a great motivation for any party. With that in mind, most of the hooks revolve on finding untold riches on the Isle of Dread.
You get one detailed hook and three supporting hooks. The detailed one is an account by a sailor who traveled to the island and stopped there briefly. He talks about meeting the locals and trading with them. He discovered rumors of an ancient civilization flourishing and falling here. Its ruins are scattered across the island, the most impressive being a forgotten city filled with riches. He includes a rough map in his account.
This is a solid hook to work with. You could easily turn the written account into an actual NPC and have him tell the player characters all this and provide them with the map. Maybe he is too old or sick to go, but wants to pass this along to a dear friend or relative. As presented in the module this all happens because the PCs stumble across the account and map by pure luck. I like adding that personal connection.
One of the minor hooks is similar with a brief account of a massive black pearl of incalculable value hidden on the island. Not a bad hook. You could even say the pearl has magical properties that might entice the PCs further. This could be a local legend, but you need something tangible to kick the adventure off. Again, an NPC or chart to the isle or magical guide could be used to get the quest for the pearl rolling.
"No, I really did see a black pearl the size of your head. Do I look like a liar?" |
Or you could combine the account of the sailor with the legend of the pearl, and give the PCs a goal to seek out on the island. If you have a group that needs or wants a clear cut goal, this could work great. With both of these hooks, you can easily skip past the voyage to the island and just start with the ship in sight of the Isle of Dread. You also don't have to develop the crew of the ship all that much, since they are pretty much around to take the players to different spots and wait for them.
Then you get the option to be working for a merchant who sees the Isle of Dread as a trading opportunity. Essentially he hires the PCs to travel to the island, scout out the resources and make contact with the locals to set up a trading post. If you have a group that likes to focus on role-play over combat, this might be a good option. They are not going to the isle to fight, but to make friends and set up trade. One thing I would avoid is turning this into an exercise in colonialism. That can lead to some very dark and disturbing areas that not everyone is comfortable with. If you do select this route, then creating NPCs for the vessel and their goal in the operation will become important. This may require some extra work on the DMs part.
The last option could be a fun one with the right group. Just start with the characters waking up after a shipwreck. They are on the Isle of Dread with a few other cast away NPCs, and then set about exploring and trying to survive in this dangerous wilderness. You could ramp up the survival aspects of the game (especially if you are using an old school rules variant). This hook throws the players right into the adventure, and you can keep the NPCs to a minimum (mostly as back up characters in case one of the player character's die).
Starting with other material
The Isle of Dread adventure is recommended for characters at level 3. If you want a full level 1 to 7 campaign, then you might need some material to get those first three levels under the character's belts. The adventure provides you with a mini world setting including some brief descriptions of lands and islands to start the adventure in. These would all become the Mystara setting in later modules and gazetteers. What you get here is pretty sparse, but you could use it as a jumping off point for some homebrew adventures
Go full classic Mystara if you start here. |
There are a couple of adventures that could provide a good starting point. One is the classic adventure The Veiled Society, which starts at level 1 and goes up to level 3. It takes place in the city of Specularum in the Grand Duchy of Karameikos, which is a massive port city. It gives the players experience in the city and then you can tie it to obtaining the ship or the hook for the Isle of Dread as part of the reward for completing the adventure.
The other option is to take the first adventure of Ghosts of Saltmarsh (5th edition adventure collection) and use that as starting point. This adventure contains pirates and smugglers, and ends with the party possibly obtaining their own ship! It makes for a solid starting point, with some of the NPCs from that adventure and in the town of Saltmarsh being accessible as crew for the voyage. This is a great option if you are using 5th edition to run this adventure, and want to use published material to flesh out your adventure.
For even looser starting points, you could select ports in any campaign setting you wish, and build some low level adventures tied to those locations. Waterdeep in the Forgotten realms could work fine, with someadventures around the docks being a good way to start things off.
If you want to stick to the Mystara setting, but want the voyage to start a bit closer, you can pick up the gazetteer for the Minrothad Guilds which contains a bunch of information about these trading guilds and their rivalries. It includes several low level adventure ideas that you can use to build the characters up to level 3. This would be a solid fit for a group that wants to explore trading and role playing options on the Isle of Dread.
Starting with home-brew
Magical trident on a lost island? Go for it! |
If you want to craft your own material then even more options are available. Focus on your players and what they enjoy in a game. If you aren't sure, then you can give them a goal, but allow for some wiggle room to expand beyond that if you wish.
The great thing about this module is that it is very flexible and you can fit it into a campaign very easily. I see three obvious ways to make this work (and I'm sure you can come up with more).
The Isle of Dread is the location of:
- A potent magical item or lore
- A dangerous enemy that must be defeated
- A powerful ally that must be bargained with
Forgotten lore works the same way, with plenty of ancient locations and artifacts waiting to be discovered on the island. You will need to seed hints about the location of the lore, and turn the adventure into an investigation as they piece together the location of the treasure or lore and discover it. This option works great with the exploration focus of the original module.
When it comes to antagonists, you have a lot to pick from on the Isle of Dread. The two obvious one are the pirates and the monstrous Kopru.
Did someone say orc pirates? |
Focusing on the pirates is easy enough, making the Isle of Dread their base of operations. If this is the focus of the campaign, you probably need to flesh out the pirates a bit more, giving them more ships and captains. At the end of the Goodman Games update, you'll find a couple of pirate crews ready to be added to the adventure. One with ties to the shark cult and one that is undead. You may want to figure out a goal for the leader of the pirates, and how the players can interfere with it. For added flavor, make it a confederation of multiple pirate groups on the island, and the players can pit them against each other. While the rest of the island kind of turns into side quest material, it can also serve as hidden resources the pirates are attempting to find and use to complete their goal - whatever that might be.
Kopru are unique monsters in D&D history and most new players won't know anything about them. Their mental powers and specific biology make them tricky and dangerous opponents. Turning them into the focus of evil spreading out from Isle of Dread can be a lot of fun. Essentially allowing you to make a cult of Kopru that is bent on dominating as much of your campaign world as possible. This can be an insidious evil that starts with corrupted cultists doing evil deeds in the port city (a connection to The Veiled Society adventure). As the players uncover more information they find that the origin of the cult is across the Sea of Dread. They then seek out the source of the cult, leading to island hopping adventures - gaining levels until they reach level 3, and arrive at the Isle of Dread. Here they seek out the source of the cult, interacting with the various locals (who have cult member embedded within or may already be completely loyal to the Kopru). Eventually everything leads to the plateau and the hidden temple within.
Don't see enough bronze dragons these days. |
The ally option is a bit trickier because you would need a reason for the ally be on this very dangerous island. Are they a prisoner here? Are they researching the ancient ruins, seeking out forbidden knowledge? Are they obsessed with taming and training dinosaurs? You can have your ally be willing to help the PCs in exchange for something they need done. It can be as simple as retrieving the black pearl from the hidden temple or as dangerous as destroying the ancient monster Kopru. You have a lot of options to play with and build a fun story around. Your biggest hurtle is creating an interesting NPC with a valid reason for being on the island. One option would be to have a bronze dragon living on the island. These underused dragons live on coasts, are intelligent and helpful to a heroic party. Could make for some fun and interesting interactions.
And this post is long enough. Next time I'll tell you what I attempted. Including all the silly mistakes I made.
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