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Reviews
Reviews of L5R RPG releases.Book of the Shadowlands
(4/17/98)
Reviewed by Kenneth Hite, Roleplaying Columnist, MANIA! (www.mania.com/mania)
Oni The Lonely
Speaking of well-realized fantasy worlds and horror, though not of
going direct, I was vouchsafed a copy of the Book of the Shadowlands
($24.95, 160 page hardback) for AEG's Legend of the Five Rings RPG, Cris
Dornaus and Rob Vaux' "translation" of one of the most hated and feared
books in all of Rokugan: Kuni Mokuna's masterful study of the nature and
denizens of the Shadowlands of Leng Fu.
Let me begin by getting something out front: this book is relatively
pricy, and perhaps too expensive. Kindred of the East, for example, was
the same price for half again the pages, and the large margins and
decorative fonts in the Book of the Shadowlands make me think there are
less words per page here, to boot. However, the Book of the Shadowlands
triumphs as a splendid combination of "monster manual" (describing all
manner of sundry pseudo-Japanese awfuls from goblins, ogres and trolls
to the fearsomely demonic oni) and "dark land, only darker" setting book
(covering the Shadowlands taint, geography, and mythography). As an
example of how to work horror into a non-horror roleplaying game, the
Book of the Shadowlands is matched perhaps only by Ravenloft. The art,
by Cris Dornaus and Carl Frank, is delightfully reminiscent of Japanese
pen-and-ink at times; the rest is in a very effective mix of some kind
of charcoal-looking art and more conventional, but still convincingly
Rokuganesque, pen-and-ink. I'd have liked to see something like a
Hokusai/Hiroshige print in there as well ("Ogre View of Yugure Yama"),
but that, as John Wick would say, is just me. In the unified look and
interior design, the Book of the Shadowlands actually surpasses Kindred
of the East, which is saying something. |
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