![]() ![]() #Hawkmoon rpg amazon series#And take a look at my Patreon page, where I’m working on a novel and developing a tabletop RPG setting. TSR 4008 Viking Gods is a lesser known title in the TSR minigame series (as compared with Saga: Age of Heroes and Revolt on Antares). Like the previous two books (review here and here), I read this as part of Corum: The Coming of Chaos, part of White Wolf’s collection of Eternal Champion books.Ĭheck out my Facebook, Twitter, or Goodreads. I’m curious to see how he’s brought back into the forever conflict of Law and Chaos. I’ve never read it, and I plan to at some point. You know he could fix things if he could just call on his powers, but nope.Īs I said, this seems to have been intended to be the end of Corum’s story. The reason given is not especially satisfying. Why can’t Corum use his god-eye and god-hand in this? I don’t know. It’s funny how Moorcock likes to give his heroes amazing powers and then kinda randomly snatch them away. One of these days, I’m going to read some of their books, too (I think maybe I read the first Hawkmoon book once upon a time…). ![]() But there are other incarnations kicking around. Of course, Corum meets Elric, though not in the same way Elric met Corum in The Sailors on the Seas of Fate. Even though I’d read this before, I apparently blocked out how danged strange it is.įrom dimension hopping (even beyond the 15 realms talked about before in this trilogy), to guest appearances of other incarnations of the Eternal Champion, a lot happens in a relatively short novel. ![]() Moorcock gets into a lot of his Multiverse cosmology in this one, getting into what makes Chaos and Law tick, what the Eternal Champion really is, and how the various worlds work. The third and what I assume was intended to be the final outing for Corum, The King of the Swords gets really, really weird. ![]()
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