Rick Meints’ Forward to 𝘊𝘶𝘭𝘵 𝘊𝘰𝘮𝘱𝘦𝘯𝘥𝘪𝘶𝘮 (2002): “I find it amazing that virtually all of this material [basically what is contained in the 𝘎𝘭𝘰𝘳𝘢𝘯𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘯 𝘊𝘭𝘢𝘴𝘴𝘪𝘤𝘴] came out within the span of only three years.”

05 December 2025

Cons & News

I haven’t posted in a long time… but hey I was busy: attending two cons in a row, Chaosium Con Europe in Poland, and Contes d’Automne in southeastern France, plus many real life shenanigans kept me away from the interwebz.

Chaosium Con Europe

This was the first official Chaosium Con in continental Europe (after the various unofficial ones in Germany). It was organised as part of the 50th anniversary celebrations of Chaosium’s creation by Greg Stafford, and it took place from 30 October to 2 November in the beautiful port city of Gdańsk in Poland.


red bricks galore

The venue was really nice: the Uphagen Manor, a former redbrick manor transformed into a hotel (see the picture). There weren’t that many gaming slots so I only played RuneQuest (twice), Pendragon and Age of Vikings, the latter GM’ed by Pedro Ziviani, its creator. It was still nice to catch up with the ‘tribe’ as I hadn’t been attending any con outside of France since the coronavirus pandemic.

I was very, very positively impressed by Age of Vikings. I initially thought it was ‘just’ the second edition of Mythic Iceland but it is much more than that. The rules are basically a streamlined version of RQ/BRP:UGE in terms of combat, skills, passions... honestly I wish Chaosium had trod this path rather than the inelegant nuRQ. Oh, well.

I shall provide other snippets of news gathered around the many pints of beers that were quaffed at the bar of the hotel—I couldn’t attend any of the panels (because of conflicting schedules with the games or with my wife’s desire to visit Gdańsk) so the following is all hearsay (also, probably old news by the time you read this).

The short term publishing schedule for RuneQuest is as follows:
- the Sartar book, 
- the Pavis book,
- a new Starter Set with a focus on Sartar and Pavis,
- a new rulebook (see below),
- the remaining ‘cults’ books are going to be published after all of the above, Darkness then Water then Chaos,
- the cults books for the Invisible God and the Horned God are not in the pipe at the moment,
- the Harmast novel.

Later on, we should expect:
- a reprint of the RQ3 Dorastor supplement (à la Sun County
- the new White Bear Red Moon wargame won’t be an identical reprint after all; it will feature less wargame-y rules than the original game (but not a reboot as what Chris Klug was working on).

The more general news about RuneQuest is that the ‘new rulebook’ will be a shorter but more streamlined book, less intimidating than the current one, and with bestiary elements and better indexing. Contrary to the tentative “nuRQ” of 2025 it won’t aim at being a ‘new edition’.

We shall also expect more PDF downloads like the Elder Race Adventurers and the Praxian adventure The Hunt for the Storm Calf.

The good news is that the con is back in 2026, also in Gdańsk, but probably a tad earlier in the year.


Contes d’Automne

This is probably less of interest to my non-Francophone readers. Contes d’Automne is a fantastic con set in a former monastery in Provence. What I really like there is the sense of being with your friends during the whole duration of the con: all meals are taken together, whereas at Chaosium Con Europe you had to leave the con’s premises to find something to eat in the neighbourhood, which (1) broke the out-of-time-out-of-everything spell and (2) didn’t guarantee you’d have lunch with the tribe. I hope they fix it for next year.

Anyways, I discovered a lot of games at Contes d’Automne—which is usually what happens because GMs there tend to concentrate on lesser-known games. I played Cthulhu Dark, Blades in the Dark, and Candela Obscura (yes, quite an array of gloomy games), and I ran QuestWorlds, because I purchased the hardcover at Chaosium Con and couldn’t wait to use it.

If you speak French, I really recommend this con.