
In Cthulhu: Death May Die, inspired by the writings of H.P. Lovecraft, you and your fellow players represent investigators in the 1920s who instead of trying to stop the coming of Elder Gods, want to summon those otherworldly beings so that you can put a stop to them permanently. You start the game insane, and while your long-term goal is to shoot Cthulhu in the face, so to speak, at some point during the game you'll probably fail to mitigate your dice rolls properly and your insanity will cause you to do something terrible — or maybe advantageous. Hard to know for sure.
The game has multiple episodes, and each of them has a similar structure of two acts, those being before and after you summon whatever it is you happen to be summoning. If any character dies prior to the summoning, then the game ends and you lose; once the Elder One is on the board, as long as one of you is still alive, you still have a chance to win.
The episodes are all standalone and not contingent on being played in a certain order or with the same players.
- Publisher: CMON
- Model: DMD001
BGG Link: | BGG Link |
Game Type: | Thematic Games |
Game Categories: | Fantasy | Fighting | Horror | Miniatures |
Game Mechanisms: | Action Points | Cooperative Game | Dice Rolling | Variable Player Powers |
Game Family: | Category: Dungeon Crawler | Components: Miniatures | Crowdfunding: Kickstarter | Players: Games with Solitaire Rules | Theme: Cthulhu Mythos |
Game Designer(s): | Rob Daviau | Eric M. Lang |
Game Artist(s): | Nicolas Fructus | Karl Kopinski | Thierry Masson | Edgar Skomorowski | Adrian Smith | Richard Wright |
BGG Rank Overall: | 120 |
BGG Weight: | 2.38 |
BGG Weight Filter: | 2 to 3 |
In Cthulhu: Death May Die, inspired by the writings of H.P. Lovecraft, you and your fellow players represent investigators in the 1920s who instead of trying to stop the coming of Elder Gods, want to summon those otherworldly beings so that you can put a stop to them permanently. You start the game insane, and while your long-term goal is to shoot Cthulhu in the face, so to speak, at some point during the game you'll probably fail to mitigate your dice rolls properly and your insanity will cause you to do something terrible — or maybe advantageous. Hard to know for sure.
The game has multiple episodes, and each of them has a similar structure of two acts, those being before and after you summon whatever it is you happen to be summoning. If any character dies prior to the summoning, then the game ends and you lose; once the Elder One is on the board, as long as one of you is still alive, you still have a chance to win.
The episodes are all standalone and not contingent on being played in a certain order or with the same players.
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