Rogue Mistress
Rogue Mistress, subtitled "An Epic Campaign Across the Multiverse", is a collection of adventures published by Chaosium in 1991 for use with either of the fantasy role-playing games Stormbringer or Hawkmoon, both based on the Elric of Melniboné stories of Michael Moorcock.
Description
Rogue Mistress is a campaign of nine chronologically-linked adventures in which the player characters travel to various planes that make up Michael Moorcock's "Million-Sphere Multiverse." Travel from sphere to sphere is accomplished on the pirate ship Rogue Mistress captained by Maria de tres Pistolas.Adventures
The campaign consists of eight adventures that are played in sequence:- "Dark Eyes, Cold Hearts": On the plane of Styyxx, the characters must find and deliver a prisoner to a demented witch, or die from the living demon hearts that have been implanted in them.
- "The Prisoner": On the plane of Ildaron, the characters must sneak into the palace of Queen Media in disguise.
- "The Rogue Mistress": The character board the sphere-travelling ship Rogue Mistress and are sent on a quest to find a piece of the Pirate of the Worlds.
- "Ghosts in the Machine": The missing piece is found in the wreck of another ship, but the characters must fight off "Energy Vampires".
- "The Web of Chaos": On the plane of Albyon, the characters search for an artifact, but are hurled through the spheres to The Sea of Whispers.
- "The Whispering Sea": Aided by the Eternal Champion, the characters must find and destroy the Scourge of Strashaa,
- "Dark of the Sun": On the high-tech plane of Uerth, the characters must choose between mutants and humans.
- "The Two Who Are One": The characters return to the plane of Styxxx in order to kill the demons whose hearts still beat within them.
Publication history
In his 2014 book Designers & Dragons, game historian Shannon Appelcline noted that after the fourth edition of Stormbringer was published, "the best books to date for the line were produced first by Keith Herber, then by Mark Morrison. They consisted of thick, well-written books of background, such as Sorcerers of Pan Tang and colourful adventures, such as Rogue Mistress."