100 Frescoes, Mosaics, Murals and Reliefs to Find in a Dungeon (C&C)

100 Frescoes, Mosaics, Murals and Reliefs to Find in a Dungeon (C&C)

100 Frescoes, Mosaics, Murals and Reliefs to Find in a Dungeon (C&C)Dungeons, as well as manor houses, castles and other buildings, have walls, as well as floors and ceilings. These surfaces may often be blank, simply plastered, covered in tapestries or just unfinished. They may, however, have another form of adornment.

This supplement lists 100 different descriptions for designs that could be directly applied to a wall, floor or ceiling. These can be used to misdirect players by making them thing the decoration described is important, or they could be used to hold clues or hide secret doors or compartments. Although many will technically be valuable, removing an entire wall, floor or ceiling intact will not be easy. They cover a range from horrific designs suitable for evil lairs and locations to rather more pleasant ones suited for areas frequented by good.

To use the list, either roll d100 for a random result or select appropriate ones manually.

Here are some sample results:

92. A cloaked figure in all-encompassing armour is standing atop a cliff over the ocean. In the water below an immense war fleet of hundreds of galleys covers the ocean out to the horizon, with barely any water between each craft. Dark stabilising sails with an evil insignia are raised on each galley, and the vessels themselves are painted dark. Fantastic bronze rams can be seen on the closer galleys, shaped like the horned heads of hideous monsters.

93. This depicts a very stylised tree. There is a central trunk with five globes on it, including one at the base and one at the top, and two side branches that start part way up the trunk, both vertical, each of which has three globes. The different globes are connected together and all bear symbols. Of the central trunk, the topmost globe bears a crown, the next down a book, the next a pair of scales, the next a chariot and the final one a bride. The left-hand branch has a brain at the top, followed by a judge’s hammer and finally a written scroll. The right-hand branch has a head, followed by a hand bearing a gift of a coin and finally an infinity sign.

94. This image is covered in intricate Celtic knotwork. Complex interwoven patterns are formed from the threads that make up the knotwork and there seems to be no beginning or end. Shields, crosses and more simple knots are tied together with more threads of knotwork. If the individual threads that make the knots are examined (CL 2 Intelligence check), each is also comprised of knotwork.

Released: 14th June 2025 Pages: 18

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