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Necroscope licensed by Revelations Entertainment

Started by BoxCrayonTales, July 20, 2021, 02:26:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

BoxCrayonTales

https://deadline.com/2021/07/revelations-entertainment-acquires-necroscope-novel-series-1234791047/

Morgan Freedom has been very busy it seems.

Necroscope had a brief tabletop RPG adaptation back in the 90s. I previously contacted the Lumley Estate about the likelihood of republishing the tabletop game in digital format, but I was told this isn't possible because of restrictions made by the movie deal. Oh well.

Anyway, I like Necroscope because it has psychic espionage. You'd expect that to be more common, but Necroscope is the only series I've been able to find that deals with psychic espionage. Or ESPionage as it's nicknamed in the books. And the series introduces a ton of other things on top of that, like vampires, other worlds, aliens, space magic, and Lovecraft references.

Ghostmaker

Necroscope... now there's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time.

I liked how horrific vampires were depicted, and the fairly disturbing work involved in necromancy (which basically involves tearing a corpse apart to find the secrets).

BoxCrayonTales

Quote from: Ghostmaker on July 21, 2021, 08:10:10 AM
Necroscope... now there's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time.

I liked how horrific vampires were depicted, and the fairly disturbing work involved in necromancy (which basically involves tearing a corpse apart to find the secrets).
Calling it "necromancy" is technically incorrect, but considering how difficult research was when it was written...

Wikipedia calls this "anthropomancy," but doesn't properly cite its sources. Google provides other sources: https://occult-world.com/anthropomancy/

Ghostmaker

Quote from: BoxCrayonTales on July 21, 2021, 10:55:36 AM
Quote from: Ghostmaker on July 21, 2021, 08:10:10 AM
Necroscope... now there's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time.

I liked how horrific vampires were depicted, and the fairly disturbing work involved in necromancy (which basically involves tearing a corpse apart to find the secrets).
Calling it "necromancy" is technically incorrect, but considering how difficult research was when it was written...

Wikipedia calls this "anthropomancy," but doesn't properly cite its sources. Google provides other sources: https://occult-world.com/anthropomancy/
In defense, that's what Lumley calls it in the book and I was using his terminology. You're right of course (maybe it could be called anthroharuspicy? Or am I butchering languages again?).


BoxCrayonTales

Quote from: Ghostmaker on July 21, 2021, 12:03:47 PM
Quote from: BoxCrayonTales on July 21, 2021, 10:55:36 AM
Quote from: Ghostmaker on July 21, 2021, 08:10:10 AM
Necroscope... now there's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time.

I liked how horrific vampires were depicted, and the fairly disturbing work involved in necromancy (which basically involves tearing a corpse apart to find the secrets).
Calling it "necromancy" is technically incorrect, but considering how difficult research was when it was written...

Wikipedia calls this "anthropomancy," but doesn't properly cite its sources. Google provides other sources: https://occult-world.com/anthropomancy/
In defense, that's what Lumley calls it in the book and I was using his terminology. You're right of course (maybe it could be called anthroharuspicy? Or am I butchering languages again?).
In Lumley's defense, the term "necromancy" had developed negative associations according to Encyclopedia of Fantasy. It had become synonymous with black magic, so becoming synonymous with anthropomancy is the next logical step.

Spinachcat

Necroscope was a great book. Highly recommended. Lumley has an interesting writing style.

Do we know anything about the RPG company?

Is this good news?

BoxCrayonTales

Quote from: Spinachcat on July 21, 2021, 03:14:01 PM
Necroscope was a great book. Highly recommended. Lumley has an interesting writing style.

Do we know anything about the RPG company?

Is this good news?
The Necroscope RPG published in the 90s used the Masterbook rules. Precis Intermedia is the current owner. To republish the game, a new agreement would have to be made between Precis Intermedia, the Lumley Estate, and Revelations Entertainment.

Revelations Entertainment is a multimedia company, not an RPG company.

martinjpayne

#7
Great! I'm looking forward to this as I read the Necroscope/Vampire World series in the late nineties.