Yes, you too can now have a mechanic to not just install a Kitchen Sink in your dungeon, but to make it interesting, fun and potentially rewarding and/or lethal for your players!
RPGPundit Presents #10: The Kitchen Sink (http://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/228161/RPGPundit-Presents-10-The-Kitchen-Sink) is a guide to a feature every dungeon should have. Also works for fountains, bubbling pools and other water-related architectural features. But it's just way more fun if it's a literal sink.
(http://www.illustrationweb.com/Thumb386s/75394/image_49901/monster-kitchen-sink.jpg)
For just 99 cents you get 7 pages of random charts and tables to make unique and weird kitchen sinks, including where they are, what they look like, what's in the sink, what's in the drain, what the faucet does, and what comes out of the faucet. You are almost guaranteed never to get the exact same sink twice! Surprise and entertain your players for hours, with a product you'll be able to use over and over again, for less than the cost of a coffee!
You can purchase The Kitchen Sink now, at DTRPG (http://www.drivethrurpg.com/product/228161/RPGPundit-Presents-10-The-Kitchen-Sink) or at the Precis Intermedia Store (http://www.pigames.net/store/product_info.php?cPath=136&products_id=891).
Stay tuned for more next week!
RPGPundit
Currently Smoking: Lorenzetti half-volcano + H&H's Chestnut
Heh, there was an adventure in IMAGINE magazine back in the day, 'Round the Bend' or somesuch, where the dungeon WAS the kitchen sink in a wizard's laboratory, and the PC:s were shrunk to fetch the wizard's lost 'contact' before it was flushed into the sewer proper. Fun times.
Quote from: Dr. Ink'n'stain;1011577Heh, there was an adventure in IMAGINE magazine back in the day, 'Round the Bend' or somesuch, where the dungeon WAS the kitchen sink in a wizard's laboratory, and the PC:s were shrunk to fetch the wizard's lost 'contact' before it was flushed into the sewer proper. Fun times.
And it was a solid adventure.
There was a D&D tournament adventure at one convention I attended, where the party were all woodland insects (IIRC), worked brilliantly.
Not familiar with that adventure.
My inspiration for this supplement was Roguelike games that featured a kitchen sink in some dungeon levels.