For millennia, monsters have hunted and fought alongside us…
Rebellions swell and vampires feed. Casualties of war draw Reapers to blood-soaked battlefields. Gilded ages benefit mortals and monsters alike.
How? Why? What role do the monsters play with us —- and each other?
Dark Eras 2 explores 13 new eras scattered throughout the history of the Chronicles of Darkness. Each... [click here for more]
The world is ill. You have everything to lose through its sickness. Loss. Change. Chaos. Your own blood will rebel against you. Your own herd.
Your own loved ones. Do not believe that just because you’ve had a hundred years on this earth, you’ll be exempt. Just because you were ignorant of it until now does not make you immune. Your waking to the reality of this... [click here for more]
Always Another Secret
The Chronicles of Darkness stretch back to the beginning of human civilization, and perhaps further. When people fearfully peered into the darkness past their campfires, the Begotten were looking back. When they opened their mouths and spoke, attaching sound to meaning, the Awakened bound those words in power and light. When humanity was forming tribes, werewolves... [click here for more]
Chronicles of Darkness: Dark Eras reveals the world throughout its long and storied past.
Chronicles of Darkness stories stretch back to the beginning of human civilization — and perhaps further. The Chronicles of Darkness: Dark Eras collections reveal the world throughout its long and storied past.
Now you can get all of the Changeling: The Lost Dark Eras originally published... [click here for more]
Like the Great Below and the many mysterious places mages roam, the ocean’s depths are seen only in glimpses, filled with wondrous and terrifying things that never see the light of day — but willworkers and the Bound have the means and the will to stare into these abysses.
Although there’s nothing kind about cutthroat pirates, the promise of equality and honor among thieves appeals to those... [click here for more]
Scandinavian countries quickly adopted the w witch trials from Germany after the Reformation, and were even more cautious about magic and witches, as they knew they lived closer to hell than most other countries.
Magic was no longer seen as a tool to alter fates or change the course of lives, and it was no longer directly linked to communication with gods. Those wielding magic were no longer respected... [click here for more]