Search:
San Francisco Restaurants -
Restaurants -
Music -
Meta Web Search -
Meta Local Search -
News -
Quotes -
Encyclopedia -
Dictionary -
Images -
Blogs -
Videos
Home » Games » Roleplaying » Genres » Fantasy Ars Magica A fantasy roleplaying about the wizards of Mythic Europe, created by Jonathan Tweet and Mark Rein*Hagen. Originally published by Lion Rampant, currently published by Atlas Games.
| Atlas games - Ars Magica - Come to a land of adventure and mystery, of falling empires and rising nations, of legendary creatures and incredible myths. This is Ars Magica's Mythic Europe, where the power of magic is real and exists alongside historical figures and locations. Stories revolve around the covenant: one part mystical college, one part magical laboratory, one part Hermetic fortification, one part bastion of secrecy.
Rate this
| | Bifrost Ars Magica Pages - Details of a saga set in the Stonehenge tribunal, together with descriptions of covenants, libraries and magi across Mythic Europe. Also includes some new spells, rules and libraries, as well as a brief description of an Ars Magica - World of Greyhawk cross over campaign.
Rate this
| | Project Redcap - The Crossroads of the Order - Features an Ars Magica FAQ, mailing lists, resources, and a large link collection for multiple languages.
Rate this
| | Cliffheart Covenant - A nicely laid out site about Ars Magica that was originally done in Italian, but has now been translated to English.
Rate this
| | Hermes' Portal - A fanzine about the game.
Rate this
| | Rabenstein Covenant - Offers characters, maps of the covenant, house rules, summary of the saga, and historical background.
Rate this
| | Malinbois Home Page - Includes characters, maps of The Covenant and its library, and rules.
Rate this
| | Insula Maledictus - AnProvides characters, relations, stories, history, spells, magical items, letters, essays and in-game and off-game material.
Rate this
| | Secretum Secretorum - Background for the game, contains information from a text translated from Arabic in the middle of the twelfth century.
Rate this
|
|