St. Patrick’s Day is almost here, and DriveThruRPG has put together a Mega Bundle built around Irish and Emerald Isle horror. I’m happy to say my work makes up a little of that bundle.
My stuff first.
If you haven’t picked up Convalescence yet, this bundle is a good excuse. It’s a one-shot scenario I wrote for Call of Cthulhu 7th Edition set in a small, quiet country clinic just outside Dublin in the 1920s. Your investigators are already there as patients — convalescing from whatever adventure left them worse for wear — when two horrifying murders upend everything. Someone on staff, or among the patients, may be an angel of death. The investigators need to figure out what’s happening before it gets worse.
It’s designed to run in a single session for two or more players. There are 13 pages of scenario content, seven pages of handouts, and six pre-generated investigators, so you can be up and running quickly. I’ve always been fond of the setup — investigators who start the scenario already at a disadvantage, in unfamiliar surroundings, with no obvious way out.
Also in the bundle is the St Midabaria Clinic map I made as a companion piece. The original map in Convalescence is functional, but it wasn’t designed with virtual tabletop use in mind. So I made a new one: the clinic and its outbuildings, no player-facing labels, clean enough to drop into a VTT session or print out. It works fine on its own too, if you just need a 1920s-era clinic for something else you’re running.
Both are included at half price.
What else is in the bundle?
The centerpiece in terms of scope is Cthulhu Ireland — a 2025 ENNIE Gold Winner for Best Setting, and it shows. It’s a full campaign setting for 1920s Ireland that leans into Irish folklore rather than the usual Mythos defaults. Faerie folk stealing children away at night, merrow dragging sailors into the deep, púca luring travelers into the bogs. The horrors feel genuinely rooted in the island, which makes for a different experience than running a standard Miskatonic-adjacent campaign. If you’ve been looking for a sourcebook to anchor a longer Irish campaign, this is the one to build from.
Five Faces of Fear collects five ready-to-play scenarios plus a setting guide to Modern Ireland — which gives it some value even beyond the scenarios themselves. The adventures range from modern rural Ireland to Victorian Liverpool to South Africa, so there’s variety here. It’s a useful grab if you want a stack of one-shots with different flavors.
The Horror of Morinrood is a modern survival horror scenario that wears its influences openly — the authors cite Prey (2017) and Resident Evil as touchstones. Investigators travel to a remote island in the Irish Sea to look into a murder at a research facility, a storm traps them there, and things deteriorate quickly. There are mi-go, corporate agents, and access cards to collect to unlock new areas. If your players enjoy tight, environmental horror with a survival game feel, this is worth your attention.
The remaining two lean into the comedy side of the genre. Last Call of Cthulhu blends actual CoC play with drinking game rules — it includes a full 29-page modern scenario called “The Trip,” set in a rural English pub, plus cocktail recipes contributed by names like Mike Mason and Lynne Hardy. Pre-generated character sheets printed on beer mats. It knows what it is, and if you’ve got a group that wants a memorable, loose evening with horror trappings, it will get the job done.
Omega Kappa DIE!!! goes full Animal House: a fraternity moves into a haunted 1930s manor house, an imprisoned god wants to crash the housewarming party, and the investigators — the frat brothers themselves — have to party their way to saving the world. It’s a ~4-hour one-shot, it leans all the way into the comedy, and there’s a real place for that kind of game.
The bundle.
All seven items retail for a combined $55.96. The bundle price is $27.96 — 50% off across the board. It’s live now and presumably timed around the holiday, so don’t sit on it.
