It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
Yes you should care Cthulhu because one day the stars will align correctly and world will come to an end. Unless you join Johnson Occult Investigation and help stop this menace! We offer great insurance in every area* and have survivability time 200% longer than our competition**-yes sir you have two more days to live a normal life before going insane and/or dying a horrible death. :)

*Life insurance not included.
**Your experience may vary.
Post edited June 04, 2012 by MrWilli
Recommended stories:

Rats in the Walls
Pickman's Model
Dunwich Horror
Shadow over Innsmouth
Shadow Out of Time
Colour Out of Space
Herbert West - Reanimator (source of the movie)
Cool Air

Rats in the Walls and Shadow Out of Time are my personal favorites, and Rats is also one of the best introductions people can have to the Mythos. The Call of Cthulhu RPG is also highly recommended, if you can gather enough cultists to play with you. Don't expect your characters to last long, though.
First off: its "Cthulhu" (pronounced something like "Cuh-thu-loo")

The thing about HP. Lovecraft is that a) he was a weirdo and b) he practically invented the whole "cosmic horror" subgenre. The dude realized that humans and their puny minds where NOTHING compared to the vastness of the universe and that even the slightest glimpse of that unknown would drive people insane. Human minds are too unprepared for that, so he developed this mythology with beings beyond human nature, non-euclidean geometries, human cults and wanton lunacy.

Of the Cthulhu stories I have read I recommend, well all! The ones I read are: Call of Cthulhu, Shadow Over Insmouth, Color out of Space, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. I'd probably tell you to start with Call of Cthulhu or The Color Out of Space.

Funny enough, arguably the best Cthulhu Mythos movie is not directly based on any of the stories. I'm talking about Carpenter's "At the Mouth of Madness" (though it also draws from Stephen King).

There have also been decent games made out of the Mythos: Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth and Shadow of the Comet and the recent Cthulhu Saves the World.


PS: This is awesome.
Post edited June 04, 2012 by Tychoxi
avatar
PMIK: So I've heard about this Chuthulu thing over and over again. I heard that it's by Lovecraft or someone. I've noticed a whole bunch of games have been based on it or inspired by it. I know it is some kind of old-school psychological horror or something.

However, I have never looked into, read, played, watched, smelt, digested or otherwise encountered anything related to it.

Am I missing something awesome or is it just over-rated with a fanatic cult following?

Should I invest any time into it, and if yes, where should one start?
It depends what you care about. I might suggest HP Lovecraft's literature and some Hellboy comics to follow it up. The pen and paper game will have you discarding characters as they go insane with reckless abandon, so don't get too attached (never played it, description courtesy of a friend). Finally some other stuff. Seriously, Wikipedia this one, you'll need it to sort through it all.
avatar
Tychoxi: First off: its "Cthulhu" (pronounced something like "Cuh-thu-loo")

The thing about HP. Lovecraft is that a) he was a weirdo and b) he practically invented the whole "cosmic horror" subgenre. The dude realized that humans and their puny minds where NOTHING compared to the vastness of the universe and that even the slightest glimpse of that unknown would drive people insane. Human minds are too unprepared for that, so he developed this mythology with beings beyond human nature, non-euclidean geometries, human cults and wanton lunacy.

Of the Cthulhu stories I have read I recommend, well all! The ones I read are: Call of Cthulhu, Shadow Over Insmouth, Color out of Space, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. I'd probably tell you to start with Call of Cthulhu or The Color Out of Space.

Funny enough, arguably the best Cthulhu Mythos movie is not directly based on any of the stories. I'm talking about Carpenter's "At the Mouth of Madness" (though it also draws from Stephen King).

There have also been decent games made out of the Mythos: Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth and Shadow of the Comet and the recent Cthulhu Saves the World.


PS: This is awesome.
I absolutely love the Cthulhu games, such as Dark Corners and CStW. Where can you get Shadow of the Comet? I've been looking for it for a while with no such luck.

I also am so happy people mentioned Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem. My copy is sitting beside me, it is one of my favourite games of all time.
avatar
Theta_Sigma: I absolutely love the Cthulhu games, such as Dark Corners and CStW. Where can you get Shadow of the Comet? I've been looking for it for a while with no such luck.
I have no idea, but you can always vote for it in GOGs wishlist!
"Immortal! In madness, you dwell......."
avatar
Tychoxi: PS: This is awesome.
Ohh, that's reminded me of this amazing cartoon: The Adventures of Lil' Cthulhu. :-D
Yeah, you should care. It could change your life.

Join us.
This game is inspired by HP Lovecraft's work:

http://www.gog.com/en/gamecard/alone_in_the_dark

Arkham Asylum is a great board game. There's another one where you're in a mansion. I forget the name.

Besides those games I haven't gone too deep. But I love the setting and atmosphere.
avatar
Tallima: Arkham Asylum is a great board game. There's another one where you're in a mansion. I forget the name.
That would be Mansions of Madness.
- You would have to use an emulator for this interactive fiction. It was hard, time limited, but very good:
"The Hound of Shadow" (1989)
http://www.mobygames.com/game/dos/hound-of-shadow

You had to create a character a the start, and the game, a detective story, showed different information based on the protagonist.

- "In the Mouth of Madness" (1995) is one of the most Lovecraft-like movie.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113409/

- This kickstarter may be of interest:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/forkingpath/the-doom-that-came-to-atlantic-city
Opinion. I think Lovecraft is a very interesting (and slightly damaged) human, and that he is important for the poetic universe he's built. The saga of Randolph Carter is quite beautiful, and reminds me, in his themes, of Tolkien's "Feary". Or even various Terry Gilliam themes about escapism and the hope of opening a door on another, richer, fantasy/reality dimension.

His approch of horror, with the focus on the unspeakable, and the fragility of human mind in front of entities which mere alterity is a threat in itself, is also something very important. That being said, I think that these concepts work better than their implementations. Lovecraft doesn't strike me as a very good writer, technically. I find his prose heavy and redundant, relying too much on assaults of adjectives to convince us that something is scary. And his plot twists or last minute reveals are extremely predictable. I generally find him clumsy, and am forced to read him in some sort of "forgiving" mindset. I'm more "yeah, I see what you're trying to do, and it's cool", than "aargh". I like his ideas more than his actual texts. Well most ideas. The guy was hilariously racist, but, again, I think he wouldn't have thought up this universe without these morbid fantasies of purity and contamination.

So, generally speaking, I see Lovecraft as a source, a "real deal", but worthy more because of his influence on later fictions than by his own direct production. He contributed a lot to shape modern horror and fantasy, the whole "lovecraftian" style.

That said, it's difficult. Lovecraft often failed as being lovecraftian, because he used to set up his tales for unspeakable sanity-crishing non-euclidian horrors, and then made the mistake of describing them. Bug-eyed spaghetti plates with elephant legs and wings, okay, whatever. His followers did worse : they made these entities defeatable, even if temporarily (like Blofeld or Dr. Claw). They made stories, and games, with heroes fighting evil cults, saving the day, etc. And then, there's the movies. The movies can't, by nature, stay at the "unspeakable" level (okay, David Lynch can, but he's insane so that doesn't count). So, I'd say, the potential that Lovercraft established has never -or seldom- been actually tapped, even by Lovecraft. But at least, he has brought its interest to attention, and has clearly, deliberately, pointed at a thing that is very worthy to aim at. And dangerous, because easy to ridicule when you fail.

Now, there's quite a few productions that have lovecraftian aspects, with these limitations. Games, of course, let you struggle, defeat monsters, etc, which miss the point. Still, the good ones I'd think of are often mentionned :

- Dark Corners of the Earth

- Shadow of the Comet

- Cthulhu Nation.

Cthulhu Nation is a browser-based RPG, like Urban Dead and Shartak, but much more story-driven, with quests, investigations, etc. It's actually very cool. But it's not free (at least not past a certain point). I really advise Lovecraft fans to give it a try, it's really a work of love :

http://www.cthulhunation.co.uk/

And I'd say that Penumbra had a very strong lovecraftian vibe, in its atmosphere and the nature of its scares. A movie such as In the Mouth of Madness can also approach this universe better than direct adaptations (such as the goofy and too humourous Dagon, the cheesy Necronomicon, the laughable From Beyond, and the unrelated Reanimator), but, In the Mouth of Madness scared me as a kid. I've rewatched it recently and was much more 'meh' than first time.

So, all in all, I think that Lovecraft is great for the elements of thought and imagination that linger after reading his stories. He's good food. This excuses his style, and the cheesy "tales from the crypt" aspect of most of his stories.

There. Lots of words. Because ambivalence. TL;DR -> Good, bad ? Well, interesting, charming, important. Disappointing if you expect literary genius. Overrated ? Yes. No. Both.

Will he scare you ? No. But he'll manage to make you wish he would. He might even make you spontaneously pretend, out of respect for the nature of his attempt.

Also : Sam and Max.
With the mention of Penumbra we of course have to bring up Amnesia. Same company, also very Lovecraftian, and in the current Humble Bundle. Anyway, I appreciate the recommendations as I've been meaning to read some Lovecraft as well.
Haven't seen it mentioned yet (maybe I missed it), but Quest for Glory 4 has a lot of Cthulhu references. Parts of the story definitely draw their inspiration from Lovecraft. This is actually the game that got me interested in this lore to begin with...