Lovecraft's Untold Stories

Lovecraft's Untold Stories

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Bestiary (Ongoing project)
By Giovs
This is an unfinished Bestiary that I’m trying to make for every enemy in the game. One thing that I really enjoyed while playing this for the first time was seeing how much respect the developers had for the Cthulhu Mythos lore, and how they managed to draw so much from the works of Lovecraft and the cycle of authors that build up the Cthulhu Mythos. There are so many enemy variety that newcomers to the Mythos (heck even those that are not newcomers) may get confused if a creature is something from the Lore or a creation for the game, and maybe you want to know the name of a specific monster that you really liked or something, and you may want to know where it's from. So that is why I'm making this guide. And my intend is to focus on the Lore mostly.

Any help is appreciated. If you see an information that is wrong or missing, feel free to tell me about it so I can update the guide. There's A LOT of enemies in this game, so it'll probably take a while to finish this.

When possible, I'm using the names from the Cthulhu Mythos Lore. When not possible, some of them are simple names I created for convinience when I didn't know what they where, so if you know something that I don't and spot a mistake in the Guide, please let me know.

Of course, Spoilers alert if you haven't played the game.
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Regular Enemies: Part 1 - Creatures of the Mythos
Cultists



Humans that worship the Great Old Ones and plan to awaken them.
Origin: They appear in many works, maybe the most popular is the Cthulhu Cult from "Call of Cthulhu" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Rebirthed Cultist



This may be a game creation, or it may be the Cultist creatures from "The Festival", that are problably sorcerers rebirthed as wormlike creatures.
Origin: Possibly "The Festival" by H. P. Lovecraft

Mi- Go



The Fungi from Yuggoth, they are creatures with a vast empire that have an outpost on Pluto (Yuggoth) and a colony on Earth since the Jurassic period, that obtains minerals from our planet. They are also masters of surgery, and can remove the brain of any being and tranplant it to a metal cylinder. They worship Yog-Sothoth.
Origin: "The Whisperer in Darkness" bu H. P. Lovecraft

Reanimated Corpses



Dead humans reanimated though an advanced form of science.
Origin: Most famously in "Herbert West - Reanimator" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Deep One



A race of fish-like humanoids that inhabits Earth's oceans and do not die to natural causes. They live in cities built of stone and decorated with pearls, and are led by Father Dagon and Mother Hydra (Who are themselves Huge Deep Ones), but also worship Great Cthulhu. They usually don't care about humanity, but sometimes stabilsh cults with coast dwellers like the "Esoteric Order of Dagon" from Innsmouth, where they mate with humans to creat hybrids.
Origin: "The ShadowOver Innsmouth" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Deep One Hybrid



The result of mating between a Deep One and a Human. When children they resemble normal humans, but as time passes they undergo a metamorphosis beacming more fish'like, until they turn into Deep Ones, and journey to the Ocean to go live with their kind.
Origin: "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Leng Spider



Giant, intelligent Spiders native to the Dreamlands, they live near the Plateau of Leng. They seem to have faced the Humanoids of Leng in battle long ago and lost, event that explains why their distribution is so limited today.
Origin: They are briefly mentioned in "The Dreamquest of Ancient Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft, and where expanded on the Call of Cthulhu RPG books

Star-Spawn of Cthulhu (Cthulhi)



A race of beings that came to Earth alongside Cthulhu and constructed the great city of R'lyeh eons ago, when they also battled the Elder Things and drove them to the oceans. When R'lyeh sank beneath the ocean, they where imprisioned with their master Cthulhu, and will someday awaken with him when R'lyeh rises from the ocean. Likely, as it is in the game, some of them are still free. It is possible that Cthulhu is from the same race of them, or they are descended from him somehow.
Origin: "At the Mounstains of Madness" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Ghouls



A race of corpse eaters that lives in tunnels beneath graveyards in the "waking world" and in the Dreamlands. They are not always unfriendly to humans, and may even befriend a human who know about them and learn their language. Somehow, Humans can transform into Ghouls (either by proximity, change in diet or something else), as is the case of Pickman and the game character Eliot Loss.
Origin: The Ghoul appear in "Pickman's Model" and are later expanded in "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath", both by H. P. Lovecraft.

Ghasts



A species that lives in the Underworld of the Dreamlands, they cannot survive direct sunlight (despite appearing in the desert level in the game), and spend most of their lives in the vaults of Zin. They are know to attack both Ghouls and Gugs, but if the need arises they have no problems with cannibalism.
Origin: "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Gugs



These giant creatures are native to the Dreamlands, where they once lived upon the surface of the earth and built stone monoliths that still remain. They where banished by the gods of the Earth because of their worship of Nyarlathotep and the Other Gods, and now live in the caverns below the surface, in a stone city near the vaults of Zin. They are enemies of the Ghouls.
Origin: "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Serpent People



An inteligent species of bipedal reptiles that evolved on Earth in the Permian period. Despite conquering the great empire of Valusia in the past, nowadays they are small in numbers and try to keep hidden. You'll encounter three kinds of Serpent People in the game: A bigger, muscular one that is very strong, a smaller one with either two knives or an axe, both of these give you the bleeding effect if you're hit. There's also the third type, the sorcerer, that can shoot fireballs at you that will give you the burning effect.
Origin: A race of ancient reptile humanoids was first mentioned in "The Nameless City" by H. P. Lovecraft. The actual Serpent People first appeared in "The Shadow Kingdom" by Robert E. Howard, they would also appear in "The Seven Geases" by Clark Ashton Smith.

Dark Young of Shub-Niggurath



These are the thousand youngs of Shub-Niggurath. Dark Youngs usually dwell in forests where cults of Shub-Niggurath meet. They can be summoned by a cerimony found in the Book of Eibon, involving a blood sacrifice on a stone altar deep in the woods.
Origin: This creature first appeared in "Notebook found in a Deserted House" by Robert Bloch, and was referred by a character from the story as a Shoggoth. The name Dark Young was given in the Call of Cthulhu RPG.

Daughter of Shub-Niggurath



They are also probably among the thousand youngs of Shub-Niggurath, since they are birthed directly from Shub-Niggurath, usually in a cerimony in which animals or humanoids are sacrified. This creatures are able to birth their own Dark Youngs, and they dwell among cultists that can care for their Dark Youngs.
Origin: I'm not sure if this is the first appearence of the creature, but the only time I came across it while exploring the Cthulhu Mythos was in "Sandy Peterson's Cthulhu Mythos - 5e" (besides Lovecraft's Untold Stories, of course). I will happily correct this if someone has more information.




Regular Enemies Part 1.2 - Creatures of the Mythos
Elder Thing



Alien beings featuring characteristics from both the animal and vegetable kingdoms. They prefer to live underwater, but can also just as easily live on land and even fly. They arrived on Earth Eons ago, and built a great city near the South Pole. They created the Shoggoths to use as labor force, and also (probably unintentionally) many life forms of Earth, including those that would result in humanity. They fought many wars on Earth, against The Star-Spawn of Cthulhu, the Mi-go and the Great Race of Yith, but their Downfall on Earth was an insurrection of the Shoggoths, that evolved intelligence and rebeled against their masters.
Origins: The Elder Things first appeared in "At The Mountains of Madness" by H. P. Lovecraft, they would later be mentioned in "Dreams in the Witch House" by the same author.

Hounds of Tindalos



The Hounds of Tindalos inhabit the "angled time", while we exist in the "curved time". They dwell in Tindalos, a city of corkscrew towers. Time travel is something that attracts the attention of the Hounds, and they can follow the traveler through time and space until they caught and kill him. However, they must materialize themselves through an angle, and therefore cannot enter a perfectly round room, for exemple. They have no enzymes, so they probably do not age.
Origin: "The Hounds of Tindalos" by Frank Belknap Long.

Servitor of the Outer Gods



Toad-like Alien beings with numerous tentacles that are always playing a flute. They provide music at the court of Azathoth, and sometimes may participate in cults on Earth. They've also been know to accompany Nyarlathotep. Their mad music has the power to summon other creatures from the Mythos.
Origin: They appear in "The Festival" by H. P. Lovecraft, there are many mentions of beings playing pipes in the court of Azathoth in other tales. They also appear in "The Dweller in Darkness" by August Derleth.

Shoggoths



Creatures created by the Elder Things as slave labor. Shoggoths are protoplasmatic, and can form and dissolve limbs and organs as it moves. They do not age and have great regenerative capabilities. They eventually evolved intelligence and rebelled against the Elder Things of Earth in the Permian period.
Shoggoths are supposed to be huge, so the smaller variants that appears as regular enemies may actually be Proto-Shoggoths.
Origin: "At The Mountains of Madness" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Rats



Origin: Most notably in "The Rats in the Walls" by H. P. Lovecraft

Unnamable



This monster could be a game creation or it could be the creature from "The Unnamable", that is described as having a human-like skull with horns and hoofed feet. Another thing that could point to it being the Unnamable is the fact that in the original story this creature attacks the characters in a cemetery, and in the game they always appear at the cemetery level.
Origin: "The Unnamable" by H. P. Lovecraft

White Ape



A race of white apes that lives in Africa, not much is know about them, but the fact that they can interbreed with humans.
Origin: "Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family" By H. P. Lovecraft
Regular Enemies: Part 2 - Original Creations for the Game
Rebirthed Cultist



A floating cultist with double swords.

Salamander



Lizards that can spit fire.

Wyvern



Bipedal lizards that can freeze enemies with their cold breath.

Grey Construct



A creature that seems to be constructed by Herbert West.

Brown Construct



A stronger version of the previous construct.

Golem



An artificial being constructed by an alchemist.

Giant Beetle



Giant desert beetles that remains hidden under the sand to ambush his prey.

Beelzebeth's Minions



Giant, Bee-like creatures that live in Beelzebeth's Harmonious Commune.

Flying Gargoyle



A creature that inhabits the City of Carcosa.

Flying Gargoyle (bigger)



Like the previous creature, but bigger and with an ape-like face.

Variant Ghoul (?)



Not sure what this is. They appear in levels that have Ghouls, so they may be related to the Dreamlands, and they seem to live in the underground. They may represent some creature of the Cthulhu Mythos, or they may be a creation for the game. Any help is welcome.

Human member of Beelezebeth's Harmonious Commune



Humans that somehow ended up in Ythill, where Beelezebeth's Harmonious Commune is located. They seem to be controlled by an insect hidden inside their hats.

Controlled Miner



Human miners that seem to have been controlled by the Mi-go to use as slave labor in the mines. One of their arms was replaced with a machinery of some sort.
Bosses - Creatures/Characters from the Mythos.
Star-Spawn of Cthulhu (Cthulhi)



A race of beings that came to Earth alongside Cthulhu and constructed the great city of R'lyeh eons ago, when they also battled the Elder Things and drove them to the oceans. When R'lyeh sank beneath the ocean, they where imprisioned with their master Cthulhu, and will someday awaken with him when R'lyeh rises from the ocean. Likely, as it is in the game, some of them are still free. It is possible that Cthulhu is from the same race of them, or they are descended from him somehow.
Origin: "At the Mounstains of Madness" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Castro



Pure blood Tcho-Tcho, the last boss of the Detective Story, found in the Innsmouth level.

Colour out of Space



An entity from outer space that manifests itself as a color of unknow spectrum. It starts as a small sphere that crashes in a planet like a meteor, and then begins to influence and feed of the life of the surrounding area until it gains enough energy, when it drains the surrounding area of life and flies off into space.
Origin: "The Colour out of Space" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Night Hunter



It is possible that the Night Hunter is the game's interpretation of the Hunting Horrors. Since they're both winged creatures with serpentine body. Hunting Horrors also are dispelled by daylight, which also fits with the name "NIGHT" Hunter. Hunting Horrors serve Nyarlathotep.
Origin: They are mentioned in "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft, and appear in "The Lurker at the Treshhold" by Agust Derleth. It is possible that the creature from "The Haunter of the Dark" by H. P. Lovecraft is a Hunting Horror, or an avatar of Nyarlathotep.

Sorcerer



Found in the Poofessor Story, in the Miskatonic Library level.

Eldritch Horror



Found in the Professor story, in the Miskatonic Library Basement sublevel.

Ancient Shoggoth



Creatures created by the Elder Things as slave labor. Shoggoths are protoplasmatic, and can form and dissolve limbs and organs as it moves. They do not age and have great regenerative capabilities. They eventually evolved intelligence and rebelled against the Elder Things of Earth in the Permian period.
Origin: "At The Mountains of Madness" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Brown Jenkin



A rat-like creature with human face and hands. He was the familiar of the Witch Keziah Mason, and some claimed she fed him her own blood. He is strong enough to eat through a human body. He may have been created with Nyarlathotep's assistance.
Origin: "Dreams in the Witch House" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Cassilda



A character from "The King in Yellow", a dangerous play that drives people insane after they read it's second act. Not much is know about her.
Origin: "The King in Yellow" by Robert Chambers

Yig



A Great Old One that looks like a big serpent-man. Yig came to Earth eons ago and was responsible for the creation of reptiles, today a few Native American tribes still worship Yig. Unlinke the other Great Old ONes, Yig is usually peacefull and doesn't harm humans, unless the human harms serpents, its spawn. If a human does harm a serpent, he may make Yig angry, and end up being turned into a human snake. In the game you can avoid figthing Yig if you don't burn any of the serpent nests in the sublevel.
Origin: "The Curse of Yig" by Zealia Bishop and H. P. Lovecraft.

Terrible Old Man



A mysterious old man that lives on Water Street in Kingsport. He is feared by the towsnfolk, who whisper about carvings in his yard and his conversations with bottles with lead pendulums inside. He is a master of mystical traditions, and seems to be able to trap the essence of someone inside a bottle with a lead pendulum. He dislikes visitors and shows no mercy to any who enter his house uninvited. In the game, they expanded his character by making him an affiliate of some sort of the Witch Keziah Mason.
Origin: "The Terrible Old Man" and "The Strange House in the Mist" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Black Pharaoh



The Black Pharaoh is Nephren Ka, the last pharaoh of the Third Dinasty. A migthy sorcerer, Neprhen Ka revived the worship of Nyarlathotep. The people of Egypt revolted againts him, but Nephren Ka and his followers escaped and built a secret undergound vault, where they sacrified one hundred victims to Nyarlathotep. In exchange, Nyarlathotep bestowed the gift of prophecy upon the Black Pharaoh, and he used the gift to draw the future of the human world in the walls of his tomb.
Origin: Nephren Ka ins mentioned in many works of H. P. Lovecraft, like "The Outsider" and "The Haunter of the Dark". He is greatly expanded by Robert Bloch in his story "Fane of the Black Pharaoh"

Flying Polyp



A predatory alien species with partly material bodies that arrived on Earth in the distant past. Some say that they where pursuing the Great Race of Yith (that possessed a species of conical bodies from Earth's past), others that they simply entered in conflict with them on Earth. What we know for sure is that they where driven underground and sealed by the Yithians. Unaffected by the dark, they built vast chambers beneath the ground. They eventually managed to escape and wiped out the conical creatures (The Great Race, however, survived by sending their minds in the future to posses another species). They still live in the undergroud cities they built.
Origin: "The Shadow out of Time" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Gug King



These giant creatures are native to the Dreamlands, where they once lived upon the surface of the earth and built stone monoliths that still remain. They where banished by the gods of the Earth because of their worship of Nyarlathotep and the Other Gods, and now live in the caverns below the surface, in a stone city near the vaults of Zin. They are enemies of the Ghouls.
The Gug King (mispelled as Goog king in the game) is a creation of the game.
Origin: The Gug race appears in "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Queen Spider



A Huge Leng Spider. Leng Spiders are Giant, intelligent Spiders native to the Dreamlands, they live near the Plateau of Leng. They seem to have faced the Humanoids of Leng in battle long ago and lost, event that explains why their distribution is so limited today.
Origin: They are briefly mentioned in "The Dreamquest of Ancient Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft, and where expanded on the Call of Cthulhu RPG books.

From Beyond



A creature form another dimension that overlaps our own reality. Their existence was discovered by Dr. Crawford Tillinghast, that constructed a machine that made it possible to perceive them. Origin: "From Beyond" by H. P. Lovecraft
Bosses - Creatures/Characters from the Mythos part 2
King of the WHite Apes



King of a race of white apes that lives in Africa, not much is know about them, but the fact that they can interbreed with humans.
Origin: A king is never mentioned, but the White Apes appear in the story "Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family" by H. P. Lovecraft

Dholes



Gigantic worm-like creatures original from the Dreamlands, but that can infect planets in the Waking World. Dholes can destroy whole planets by hollowing them, they can also spit mucus to engulf their targets. Earlier copies of the Book of Eibon contained a formula that could summon Dholes to Earth, but fortunately all of these copies have been lost.
Origin: This one is a little troublesome, in the story "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" Lovecraft mentions the "gigantic bholes", that has been misread by Augusth Derleth as "Dholes" and this name has been incorporated in other Mythos stories since then. Later, Lovecraft Scholar S. T. Joshi restored the name "bholes". This confusion led to the creation ot two different creatures: The Dholes and the Bholes.

Gnoph-Keh



Horned, furry monsters from Greenland that walk on two, four, or sometimes six legs. These ancient creatures are intelligent and can call up storms to immobilize their prey. They may worship Rhan-Tegoth or Itaqua. In the game you can only find this Boss in the Secret Level.
Origin: "The Horror in the Museum" by H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald.
Bosses - Original Creations for the Game
Alchemist



Found in thie Thief's story, in the Alchemist Catacombs level (sublevel of the cemetery).

Big Construct



Possibly constructed by Herbert West.

Magic Beast



A Creature that floats around and have the head of a Wyvern and a Salamander in place of its hands. The Heads can shoot ice and fire.

Abomination



A creature that seems to be a hybrid between a Human and some tentlacled monstrosity.

Man of Many Parts



Enemy of the Witch Elizabeth de Flèches.

Rat King



A bipidal giant Rat that seems to be the spawn of some sort of black magic.
NPC's - Creatures and Characters from the Cthulhu Mythos
Tsathoggua



Great Old One that resembles a frog and a bat, it lives in the black caverns of N'Kai. He is very lazy and is often asleep. Humans offer sacrifices to be devoured by Tsathoggua, in hope of gaining his favor.
Origin: He was mentioned many times by H. P Lovecraft in variopus stories, but was created by Clark Ashton Smith in the story "The Tale of Satampra Zeiros".

Barnabas Marsh



The grandson of Obed Marsh, that founded the Esoteric Order of Dagon in Innsmouth and made a pact with the Deep Ones. Barnabas Marsh is the owner of the gold refinery of Innsmouth.
Origin: "The Shadow over Innsmouth" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Erich Zann



A mute German musician, who was able to create otherwordly music. When living in the Rue d'Auseil in Paris, he played in his apartment every night, some believe he was playing in order to prevent Azathoth's awakening.
Origin: "The Music of Erich Zann" by H. P. Lovecraft.

The Great Race of Yith



A race of beings that can project their minds through time and space, possessing other beings. The conical bodies they are usually associated with are actually a race of beings from Earth's distant past that were possessed by the Great Race. We do not know their original shape, or even if they really have one. They are know to sometimes posses humans during a few years, and they use their time as humans to reserach about our history and read some forbidden books of eldritch lore.
Origin: "The Shadow out of Time" by H. P. Lovecraft

Inspector Legrasse



A New Orleans police inspector, Legrasse led a raid in 1907 against a Bayou Cult. He ended up discovering the existence of the Cthulhu Cult. The game's detective John Murphy learned a lot from Legrasse when he served under him. In the game he was killed, and that event led Murphy to start his investigations.
Origin: "The Call of Cthulhu" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Nodens



Usually placed among the Elder Gods, Nodens is fond of dreamers and visionaries, and while he has no ill intent against humanity, he also does not care about us. In the game Elizabeth des Flèches serves Nodens.
Origin: "The Strange High House in the Mist" and "The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft

Professor Armitage



Head Librarian at Miskatonic University and expert in the Occult, Armitage did us a great service by not allowing Wilbur Whateley to borrow the Necronomicon from the Miskatonic University Library, thus avoiding that Wilbur opened the gate to Yog-Sothoth, and later by putting an end to the Dunwich Horror alongside Professors Rice and Morgan.
Origin: "The Dunwich Horror" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Richard Pickman



A painter of incredible talent, know for paintings depicting humanoids with canine features feasting on corpses in graveyards and cellars. His work was despised by most. He was an associate of the Ghouls, and eventually turned into a Ghoul himself, and moved with them in the Dreamlands.
Origin: "Pickman's Model" and "Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath" by H. P. Lovecraft.
Great Old Ones
Under construction
Obs: Both Yig and Tsathogghua are Great Old Ones, but they are featured in different sections.

Dagon



"All in the band of the faithful- Order o' Dagon - an' the children shud never die, but go back to MOther Hydra an' FAther Dagon what we all come from onct"
The Sea-knight, Father Dagon is the leader of the Deep Ones (alongside his mate, Mother Hydra) and a server o Cthulhu. Dagon cults have existed for milennia, the most famous being the Esoteric Order of Dagon in Innsmouth. It is possible that Dagon himself is a Deep One of huge proportions.
Origin: "Dagon" and "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Cthulhu



"In his house at R'lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming".
Cthulhu is a Great Old One that is sleeping in a deathlike trance somewhere beneath the Pacific Ocean in the blasfemous city of R'lyeh. Possibly a high priest of Yog-Sothoth, he arrived on earth aeons ago from the stars, alongside his Star-Spawn, and they built the city of R'lyeh. They went to war against the Elder Things (who arrived before Cthulhu) and forced them into the ocean, after that they declared peace and agreed not to interfere with each other. It is unknow how and why, but Cthulhu eventually fell into hibernation and his city of R'yleh sank beneath the ocean (Some later authors atributed this to the Elder Gods, who won a war against the Outer Gods and the Great Old ones and imprisioned them as punishment, but this is a controversial idea not accepted by all, since it appears to contradict Lovecraft's original intentions by creating a cosmic war of good vs. evil. Ultimately if you accept that or not is up to your own personal preference), eventually humanity evolved on Earth and Cthulhu spoke to humans in our dreams, showing us how to find his statues and idols brougth from the stars, and instructing us to creat the Cthulhu Cult, who are quite widespread. One day, when the stars are right, Cthulhu and his Star-Spawn will rise again and retake the Earth.
In some cultures he is refered to as "Kutulu" or "Tulu".
Origin: "The Call of Cthulhu" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Outer Gods
Under construction

Nyarlathotep



"And where Nyarlathotep went, rest vanished, for the small hours were rent with the screams of nightmare."
The messenger of the Outer Gods, Nyarlathotep seems to be the only one of them that is free and able to go and do as it pleases, and it's the only one to show some interest in humanity. It's also know as the "Crawling Chaos" and many other names, since it can take many forms, and has been worshiped under several guises. It's most notorious worshiper was probably Nephren-Ka, the Black Pharaoh, and it was in his reign that it gained the suffix "hotep" (meaning "the gratifed") in it's name. Nyarlathotep will eventually bring destruction to humanity, and when that happens it is said that it will come dressed in red and with wild beats licking its hands. Nyarlathotep travels among cities of the world, giving demonstrations of science and magic.
Origin: "Nyarlathotep" by H. P. Lovecraft.

Shub-Niggurath

Azathoth
Bibliography:
- HARMS, Daniel. The Cthulhu Mythos Encyclopedia. 3rd edition. Elder Sign Press, 2011.

- FRICKER, Paul (Ed.) and MASON, Mike (Ed.). Call of Cthulhu Keeper Rulebook - Revised Seventh Edition. Chaosium. 2016

- MASON, Mike (Ed.). S. Petersen's Field Guide To Lovecraftian Horrors. Chaosium. 2016.

- PETERSEN, Sandy, PETERSEN, Arthur, JACOBS, James, STARCHER, Ian and ROSS, David N. Sandy Petersen's Cthulhu Mythos - 5E. Petersen Games. 2019

From H. P. Lovecraft:
- The Unnamable;
- The Nameless City;
- The Festival;
- Dagon;
- The Call of Cthulhu;
- Dreams in the Witch House;
- The Colour out of Space;
- The Dunwich Horror;
- At The Mountains of Madness;
- The Shadow over Innsmouth;
- The Shadow out of Time;
- The Whisperer in Darkness;
- Pickman's Model;
- The Dream-Quest of Unknow Kadath;
- Through the Gates of the Silver Key;
- Herbert West - Reanimator;
- The Terrible Old Man;
- The Strange House in the Mist;
- The Rats in the Walls;
- From Beyond;
- The Outsider;
- Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family;
- The Curse of Yig (With Zealia Bishop);
- The Horror in the Museum (With Hazel Heald).

Stories by other authors:

- "The Shadow Kingdom" by Robert E. Howard;
- "The Seven Geases" by Clark Ashton Smith;
- "The Tale of Satampra Zeiros" Clark Ashton Smith;
- "Fane of the Black Pharaoh" by Robert Bloch;
- "Notebook found in a Deserted House" by Robert Bloch;
- "The Hounds of Tindalos" by Frank Belknap Long;
- "The Dweller in Darkness" by August Derleth;
- "The Lurker at the Treshhold" by Agust Derleth;
- "The King in Yellow" by Robert Chambers.