Supernatural
Set in a world inspired by the Pen & Paper "Werewolf: The Apocalypse 5th Edition", Ironwood is a modern, urban city steeped in supernatural myth and occult intrigue. As a Garou—a werewolf warrior of Gaia—you must protect the Umbra & the spirits and survive gentrified sprawl, corrupted politics, and ancient rivalries. Elders clash with defiant youth, hunters stalk the shadows, and the Wyrm spreads unseen. Survival is sacred, yet change is inevitable. Fight, love, live. You are a monster - or not?
Author's Note: ##THIS IS NOT A D&D 5e WORLD. NO D&D CLASSES, RACES OR SPELLS ARE INTEGRATED HERE. STARTING A CAMPAIGN WITH D&D CHARACTERS CAUSES PROBLEMS##
#Still a work in Progress#
Highly experimental lose translation of the Pen & Paper setting and core rules of "Werewolf the Apocalypse 5th Edition" (& "WtA - Revised edition" mixed in), which is part of the "World of Darkness"-Universe, into the F&F Framework (does not mean that everything will be set in stone yet.). Lots of Homebrew here as well, to fit the freamework.
Ironwood concentrates solely on the Garou. Vampires, Mages etc. are not integrated. This world solely revolves around the werewolf side of World of Darkness.
A lot of WtA-Mechanics can not be integrated into the F&F Framework, for example how Dice-Mechanics work or tracking Harano and Hauglosk.
What is in it so far?
- 12 werewolf tribes as classes
- Auspices are more like Sub-Classes here, not the main classes. Why? Because i feel the tribes allow more immersion in that regard on a narrative lvl. The Auspices are still referenced and part of every character brief description. Their respective skills are marked in the spell book for usage.
- all official WtA Items
- all official WtA Spells, rituals etc. (most of them translatef & adjusted to fit "D&D language" but also a whole lot of Homebrew ones)
- a fictional modern american city inspired by supernatural & occult Detroit and Portland meshed together
- custom factions & characters
- official banes & fomori are added as spawnable monsters
Known issues:
I deleted the Rage-Tracker for now. Maybe someday it is possible that on F&F other dice systems/Pen and Paper Systems will be supported. It caused problems especially in Multiplayer so I put it away for now.
"I can not start a campaign with my own character": This is a non-D&D-World. If you want to play with a character that has a race, class etc. which is not represented in Ironwood (or not integrated), clone Ironwood and add your character in the workshop tab to the existing character roster. The same you do with the class you want to play and the spells your class uses. Same for items. Start your campaign from your workshop.
Atm everything is so op: you are a werewolf, you are not a human in this world. You are still a monster. So you are in general more durable, strong and resilient than a normal human being (this is also something deeply ingrained into the Pen and Paper-system). Yet I dialed all damage down, to get it closer to a normal D&D-Experience - well, kind of. You are still pretty sturdy and strong.
Why so many homebrew-spells? Because with the few provided by the core rulebook the turn based combat becomes stale and repetetive pretty fast otherwise. I tried to give all classes fitting ones, maybe I rework some of them down the line.
Future plans:
- Reworking the world map
- adding some Hound Members, some Pentex Employees etc.
- adding all missing patron spirits
- rebalancing monsters (I still have no clue how)
Played | 32 times |
Cloned | 11 times |
Created | 157 days ago |
Last Updated | 16 days ago |
Visibility | Public |

Harper Quinn's Apartment
Point of Interest
Details
Coordinates | (-7403, 1188) |
Description
A chaotic yet cozy and colorful single apartment belonging to Detective Harper Quinn, filled with bookcases on history, local urban legends, and occult topics, alongside numerous plants. It includes a kitchen, living room, small bath and laundry area, with a practical and orderly bedroom reflecting Harper's eccentric but methodical nature.
Appearance
The apartment is vibrant and cluttered with books and plants, walls adorned with eclectic decorations and occult symbols. The living room is cozy with mismatched furniture, the kitchen is compact but functional, and the bedroom is neat and practical, contrasting the rest of the space.