Folklore
Behind the modern façade of Britain in the 1920s is a country teeming with links to the supernatural. British folklore harkens back to days of old when early cultures lived alongside strange folk and stranger creatures¸ when druids and shamans made sacrifices to pantheons of gods both powerful and terrible¸ and when people celebrated myth and legend in song¸ art¸ and oral tradition at the very heart of their civilizations. And those deep roots that so colourfully tell of fantastical creatures¸ miraculous events¸ and wondrous deeds also hint and grasp blindly at darker truths. The truth is that folklore can take us behind the veil of reality to glimpse the terrible¸ alien truths of the universe beyond¸ capturing vague notions of evil¸ malevolent beings¸ their horrible deeds¸ and the primal fears that they inspire and that have been preserved in Britain's cultural memory.
"Cthulhu Britanica: Folklore presents a uniquely British vision of Lovecraftian horror where fairies¸ witches¸ and folk traditions intertwine with the dreadful¸ eldritch powers and otherworldly terrors of the Cthulhu Mythos.