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There are also details concerning Chantries controlled by the "enemy". One chapter covers the Technocracy and includes Null-B, the Technocracy's greatest Construct, as well as Iteration-X's slave labor facility in MECHA and the Progenitor's realm of Moreauvia where they use genetic engineering to create beast men. The next covers the Nephandi, including a sea of darkness ruled over by a Dreamspeaker barrabi and the criminal underground of Chicago's Chinatown which is led by a fallen Akashic. Alot of this stuff smacks of second edition stereotypes about the Technocracy being "evvvvvil!" but you can still get lots of use out of it. It closes out with some great rules for creating Chantries in depth (and EVERY aspect you can imagine) plus some legendary Chantries, but also includes an annoying game you can run involving Sam Haight (*ick*) plundering from a Verbena farm Chantry in rural Kansas. Just ignore it and its a fairly decent, if dated, book.
In the book there are detailed descriptions of Tradition Chantries, Technocracy Constructs and Nephandi Labyrinths. Each of these includes information on story ideas, NPCs, Locations, Nodes, History, Art and much, much, more.
The book also has a section that explains how to create chantries. In this section are details of how chantries are defended, how sanctums work inside chantries, how nodes are added, and the horizon realms chantries can have. And many other bits and pieces.
The Book contains Information on a few rotes. This is probably the most useless page. The rotes are short, boring, uncreative, and a waste of space. On the bright side it only takes up one side of a page so it does not lower the over all value of the book to much.
There is also a short story called "Harvest Time". This centers on a Verbana hereditary chantry owned by the Crombey's. It is an OK story. It is original and an asset too anybody looking for a new idea for a story, however I did not care for the ending it suggested and take a different route every time I use it.
Altogether a great book! A page is wasted on rotes, but everything else more than makes up for it. A must have for every mage player and storyteller interested in chantries.