
Asher’s Ridge
A fully collaborative tabletop roleplaying game for 1 to 4 players, where you direct—and play through—episodes of an original paranormal drama television series. Experience the unexplainable in the breathtaking heart of the Lake District. Gather your cast of characters, scout your filming locations, and make a show that will keep them guessing for years to come.
Inspired by Twin Peaks, The X-Files , Stranger Things and more, Asher’s Ridge captures the twists and turns of your favourite paranormal television shows.
Paranormal versus Supernatural
Paranormal: Not scientifically explainable – Merriam-Webster
This game uses the word paranormal to encompass the supernatural as well as the unexplained and extraterrestrial.
Gameplay
During an episode – AKA a game – you foreshadow a paranormal threat to Asher’s Ridge in short, atmospheric interludes and collaborate on scenes using a web of plot threads created from letter tiles. The threat escalates, becoming personal to your characters, and tension increases as you take risks to address it. Eventually problems come to a head, for better or worse, and the episode ends in a dramatic cliffhanger.
Begin by creating a character (or choosing a pre-gen) to suit the style of game you want to play. Characters have attitudes, which affect the mechanics of the game, for example, by altering the web of plot threads, drawing new letters, or affecting the order of card draws. Your character develops across a series of episodes by inviting risk with their actions.
Then choose (or create) a logline. Loglines are the ‘elevator pitch’ of an episode. For example: “ three friends camp in the Wulfwoods under the light of the full moon, while something watches with interest from the shadows.” The logline provides the overall tone of an episode and serves as a reference point to return to when playing later scenes.
Decide on the locations to use in the episode. Either choose a pre-set deck of 20 cards, or draft 20 cards as a group. Pre-set decks let you get straight to playing, while drafting lets you share what excites you about locations in the context of the logline.






