Time Terror - Mander

Isn’t that basically the plot of a season in the adventure zone?
There’s a Cypher System RPG called Old Gods of Appalachia that’s pretty neat too.
Old Gods of Appalachia Roleplaying Game - Monte Cook Games Store

Venture into the dark, eerie past of an alternate Appalachia and enjoy a fluid, story-based roleplaying experience with an intuitive, concept-driven character generation system that gives you limitless options. With loads of lore, dozens of creatures and NPCs, and two complete adventures to launch your campaign, the Old Gods of Appalachia Roleplaying Game has everything you need to experience your own stories of horror, hardship, and heart in this immersive, narrative, and deeply chilling setting.

Monte Cook Games Store

also a horror podcast

Old Gods of Appalachia

antennapod.org/deeplink/subscribe/?url=https%3A%2…

Subscribe – AntennaPod

Click to subscribe to this podcast on AntennaPod or on any other podcast app.

AntennaPod
…radio drama came first, RPG followed a few year after…
didn’t realize there was a system adaptation based on it. very cool!
Also thematically related is The Twisted Ones by T Kingfisher, which itself is a reinterpretation of The White Ones by Arthur Machen (written in the late 1890s). Appalachia has been creeping people out for a long time!
As I mentioned in another comment, but elaborating further here, there’s a Savage World’s setting that revolves around eldritch horror and rampant corporate industry called Holler.

Most of the Appalachians is now located within the eastern part of the United States as runoff. Imagine how long it took for huge mountains to erode down and wash outwards into the ocean that distance.

And the Appalachians are still young compared to a few other mountain areas around the world.

Australia and South Africa giving me the willies.
Yup. Makhanjwa range in the north west of SA is three times as old as the Appalachians at 3.5 billion years. Days were only twelve hours long back then….
How old is the Australian Great Dividing Range (which has been worn down quite low)
The Appalachian Mountains and the Scottish Highlands are the same mountain range, because it is older than the continents moving apart.
The Atlantic Ocean is younger than the Appalachian Mountains.
That makes so much sense in context.
And apparently the Scandinavian Mountains are also a part of the same mountain range. Cool!
My favorite geological fact about Scotland is the super obvious fault line that slashes straight through it. The Great Glen.
I do regard them with terror, but this isn’t the reason why.
Is it the deer? I’ve heard they’re sketchy round there.
The deer ticks will fuck you up if you don’t check for them.
Fallout 76 taught me how annoying Appalachian ticks can be
Am I the only one who the image is not loading for?

the appalachian mountains are older than saturn’s rings. the appalachian mountains are older than dinosaurs. the appalachian mountains are older than trees. the appalachian mountains are literally older than BONES. the appalachian mountains should be regarded with pure terror.

Because North America and Africa were once geographically connected, the Appalachians formed part of the same mountain chain as the Little Atlas in Morocco. This mountain range, known as the Central Pangean Mountains, extended into Scotland, before the Mesozoic Era opening of the Iapetus Ocean, from the North America/Europe collision (See Caledonian orogeny)

By the end of the Mesozoic Era, the Appalachian Mountains had been eroded to an almost flat plain.[27] It was not until the region was uplifted during the Cenozoic Era that the distinctive topography of the present formed.

North America - Wikipedia

I thought the Rockies were older

Nah the rockies were made by continental drift. Kind of. It’s complicated.

youtu.be/I9Xk1O17dzg?si=Tnmrz0nIVYAK8Ofg

How did the Rocky Mountains Form?

YouTube
The Rockies are actually relatively recent, 55M to 80M years old. The Appalachians are much older and part of the reason they aren’t anywhere near as big as (for example) the Rockies, is because they have been eroded for so much longer. That said, they are still definitely not the oldest mountain range. It looks like the Makhonjwa Mountains win that one.
Rocky Mountains - Wikipedia

That’s sick as fuck, thank you for that link

I agree, this kind of thing is awesome. Like in the original meaning of the term too… inspiring of awe.

Keith Richards built the Appalachian mountains.
They’ll kick your ass too. Source: hiked hundreds of miles therein
This sound like the opening of some eldritch horror novel.
Well if you know anything about Appalachian lore
There’s unironically a bunch of Appalachian cosmic horror stuff out there. In fact iirc Savage Worlds has a setting for it called Holler and Monte Cook games published a ttrpg for the Old Gods of Appalachia podcast.

If I hadn’t burned myself out on Pseudopod, Welcome to Nightvale, The Black Tapes, and Limetown, I’d be a bigger fan.

But my friends swear up and down by Old Gods. Solid writing and a good creepy blend of the mundane and surreal.

The resting place of cthulhu’s rotten carcass
The Appalachian mountains are full of hillbillies. THAT’S the scary part.
Banjo intensifies.
Wouldn’t they be mountainbillies?
Sometimes we move to the cities and fuck shit up there too.
The hills have bones
In the same vein, sharks are older than trees.
Sharks are older than Saturn’s rings.
How does one pronounce Appalachian?
App uh latch e en
Not App uh Lay shin?
From Western PA and this is the pronunciation I grew up with

Yeah, Pittsburgh here, I totally say lay-shun.

It’s been said the Pittsburgh accent is one of the least attractive so maybe don’t mimicking our diction.

I dunno, the way I typed it is how the robots in Fallout 76 pronounce it haha. I could very well be wrong.
You cheeky bastard!
I’ve also heard apple-late-chin
Depends where you’re from lol.
I’ll stick with Ah-pah-lah-shee-an
The closer you get, the more it sounds like “App-uh-latch-uh”
Seems like North America has always had a thing for conservatism.