GURPS Blood Types
![]() Cover  | |
| Designers | Grate Lane | 
|---|---|
| Publishers | Steve Jackson Games | 
| Publication | 1995 | 
| Genres | Horror | 
| Systems | GURPS 3rd edition | 
GURPS Blood Types (ISBN 1-55634-113-X) is a 128-page soft-bound book compiled by Lane Grate and published in 1995 by Steve Jackson Games as a supplement for the third edition GURPS role-playing game system. It contains biographies and gaming statistics for 23 vampires, vampire-like beings, and guidelines on creating more for various campaign settings.
Contents
The three broad types
GURPS Blood Types breaks vampires and vampire-like beings into three broad types:
Mortal Vampires--Living beings who have become vampires through some pact or deal. Generally they are not undead.
Undead--Once living beings who have come back from the dead to feed on the living
Spirit and otherworldly beings--Otherworldly parasitic beings that masquerade as a member of a mortal race.
Vampire Types
Those with a ^ can be active in daylight
- Adze^, supernatural entity vampire from central Africa mainly Ghana and Togo.
 - Alien^, otherworldly vampire—may or may not be supernatural in nature.
 - Astral^, mortal vampire (sorcerer) found around the world. Some examples are Bebarlang of Southeast Asia and Philippines and the Chordewa of Bangal hill tribes.
 - Baital^, supernatural entity vampire from India.
 - Ch'iang Shich, undead vampire from China.
 - Civateteo^, an undead vampire of Mesoamerica. Another variant of this from the same region is the Langsoir.
 - Gaki^, supernatural vampire-like being from Japan—may either be animated corpse or otherworldly spirit
 - Ghul^, Mortal vampire (flesh eater) from Arabian folktales
 - Gothic, undead vampire made famous by Dracula and most of the movie variants inspired by it
 - Half-Vampire^, Mortal vampire that is usually a servant or slave to the Gothic type
 - High-Tech^, Mortal vampire created via super science
 - Human^, Mortal Vampire who feels the need to drink another's blood
 - Incubus (Demon)/Succubus^, supernatural vampire-like entity that drains life via sexual contact rather than blood
 - Lamia^, undead/supernatural entity from ancient Greece.
 - Lilitu^, supernatural entity vampire from ancient Mesopotamia. Given their name and nature they may have connection to Adam's first wife (Lilith).
 - Loogaroo^, Mortal vampire (soul pact) of Haiti
 - Modern, Updated version of Gothic vampire type
 - Nosferatu, In the context of GURPS Blood Types it is the vampire seen in the film Nosferatu
 - Penanggalen^, Female mortal vampire (soul pact) of Malay Peninsula. Male counterpart in Berma is the Kephn Can only feed at night
 - Strix, Mortal vampire (witch) of ancient Rome
 - Usrel, Undead child vampire of Poland. If not properly destroyed can rise again as another type.
 - Vampir, Traditional undead European vampire of the Slavic nations. Usually attacks in astral form and is more likely to be a peasant than nobel
 - Vyrolakos^, Traditional undead European vampire of the Balkan nations. Usually attacks physically and in the legend would often take human mates and have families. Tympanios is a precursor variant that was less insane and did not depend on blood
 
Publication history
Blood Types is a GURPS game supplement, published as a 128-page softcover book by Steve Jackson Games and designed by Lane Grate.[1] Editing was by Jeff Koke and Scott Haring, with illustrations by Dan Smith and a cover by Tim Bradstreet.[1]
Reception
Rick Swan reviewed GURPS Blood Types for Dragon magazine #227 (March 1996), and rated it a 5 out of 6.[1] According to Swan, Blood Types "belongs on the shelf of every horror aficionado who's had his fill of recycled Bela Lugosis".[1]
Reviews
- Rollespilsmagasinet Fønix (Danish) (Issue 12 - Mar/Apr 1996)[2]
 - Australian Realms #28[3]
 
Scholarly Bibliography
Among the sources used to make this book are some scholarly ones:
- Barber, Paul (1988) Vampires, Burial and Death (Yale University Press)
 - Bunson, Matthew (1993) The Vampire Encyclopedia (Crown Publications)
 - Frayling, Christopher (1991) Vampyres: Lord Byron to Count Dracula (Faber and Faber, Ltd)
 - Haining, Peter (1977) The Dracula Scrapbook (Bramhall House)
 - McNally, Raymond T. and Florescu, Radu (1972) In Search of Dracula (N.Y. Graphic Society)
 - Melton, J. Gordon (1994) The Vampire Book (Visible Ink Press)
 - Summers, Montague (1928) The Vampire, His Kith and Kin (Routledge and Keegan Paul)
 - Summers, Montague (1929) The Vampire in Europe (Routledge and Keegan Paul)
 - Twitchell, James B, (1975) The Living Dead: The Vampire in Romantic Literature (Duke University Press)
 - Wolf, Leonard (ed.) (1995) The Essential Dracula (Plume)
 
References
- ^ a b c d Swan, Rick (March 1996). "Role-playing Reviews". Dragon (#227). Lake Geneva, Wisconsin: TSR: 113–114.
 - ^ "Anmeldelser | Article | RPGGeek".
 - ^ "Australian Realms Magazine - Complete Collection". June 1988.
 
