Narrative Lane Final
Two games that lean into horror with different approaches and excellent results. Both shine with tools for shared narrative building and rising tension. Their common heritage in Powered by the Apocalypse highlights the differences between them more clearly than any other matchup in this bracket.
Public Access
The writers' room mystery system is still the engine everything else runs on. No canonical solution before play starts, everyone at the table building the answer together from what the players notice and pursue. That shared authorship produces investment that pre-written mysteries can't replicate.
What I've learned writing It's Worse Than That! material for Carved from Brindlewood games is what the system is asking of its Keepers. A Night Move scene needs dread, escalating personal cost, and a worst case that's worse than the player imagined. The following scene is from the IWTT! Winter 2025 volume:
The Latchkeys are sneaking around an empty fairground a couple of hours before dawn. Maia watches a skeletal figure rise from the bubbling depths of the Fried HoHo stand's industrial fryer as a cloud of rancid grease fogs the air. Its hollow eyes burn with cold hunger. The player wants to knock the awning supports out and trap Mr. Bones in the kitchen. The Keeper asks what happens if she fails. "I'll be trapped with the skeleton, swimming in hot grease." It's worse than that: Mr. Bones is going to kill her and turn her into a deep-fried minion.
That escalation structure is what Public Access runs on. And the mystery solving mechanism turns out to apply well beyond traditional mysteries. The More Than a Mystery jam explores that range, and so does Beneath Ahknoor, my own CfB megadungeon. The system is more portable than it looks.
Teeth
The Devil's Bargain is the heart of what Teeth does differently. Where Public Access asks what happens if you fail, Teeth asks what you're willing to offer and who gets implicated by the offer. This scene is from the IWTT! Spring 2026 volume:
Something went into the drainage ditch at the edge of the village and hasn't come out. The smell suggests it has been using it for some time. Reverend Osswick Pale watches from his doorstep with an expression that suggests he knows more than he intends to say. Grusham Fell drops into the ditch and asks for a Devil's Bargain. What do you offer? How does the offer change if the creature has already taken someone this week? What offer implicates the Reverend rather than escalating the immediate danger?
The Clocks in Night of the Hogmen are beautifully drawn. The Vale is a wonderful sandbox. The moral weight that accumulates through Devil's Bargains produces a different quality of consequence than the CfB mystery engine. There's a time and a place for both of these games.
The honest case for the loser
Teeth is an amazing game that I need to play more of. The hogmen, the burning church, the flooding countryside: that energy is specific and irreplaceable. The Vale is a rich sandbox with room for a long campaign, and the Devil's Bargain mechanism does things the CfB mystery engine doesn't try to do. The reader who thinks Teeth deserved to go further isn't wrong. Right now, at my table, it's not the pick.
The pick
Public Access, and it comes down to the writers' room. The shared creation of the mystery, the way the mechanism applies to different kinds of problems, the dread that accumulates in a specific place and time: all of it keeps pulling me back. The Licorice Beastie still limps. Mr. Bones is still in the fryer. That's what Public Access does, and it's enough to win.
That's my pick. Who'd you have sent through? Tell me in the comments.