Draug is a Fudge-based Norwegian roleplaying game set in early 19th-century Norway, where creatures out of Scandinavian legend are true.
Translation of information from the publisher's webpage from Norwegian Bokmål to English:
The year is 1801. Norway is under Danish rule, with no king and no flag. The country is ruled by the civilized artistocracy in Copenhagen. The merchants in Christiania are getting rich with lumber, and going bankrupt with shipping companies. It's an enlightened time, where priests and bishops are beginning to win over the superstitions of the farmers, and ideals of free trade and self-government have taken root among the country's forwardmost.
Outside the large cities, however, in towns and villages, in valleys and caverns, there are a different type of people. The nøkk rests within the deep waters of the forest, waiting for foolish passersby; underneath the hills rest subterranean that may never see the light. At every farmstead lives a nisse, in every village a spirit, and on the waves rides the draug – howling as it hunts for souls.
Draug is a role-playing game that takes place on the borders of historical Norway during the 1800s and a mythical adventurous world. It's the first role-playing game released in Norwegian and with a game universe that builds upon Norwegian history and mythology. Draug is suitable for 3–6 players, 12 years and above.
The cover images for Draug and its are done by Robert Elneskog, but the illustrations within are borrowed from historical artists and illustrators from Norway, such as Theodor Kittelsen and Gunnar Berg.