Shiver is a fully standalone atmospheric winter horror scenario for Trophy Dark, themed around feasting, scarcity, and cold.
It feels a little like a Russian folktale version of Annihilation.
The PDF is 20 pages, with strong writing, an extremely smooth layout, one lovely grayscale interior landscape, and a sweet/tragic/atmospheric cover.
The cover art is an absolute standout, but the book has a consistent visual impression throughout.
Content-wise, Shiver leads with a content warning and safety tool recommendations---which is extremely welcome in a horror game.
Because it's a Trophy system game, Shiver's tendency is towards atmospheric horror, and it approaches this from an attrition-and-inevitability angle rather than with more obvious traps and monsters. The game's hazards largely involve infirmity, deprivation, and a sense that things have already slipped past the point of saving---although they are also frequently supernatural.
Mechanically, Shiver adds an extra mechanic onto Trophy's usual loadout, in that PCs have food that's been packed for them, and they can use it to avoid Ruin rolls.
The PCs also need this food at various points during their journey, creating a strong sense of resource scarcity---even though the mechanics for tracking food are quite simple.
All of the game's mechanics (including a neat and flavorful character creation section that's unique to the scenario) are at the back of the book, and everything is explained well. There's character creation charts, background choices, and even unique spells.
There's also ample GM advice---and I think Shiver would be easily runnable by someone who is not just new to Trophy but new to tabletop as well.
Overall, you might want to avoid this if someone in your group would be deeply bothered by horror involving scarcity or excess of food. It's very well written, and the horror can hit pretty hard because of that.
However, if what you want is a snowy, ominous, terrifying fairytale about going into the winter woods and seeing what provisions lie there, you should get this.
It's really good.
Minor Issues:
-The snowflake background that's on most pages looks really nice. It feels slightly odd that it's not on all of the interior pages, though. The fully white pages stand out a bit.
-Page 4, the snow-blanketed animals and the emaciated bear, unless the GM intervenes, these might provide the food the PCs need.