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Sundog

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Everything posted by Sundog

  1. The term "musket" generally refers to unrifled long-arms. This was one reason for their notorious inaccuracy. Another was windage - the ball (NOT bullet) would invariably be significantly smaller than the inside of the barrel, allowing it to "bounce" down the barrel instead of being guided in a straight line - I've seen one (slow motion camera) emerge fro the barrel at a good 15 degrees off true. Rifles did exist - they were much more useful for hunting, and were sometimes issued to marksmen - but for those the ball had to actually be slightly larger than the bore of the gun, and was hammered into the muzzle (literally - a small mallet was required) so as to ensure the ball engaged with the rifling. While there were exceptions who could get it down to three times, the average rifleman could reload and fire only one fifth as often as his musket firing counterparts. Beast, I agree with your write up with two caveats. First, I don't think it needs the Extra Time - Full Phase limitation - these weapons fired, once loaded, as fast as any single-action revolver, which if I recall correctly, doesn't have this limitation (I may be wrong - if I am, ignore that). Second, I would add double range penalties.
  2. How about "Voidcraft"? Many types, but all Voidcraft.
  3. United Law-enforcement Taskforces and Regulatory Agencies?
  4. A supervillain short sells a large number of shares in a research company in his secret ID or through a broker. Then the supervillain trashes the research comany's primary laboratory complex, tanking their stock.
  5. The good version or the Clooney version?
  6. You have a point, but I'll still stand by my statement. Burroughs wrote action fantasy, and his writing is considered exemplary. H.G. Wells managed to combine high concept with exciting action and excellent use of the english language. Quality shines through, and I find not a huge amount of quality in the pulps, generally - which doesn't stop me reading them for the good action-adventure tales they remain.
  7. Compared to what else was coming out at the time? F.Scott Fitzgerald was writing his pieces from the 1920's to the late '30s. Asimov and Clarke started out in the end of the pulp era. Edgar Rice Burroughs started in the pulps, but soon enough was publishing his own books under his own imprint. I'm not a big fan of "literary merit" or snobbish assumptions of "important works" (which, frankly, mostly seem to have been simply those the self-important liked), but there is a pyramid of quality, ranging from master of the art , to novelist, all the way down to hack. And whatever good ideas and fun plots the pulp writers managed, their actual skill as writers tended towards the latter, not the former.
  8. Noir derived in many ways from the pulps. I like to think of noir as the darker side of the pulps gone cinema.
  9. You will be captured. Accept it.
  10. I think the real result would just be slightly higher premiums on insuring the ATM. The banks might well grouse and complain, but the fact is they wouldn't put amounts of money out in machines without insuring it all.
  11. The new cover of "Eye in the Sky" by Asia Featuring John Payne https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQ8LFDF6G0A
  12. Had to think a bit, but... The Atonal Variation 8 Members. Wladyslaw Maranovski was the toast of European musical society, conductor and arranger par excellance. Oh, some called him arrogant, overbearing, unfeeling...but when you have the skill to take a bunch of prima donna musicians and low talent nobodies and weld them together into a cooperative whole to make beautiful music, no one cares. Until you can't anymore. Wladyslaw's life as a celebrity ended the day his doctor told him the odd ringing in his ears was only the beginning. Within a year, his developing deafness had ended his career, and his nasty, vicious (and deteriorarting) personality had driven away what few friends he had. He sought a cure from anywhere that offered hope, but all that he wound up with was debts...and silence. It was not fair, he knew. He was a genius! An architect of music! This, this biological oddity was beneath him! He deserved better! If the world would not give him what he deserved, then he would take it! Calling himself Octave to hide his identity, Wladyslaw set out to bring together thugs, fighters, mercenaries...but only ones with a connection to music, or with musical talent. With his organizational skills, he could have turned any group into a team...but he has his standards. Just as he has standards in his takings - what point robbery if it does not advance the cause of his music? And now, with his team, his planning skills, and his newly-developed skills in sign-language and lip reading, he would take what he liked. Oh, no, this was not entirely a new thing, of course. He could not call this a symphony, or even a piece; no, it was only a variation. An Atonal Variation.
  13. Nephthys The last of Darrian's companions, Nephthys is an exception to the rule. Antoinette de Groote, French/Boer big game hunter and tracker has no real interest in Egypt at all - but she has a very strong desire to make the British (whom she blames for the loss of her lands and husband, the one compulsory purchased in South Africa, the other conscripted into the Great War and killed) pay. Oh, she doesn't mind that she'll also have to deal with other nationalities, but it was Darrian's promise that they would leave the British Museum, the heart of their prestige a lifeless husk that got her to throw in.
  14. Don't forget Tales of the Gold Monkey http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tales_of_the_Gold_Monkey
  15. Life in Bullet Time by Miracle of Sound.
  16. Sundog

    Squadron 42

    Looks VERY Wing Commander. Which, provided you ignore the execrable so-called movie, could be a good thing.
  17. I downloaded SB, and I'm going through it now. My first time with the Fate system, though I've heard good things about it.
  18. There's a lot of variation you could use. Concordance, covenant, alliance, union, confederation/acy, commonwealth, league, mandate, caliphate, sultanate, region, charter, magistracy, dominion, as well as the more common republic, empire, kingdom. Even just "state" has been used at times. In this case, perhaps something like "The Noble and Imperial Covenant of Worlds" would be suitable..
  19. I'd say a character-focussed piece would be the way to go. Set up some fellow vault-dwellers to interact with - the teacher giving the GOAT, a fellow student one of the PCs can care about, maybe an adult who (for whatever reason) dislikes a PC and is seriously peeved when the GOAT assigns him that youth as an apprentice. Plus family ties, parents, younger siblings. This'll all pay off in a few episodes when the Raiders break in. Then the PCs will have people they care about to defend... and fail. And people to resue later, or avenge.
  20. Not sure about that. Ultimately, that's the point of this strip - neither the world, nor this story, revolve around Tarquin. He's just a bit player in this.
  21. No, there just aren't any major book printers in WA, and few in Australia as a whole. Shipping costs are rather horrendous.
  22. Welcome to my world. Minimum price for a new paperback in West Australia is about $22AUS.
  23. I see you've taken the Palladium view and not given the Alpha nose mounted lasers. Unfortunately, they got that wrong - while rarely used in the series, the Alpha does mount them.
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