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Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)


steriaca

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

If that were the case then NO ONE would buy Healing as it would be flat out worse than Aid (Healing is 10 pts per d6, AID is 6 BEFORE you apply the Only to starting value limitation). Aid is REALLY complicated when you try to use it for healing. Your AID basically creates a "new" pool of whatever characteristic it applies to. Damage after this point comes out of your AID pool before your starting pool. This means you have to keep track of 3 things. Your current STAT (unaided), Your current AID pool, and your current AIDed amount (to track fading and so you know how much you can add with another AID)

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

If that were the case then NO ONE would buy Healing as it would be flat out worse than Aid (Healing is 10 pts per d6' date=' AID is 6 BEFORE you apply the Only to starting value limitation). Aid is REALLY complicated when you try to use it for healing. Your AID basically creates a "new" pool of whatever characteristic it applies to. Damage after this point comes out of your AID pool before your starting pool. This means you have to keep track of 3 things. Your current STAT (unaided), Your current AID pool, and your current AIDed amount (to track fading and so you know how much you can add with another AID)[/quote']

 

*nod* Noted. I have the week free, so I best read up on the Healing power, then work something legal up to replace the AID. What do you think? 2d6 of Simplified Healing, Decrease Reuse Time (1 Turn, +1 1/2), Self Only (-1), Concentration (1/2 DCV, -1/4 (from memory...could be wrong)), Incresed Endurance Cost (X2, -1/2 (from memory)), Unified Power (Nanomachiens, -1/4), Limited Power (Hackable, -1/4), Extra Time (Full Phase, -1/2 (from memory))?

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Campain Use: Paradox is a perfect hero charater to show up to take cair of skill related problems so that the heros can concentrate on fighting the villians. She is also a charater to get the heros in to stories based on time travel. And she could also be a hero to introduce to the fight against Mister Wicked (if your ever going to use him, no mater how you rewrite him).

 

To increse her power, increse her skill levels and equipment. Prehaps, if you see a need for a new nanomachien based power, she could have one also. To decrese her powers, you might decide to weken her nanomachien powers or reduce or remove some skills.

 

Remember, in her mind combat means she did something wrong. She is not ment for pure combat (othoe she can protect herself if need be).

 

Apperance: Paradox is hard to pin down, but when she is not pretending to be someone else, she is a woman of avrage hight and weight, with a good size bust and hips, with alburn hair and green eyes. Her two main outfits are her 'work outfit' of a blue and white mini-dress with aproprate belts and badges, like all female members of the TED. When in combat, she shapes her outfit into a skin tight armored looking blue and white outfit (so she can move without getting cloth caught into something).

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Honestly I would probably steer away from Simplified Healing. It really only heals Stun (on average 2d6 will only heal 1 Body per turn) and that is better off simulated by increased REC (and cheaper too).

 

Buy it as Healing, Body only 2d6 instead. (averaging 4 BODY per use). All your limitation values are correct. This will allow her to heal back any BODY lost during a fight provided she takes some time out (although she will have to rely on her regeneration power to restore limbs, etc). Alternately you could just increase your Regeneration power to be effective more often.

 

Healing isn't really worth the time for STUN (2d6 only gives 8 STUN, for instance). Basically REC costs 1 AP for 1 STUN per turn, Healing, on the other hand, costs 25 AP for 4 STUN per turn (average), or 6.25 AP per 1 STUN (and REC also restores END unless you limit it). Unless you buy a HUGE heal (5 or 6 dice worth) it is highly unlikely it would ever be worth taking a phase off to use it due to the limited returns vs just taking a recovery or waiting for post Segment 12.

 

Buying some increased REC, (Only to recover STUN, -1/2), (Full Phase to Activate, -1/4), Time Limit (1 Turn, -2 1/2), with all your other limitations [Concentration (1/2 DCV, -1/4), Incresed Endurance Cost (X2, -1/2), Unified Power (Nanomachines, -1/4), Limited Power (Hackable, -1/4)] is far more cost effective, although she will either have to take another phase to take a standard recovery, or will have to wait till post Segment 12 for the healing to take effect.

 

 

Edit: also, if you buy the Healing: Body you should probably go ahead and limit your regeneration power to "Only to restore limbs" since the heal will more than cover any normal Body damage taken.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

I'm getting final cost 44, 32 end (165 AP)

 

10 Per d6 * 5d6=50+5 (can heal limbs) = 55 * 3 (+2 Advantages) = 165 AP / 3.75 (-2 3/4 Limitations) = 44 RC

 

END Cost 165/10 = 16.5 = 16 *2 (x2 END cost limitation) = 32 END

 

also note however that her regeneration ability is now totally worthless. Her "heal" will, on average, heal 9 Body, in one phase, 50% more than her regeneration does in a week.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

I'm getting final cost 44, 32 end (165 AP)

 

10 Per d6 * 5d6=50+5 (can heal limbs) = 55 * 3 (+2 Advantages) = 165 AP / 3.75 (-2 3/4 Limitations) = 44 RC

 

END Cost 165/10 = 16.5 = 16 *2 (x2 END cost limitation) = 32 END

 

also note however that her regeneration ability is now totally worthless. Her "heal" will, on average, heal 9 Body, in one phase, 50% more than her regeneration does in a week.

 

What do you sergest to do to save both powers, but make them both worth while?

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Meanwhile...here are a list of other members of the TED (this is comming off memory, so it is probaaly incompleat). Note: MajorTom2009 can easly expand on this (as he already has). What he post on background of the charaters trumps mine.

 

Director Mainline: A no-nonsence director of the TED. Slightly paranoid about 'future changing'. Kepted suplied with Pepto by his secretary/bodyguard.

 

Profesor Justin Timely: Paradox's father and head of science and invention for the TED. Just as excentric as his daughter.

 

Melody and Grace Timely: Sisters and Paradox's mothers. One is in charge of the public face of the orginzation. The other handels the day to day acounts for the secret para-police side of things.

 

Tempitan Fergus: "Time Flys". Special agent in charge of tempral resques.

 

Gazer McGee: Top 'Gazer' agent. Scaner of the timeline searching for abnomilities and disterbances. Nobody knows his first name.

 

Timithy Masters: Head of mantance. Jellous of Profesor Timely. Name looks familer...

 

Sunny Dhail: Cadit, traning to be a full agent. Always chearful is she.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Here are the descriptions of those who are part of the Directorate, starting with its current head --

Director Mainline:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45276[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

The most senior and experienced of the agents chosen from the various intelligence and law-

enforcement agencies of the Federation, Mainline (not his real name) was the natural choice

to head the new agency. While he enjoys the challenge of running a new -- but highly covert --

agency, there's one part about it that's caused him to go prematurely gray: Paradox Timely.

While he realizes that she doesn't deliberately go looking for trouble, her knack of finding her-

self in the thick of the most dangerous incidents to take place since the Directorate's creation

has had the tendency to not only add to his daily paperwork, but has also increased the level

of antacids and stress-relief medications he's having to take these days. Fortunately, he has

a very able and competent secretary who handles most of the minor details of the job, which

leaves him free to focus on more important matters -- such as ensuring the integrity of the

timeline against those who would alter it for their own ends. He can also rely upon the rest of

the Timely family -- Professor Timely and his SOs, Grace and Melody -- to help carry some of

the load, along with a few others.

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

As mentioned in the previous post, Director Mainline has a secretary who takes care of most

of the minor details where the running of the TED is concerned, and here she is -- Jasmine

Aianbatafurai:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45277[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

Jasmine is a young Oriental woman of about 20 to 25 years of age, and is without a doubt

the most efficient and professional secretary in the entire Directorate. She is also considered

to be one of the most attractive women in the entire organization, but in spite of attempts

by some of the more adventurous single men in the TED, she has remained single, preferring

to concentrate on her job as Mainline's secretary. Needless to say, this has given rise to the

universally-held opinion of the Directorate's personnel that Mainline is the luckiest man in

the entire organization.

 

These people would be very surprised, then, to learn Jasmine's secret -- a secret that a very

select few are privy to: that she is, in fact, a sophisticated android -- an android which has

been constructed to appear and to feel just like a human being in every way, and which has

been given an experimental AI/neural-net computer. Her computer "brain" -- which has been

programmed with the Three Laws of Robotics created by 20th-Century author Isaac Asimov --

allows her to act as a human being would under virtually any circumstance; this is because

of the neural-net processor that is a part of it, and which enables her to learn through experi-

ence. Although her primary programming is to serve as Mainline's secretary, she also has a

secondary function -- that of a bodyguard. Considering the knowledge that Mainline possesses,

both from his previous career as well as his current one, a bodyguard is a necessary thing in-

deed in his case -- and if the bodyguard doesn't look like one, so much the better.

 

Under normal circumstances, androids like Jasmine have built-in -- and very strong -- inhibitions

against the taking of life for any reason. In her case, however, a special override was installed

in her "brain" which, upon the reciept of a two-word code phrase addressed verbally to her by

Mainline (and Mainline alone), allows her to use lethal force against anyone who presents a

clear and present danger to the Director. The words of the code phrase don't even have to be

spoken at the same time, provided that they follow one another in the correct sequence. In

Jasmine's case, her code phrase -- which was suggested to the Director by Paradox -- is "Crom-

well Approval" (like a lot of things associated with his young agent, Mainline suspects that the

phrase has something to do with her fascination with the 20th and 21st Centuries).

 

While Jasmine does carry out the normal duties of a secretary, she has also added a few extra

duties to her job load. After seeing the effect that reading Paradox's reports often has on the

Director, Jasmine has taken to bringing a bottle of liquid antacid with her whenever she delivers

one of Paradox's reports to him; anyone seeing this knows that steering clear of the Director

would be a wise choice indeed.

 

Sample dialogue:

 

JA: "Agent Timely's latest report, Sir. Oh, yes, and here's your Pepto."

 

DM: "Oh, God. What in Einstein's name has she gotten herself into this time?!"

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

While Director Mainline is the overall head of the Directorate, he relies upon the heads of its

various Divisions to handle as much of the responsibilities of running the organization as is

possible; in the case of the Science Division, that task falls to Professor Justin Timely:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45278[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

The creator of the time machine that was incorporated into the design of the timeship

that was stolen by Dirty Tom Rackham, Timely understands better than most just how

dangerous his technology can be in the wrong hands -- and that understanding is what

drove him to not only suggest the creation of the Directorate, but also to provide it and

its agents with the tools that they would need to do the job of protecting the timeline

from temporal criminals such as Rackham. That there would be as many as there are

was something for which he hadn't been prepared -- or that one of their own would

turn traitor and try to kill the Director, becoming the Directorate's greatest enemy in

the process (the attempt was very nearly successful, due to Malkhronos' managing to

maneuver Jasmine away from the Director's office on a false errand; it failed only be-

cause of the intervention of Agents Timely and Templeton).

 

While Professor Timely does have a regular duty uniform, more often than not he can be

found in the laboratories deep within the organization's headquarters wearing a simple

jumpsuit and a white lab coat; his only concession to regulations is the badge that he

wears on the upper left breast of the jumpsuit (part of which can be seen under the edge

of the lab coat). His subordinates, recognizing that their boss considers himself to be

more of a scientist than a bureaucrat, handle as much of the paperwork for their Division

as they can so the Professor can concentrate on doing what he considers to be his real

job; in exchange, he stands up for them whenever the need arises if one of them runs

afoul of some "nit-picking, blundering bureaucrat with an IQ smaller than his hat size"

(his own words).

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

While Professor Timely is responsible for running the scientific and technical functions of the

Directorate, it's his significant others -- sisters Grace Timely and Melody Timely, who also

happen to be Paradox's mothers -- who handle the details of the TED's day-to-day operations,

as well as the public-relations duty that comes with the organization's cover identity:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45280[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]45281[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

Grace (the brunette) handles the bureaucratic and financial details of TED's Administrative

Division, while Melody (the redhead) serves as the head of public relations for the organi-

zation's cover identity -- the Old Earth Historical Preservation Society*, whose stated pur-

pose is to preserve historical sites and treasures from Earth's past from decay or -- in some

cases -- outright theft by illegal collectors. In this role, Melody got to work closely with Para-

dox prior to her assignment to the 21st Century, as Paradox was often presented as the

public face of the Society to those unaware of its true purpose.

 

As products of Earth's Victorian Age, both Grace and Melody tend to be rather conservative

where certain matters are concerned -- especially where clothing is involved. The "rather

daring" skirts worn by the female members of the organization are just a little too daring

for their taste, so they've both had duty uniforms designed for them that have longer skirts,

as that was what they'd grown up with and were used to. Their preferences in this regard

piqued Paradox's interest enough that she included at least one Victorian-style outfit in her

nanocloth wardrobe's inventory before she left for the past on her mission.

 

*The idea of a top-secret organization with a public cover identity -- at least, a fictional

version of a real-world organization -- isn't exactly a new one; in the James Bond films,

British Intelligence sent its '00'-rank operatives into the field under the cover of being

employees of a company called Universal Exports.

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

One of the key people in the TED's Science Division is Dr. Timothy Masters, the chief of

the Division's Technical Section, which has the responsibility for maintaining and repairing

the special gear that TED agents use in the field, as well as responsibility for the Temporal

Transport Field Generator which is used to send agents to any time period -- or to retreive

them in the event of an emergency:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45282[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

For a while after coming to work for the TED, Dr. Masters was somewhat jealous of Professor

Timely's greater ability as a scientist, not to mention his prestige within the organization.

Following the incident with Chronosaurus Rex, however, Masters was able to correctly ident-

ify the saurian criminal as being from a parallel timeline; because of this, Professor Timely

recommended to Director Mainline that Masters be given charge of a new Section within the

Science Division -- that of Crosstime Research and Defense. Timely's recognition of Masters'

contributions and his recommendation did much to lessen that jealousy, to the point where

the two men are friendly rivals.

 

As the head of CR & D, Masters has the responsibility of watching out for signs of an imminent

crosstime incursion, as well as conducting research into possible ways of sending an agent to

the timeline in question, and to be able to return him or her to their own time safely.

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Well, removing the "can heal limbs" adder from the heal would allow the regeneration to do that I guess. I do not see why you really need both tho. Healing and Regeneration do about the same thing.

You could possibly just increase the regeneration and change the Healing to Stun only.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Well, removing the "can heal limbs" adder from the heal would allow the regeneration to do that I guess. I do not see why you really need both tho. Healing and Regeneration do about the same thing.

You could possibly just increase the regeneration and change the Healing to Stun only.

 

Thanks. I deduced Healing to 2d6, made it for STUN, and removed can heal limbs. By the way, any served limb breaks down imedetly, so that nobody in modern times can study it for the nanomachiens. (*acualy, that would make sence*)

 

Thanks to MajorTom2009 for the pics and background on the TED heads.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

List of TED villians (so far):

 

Dirty Tom Rackham: Time/Space Pirate. You know him from the Mister Wicked thread. MajorTom2009 might grace us with his crew (or not).

 

Caption Cronos: Wanted for the mistermeaner crime of 'time medeling' (and not with much effert). You know him from VV3.

 

Cronosaurous Rex: Time traveling evolved T-Rex from a cross time dimention.

 

DALCYB-1: Another crosstime evil being. Looks like a cross between a Dalick shell and a Cyberman,

because it is[/spolier].

 

Father Time: Time traveling rober who dresses like the stertypical image of 'father time'.

He is a golden age supervillian who was given a time travel device by an unknown party, and reinvented himself in the 31st centery before going back to 'the age of heros'

.

 

Malhkronos: Malhkronos the Trator. Malhkronos the Bad Time. Nuff said.

 

Tempral Force: See 'Create A Villian' thread. A group of time traveling robbers lead by The Lord Of Time.

 

The Tempral Trio: Three lesser villians who use to work for Isteria Vhan(sp?), but were left behind after she was driven off. Somehow thay got there hands on time travel tech.

Based loosly on the villians from the Time Boken series of anime AND Team Rocket from Pokemon

.

 

Timemaster(?): Does he still exist? And if so, what does he have to do with Doctor Masters?

I'm leaving this up to you guys. Enjoy.

 

 

The Darktyme Orginzation: UNTILL and Primus have VIPER. TED has Darktyme.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Standard "its your character" disclaimer, but a 2d6 heal for stun is basically worthless. You are giving up your full phase, going to 1/2 dcv (based on your build) and spending 10 END to gain back a measly 7 STUN on average. Taking a recovery has most of the same penalties, restores 12 STUN and 12 END (based on your build), and costs no extra points.

 

Basically I cannot see a situation where using your healing power is a tactically sound choice. If you relatively safe from an attack a recovery is way better. If you are not your 1/2 DCV generally means you will wind up loosing far more STUN afterwards than you gain back by taking this healing action. At 5d6 it was approaching useable (18 STUN is a hefty chunk, you get the benefit right away instead of at the end of the segment (so it can't be interrupted like a recovery), you gain 50% more STUN than you would from taking a recovery, and only a powerful hit (46 STUN) before your next phase would actually fully negate the benefit you gained).

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

I was hoping to get these posted last night as well, but was stopped by a data error in the website

when I attempted to use the Attachment function. Oh, well...

 

Anyway, here are the remaining TED personnel (with the exception of Sunny Dhaile[?], for whom I

have no picture as yet, having only learned about her last night), starting with "Gazer" McGee:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45286[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

"Gazer" (his real first name is known only to Director Mainline) is a longtime friend of the Director,

and is in charge of the organization's Records Division. Now, most people who aren't aware of TED's

true purpose might think that such a job would be a waste of a good man's talents -- after all, keep-

ing records is the sort of job that you give to a bureaucrat instead of an agent with years of experience

in the field. Those who do know what the true function of the Records Division is know that "Gazer" --

with his attention to the smallest detail and his unrelenting (some would say almost paranoid) vigilance --

is the perfect man for the job.

 

This is because the true purpose of the Records Division is to not only monitor the timeline for signs

of temporal tampering -- or an outright invasion, an all-too-real possibility given the V'hanian invasion

of several years ago -- but also to devise countermeasures that will enable their field agents to correct

the damage to the timeline and restore it to what it's supposed to be. "Gazer" and his personnel are

assisted in this endeavor by a gift from Professor Timely: a complete historical database which was

compiled by the computers of his time machine during his original journey to the past. The database --

which is stored in a special vault that is protected by force fields of Professor Timely's and Dr. Masters'

devising, and which prevent the database from being affected by any changes in the timeline -- contains

a record of every historical event dating from the time of Timely's arrival in the mid-Victorian Age to the

present day of the 31st Century. In addition to the protected database, there are several computer

monitors in the Records Division, all of which have copies of the records housed within the database, but

which do not have the same level of protection. These monitors are manned on a constant basis, with

rotating shifts to allow those manning them to get needed rest.

 

In the event that a temporal alteration has occurred -- which would show itself as a discrepancy in the

unprotected records when compared to those of the protected database -- the computer which monitors

the two systems immediately sounds an alert, followed by a verbal description of the alteration in the

timeline and when and where it occurred. The next step in the process is a notification of a discrepancy

in the records which is made by "Gazer" to the Director himself, followed immediately by a mobilization

of a response team as well as a plannng session to decide upon the best course of action to take in order

to restore the timeline to what it was.

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Standard "its your character" disclaimer, but a 2d6 heal for stun is basically worthless. You are giving up your full phase, going to 1/2 dcv (based on your build) and spending 10 END to gain back a measly 7 STUN on average. Taking a recovery has most of the same penalties, restores 12 STUN and 12 END (based on your build), and costs no extra points.

 

Basically I cannot see a situation where using your healing power is a tactically sound choice. If you relatively safe from an attack a recovery is way better. If you are not your 1/2 DCV generally means you will wind up loosing far more STUN afterwards than you gain back by taking this healing action. At 5d6 it was approaching useable (18 STUN is a hefty chunk, you get the benefit right away instead of at the end of the segment (so it can't be interrupted like a recovery), you gain 50% more STUN than you would from taking a recovery, and only a powerful hit (46 STUN) before your next phase would actually fully negate the benefit you gained).

 

Thanks for your advice. I'm trying to make this charater playable in as many campains as she can with the mimimum of adjustments for campains. That is the 'fate' of NPC heros.

 

I'll go over what I wrote in my notes and give an improved version which would be less useless.

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Next up is Fergus Templeton, an agent who joined the organization at the same time as

Paradox:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45288[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

Fergus' knowledge of the past is as great as Paradox's own, which has made him the ideal

choice for a special assignment to the Records Division -- that of a one-man rescue team.

 

One of the dangers facing TED agents in the field is that they could be seriously injured --

or worse, captured by someone who knows what and who they are -- with no opportunity

whatsoever to send an emergency message to their own time. Fortunately, standard pro-

cedure for agents in the field (i.e., the past) is to find someone that they can trust in what-

ever time period that they happen to be operating in to be their "mailman" -- someone

who is entrusted with a simple message that can be placed in the Classifieds section of

the local newspaper (or electronic equivalent) if they haven't been contacted within a

certain period of time by the agent. The Records Division of TED houses the computerized

archives of the newspapers or electronic bulletin boards; upon detecting such a message,

the Division's main computer broadcasts a distinctive alert sound throughout TED Head-

quarters, letting everyone know that an agent may be in trouble and need to be rescued.

Fergus is then briefed on the situation as they know it before being temported to what-

ever time period that the missing agent is operating in, where he immediately begins an

investigation, starting with the "mailman".

 

Whenever possible (and when they're both in the same time period), Fergus and Paradox

try to spend some "quality time" together; while they're not boyfriend and girlfriend in the

usual sense of the word, they do enjoy a close relationship. Out of consideration for the

Victorian-age sensibilities of her mothers, Paradox keeps her relationship with Fergus very

discreet (there's also the fact that Mainline wouldn't be too happy about the relationship

if he knew about it). This hasn't stopped her from what she calls "popping the question"

to Fergus (no, it's not that question; the question that she does ask someone is meant to

see how the person being asked reacts to it, and is done for amusement more than any-

thing else); having been on the recieving end of her question, Fergus feels a mix of heart-

felt sympathy and amusement for those upon whom she's sprung it. He has noticed, how-

ever, that those she does ask are the ones who she really likes.

 

Because of his special duties, Fergus has the unofficial code name of Tempus Fugit.

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

Here's the latest addition to the TED's roster -- Agent Cadet Sunny Dhail:

 

 

 

[ATTACH=CONFIG]45320[/ATTACH]

 

 

 

Sunny has yet to finish her training as an Agent, therefore she hasn't yet been given her first

trainee mission. She has a rather upbeat personality, and always has a smile for her fellow

TED employees -- which in its own way is almost as annoying to Director Mainline as some of

Paradox's personality traits are. In fact, he has often thought of sending Agent Cadet Dhail to

the 21st Century to be Paradox's assistant for training purposes; at least, that's his official

story. What he really wants is to drive Paradox just a little bit nuts; he figures that enough

exposure to Sunny's relentlessly-perky nature will be enough to drive her blood pressure up

a few points (whenever he imagines Paradox being driven slightly nuts by Sunny, he gets

what can only be described as an expression of diabolical pleasure on his face; those seeing

it don't know the cause for it, but they do know that Mainline's thinking evil thoughts about

someone when he does get that expression on his face).

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

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Re: Paradox Timely of the TED (6ed, PG-13)

 

(whenever he imagines Paradox being driven slightly nuts by Sunny, he gets

what can only be described as an expression of diabolical pleasure on his face; those seeing

it don't know the cause for it, but they do know that Mainline's thinking evil thoughts about

someone when he does get that expression on his face).

 

 

 

Major Tom 2009 :cool:

 

LOL. I bet he thinks of 'pleasing thoughts' about Agent Paradox as ways to lower his blood presser. Nothing so far as imagening her tied to the train tracks (she would enjoy it to much), but prehaps Miss Dhail getting under her skin with her enternal perkyness could equal a week with his paperwork about Agent Paradox's actions.

 

On the other hand, Agent Paradox is an omnisexual...so there is no telling exactly what she might not enjoy.

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