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Peregrine

HERO Member
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Posts posted by Peregrine

  1. Originally posted by Lord Mhoram

    He's got hammers for hands and wheels for feet raised by farm Implements and living in the woods. She's a martial artist with who hobby is burning churches with pyrokenesis.

    They Fight Crime.

     

    (ducks)

     

     

     

    Couldn't resist, on a suggestion from my wife.

     

    You forgot the exclamation point.

     

    They fight crime!

  2. I wonder as well. It's been a while since they were published, and while they were wildly popular with those who did read them, I don't know how they sold compared to other books of the time.

     

    As for the lack of creativity being the drakensis' greatest weakness... yeah, I'd say so. That, and unarmored eyeballs. :)

  3. Remember how the Draka saw the Nazis in their own world? Gwen, being an adult before the Final War, grew up on the stories of the Eurasian War. She'd see the Nazis as allies to be used and discarded, possibly betraying her Nazi associates to Our Heroes when she was finished with them. I could actually see her playing both sides against the middle, working from a Caribbean base (as she did in Drakon, as I recall) and skimming the scientific genius of both sides. Remember, the drakensis are non-creative, generally speaking, but otherwise they are of genius intelligence, and are manipulators par excellance.

  4. Originally posted by ChaosDrgn

    Graduation Day #3. And the way they end it they could bring her back if they really wanted to. Personally I don't think many writers know what to do with her so they get rid of her out of hand. And yeah I know a lot of people here Byrne bash but all I can say is a: he kept her alive and b: He tried to sort the caracter out. And no, this is not an opening comment for a flame.

     

    Damn. In case it wasn't apparent, Donna has always been one of my favorite characters. And while Byrne tried to sort her out, he made matters worse in the attempt, I think.

     

    I'd like to see her brought back, as long as it's written well.

  5. Well, if you use the scenario in Drakon, Gwen Ingolfssen is going to have an easier time of reproducing molehole tech in a four-color setting, what with all the super-tech floating around. On the other hand, if Our Heroes get wind of what she's up to, she's easier to stop, because our Heroes are more powerful than the protagonists Gwen faced in the novel. On the gripping hand, you have Ken LeFarge...

     

    Here's another idea I once had. Drop Gwen into a Pulp Heroes game, sometime in the mid-30s. Sure she's got a longer tech curve to overcome, but can she be stopped before WWII takes a really ugly turn?

  6. Why disturbing? I think that the whole plot of Drakon could be played out as a HERO game adventure - stop the extra-dimensional invasion before it starts.

     

    Of course, the Final Society itself is quite disturbing - a look into the darkest corners of humanity, a 'what-if' of baser desires given free rein, without an objective moral code to restrain behavior. Just the thing to highlight the heroism of Our Heroes - and, hopefully, make them (and their players) rethink some of their most cherished personal and social assumptions, even just a bit.

  7. Re: Re: Re: Lensman HERO

     

    Originally posted by John Desmarais

    Actually, the biggest problem I've seen with using lensman as a campaign setting is the way the series treats women. You would never get a female gamer to play a Lensman game.

     

    John D

     

    GURPS Lensman addresses this issue directly. Summarizing as best as I can from memory, female PCs are generally accepted to be 'the exception to the rule'; so unless your female gamer wants her character to change the fictional society she would be unencumbered as to her adventuring opportunities.

  8. My fictional city (originally created some ten years ago, real time) is called Trinity City, located at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, at the site of real-world Cairo, IL. The name of the city came from its history (as it grew ahistorically from extra railroads run into the area both antebellum and later) when the area suffered less from the Great Depression than cities further east, and FDR made a speech during the 1936 elections praising 'this trinity of cities' (at the time they were Cairo, IL, West Cairo, MO, and South Cairo, KY). Within six months each city had renamed itself Trinity City.

     

    Ultimately, the three cities merged under one municipal government, but that's a tale for another day. :)

  9. Designed?

     

    The Association of Worlds. Basically an interstellar treaty association guaranteeing free trade among its members and establishing a StarCorps (star fleet, space marines, diplomatic corps, espionage organization, all rolled into one) to enforce the treaty and defend treaty members from external threats.

     

    Stolen whole cloth?

     

    The Orions, from the FASATrek universe. Three subraces, one of which is enslaved by the other two and genetically altered to die at middle age.

  10. OK. Stepping outside the comics, but supervillain nonetheless...

     

    Dr. Marc DuQuesne, from the Skylark series. Heck, the fourth book of the series was named for him (Skylark DuQuesne), he carried the day when the heroes fell short (against a common foe), and he went out in style, carrying on his ambitions - to rule an entire galaxy, unmolested by the heroes. In other words - he won.

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