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Whitewings

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Posts posted by Whitewings

  1. Re: Re-Imaged Hero(ines)

     

    Tombstone, despite her ominous name, is not a particularly gloomy person; she doesn't even affect a dark and brooding persona. Tombstone Research is a small RD& compnay run by Carol Cunningham, a multiple doctorate holder despite being only 23. Her secret? She has a unique psychic gift, a combination of mediumship and psychometry: By touching someone's grave marker, she can absorb the skills and knowledge they had in life. In principle, she could probably get a "read" from a corpse or a skeleton, but that's a bit too icky for her liking. She hasn't dared try a funeral urn yet. By this point, she's made pilgrimages to the tombs and graves of every renowned person she can manage. Now if she could just get the certifications to go with the skills...

  2. Re: WWYCD: Lost in a world without Supers; 9/11/2001

     

    Bah. Do you seriously imagine that if terrorists could get a nuke and the wherewithall to smuggle it into Pittsburgh that they'd stop and think "Wait, we already toppled the World Trade Center. I think we've done enough, don't you?". What's more that reasoning applies to every single act of commission or omission. You never know what the long term consequences will be.

     

    However I can see why someone would hesitate to tinker with the history of their own world. Even if the result would be better it would still at the least be likely to mess up their own life by eliminating their place in the world, or creating another them who never travelled back in time, or changing their relationship to the people close to them. Doesn't apply though when visiting the an alternate history you have no place in, in the first place.

     

    Extremists of any stripe are by definition incapable of settling for less than "everything we want and more." If you prevent incident X, than will do *nothing* to prevent incident Y, or to encourage it, other than the effect on a given group's credibility and manpower. In the specific case of the WTC attacks, forcing the planes down and arresting the hijackers, so they can be tried and convicted like common criminals, is the best possible action: It will save many lives, and it will send a clear message to those responsible and others who might be thinking of joining or forming similar groups "You're not soldiers. You're criminals, nothing else." Also, stopping the planes and forcing the authorities to treat the hijackers as criminals, period, will make the "War on Terror" a much harder sell, maybe even impossible.

  3. Re: Class of the Titans

     

    I wouldn't say they were low rent really. Maybe they aren't as powerful as the originals but they're not wusses either. I'd say it's more a case of thier opponents being that much more powerful in comparison to them. I mean Cronus IS tossing the nastiest beasties Greek mythology has to over [and borrowing the Kraken from Scandanavian myth as well] after all.

    To be fair, the Kraken is only the Scandanavian name. The basic concept of an impossibly huge sea-going monster is found is almost every sea-going culture I'm aware of, including Greek. The writers simply chose to use familiar name (presumably, the gods chose to refer to it as "kraken" so the heroes would more readily understand the threat).

  4. Re: Real World Stuff That Only Sounds Like A Comic Book

     

    Don't forget the lost city of Petra. Or on a different note, the log cabins of the redwood forests: There are several houses made from fallen sequoias. So? What's so unusual about that? The houses in question are built *inside the fallen trees.* The trees were left where they fell and cabins carved into them.

  5. Re: Unused Adventure Concepts

     

    The Greatest Show On Earth:

    The PCs are attending the Opening Day of the Pacific National Exposition (PNE) which is hosting the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey. The crowd is large well behaved.

     

    The Tunnel of Love: -

     

    The Roller Coaster: -

     

    More Later

     

    QM

     

    A "Tunnel of Love" would be a travelling attraction, which means the PCs (assuming Vancouver natives) would never have seen it before. This could be a distinct advantage for planning.

     

    As for the roller coaster, the Big Dipper (aka Old Rickety) is the tallest wooden roller coaster in Canada. Wooden coasters are not quiet; they creak, they rattle, they groan and flex. Unlike a steel coaster, a wooden coaster makes noise from every single part of the structure, and that structure is dense. It is not light, it is not open, it is not airy. It is wooden. It is flammable. Blasters might want to keep this mind; heroic noes will have to be careful, villainous ones might use it for a distraction.

  6. Re: Real World Stuff That Only Sounds Like A Comic Book

     

    Another example of real world stuff that only sounds like a comic book would be the case of the 100-pound housewife who was able to lift a 2,000 pound car to free her trapped son (and I do have the attribution and full particulars, I just can't find the book at the moment). Technically, she rolled the car, rather than lifting it, but it's still an incredible feat. Similar feats of strength, endurance and courge, equally astonishing, can be found with some research.

     

    Howard Hill, the man who did the actual shooting for Errol Flynn in Robin Hood, once killed a tiger shark at a distance of fifty feet with a single arrow - fired while he was underwater. He may have been the greatest archer ever (but he never split an English arrow nock to tip - the arrow in the film was a bamboo "stunt double" :)).

  7. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    Using Silver Age physics' date=' it would not be unthinkable that Color Kid could turn the entire sun red thereby rendering Superman (or Superboy, more appropriately) completely powerless. And how about changing the GL ring entirely to yellow so the energy can't even leave the stone? [/quote']

    During the Great Darkness Saga, there's a panel that shows Colour Kid using his power to dazzle and stun Daxamites. Daxamites, people. Think about that for a second. And Lanterns are still vulnerable to yellow, but an individual Lantern can overcome this by facing and conquering his deepest fear.

  8. Re: Real World Stuff That Only Sounds Like A Comic Book

     

    I assume you mean the Dogon?

     

    I forget the star (it was Sirius, I think), but I did read about the theory in The Sirius Mystery, which is easily head and shoulders the best 'ancient astronaut' book out there (not that _that_ means a lot). Ken Hite once listed it as one of the ten best weird books ever written.

     

    As far as their knowledge goes, I always assumed that they just made one of the luckiest guesses in all of history.

     

    That's right. They knew of the companion star, Sirius B, and incorporated its motions into their "siggi" ritual, which seemed to date back to before the "pup's" orbit was plotted by any known astronomical traditions. They also knew of Saturn's rings, Jupiter's moons, the elliptical structure of the Milky Way, and the existence of other galaxies - all of which information appears to predate its discovery by known astronomical traditions. Yet at the same time, they didn't know of the planets beyond Saturn, which if their information came (as hypothesized) from parties of astronomers who vistied the area in the 1920s, one would expect. They say that their knowledges came from beings who came from a far place, but that "far place" is not defined. The information can be gathered from right here on earth with moderately powerful reflecting telescopes, but if it was gathered by an ancient civilization... which one? You might be right, it might have been the luckiest guess in history. But it's a great source for speculation, espcially in a superhero campaign.

  9. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    There was Chrysalis from Wildcards who's power was that her tissues were transparent but only her soft tissues, not her bones so she looked like a walking skeleton in the glasslike body of a beautiful woman.

     

    Or that poor Joker who's (arugable) power was the fact he was always on fire and he had just enough regeneration to offset the damage being done...and no immunity to the pain.

     

    I seem to recall reading that the luckless Joker in question was shot "by persons unknown." Nobody ever found out who the shooter was because nobody wanted to have to prosecute them.

  10. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    He apppeared all of about four times because writers didn't know what to do with him.

     

     

     

    The justification, I think, was the "only at night" limit. The unique powers rule was inconsistent, as membership by both Superboy and Mon-El indicates. [Night Girl was immune to kryptonite AND lead, so she was as unique as either of them]

     

     

     

    Polar Boy was also excluded for years, and Color Kid and Stone Boy never got membership (Stone Boy was offered, IIRC). They suffered none of these limitations (maybe Polar Boy suffered from lack of control initially?).

     

    Wildifre was reliant on his suit not being breached. Cosmic Boy was as reliant on ferrous metals as CK was on plants/seeds. Saturn Girl relies on minds. Blok was also just a brick.

    True, the memberships requirements did change over time. Wildfire was actually rejected initially becaues he couldn't demonstrate a unique power (his suit's allowed under the "life sustaining equipment" clause of the constitution), only existing ones; he describes himself in his spotlight issue as "a one-man Legion of Superheroes." Blok can communicate telepathically with other silicon-based intelligences (which Saturn Girl can't), and he can increase his density. And Cosmic Boy and Saturn Girl founded the Legion. They predated the membership requirements :lol: Superboy's membership (and Supergirl's) was actually addressed in the Legion Outpost: Being in effect both permanent and honorary, his membership doesn't exclude others from possessing similar powers (Mon-El, Ultra Boy).

     

    There's also the "suitable character" clause to consider. Fire Lad was rejected because he was too much of a hot-head (pun unavoidable). And Stone Boy... well, if you were on the membership committee, wolud you induct a statue? :)

  11. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    [Always wondered about the LSH membership standards - those guys don't make the cut' date= but characters like Chemical King, Bouncing Boy and Triplicate Girl get in...]

     

    Chemical King was enormously powerful: He could speed up, slow down, or even induce almost any chemical reaction, to the point where he could set a steel gun on fire by accelerating its normal oxidation rate.

     

    Anyway, the Subs failed to make the grade either because they didn't have a unique power (Night Girl, for example, was a brick, but only when she was out of sunlight - they already had Superboy and Mon-El), or weren't able to fully control it (Infectious Lass, Porcupine Pete), or it depended on external items (Chlorophyll Kid needs existing plants or a supply of seeds).

  12. Re: Real World Stuff That Only Sounds Like A Comic Book

     

    The Coral Castle. Its construction methods are unknown, and the entire structure was assembled by one man, working alone, with no power tools or heavy equipment, and with no known assistants. Some of the blocks are so large that in a test performed in the 1970s, a replica could not not even be extracted from its quarry bed.

  13. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    Actually' date=' that's only a useless power for crimefighting. In famine-struck areas he'd be a godsend (unless it's so bad that the seeds won't even germinate).[/quote']

     

    And in the Great Darkness Saga, when supplied with seeds of Daxamite plants, he was able to grow trees and vines around the rampaging Daxamites, trees and vines strong enough to restrain even them. Chlorophyll Kid's power could be extremely useful.

  14. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    She could also incapacitate or kill people by touching them and absorbing the water in their bodies; and she could project her stored water with the force of a fire hose.

    And the dissolved oxygen in the water she absorbed passed into her bloodstream slowly, extending how how she could hold her breath and allowing her to stay submerged indefinitely.

  15. Re: Campaign Launch: What Would You Think?

     

    The man will be destroyed. Every possible charge, civil and criminal, will be filed against him by every possible person and agency. The end result is that no super-being with any sense will attempt to operate openly, meaning that the only super-beings who will do so are idiots, mostly thugs I suspect. Welcome to a world with no superheroes and vicious anti-super legislation, at least in the US.

  16. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    I think we have a fundamentally different view on "FTL vision." FTL vision, meaning you can somehow see things at greater-than-light velocities, means you can see objects before the light from them reaches us. Therefore, you see things with less of a time lag than normal light-based vision. Therefore, on the astronomical scale (where this becomes significant), you can see a more recent image of nebulae, stellar nurseries, et. al. subject to the limits of your ability to resolve them. So if you can use this ability in conjuction with a regular telescope, you can observe a thousand light year away object and see what was going on, say fifty years ago instead of a thousand years ago.

  17. Re: Wow....that is a useless power for sure....

     

    FTL vision will not help you see a long way away. It will make it so you see faster that light. As in you see thing so fast that maybe you can see photons moving or you see so fast that they look like they are not moving. that is if you could see things that small. Think about it that way not Telescopic.

    Perhaps you've heard of these interesting devices called "telescopes?" They come in many sizes, and I understand that some of them can even be used by the public.

  18. Re: WWYYCD: The Rally

     

    Faye would just groan, "Do you people not learn? Why am I even asking?" and haul the whole lot off to one of the uninhabited islands off the coast (there are a few of them around), then call the cops.

     

    Henutsen would make a show of protecting the Klansmen, but her heart wouldn't be in it, so she'd be less than effective. If men who preach treason and sedition in general, and her murder or enslavement in particular, are pummeled into oblivion, well, somehow, she just can't really get upset over this.

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