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Terry Wilcox

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Posts posted by Terry Wilcox

  1. Re: Potential Campaign: Alpha Flight or Superhero Socialism

     

    Er...don't get the wrong idea. Canada is large and population density is low in the north. But there are small towns and villages all over the place.

     

    I know. I grew up in a small town in northern Alberta. By "empty" I meant low population density, not devoid of all things, including life.

     

    You know, figuratively, not literally...

  2. Re: Potential Campaign: Alpha Flight or Superhero Socialism

     

    In terms of speaking French, as I understand it, most Canandians would have at least 1 pt. in it to begin with.

     

    French and English language skills will vary greatly by region, age, and education. My parents, retired in Alberta, have 0 points in French. I have about 1 point although I had a decade of French courses a very long time ago, I know a few people who are fluently bilingual, and I have a friend with Quebecois relatives who have 0 points in English.

     

    Public employees are expected to be able to get by in both official languages.

     

    You'd never know where Alpha is based.

     

    Keep in mind that Canada is really really big and pretty much empty. As the crow flies it's 5046 km from Vancouver to Saint John's. In comparison New York to L.A. is only 3961 km. And IIRC Canada is larger North to South than it is East to West.

     

    Most of the population of Canada is within a few hundred miles of the American border, so anything North of that is pretty deserted.

     

    I think an important question is; would this be a campaign y'all would want to be involved in.

     

    I don't really see why your campaign needs to occur in Canada. There's already precedent for groups funded by or operating under the auspices of the American government. All-Star Squadron during WWII, the Avengers, SHIELD.

     

    Not every super group has a genius that makes billions of dollars off of patents that never ever show up in technology outside of other super groups. And how do solo superheroes get by working part-time and needing so much health insurance?

     

    As a Canadian I'd rather play in Avengers or Superhero Litigation.

     

    In today's episode we learn that nobody on the planet will insure the Avengers and the world doesn't have enough lawyers to cover all the property damage and personal injury lawsuits filed against them.

     

    Meanwhile, the Fantastic Four are in a quandary when the Human Torch can't use his powers due to a restraining order. Little Bobby Smith lit himself on fire because of the Human Torch...

  3. Re: Questions for the Canadian HEROBoard members

     

    And if you have a plan to get those Calgarians further away' date=' we'd be interested in hearing it.[/quote']

     

    We're getting closer; we're buying all your real estate.

     

    And any song by the Arrogant Worms is a good Canadian song: The Last Saskatchewan Pirate, Rocks and Trees, etc.

  4. Re: Cities of the Future

     

    Don't think we're seeing the last of cars anytime soon. Not that difficult to modify them to run on propane. Propane can be made from water' date=' carbon dioxide, and electricity.[/quote']

     

    In theory you could make any of the hydrocarbons. In practice, I can't find a single reference to anybody manufacturing them, including propane. I don't suppose you have a reference you could post?

     

    And it would seem rather inefficient to use electricity to create hydrocarbons. The electricity has to come from somewhere. Why not just use the electricity to power your engines?

  5. Re: Cities of the Future

     

    I'm curious what cities will look like as oil and gas prices continue to rise and hydrocarbon supplies dwindle.

     

    I work in the oil and gas industry (writing software for production accounting, which accounts for oil and gas production). Every day I hear about rising demand for hydrocarbons. Some of you may have noticed gasoline prices getting stupidly high. The cost of heating my house with natural gas keeps growing every year.

     

    What happens when hydrocarbons are too expensive for consumers? If a cheap science fiction energy source were introduced in the next 50 years, what would happen?

  6. Re: Cities of the Future

     

    A major undertaking at an insane cost. And this is just to extend one set of rapid transit lines from the city core to the airport. Imagine trying to adapt a whole existing city with it!

     

    It is too expensive and involves too many special intrest groups and private citizens to try and change a city in any major way for it to be practical. So, in my opinion, an existing city (like New York, London, Paris) 200-300 years from now will not be very diferent from ones that we live in today.

     

    I was in London in July. They were working on extending their light rail (Docklands, not the Tube) out to City Airport (not Heathrow or Gatwick or Stansted, which already have trains). In London it isn't seen as a major expense because Londoners use public transportation a lot. If you've ever driven there, you'll know why.

     

    The London Underground is less than 150 years old. It has around 275 stations now, with in excess of 200 miles of track.

     

    That's a pretty dramatic change for an existing city over the last 150 years. And that's just the change in public transportation. The changes in plumbing and sewers were prety big too.

     

    So if London can change that much in the last 150 years, how much will it change in the next 200 years?

  7. Originally posted by Supreme

    Ah! Now we're getting somewhere. But isn't there a limit on how much planting you can do? Isn't there a point, on the super-human scale, when the ground should give way?

     

    There's a simple way to test this. Go stand next to a wall. Lean into the wall and push. Do your feet slide back? Now try it while standing on ice. Then try loose soil. Then try it against the front of a moving car. On ice. With only one leg. With wolves biting your leg.

     

    That's why superhero physics is different from real world physics. How can Superman lift a car with one hand without bending the frame? If you put your jack in the wrong place you can bend the frame. Why aren't flying heroes covered with bugs after a flight? My car collects bugs at far lower speeds. Why don't Cyclops' eyes blow out the back of his head? Before she joined the X-Men, how did Kitty Pryde walk through walls but not her clothes?

     

    Superhero physics is like time travel. If you think about it too much it gives you a headache.

  8. Originally posted by Rebar

    I can state from experience that any kind of formal timing will be received poorly. Leads to paralysis and frustration.

     

    If you've got a player that takes 5 minutes to make a decision, no amount of rule hacking is going to make combat go faster. The player is the bottleneck.

     

    So get them chess timers. Those make a slow game of chess go faster without changing the rules.

     

    If you have 5 players and 5 NPCS in combat and you want to limit it to 10 minutes, put a minute on each timer. Or scale each character's time according to their speed.

  9. Originally posted by Count Zero

    Wouldn't the Dark Ages have felt like an Apocolyptic Age compared to the "enlighted age" of the Romans... apocolypse is a perspective in most fantasy worlds.

     

    That really depends on your perspective. If you're a dirt poor peasant, the so-called Dark Ages were no worse than the so-called "enlightened age". You're still down-trodden and dirt poor. People still tramp through your village killing and pillaging.

     

    The dark ages weren't particularly dark. They just got a bad reputation by lacking the huge empires that impress western civilization.

  10. Originally posted by Old Man

    I sort of hate to use magic as an excuse to not develop technology because it implies that magic is more prevalent than I would like it to be.

     

    If you want to keep magic rare but also explain why we don't have flying cars yet, use the standard reasons for technology not advancing. Lack of resources, lack of knowledge transfer from other civilizations, persecution of inventors by whoever is in charge, etc.

     

    But it doesn't take much magic to stifle innovation. Superstition works just as well. Priests of the Harvest Goddess frowning at the idea of a new plow works, especially if the Harvest Goddess really exists and the priests do have some power.

  11. A lot of fantasy literature is based on post-apocalytic worlds. Often the world is "early in the third age", meaning that the last two ages ended in some horrible world-ending conflagration that nuked almost everybody back to the stone age. Except those damn elves.

     

    An apocalypse is a good way to set up forgotten civilizations, lost cities, and ancient magics. Have an apocalypse, then wait for your players to find the lost goodies.

     

    100,000 years may seem excessive, but but it's relatively tame compared to flying cities, gods, giants who don't need knee braces, etc. Fantasy is prone to hyperbole.

     

    As for technology, consider where medical science would go if diseases and infections were caused by evil spirits and the local priest could pray your wounds away. There wouldn't be much need for disinfectant or stitches. Or surgery. Or doctors. Or much medical science.

     

    A world with wizards who can conjure up a wind wouldn't need steam ships. It just needs more wizards.

     

    Necessity is the mother of invention. If you have magic to fill the need, technology isn't required.

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