SPECIAL NOTICE
Malicious code was found on the site, which has been removed, but would have been able to access files and the database, revealing email addresses, posts, and encoded passwords (which would need to be decoded). However, there is no direct evidence that any such activity occurred. REGARDLESS, BE SURE TO CHANGE YOUR PASSWORDS. And as is good practice, remember to never use the same password on more than one site. While performing housekeeping, we also decided to upgrade the forums.
This is a site for discussing roleplaying games. Have fun doing so, but there is one major rule: do not discuss political issues that aren't directly and uniquely related to the subject of the thread and about gaming. While this site is dedicated to free speech, the following will not be tolerated: devolving a thread into unrelated political discussion, sockpuppeting (using multiple and/or bogus accounts), disrupting topics without contributing to them, and posting images that could get someone fired in the workplace (an external link is OK, but clearly mark it as Not Safe For Work, or NSFW). If you receive a warning, please take it seriously and either move on to another topic or steer the discussion back to its original RPG-related theme.

Questioning chirine ba kal

Started by Bren, June 14, 2015, 02:55:18 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

chirine ba kal

#5880
Quote from: Hrugga;955649Uncle,

Do you remember which pole the base was located and how big it was? Also since you mention it, I would love to see that little "ship"...!!!

Thank you as always,

H:0)

North pole, a couple of square kilometers from what we could see.

The only description I ever got from Phil was "spherical, about the size of a tubeway car, silvery grey, hatch on top, looks like a spaceship - you know, like in 'Space Vikings!" So...

[ATTACH=CONFIG]861[/ATTACH]

Got this casting from a vendor at the flea market ay Cincy Con; I am told it's a bad casting, but it looks fine to me.

chirine ba kal

Quote from: AsenRG;955778Well, I tend to just hammer the stupid out of them, so I don't see it too often:).

But Uncle, I'm talking about smart decisions, too. Just unexpected ones, and probably amusingly dangerous;).

Understood, and I agree with you - unexpected is always a lot of fun for me.(Mayhem usually ensues.) What's driven me mad, over the decades, is ponderous pacing and decision-making processes that usually result in a decision that I saw coming several hours ago and which is astonishingly predictable.

Hrugga

Quote from: chirine ba kal;955805North pole, a couple of square kilometers from what we could see.

The only description I ever got from Phil was "spherical, about the size of a tubeway car, silvery grey, hatch on top, looks like a spaceship - you know, like in 'Space Vikings!" So...

[ATTACH=CONFIG]861[/ATTACH]

Got this casting from a vendor at the flea market ay Cincy Con; I am told it's a bad casting, but it looks fine to me.

Very cool!!! That would leads me to my next question. How did the Professor see Humanspace technology? Pulp style such as Lensman? Or did he have something else in mind(apart from Space Vikings)? Thank you for sharing!!!

H:0)

Shemek hiTankolel

Chirine,

Love the Tardis :).
What other planets did you make it to in the Tekumel system? Would you be able to give us some details about the location, i.e. terrain, inhabitants, atmosphere, etc?

Shemek.
Don\'t part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live.
Mark Twain

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Hrugga;955820Very cool!!! That would leads me to my next question. How did the Professor see Humanspace technology? Pulp style such as Lensman? Or did he have something else in mind(apart from Space Vikings)? Thank you for sharing!!!

H:0)

Phil's view was very much in the pulp genre, and the Lensman series fits in this nicely. "Space Vikings" comes into this as one of the players happened to have his copy at the table, and Phil started paging through it with obvious delight. So, plot-wise, his mantra of "Action! Adventure! Romance!" very much applied. As for the look of the thing, Phil was very much in the mode of 1930s 'streamline art deco moderne', as is Bucky Fuller's Dymaxion cars and buildings; as we've mentioned a while back Phil knew what the future looked like - just like the the 1939 World's Fair.

So, my little ship looks a lot more 'modern' as in "2001 - A Space Odyssey" or the kind of "We must show all the panel lines to show the fans that we really put a lot of work into the ship models!" look hat Hollywood has conditioned modern viewers to, but my reply is that the thing was a whole $15 and it'll paint up just fine, saving me a week of work that most gamers will never be able to appreciate. And the book Phil was holding up had panel lines on the ship on the cover - it was the Ace edition, and I still have mine - so there we are... :)

And in later years, people got all cranky bitch all over Phil because his view of the future wasn't out of Star Trek / Star Wars/ Macross; he got pretty tired of it, and tended to avoid the subject when he could.

chirine ba kal

#5885
Quote from: Shemek hiTankolel;955862Chirine,

Love the Tardis :).
What other planets did you make it to in the Tekumel system? Would you be able to give us some details about the location, i.e. terrain, inhabitants, atmosphere, etc?

Shemek.

Ahem! It is not a TARDIS, it is a "Telephone Box". And it's a pretty bad one, too, as it looks nothing like any of the GPO boxes. It does, however, bear a startling resemblance to a Metropolitan Police Mk 2 call box - the rozzers lost a complaint about who owned the trademark, by the way, as Auntie Beeb had gotten there first. So, as long as you never - ever - use it in any sort of activity relating to the IP owned by A Certain State-owned Telecommunications Monopoly you're safe from Auntie Beeb's Men In Black from paying you a visit and whisking you away in their black helicopters to Luton. Never To Be Seen Again, of course.

Right. Tell that to my Missus, who was on a first-name basis with more then a few of the people involved. Who also made me look at:

http://www.themindrobber.co.uk/real-police-box-history.html

As for the other planets on our system, yes, we dropped by for visits during our 'tourists see the world(s) phase', but we didn't see or get shot at by anybody so we assumed that they are uninhabited. Ruins as mentioned, but that's it. Atmospheres largely unbreathable, unless maybe you're a Shunned One, and local conditions about what one would expect for each given their positions in the system. Which is why when dear old Turshanmu would follow his usual habit of arriving and opening the hatch to see where we were, we'd get pretty cranky - no airlock.

Kashi is your big tourist spot; imagine the Death Star spread out all nice and flat for you to map. The custodians, on the other hand, are a handful.

Gronan of Simmerya

Like that scene in Flesh Gordon:

* sniffs * "Good... there's oxygen here."
You should go to GaryCon.  Period.

The rules can\'t cure stupid, and the rules can\'t cure asshole.

AsenRG

Quote from: chirine ba kal;955995Ahem! It is not a TARDIS, it is a "Telephone Box". And it's a pretty bad one, too, as it looks nothing like any of the GPO boxes. It does, however, bear a startling resemblance to a Metropolitan Police Mk 2 call box - the rozzers lost a complaint about who owned the trademark, by the way, as Auntie Beeb had gotten there first. So, as long as you never - ever - use it in any sort of activity relating to the IP owned by A Certain State-owned Telecommunications Monopoly you're safe from Auntie Beeb's Men In Black from paying you a visit and whisking you away in their black helicopters to Luton. Never To Be Seen Again, of course.

Right. Tell that to my Missus, who was on a first-name basis with more then a few of the people involved. Who also made me look at:

http://www.themindrobber.co.uk/real-police-box-history.html

As for the other planets on our system, yes, we dropped by for visits during our 'tourists see the world(s) phase', but we didn't see or get shot at by anybody so we assumed that they are uninhabited. Ruins as mentioned, but that's it. Atmospheres largely unbreathable, unless maybe you're a Shunned One, and local conditions about what one would expect for each given their positions in the system. Which is why when dear old Turshanmu would follow his usual habit of arriving and opening the hatch to see where we were, we'd get pretty cranky - no airlock.

Kashi is your big tourist spot; imagine the Death Star spread out all nice and flat for you to map. The custodians, on the other hand, are a handful.
Kashi seems like the hot property, then! What's the going rate for buying a villa there, did you bother asking:)?
Also, what is special about the inhabitants;)?

Quote from: Gronan of Simmerya;956005Like that scene in Flesh Gordon:

* sniffs * "Good... there's oxygen here."

But does it also have enough N to be breathable;)?
My players would ask that, funny enough, being trained as biologist does that to people. And they'd only remove their helmets after a full spectral analysis!
What Do You Do In Tekumel? See examples!
"Life is not fair. If the campaign setting is somewhat like life then the setting also is sometimes not fair." - Bren

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Gronan of Simmerya;956005Like that scene in Flesh Gordon:

* sniffs * "Good... there's oxygen here."

You know, I still don't know if Phil ever saw that romp (where a bunch of SF fans make off with a perfectly legit porn film and turn it into an epic - may of them would go on to do a little confection called "Star Wars") and modeled dear old Turshanmu on Dr. Flexi Jerkoff. We will never know, I think.

I'll betcha, my General, that the youngsters on this forum have never heard of this movie, let alone actually seen it. Ah, the days of our youth, gone like dust on the wind...

chirine ba kal

Quote from: AsenRG;956070Kashi seems like the hot property, then! What's the going rate for buying a villa there, did you bother asking:)?
Also, what is special about the inhabitants;)?



But does it also have enough N to be breathable;)?
My players would ask that, funny enough, being trained as biologist does that to people. And they'd only remove their helmets after a full spectral analysis!

The locals on Kashi are all machine intelligences, and don't take kindly to unauthorized visitors. Communicating with them was possible - on the order of talking to your vacuum cleaner - but proved 'difficult'. Gettine a villa was not an option; the moon has no atmosphere, and hard vacuum plays havoc with my asthma.

Helmets? Spectral analysis? Must be nice; all we had was sticking Origo out the hatch to see if he'd turn blue...

Greentongue

Quote from: chirine ba kal;956096I'll betcha, my General, that the youngsters on this forum have never heard of this movie, let alone actually seen it. Ah, the days of our youth, gone like dust on the wind...

Ooh, the pain! The humiliation! The hemorrhoids!
=

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Greentongue;956102Ooh, the pain! The humiliation! The hemorrhoids!
=

:)  And by today's Internet standards, it's both pretty tame and pretty low-key. But, to us fans of Republic serials, it was howlingly funny.

Telarus

Quote from: chirine ba kal;956096You know, I still don't know if Phil ever saw that romp (where a bunch of SF fans make off with a perfectly legit porn film and turn it into an epic - may of them would go on to do a little confection called "Star Wars") and modeled dear old Turshanmu on Dr. Flexi Jerkoff. We will never know, I think.

I'll betcha, my General, that the youngsters on this forum have never heard of this movie, let alone actually seen it. Ah, the days of our youth, gone like dust on the wind...

Hahaha, maybe not all of them, but the 90s highschool Theater group from Kona Hawaii that I hung out with had some "odd" interests. Also my first long-term gaming group. ;)

Gronan of Simmerya

Quote from: chirine ba kal;956097Helmets? Spectral analysis? Must be nice; all we had was sticking Origo out the hatch to see if he'd turn blue...

Which, we must confess, was fairly amusing in its own right...
You should go to GaryCon.  Period.

The rules can\'t cure stupid, and the rules can\'t cure asshole.

AsenRG

Quote from: chirine ba kal;956096You know, I still don't know if Phil ever saw that romp (where a bunch of SF fans make off with a perfectly legit porn film and turn it into an epic - may of them would go on to do a little confection called "Star Wars") and modeled dear old Turshanmu on Dr. Flexi Jerkoff. We will never know, I think.

I'll betcha, my General, that the youngsters on this forum have never heard of this movie, let alone actually seen it. Ah, the days of our youth, gone like dust on the wind...
If this one is part of said "youngsters", Uncle, don't bet anything you can't easily and remorselessly part with...:)
If not, well, you might stand a chance, but Flesh Gordon was well-known in my high-school.

Quote from: chirine ba kal;956097The locals on Kashi are all machine intelligences, and don't take kindly to unauthorized visitors. Communicating with them was possible - on the order of talking to your vacuum cleaner - but proved 'difficult'. Gettine a villa was not an option; the moon has no atmosphere, and hard vacuum plays havoc with my asthma.

Helmets? Spectral analysis? Must be nice; all we had was sticking Origo out the hatch to see if he'd turn blue...
Oh, bad climate and too strict law enforcement, then. Alas, for it sounds like a nice, orderly place with low criminality...;)

I admit I was talking about more general SF games, though, like Traveller and the like.
Quote from: Gronan of Simmerya;956128Which, we must confess, was fairly amusing in its own right...

Of that, Glorious General, we have no doubt:D!
What Do You Do In Tekumel? See examples!
"Life is not fair. If the campaign setting is somewhat like life then the setting also is sometimes not fair." - Bren