September 19, 2008
Eisenhorn and Others
Upon the urging of some at
SF Signal (although they may deny it), I took a look at the fiction set in the game universe known as
Warhammer 40,000 (produced by
Games Workshop). Some further research yielded recommendations from science fiction authors such as
David Drake (who is going to be writing a "blurb" for one of the upcoming books) and John Lambshead (
researcher,
game designer,
science fiction author who somehow finds time to play the game).
Well...with recommendations like those...
more...
Posted by: Fred Kiesche at
08:33 AM
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Don't do it!!!
With WH40k, you'll find lots of opponents, and will spend lots of cash. But 3 months later, they put out a better, more effective, and cheaper (points-wise) set of models that costs only 50% more than the ones you paid for. If you don't upgrade, you'll start consistently losing. Unless you get the new Ubertroops 3 months after that...
Then every few years, they completely re-write the rules, and about half your army doesn't exist any more. And so it goes...
GW are the Microsoft of Games. I mean that in its most perjorative sense.
If you want real fun, look at all the orphan GW games that exist, "Battlefleet Gothic" and "Epic", both of which have existed in various incarnations, and have some excellent games mechanics.
Did I mention that with every edition, they re-write the history too? Whole Alien races no longer exist, and new ones are constantly being added. Just Google "Zoat Slann Squats"
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warhammer_40,000
And if you really must... try to get a copy of Rogue Trader, WH40k First Edition. That was the one where it was free-form, and there was room in the Universe for some diversity.
In the meantime, have a look at
http://www.geo cities.com/roguetraderheresy/quotes.htm
Posted by: Zoe Brain at September 21, 2008 11:10 PM (CI+WK)
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September 10, 2008
Adventures with Tintin
The Young Lady has been doing a lot of reading, but (like me, when I was a kid) tends to fall into small interest groups: reading the same series several times, etc. So we went to the library this weekend and went through a couple of shelves worth of books, with me looking at stuff and saying things like "Hey, this is about kids who travel through time, like
The Magic Treehouse, want to try that?", etc.
The one suggestion I thought she'd reject immediately has really hooked her. I spotted several Tintin omnibus collections, three adventures per book. I pulled them out, talked about them, and she took out three. And has been reading them end-to-end since. You never know what will hook her!
Posted by: Fred Kiesche at
09:44 AM
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September 06, 2008
September 01, 2008
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