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Raellus
05-23-2010, 01:04 AM
This is a bit of a rehash of a rehash but the issue has come up again in my PbP campaign and I'd like to revisit it here. I also think it's worth making the distinction between being a veteran of the military and being a combat veteran of the military.

I have never served in the military. I come from a military family. My grandfather was a USN captain in WWII. My father served as an FO during the Korean War. My brother is currently a Lt. Commander in the USN. I have a bachelors in history and I have read well over a hundred books about combat by historians, journalists, and veterans. I feel like this gives me a better foundation that the average Joe but I know full well that no amount of book learning or Call of Duty or paintball or whatever can ever come even remotely close to helping me understand what it is really like to serve under fire in real combat.

Veterans bring valuable RW knowledge and experience to a game like T2K. This can really add to the level of realism upheld by a game and a veteran's knowledge can really benefit those of us who don't have that RW experience.

On the other hand, veterans can really kill the enjoyment factor of a game like T2K if they deliver that RW knowledge in a heavy-handed or patronizing way.

I'm really interested in what your experience has been, both playing and/or reffing T2K, in groups containing veterans. Has it been a blessing or a curse? Can veterans and non-veterans play T2K together in harmony or is this like trying to mix oil and water (or nitroglycerin)?

jester
05-23-2010, 01:44 AM
I have found a game full of guys who lived the life tend to make it fun, and they force a GM to bring his A game.

I find that enthusiasts tend to kill more games, in the case of several of my games going south that is what killed them. Enthusiasts who got munchkin on us. Or in my Arctic Raiders game, a know it all active duty kid who had all of 6 months time in service and came on waaaay to strong with alot of bookishness but no real knowledge, and a general disreguard for the other players.

I think you should change the criteria as well between combat arms and non combat arms as well as services, because the mindsets are different between all of the above. Navy and AF are more these days a support role, Army and Marines tend to be the direct combat guys <with only a handfgul from the other organizations> and then the Army and Marines also get divided between the combat arms and the supporting side of the house, and again the mindset is radicaly different with a whole new intensity level.

Think about this Rae, you are a teacher right? Imagine someone who has no clue about your job telling you how you should do it? And they tell you all kinds of things you know are contrary to doing that job and insist it must be done that way even when you know better. It is like fingernails on a blackboard after a while.

simonmark6
05-23-2010, 03:51 AM
"Think about this Rae, you are a teacher right? Imagine someone who has no clue about your job telling you how you should do it? And they tell you all kinds of things you know are contrary to doing that job and insist it must be done that way even when you know better. It is like fingernails on a blackboard after a while."

I'm a teacher too, this happens several times every day of my life...
Does it get my goat, no, life's too short to worry about that sort of thing. The issue I think is that people want differnet things out of the game. I play TK2 for fun and I've seen games fall down for these issues before. The problem isn't just Military veteran vs enthusiast, it's about expectations of the game and player interaction.

In real life or a novel, the bitching and criticisms that happen all day every day don't really matter because the object of the bitching either: A) Never gets to hear it or B) Doesn't exist because the author created them as a figure of disdain.

In a roleplaying game such as the ones under discussion, the bitching can be seen by everyone and the character that you've cast as a bumbling incompetent that deserves to be fragged is another player who probably feels really shitty that they're recieving all of this negativity.

The problem is that the classic war novel trope doesn't work in a game unless it's very well done and worked out between the players in advance. I see the game as getting together to tell an interesting story rather than an exact military simulation (that's probably because of my background, but there it goes), and in a piece of interactive fiction, nobody wants their character to be cast as a fool deserving of death.

Not me anyway, I've got real life for that....

pmulcahy11b
05-23-2010, 07:57 AM
Veterans bring valuable RW knowledge and experience to a game like T2K. This can really add to the level of realism upheld by a game and a veteran's knowledge can really benefit those of us who don't have that RW experience.

I have screwed things up for a group without meaning to, particularly before I went on active duty, because I knew the limitations of a weapons system of suchlike and I blurted it out without thinking. This annoys a civilian player, especially when they know the GM didn't know that either.

In a way, a game can really get bad like that when everyone , players and GM, are soldiers. The rules tend to get picked apart left and right in such a game, but they usually tended to lead to a lot of improvised rules to fix things.

Fusilier
05-23-2010, 11:40 AM
Granted I haven't seen many problems, but of the ones I've witnessed, most have originated with people who have a military background... so it's been more of a curse in some ways I guess.

On the other hand, veterans can really kill the enjoyment factor of a game like T2K if they deliver that RW knowledge in a heavy-handed or patronizing way.

Too much appeal to authority and credentialism (if I'm using the correct term) pushed on others. "It's just a game" doesn't seem sink in deep enough.

...but on the other hand I've also gamed with many fellow veterans who are cool so I'm not labeling everyone as being the same.

HorseSoldier
05-23-2010, 03:53 PM
I've never seen any real friction between military and non-military people in gaming groups.

I have gamed with the occasional person along the way with zero military experience and a kind of know-it-all wannabe attitude (the sorts of people known in the law enforcement world as "hoslter sniffers") that kind of annoyed me and rubbed me the wrong way, but to be fair people with that sort of personality would annoy me just as much in a game that had zero to do with anything military.

But, those guys are few and far between. Mostly I don't see any sort of issue.

Grimace
05-23-2010, 04:04 PM
I'm a non-veteran, but I've got a lot of friends who are veterans, some that are combat veterans. We played Twilight together, with me..the non-veteran, as the GM. Never had any problems with them trying to push an agenda. Though I tend to gather a whole lot of information from my military friends as well as from books, so I'm not quite as skewed as a GM who might only be periferally aware of stuff in the military.

My best friend used to play Twilight while in the Marines. Some other Marine ran the game. They used their real world military knowledge and altered things to fit what they knew to be true of the weapons and tactics rather than what was listed in the game. Thankfully when he played under me he didn't run roughshod over me and try to dictate how things "should" be. Then again, none of the other guys who had military experience or even combat experience really did that too much. A little, yes, but not too bad and not in an overbearing way. Maybe I lucked out.

I think the types of people who can cause problems are a veteran who may not have been in combat but has grandios ideas how awesome he would have been in combat gets into a game where the GM doesn't have very much knowledge about things and is just running the game as listed. I've seen those type of guys who think they're all badass but you eventually find out they never saw combat and don't really have a clue about how they would really handle it. I *know* I don't have any real, concrete feeling about what it's like in combat, but I've heard enough about it from people who actually HAVE seen combat to know that the blowhards who think they're all knowledgable and hot stuff in combat don't have any better idea than I do, but want to pretend they do. Put those people up against someone that might not be quite a military enthusiast and who might not have some basic knowledge gained by talking to combat vets, and you can have a military veteran run roughshod over the GM.

At the same time, though, I've seen military enthusiasts that want to think they know everything about combat as well. They can talk your ear off about the statistics of a weapon and the foot pounds of force of particular bullets, and the awesomeness of certain gear, but they don't know what it's like when a bullet whizzes by their ear and they realize the guy downrange wants to kill them. These guys think combat is clean and easy, just like the video/computer games and the "bestest" equipment will save them from anything. They just don't understand fear and hardship of combat and the randomness of being in the field with equipment. So these guys can equally run roughshod over a GM who doesn't understand things enough. If the GM is a combat veteran, he can put them in their place, but if it's just a typical GM who never went in the military and maybe only read about some stuff in a book, then the GM can get overwhelmed by these types of players just as easily as if it were "wanna-be" combat vets, cocky military vets, or overconfident military enthusiasts (basically, "gun nuts" or "gadget hounds").

Raellus
05-23-2010, 04:46 PM
Think about this Rae, you are a teacher right? Imagine someone who has no clue about your job telling you how you should do it? And they tell you all kinds of things you know are contrary to doing that job and insist it must be done that way even when you know better. It is like fingernails on a blackboard after a while.

Yeah, that's a good point. I hope I would be undertanding and try to correct them gently but it probably would get on my nerves.

On the other hand, I'm not sure why a real teacher would want to RP being a teacher. I play T2K to escape reality.

I'm curious as to why T2K appeals to vets- especially combat vets- when it can only ever beel a pale approximation of the real military experience.

SimonMark6: That's a really good point. The Sgt. Ellias/Sgt. Barnes (Platoon) intra-party drama is all fine and dandy when the players are cool with it and have discussed it ahead of time. I've only ever seen this kind of thing develop on the fly and get personal fast, though, and that kind of ruins it for everyone involved.

Maybe it's just something about my game that makes players despise each other.

jester
05-23-2010, 05:21 PM
Yeah, that's a good point. I hope I would be undertanding and try to correct them gently but it probably would get on my nerves.

On the other hand, I'm not sure why a real teacher would want to RP being a teacher. I play T2K to escape reality.

I'm curious as to why T2K appeals to vets- especially combat vets- when it can only ever beel a pale approximation of the real military experience.

SimonMark6: That's a really good point. The Sgt. Ellias/Sgt. Barnes (Platoon) intra-party drama is all fine and dandy when the players are cool with it and have discussed it ahead of time. I've only ever seen this kind of thing develop on the fly and get personal fast, though, and that kind of ruins it for everyone involved.

Maybe it's just something about my game that makes players despise each other.


I have noticed it is certain types who tend to gang up on other types. Alas, I saw this in another couple games back in 01 and 02 with the same suspects. As well as piecing it together with someone who left the game a while ago

Adm.Lee
05-23-2010, 05:59 PM
I was fortunate(?) in that I've only run with non-veterans, and having been the most military-enthused member of a group. My own level of military enthusiasm is to study at the level above RPGs. That is, I read a lot about the generals' level of the war, not usually the grunts'-eye view. I stopped caring a lot about the minutia of weapons systems a long time ago.

I did run with some fellow ROTC cadets once (see sig), but they didn't really like RPGs so it didn't last long. The non-ROTC guys were the ones that later broke the game up over intra-party conflict (executing prisoners, as I've said before).

I made a point of including an NPC NCO sometimes, so that I could insert a "voice of wisdom" sometimes: "Uh, sir, charging that would be a bad idea. Let's take cover instead."

Snake Eyes
05-23-2010, 08:47 PM
Cake-eating civilian here. I dabbled in a law enforcement career back in the mid-90's but aside from a few scuffles and bruises wouldn't say I ever saw anything that approached actual combat. I would have rated myself on the high side of enthusiast ten years ago, but these days I barely have the time and energy to keep up with the state of the art in my day job. I'm perfectly happy leaving the tactics, doctrine and number crunching to those who either have the inclination or have been there and done that.

I developed a real anti-vet gaming bias in college during the early 90's mostly because I played RPGs as a form of amusement and distraction from real life and not for re-enactor level simulationism. I found that the ROTC cadets and Spec-4s that my game attracted locally were almost uniformly incapable of suspending disbelief or processing such abstract concepts as the need to roll dice to see if your PC could hit a target.

There were some shining exceptions to this, but there did seem to be a sense that one wasn't qualified to play Twilight unless you'd been to the infantry school and shouldn't be allowed to run it unless you had personally been checked out on all the equipment found in an OpFor weapons platoon. And it was very Twilight-specific; this notion that one must have a mastery of the Soldier's Manual of Common Tasks in order to play or run a game had no corresponding analog in the world of D&D, Champions, Cyberpunk or Shadowrun.

Now, those guys were only just as irritating to me as the pencil-necks who would cart the entire Jane's library around in their daypacks, but at the end of the day I got far more enjoyment both playing and running with folks who had no military affiliation. But that is all ancient history. The group I play with FTF now is me, two cops and two Army vets and we all get along just fine. I chalk it up to the maturity of everyone involved.

We also play 2013, which does a far better job of modeling modern small arms combat than any of the previous versions, so we don't get bogged down debating results or plausibility of a lot of crappy rule mechanics. We maintain a healthy respect of each other's backgrounds and are able to fully distinguish between the actions of a player and those of his character. We also all mutually agree that the decisions of the GM stand whether they make any sense or not. We have fun and that's kind of the point.

pmulcahy11b
05-24-2010, 12:05 AM
I made a point of including an NPC NCO sometimes, so that I could insert a "voice of wisdom" sometimes: "Uh, sir, charging that would be a bad idea. Let's take cover instead."

That's a good thing to do, in a lot of RPGs -- I used to do it sometimes even in D&D, Top Secret, and Traveller games. You have to be careful not to get too heavy-handed with it, though, or it turns into one of those things that make players feel they are being led around by the nose.

Excuse me -- Sam needs some Phazyme...

jester
05-24-2010, 12:55 AM
I've found its a good tool, to include a NCO lower, or a runner, or driver who can act as a voice to at times guide the players. Sometimes, the PCs will just stop and pause wondering what to do. Then poof, the radioman, or Cpl can make a suggestion to get things rolling.

headquarters
05-24-2010, 03:16 AM
I've found its a good tool, to include a NCO lower, or a runner, or driver who can act as a voice to at times guide the players. Sometimes, the PCs will just stop and pause wondering what to do. Then poof, the radioman, or Cpl can make a suggestion to get things rolling.

He is also useful as a victim of a gorey fate to hammer home a point or emphasize something to the party

pmulcahy11b
05-24-2010, 04:41 AM
He is also useful as a victim of a gorey fate to hammer home a point or emphasize something to the party

Yes, just put a red shirt on him...

Sorry, I'm a little goofy tonight.

Mahatatain
05-24-2010, 07:16 AM
Veterans bring valuable RW knowledge and experience to a game like T2K. This can really add to the level of realism upheld by a game and a veteran's knowledge can really benefit those of us who don't have that RW experience.

On the other hand, veterans can really kill the enjoyment factor of a game like T2K if they deliver that RW knowledge in a heavy-handed or patronizing way.

I'm really interested in what your experience has been, both playing and/or reffing T2K, in groups containing veterans. Has it been a blessing or a curse? Can veterans and non-veterans play T2K together in harmony or is this like trying to mix oil and water (or nitroglycerin)?

I think that what you have touched on here is a wider issue that effects more than just T2k. You are always going to get situations where a player or GM has background knowledge that is greater than the set up of the game and in the case of T2k that is the knowledge of people with previous or current military experience.

For example years ago at Uni I played in a Rolemaster "fantasy" campaign with one player who actively participated in Medieval re-enactments and therefore had a lot of experience of fighting with broadswords, longswords and battle axes and of wearing heavy armour. He found problems with how the Rolemaster combat rules handled certain things like fighting with two weapons and this annoyed him with the system.

This is therefore very similar to the problems that arise in T2k games where people who actually know what they are talking about (people with military experience) roleplay with people such as myself who are just keen enthusiasts and I can only assume that veterans find enthusiasts frustrating to play in a game with because of our lack of knowledge on certain things.

What everyone needs to remember however is that T2k is a roleplaying game and that it is not supposed to be an accurate reconstruction of how a squad level military unit operates. People play it to have fun and therefore by its very nature most T2k games are cinematic in character rather than realistic. People with military experience can certainly help to add a level of realism to a game but in the end we're roleplaying in an alternate history setting where WW3 has taken place!

The key therefore when people have a greater level of knowledge or experience is how players react in the game. In the Rolemaster example above the player who knew more than the rest of us reacted in a positive way and helped educate us about Medieval combat techniques. It made the game more realistic and more enjoyable to play in and I would hope that anyone with previous military experience would contribute in the same way in a T2k game. If they find it problematic to play with people who don't always do things in the correct military way then they are going to find the game extremely frustrating and will probably end up being counter productive in the game.

TiggerCCW UK
05-24-2010, 08:57 AM
As I've said on here before, I'm a civvy. My only 'military' experience comes from the cadet force, as both cadet and instructor, and from a huge appetite for military history. That said I'm the one in our game who has the most 'experience' and knowledge of things military. This seems to work pretty well for our group, the only thing I've really added for their benefit is a 'tactics' roll that the players can make for knowledge that their characters have that they don't. Its usually just a case of using it to point out that there may be a better plan than full frontal assault. Having said that, possibly because of their lack of experience I do tend to find them being fairly cautious throughout the game.

rcaf_777
05-24-2010, 01:05 PM
Just wonder what I would classed as

1994-2001 -Served as a Reserve Infantry NCO

2001-Present - Finance Speicalist

Tours to Afghanstan 02-03, 05-06

And yes I know I am a REMF however say what you well, just remember the coffee and sticky buns in the headquarters RULE, and Fridays is steak night, enjoy the rations and mud.......:D

pmulcahy11b
05-24-2010, 03:16 PM
And yes I know I am a REMF however say what you well, just remember the coffee and sticky buns in the headquarters RULE, and Fridays is steak night, enjoy the rations and mud.......:D

Hey, I count as one of my favorite duty stations the time I spent at 2nd ID HQ's G3. Yeah, I was a REMF for that tour, but I learned a whole lot of valuable stuff I wouldn't have learned anywhere else, made a good impression on some pretty high-ranking officers, got a lot of nice stuff in my personnel jacket, and got promoted above the power curve while I was there.

weswood
05-24-2010, 09:33 PM
4 years active duty in the USMC Air Wings, as a logistics/emarkation specialist, and 2 year reserves with HQ Co for an infantry battalion. I freely admit to being a remf. Funny thing is my civilian friends think I'm some kind of bad @$$ former Sgt of Marines. I've never ever claimed to be infantry. :D

Sometimes you have to explain to people it's a game, not trying to represent real life, but for pure entertainment. I was relating an experience my character in Rae's game had to a non RPGing friend who got annoyed- "He should have died from hypothermia, there's no way he could have survived that." I had to explain that some situations are resolved by die rolls regardless of how risky they are, and apparently Lady Luck was with the character that day.

jester
05-24-2010, 09:35 PM
He is also useful as a victim of a gorey fate to hammer home a point or emphasize something to the party


That too! Although, I often include someone for that as well among the NPCs. It helps to bond a group together, since suffering and shared loss are often something that does draw people together, and of course facing obstacles and over comming them as a group or team also bring a group together as a team and that is somthing that when done right is fostered within a campaign.

jturfitt
05-25-2010, 01:50 AM
Was a medic in the Air Force from 1974-1978. Spent 2 1/2 year in various places in Texas (Basic training at Lackland AFB, Tech school at Sheppard AFB, Air Evac Training at Kelly Air Force Base and 2 years working OB in the hospital at Laughlin AFB). Then spent 17 months @ Clark Air Force Base in the Phillipines working with the 9th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron. 75% of the patients we flew to the states post Vietnam were Psych patients from Korea and Japan. One trip we had three in straight jackets for the whole trip (Jesus, Alexander the Great, and Ghengis Khan), most ususual trip.

headquarters
05-25-2010, 02:05 AM
Was a medic in the Air Force from 1974-1978. Spent 2 1/2 year in various places in Texas (Basic training at Lackland AFB, Tech school at Sheppard AFB, Air Evac Training at Kelly Air Force Base and 2 years working OB in the hospital at Laughlin AFB). Then spent 17 months @ Clark Air Force Base in the Phillipines working with the 9th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron. 75% of the patients we flew to the states post Vietnam were Psych patients from Korea and Japan. One trip we had three in straight jackets for the whole trip (Jesus, Alexander the Great, and Ghengis Khan), most ususual trip.

Thats the funniest thing I have heard in a long time.

Targan
05-25-2010, 02:55 AM
One trip we had three in straight jackets for the whole trip (Jesus, Alexander the Great, and Ghengis Khan), most ususual trip.

WWGD? (What Would Ghengis Do?) :newdevil:

Frank Frey
05-25-2010, 10:52 AM
Greetings,

Here is what I did whilst in the Army.
Date of Enlistment: February 7th, 1967
After Basic and AIT, I was stationed at Fort Ord, California and then at McNair Barracks, West Berlin. I volunteered for service in Vietnam. My tour dates there were November 20th, 1968 - November, 19th 1969, the proverbial 364 days and a wakeup.
I was released from active duty (REFRAD) on Novemeber 22nd at Oakland Army Terminal.
While in Vietnam, my MOS was Armorer but basically I was assigned to a "mobs for jobs" outfit called a Special Security Detail. Most of the time, I'd say about 95% of the time, it was hot, boring, and hot. Did I say it was hot? The other 5% were moments that had a rather high PST(Pants Sh*tting Terror) factor. The most memorable being blown out of my bunk at 0300 hrs one morning by a near miss from a 122mm artillery rocket. Helluva way to start your day.

Out Here,
Frank Frey

Raellus
05-25-2010, 11:25 AM
I am still curious to hear from one of our combat veterans why roleplaying war appeals to them.

As an admitted armchair commando, I play to get just a tiny taste of what that life must have been like. It's escapism too- a break from my mudane and occasionally stressful real life. I've always been fascinated by war and military history and technology and this is my small way of acting on that lifelong interest.

But for someone who's actually seen the elephant, what is the attraction?

rcaf_777
05-25-2010, 11:39 AM
For me I started playing before army, and have always enjoyed it, and whole story I find quite appleaing, your on own behind the lines and living of the land as it where..I mean come on so aswsome

pmulcahy11b
05-25-2010, 12:14 PM
Well, I don't actually play or GM anymore, because I can't hold my end of things due to my health condition and there are no players in town for an FTF session.

I pretty much like being the "stat guy;" its therapy of a sort, because it helps keep my brain engaged, and coming up with the stats gives me a little escape because I can, at least for a short time, think less about the daily ration of crap life feeds me.

One thing I can't do is play a first-person shooter computer game. I find them disturbing.

Frank Frey
05-25-2010, 02:19 PM
I am still curious to hear from one of our combat veterans why roleplaying war appeals to them.

As an admitted armchair commando, I play to get just a tiny taste of what that life must have been like. It's escapism too- a break from my mudane and occasionally stressful real life. I've always been fascinated by war and military history and technology and this is my small way of acting on that lifelong interest.

But for someone who's actually seen the elephant, what is the attraction?

It's pretty much the same as yours. I also do Historical Miniatures Gaming and even played in Vietnam scenarios there. AFAIC, it's all a game. It's just another background to use when telling a story. That's what it is to me. No simulation, no matter what claims to realism the game designers might make, will ever even begin to come close to the reality. Quite frankly, I don't want it to. For me, it is entertainment like watching a war movie.

Out Here,
Frank Frey

weswood
05-25-2010, 08:59 PM
Well, I don't actually play or GM anymore, because I can't hold my end of things due to my health condition and there are no players in town for an FTF session.

I pretty much like being the "stat guy;" its therapy of a sort, because it helps keep my brain engaged, and coming up with the stats gives me a little escape because I can, at least for a short time, think less about the daily ration of crap life feeds me.

One thing I can't do is play a first-person shooter computer game. I find them disturbing.

I've thought about trying to get together the people here in Texas for a game. There's several of us on the board, but the logistics would be prohibitive. Right now I couldn't afford a trip to San Antonio for a couple days.

pmulcahy11b
05-26-2010, 07:58 AM
I've thought about trying to get together the people here in Texas for a game. There's several of us on the board, but the logistics would be prohibitive. Right now I couldn't afford a trip to San Antonio for a couple days.

You don't want to come right now anyway; it's already hot and drippingly-humid.

Graebarde
05-26-2010, 10:06 AM
I'm curious as to why T2K appeals to vets- especially combat vets- when it can only ever beel a pale approximation of the real military experience.

I spent most of 11 years in the Army, cira 68-79, the first five in infantry with tours to the SEA War games, and my second tour due but was abruptly sent to Korea with 135 other grunts at the Overseas Replacement Station. It was out of the frying pan into the fire too.. as we did have combat one night against infiltrators.

Anyways, why would a vet want to play T2K? For me it was a release.. call it therapy for lack of a better terminology. I ALWAYS approached the game from a perspective of playing out scenarios that could TEACH the younger guy. ie. basic tactic can be passed on, IF the person is receptive. I tried to never come on too strong, unless of course you have an idgit that will NOT listen to advise and then whines when he gets to build up another character while the game goes on around him, only to loose that character in the next encounter.. some guys NEVER learn. T2K is a game of SURVIVAL. I had a hard-core HoG when I first played, yet managed to survive for ten years with the same character in his campaigns around Poland.

The ONLY guys that bothered me were the ones that had absolutely NO idea what it entailed to be SOF and wanted to play an operator, AND be a COLONEL as well, because that's what he rolled up of course, and it IS only a game.. (same guy that kept getting killed... think his record was five in one session). But to his credit, he FINALLY did 'settle down' and some wisdom seemed to seep into his cranium.

What I enjoy is creating character's, realistic characters, with detailed backgrounds... which is much more useful in PBeM than FtF I might add.

T2K is a stess release, and teaching medium for me. At least I hope SOMEBODY learns something useful from it.

Grae

weswood
05-26-2010, 05:52 PM
You don't want to come right now anyway; it's already hot and drippingly-humid.

I'm 30 miles east of Houston, on the bay and surrounded by rivers and swamp. I know about the heat and humidity. :rolleyes:I was talking to a coworker yesterday, bitching about the heat. I asked him, "John, we've both lived here more than 30 years. Why are we still griping about it?"

pmulcahy11b
05-26-2010, 06:08 PM
I'm 30 miles east of Houston, on the bay and surrounded by rivers and swamp. I know about the heat and humidity. :rolleyes:I was talking to a coworker yesterday, bitching about the heat. I asked him, "John, we've both lived here more than 30 years. Why are we still griping about it?"

Isn't bitching part of the essential nature of humanity? In the military they actually teach you to be on the lookout for a soldier that never complains -- it's a sign that something's really wrong with them.

jester
05-26-2010, 11:00 PM
Isn't bitching part of the essential nature of humanity? In the military they actually teach you to be on the lookout for a soldier that never complains -- it's a sign that something's really wrong with them.

Like the old saying is,

"Don't worry when they are bitching. Worry when they stop bitching."

weswood
05-27-2010, 06:16 AM
This is true. Hmmm, maybe I should mess with my co-workers by NOT bitching :D

Mock26
06-15-2010, 06:06 PM
I am a military enthusiast with 6 1/2 weeks of military service. Yep. You read that right, 6 1/2 weeks. I joined the United States Marine Corps in early 1990 and headed off to Parris Island in May of that year. Halfway through basic training one of my drill instructors saw me behind my bunk with my hand pressed against my stomach and he ordered me off to sick call the next day. From there I was sent off to the hospital for further tests and they came back positive for ulcers. USMC policy is an automatic discharge if you develop an ulcer within 180 days of enlistment (or at least it was back then, do not know about it today). Unfortunately by the time I was fully clear of ulcers my life had changed enough that re-enlisting was not at the top of my list. Oh well, such is life. At least I can look myself in the mirror and say with truth that I did not quit. And looking back upon it I can say that I enjoyed my time in Basic quite a bit.

There were two bright points with my discharge. The first was after the doctor gave me the news. The doctor was a psychiatrist and when he told me I was being sent home I actually started to cry, so he left me alone in the office for a few minutes. He did not shut the door all the way and some dumb-ass drill instructor happened by, saw me crying, and decided to be a dick. So he started in on me being a cry baby. I turned around, stared him right in the eye, and then started to smile. He was about to go off on me for staring him in the eye when he realized why I was smiling. The doctor, a major, had come up behind him! That was a dressing down that I will never forget as long as I live or until dementia sets in!

The other bright point was watching one of my drill instructors, Drill Instructor Sergeant Cathey, punch in the door of his wall locker and here him mutter about losing a "top recruit" while being unable to get rid of a "lazy f**ker" who did not want to be there.

pmulcahy11b
06-15-2010, 06:38 PM
The other bright point was watching one of my drill instructors, Drill Instructor Sergeant Cathey, punch in the door of his wall locker and here him mutter about losing a "top recruit" while being unable to get rid of a "lazy f**ker" who did not want to be there.

The military is full of those -- f***kups who do just well enough to not get kicked out, while there are others that go balls to the walls and sometimes have their good ideas not work out, to their detriment, usually because of the aforementioned f***kups.

B.T.
11-19-2010, 07:32 AM
I've opted for "other", because I was a conscript in a "high readiness unit" (But to be fair - you cannot compare 80ies Bundeswehr to military organisations that were really meant to fight!) of the Bundeswehr, studied history with a strong emphasis on military history, and have a quite good knowledge about military issues of the 80ies to 90ies.

In my own group I am the only GM. We have two other guys, that served with the Bundeswehr: one was a reserves officer candidate in the "Jäger" branch, the other one was a member of the signaling korps.

No one in the party has combat experiences!

The "military" persons sometimes are a really pain in the @5$3 - "The standard procedure would be ..." - "This is not realistic!" - "A PfC would never say that to a commanding officer!" and so forth.

I think, T2k is escapist entertainment. If someone has military experience, he can bring in valid information. But, in my point of view, it was never meant to be a precise simulation of actual fighting!

Whenever a party plays a fantasy RPG, no one would argue: "You have never met a dragon/elve/orc/god, so you can't say, what a dragon/elve/orc/god would do!" But in T2k the two "soldiers" always try to come up in such a way.

When my ongoing adventure is over, I'll try to minimize the player groups size and get rid of the people with military experience!

dragoon500ly
11-19-2010, 08:46 AM
Just wonder what I would classed as

And yes I know I am a REMF however say what you well, just remember the coffee and sticky buns in the headquarters RULE, and Fridays is steak night, enjoy the rations and mud.......:D

What would you be classed as? Lucky SOB?

LOL

No seriously, would never dream of calling a fire mission on headquarters because I'm tired of their smart ass atitude! :p

dragoon500ly
11-19-2010, 08:54 AM
Most fun I've had in T2K was playing a game during an admin halt, one of the Spec4s tried the "My character has max strength and I'm going to run in sand, loaded down with my M203 with a dozen mags and 30rds 40mm, and I'm carrying the M240, 600 rounds of link, and the platoon radio, while wearing NVGs....

The downside of playing T2K with a bunch of NCOs was that we really did make him load up with all that shit and show us how well he could do in RL!!!!

:rolleyes:

bobcat
12-09-2010, 06:27 AM
combat vet myself. served in iraq as an FO with tenth mountain. funs times were had. too bad i couldn't get a game going there.

Abbott Shaull
12-09-2010, 10:21 PM
Most fun I've had in T2K was playing a game during an admin halt, one of the Spec4s tried the "My character has max strength and I'm going to run in sand, loaded down with my M203 with a dozen mags and 30rds 40mm, and I'm carrying the M240, 600 rounds of link, and the platoon radio, while wearing NVGs....

The downside of playing T2K with a bunch of NCOs was that we really did make him load up with all that shit and show us how well he could do in RL!!!!

:rolleyes:

It sounds like Poetic justice...lol

bobcat
12-10-2010, 06:24 AM
Most fun I've had in T2K was playing a game during an admin halt, one of the Spec4s tried the "My character has max strength and I'm going to run in sand, loaded down with my M203 with a dozen mags and 30rds 40mm, and I'm carrying the M240, 600 rounds of link, and the platoon radio, while wearing NVGs....

The downside of playing T2K with a bunch of NCOs was that we really did make him load up with all that shit and show us how well he could do in RL!!!!

:rolleyes:

drop the 40mm, the M240, the radio(thank god), and the running and throw a can of 5.56 linked into my ruck to make up for it and i've done it.(though me and the 240 gunner were looking for something, nay ANYTHING to unload a few belts at)

Panther Al
12-10-2010, 11:14 AM
If you want a good laugh and you have a guy who recently screwed up, have him pull the tracers out of the 7.62 link prior to tank gunnery, all eleven thousand rounds of it. Having both done it and had my idiot driver do it, I can tell ya its good for a laugh (or something).

Targan
03-27-2011, 08:24 AM
Bumping this to give new members the opportunity to contribute.

qwerty1971
03-27-2011, 10:15 AM
19 year army lifer with time spent in infantry and MI with 333 months in iraq. i just love rpgs ever since i rolled my first dice in D&D. I do not play much anymore due to work and 4 kids, but i still collect the stuff. i loved t2k when i first saw it in the mid 90s. it is not perfect, but has enough baseline where you can add stuff on your own and make it fit.