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Old 01-07-2010, 07:56 AM
John Farson John Farson is offline
The Good Man
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Helsinki, Finland
Posts: 87
Default Finnish Twilight 2000 sourcebook: the intro page

The following text is from the pg 3 intro of the Finnish sourcebook from late 1993.

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It has been five years since the first Finnish translation of Twilight 2000, and it seems impossible to think of all that has happened in the world during this short time period. Some might think that the Twilight 2000 RPG concept was already a doomed one; what madman would go and make an RPG set only a few years in the future? When Twilight was first published in America in 1984, German reunification as described by the background history of that game seemed to be made up out of thin air. The Finnish-language edition had barely been published when this turned out to be true - never mind the collapse of the Soviet Union, which has led to convulsions throughout Eastern Europe.

No matter how prophetic the author writing the game history is, sooner or later events in real life will overtake it. So the American authors of Twilight decided to immediately move over to parallel history, a concept that is used in many other "dark future" games. In this case events diverge from the attempted coup d'etat in the USSR in 1991. Once again the big bad wolf of communism engulfs Eastern Europe in its bottomless gullet. Maybe the Americans can still take pleasure from their old scapegoat, but we felt that was cheating.

There is no particular reason or point of departure in our history that inevitably starts a chain reaction leading to nuclear war. We think it is unnecessary to point fingers and tell horror stories of commie plotters; the current world situation itself is already uncertain enough that such reasons aren't needed. After Christmas 1993 anything could happen in the world. This game is one of the less pleasant imaginations of what hopefully will never happen.

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Changes with regards to vehicles:

Twilight: 2000, 2.2 has the honour of being the first to publish the game statistics of a few vehicles; mostly to replace the imaginative versions of the previous edition.

Leopard 2(I): The old Leopard 2 was very big in 1984, and still is. However, in the past decade the Germans have been able to improve their tank tremendously. This is quite certainly the first time that even a picture of the Leopard 2(I) has been published in any game.

M8 AGS: This then is the light combat vehicle that is meant to replace the M551 Sheridan in airborne and light divisions. Nobody ever built the LAV-75 even though they have on occasion been asked about from scale model manufacturers thanks to the old Twilight.

M1A2: When the first edition of Twilight was being written there was much talk about tanks which would have a small, unmanned and remote-controlled tower. Thus was born the M1A2 "Giraffe", the Leopard 3, T-90 and LAV-75 in the old game. However, the prophecies did not come to pass, and the "real" M1A2 is already being produced.

T-90: This is it? The old game's T-90 was a combination of the cover of Richard Simpkin's Red Armour book and the FST-1 (Future Soviet Tank-1), which was a boogeyman as defined by "defence experts" of the commie supertank.

So what can be said about the real T-90? Same old 125mm gun which can fire a missile (meaning that the gun's accuracy is still off at long ranges), same old engine, same old transmission, same old tank. The T-90 is like a floozy who tries to cover her mid-life crisis with massive amounts of make-up.

BMP-3: Now here is an interesting vehicle. The Soviets started the whole concept of an infantry fighting vehicle with their BMP-1, and they have steadily improved on it. The BMP-3 in the old Twilight was guesswork about what the new version might contain (BMP-2, which contains a 30 mm grenade rifle for fire support - an interesting concept which turned out to be a complete turkey). Now that the real BMP-3 has made it to production we can see that it is almost an entirely reinvented infantry fighting vechicle with a 100mm grooved gun that can take out a light battle tank. The old semi-automatic gun hasn't been abandoned either, and with it the BMP can make short work of enemy infantry fighting vehicles and APCs. The armour has also been improved. Very interesting.

Last edited by John Farson; 01-07-2010 at 09:18 AM. Reason: Adding more info
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