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#1
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I wish GDW had...
It's fascinating to see people still posting about an RPG over 32 years old and horribly out of date in many ways. Nostalgia is powerful!
I'm 44 and my friends and I spent many hours playing Twilight. I later became a US Air Force historian and realized much of the game wasn't realistic militarily never mind the plot holes it had in its geopolitical background. A few years ago, I bought most of the game materials in PDF and they are still entertaining reads even with the dated material and plot holes. Many of those plot holes have been discussed very well here. What I want to write about are details that GDW did not provide--and I wish they had. Ironically, as companies are still putting out 2300 materials, Twilight's dated and often flawed backstory still lives on into the 2010s! 1. General Cummings and "President" Broward Howling Wilderness has ZERO NPC profiles on the two biggest NPCs in the United States! My GM and I always saw Cummings as being based on General Colin Powell, who was Reagan's National Security Advisor so we just used him as inspiration. What about MILGOV's structure? Foreign relations? CIVGOV's cabinet? Popular support? Nothing, nada, zilch. But some urban mapping system? Here you go! 2. NATO Bear's Den mentions a turned Soviet division as a "NATO" division. Say what? By that time in the game, most US forces have left Europe. France, Belgium, Italy, and Greece are not part of NATO. Where is NATO now headquartered and in what form is the alliance? Any civilian leadership? Who are the former Red Army troops reporting to? 3. Nuclear weapons T:2000 made clear that the nuclear war was not a full exchange. So what about the other remaining warheads and delivery systems? Even if you say the latter were destroyed by conventional or nuclear methods what of the warheads? Other delivery systems could be presumably fashioned. Every so often a loose nuke or the Soviet Typhoon shows up but it never made sense why the USA would not just plaster Mexico. Really the thought that there could never be only a "limited" exchange while the war continued gains currency right? 4. TF:34 So Task Force 34 sails to Norfolk and all we ever hear later is some mentions of some troops being sent to New York. Say what? A massive--by game standards--force that could (even mainly as infantry) easily defeat New America strongholds, the Mexican invasion, or subdue CivGov just becomes an afterthought. And what of forces like the 8th Infantry Division who stay in Eastern Europe? What becomes of them? What of CivGov's troops in Yugoslavia? You have to buy 2300 to find out what happens to CENTCOM in Iran. 5. Speaking of CENTCOM... I loved the RDF Sourcebook. You have the Ambassador who seems as good a candidate for President as any other back home. What happened to him? CENTCOM presumably are still in Iran to secure the Gulf oil fields. Why not send TF34 and whatever tankers or makeshift takers to go get some of that oil and bring it back home? 6. "That stuff we did the last time we shelled out $20 for a module" My GM and I always complained that we'd do things in modules and it never seemed to affect the developing game narrative: Reset chip, recovered weather satellite, locating supply caches, even kidnapping the New America chief never made much difference as GDW wrote future modules. As for New America, the kidnapping was written in but only as a way of saying why NA did not take over the country in full. In reality, it should have been a major turning point against them just as Roger Caldwell intended. That said, I have fond nostalgic memories of when everyone in our PC group was some sort of special ops member (Mine: SEAL Team 6, Delta, SAS, Special Forces, and one Armored Division veterean--all present), carried seven weapons including exotic Finnish hunting rifles that did 1/2 armor value, and had enough hit points to take 12.7mm rounds to the head and not really be phased! I fear that while latter generations have their video games, they don't have the joy of imagining out their game worlds. |
#2
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Those are some good questions, fact275, and ones that many of us who have delved into the T2K materials have also wondered about. #1 and #4 are real head-scratchers. We can only speculate as to what the rationale for those rather egregious omissions were. In some case, I think that the authors didn't want to circumscribe things too much by detailing out the results of certain major in-module missions. I think they left it open to GMs to determine the large-scale, long-term effects of completing certain major missions (Reset, for example). If they spelled everything out, then T2K does become more like a video game, as creative control is taken out of the hands of GMs. Perhaps they were trying to avoid that happening. It is strange, however, that they didn't at least present possible long-term effects- a menu of options, if you will- for GMs that struggle with that sort of macro-level world-building.
I do have some pretty definite thoughts on a couple of your questions. I hope you don't mind me sharing them. #2. I think the authors used "NATO" to describe Western forces post-2000 for ease of reference. We all know what they mean. Perhaps the U.S., through CivGov, is still a part of the alliance- it's still got forces in Europe in 2001, as does MilGov if one counts US XI Corps, which gets left behind in NW Poland after OMEGA. I think making up a new acronym for NATO 2.0 would have just confused matters. Consider that, even before 2000, NATO had lost members, some even having turned coats. It would be hard to keep track if they changed the name of the alliance every time a country came or went throughout the timeline. 3. I don't see unused, unaccounted-for warheads as being a plot-hole. In fact, I see it more of a plot-hook. There are weapons to be found and kept out of the hands of tin-pot dictators, warlords, etc. Heck, if PCs can get their hands on a warhead, they can set themselves up as major power players. As to why the U.S. didn't nuke Mexico, I see a perfectly reasonable explanation. In a basic cost-benefit analysis, it's not worth irradiating one's next-door neighbor when one has confidence in one's conventional forces to stop and roll back a conventional invasion. The U.S. would have had enough issues with fallout and the like without radioactive dust clouds of their own creation rolling back over the border from a nuked Mexico as well.
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Author of Twilight 2000 adventure modules, Rook's Gambit and The Poisoned Chalice, the campaign sourcebook, Korean Peninsula, the gear-book, Baltic Boats, and the co-author of Tara Romaneasca, a campaign sourcebook for Romania, all available for purchase on DriveThruRPG: https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...--Rooks-Gambit https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...ula-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...nia-Sourcebook https://www.drivethrurpg.com/product...liate_id=61048 https://preview.drivethrurpg.com/en/...-waters-module Last edited by Raellus; 05-18-2016 at 09:20 PM. |
#3
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Yup its full of holes and that's why we love it!
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#4
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We had a thread about the unreal aspects of the Mexican front. I think most people modified that data for thier campaigns.
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#5
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Well we do know some things about Cummings and Broward - we know Cummings was part of the Grenada operation in the 80's and got injured and that he has a granddaughter but you are right there should be a lot more
As for your point 4. TF:34 So Task Force 34 sails to Norfolk and all we ever hear later is some mentions of some troops being sent to New York. Say what? A massive--by game standards--force that could (even mainly as infantry) easily defeat New America strongholds, the Mexican invasion, or subdue CivGov just becomes an afterthought. And what of forces like the 8th Infantry Division who stay in Eastern Europe? What becomes of them? What of CivGov's troops in Yugoslavia? You have to buy 2300 to find out what happens to CENTCOM in Iran. Remember that 2300, which originally was canon, later became more of one possible future - so that future can be ignored if you choose to - which opens up things considerably for GM's who see, as I do, that the US never driving Mexico out of the Southwest and Texas and letting them take over almost the whole Caribbean and Central America makes no sense at all And the total waste of the Task Force 34 troops is also a very big hole - frankly for me that is where Howling Wilderness fell apart for me even before you got the unreal drought that if it had happened per GDW would have delayed any rise of the US again for at least a century if not forever, not the twenty years of the 2300 timeline If you add up what HW says basically about 1800 men from Europe were used for reinforcements - meaning 40,000 plus were never used for anything. Which makes absolutely no sense at all. Even if they left half of them go, that leaves 20,000 men to reinforce the 194th, 197th, 49th and get to CA. And your point 6 - I agree with you there as well - we helped get back that Russian couple who knew how to build the cold fusion reactors and grabbed Reset as well. The way those modules are played its very obvious that is the general intent of the GDW authors - yet where is "Reset allows computers to start going back on line in the US by the middle of 2001, starting in the Colorado Springs area" or "the information gathered from the NA chief leads to the overthrow of the Florida regime by late December and the capture of several NA supply and fuel dumps " or "with the oil from the refinery in Texas, US and Texan forces, led by the Grange, begin to drive the Soviet and Mexican forces out of Texas" or even a simple "cold fusion reactors begin to come on line, with the first being in NJ, IL and CO, late in 2001" and it didn't have to be in HW's timeline set in stone - a simple Challenge article could have been done saying here is how the timeline changes depending on if those modules come off if for, against or neutral - i.e. "if the players do get Reset back to the DIA, computers come back on line six months later as it goes into production" or the statement above about the reactors that is a general note that a GM could then use as part of their campaign background and serve to connect the modules results to real world consequences and not just be - ok we did Reset, we did Last Submarine, whats next? GDW did a pretty good job of having an organized timeline with related modules so that you could really do an organized campaign if you wished to with all kinds of goals. It would have been nice to see those goals being achieved show up - sort of like those old books where there were multiple outcomes and depending on what you did the book changed. Last edited by Olefin; 05-19-2016 at 09:07 AM. |
#6
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Regarding #6: Once one side or another has the McGuffin, they would first make sure it's safe for THEIR side. Next, they would spend lots of time deciphering it, then producing copies for their use only, always preserving their advantage likely to the detriment/exclusion of any competing groups or even the populus at large. Only after their monopoly was fully established, and v.2.0 debugged and in place in their own organization's TOE, would they release any information about v 1.0.
On a related note, I once asked a friend in the electronics industry what core components and materials would be needed to be stashed (in a Faraday Cage to exclude EMP effects) to allow a quick restart of the Integrated Circuitry industry, even on just a small to medium scale, if only to produce simple ICs to fix phones, personal computers, vehicle emission control modules (fuel efficiency there)? I never got an answer, but the question remains: what if some tinfoil-hat paranoid crank with some bucks did stash such a cache of bleeding edge/not the best and brightest technology, including photoetching materials, etc, etc.? Or even just a bunch of junked worn-out pc's that had been replaced enmasse with newer models (think the leftovers from a large-scale corporate upgrading). Not completely workable as is, but kit-bashable/cannibalizable to produce several more-or-less workable units.
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"Let's roll." Todd Beamer, aboard United Flight 93 over western Pennsylvania, September 11, 2001. |
#7
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See that's my thinking. Instead of have the latest I.e: win'95, you might have to build a few old DOS systems. Its a lot better than having to, for example, keep logistic and inventory records or a census on paper.
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#8
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Quote:
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#9
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Quote:
. And the people who knew how to repair, rebuild, and use them; all within a 60 mile radius of Maynard, MA (Digital Equipment Corporation's HQ), some 25 miles west of Boston. (This was one of my points about New England, it's lack of nuclear targets, and available power sources.) Uncle Ted |
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