Difference between revisions of "An Introduction to Traveller"

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==a.k.a. Book 0==
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{| style="width: 20em; text-align: left; font-size: 95%; float: right"
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|-
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! colspan="2" style="font-size: larger; background: #ddd;" | An Introduction to Traveller
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|-
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| colspan="2" style="text-align: center; font-size: smaller; border-bottom: 1px solid #aaa;" |[[Image:Book0.PNG]]<br>Book 0
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|-
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! Publisher
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| [[Game Designers Workshop|GDW]]
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|-
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! Version
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| [[Classic Traveller|CT]]
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|-
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! Author
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| [[Loren Wiseman|Loren K Wiseman]]
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|-
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! Format
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| [[Little Black Book|LBB]]
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|-
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! Canonical
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| Yes
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|-
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! Edition
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| 1st
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|-
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! Year Published
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| 1981
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|-
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! Pages
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| 48
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|-
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| colspan="2" style="font-size: smaller; border-top: 1px solid #aaa;" | No Product Number
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|}[[Category:Publish]]<noinclude>
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[[Category:Infobox|Book]]
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</noinclude>
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Traveller is a science-fiction role-playing game set in the distant future, when
 
Traveller is a science-fiction role-playing game set in the distant future, when
 
humanity has made the leap to the stars and interstellar travel is as common as
 
humanity has made the leap to the stars and interstellar travel is as common as
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point of view), complex diplomatic maneuvers, larger than life heroes, heroines, and
 
point of view), complex diplomatic maneuvers, larger than life heroes, heroines, and
 
villains — the mind boggles.
 
villains — the mind boggles.
[[Image:Book0.PNG]]
 

Revision as of 13:04, 25 May 2007

An Introduction to Traveller
Book0.PNG
Book 0
Publisher GDW
Version CT
Author Loren K Wiseman
Format LBB
Canonical Yes
Edition 1st
Year Published 1981
Pages 48
No Product Number


Traveller is a science-fiction role-playing game set in the distant future, when humanity has made the leap to the stars and interstellar travel is as common as international travel is today. This means that Traveller is set against a background drawn from adventure-oriented science fiction literature, and the scope and breadth of the game are limited only by the imagination and skill of the players and their referee. Players are no longer limited to wandering inside a single underground labyrinth, to exploring a single continent, or even a single world. In Traveller there is an entire universe to be explored. Almost any situation which occurs in any SF novel, movie, or short story can be recreated in Traveller with a little work on the part of the referee. In Traveller, mankind has conquered the stars, and travels from one stellar system to another as easily as present day Terrans can travel from one continent to another. The tremendous distances involved, however, dictate that interstellar voyages can take weeks, months, and sometimes even years. A situation similar to earth in the eighteenth century is created, where communication is limited to the speed of travel, and the stage is set for adventure in a grand fashion, with all the trappings of the classic space opera: giant, star-spanning empires (good, evil, or both), huge starfleets, wily interstellar merchants (or pirates, depending upon your point of view), complex diplomatic maneuvers, larger than life heroes, heroines, and villains — the mind boggles.