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Illuminated Site of the Week
SJ Games is looking for a full-time editor. This could definitely be a telecommuting position, but some preference will be given to candidates in Austin or Montreal.
Duties will include both copy editing and fact checking, as well as some liaison with writers. Word-processing skills are required: Word, on Mac, will be most compatible with our systems, but we can put you on a PC if we have to. Quark skills would be a definite plus.
The ideal candidate will have experience as a professional editor and be familiar with the GURPS Fourth Edition system. (You don't have to be an expert right now, but we DO expect you to get there eventually.) Any candidate will need a good knowledge of gaming, especially roleplaying, and a wide background of general information.
Whatever your other qualifications, please do not apply if you suspect that your grammar and spelling are less than perfect; you will be responsible for correcting others' work, and your own work must not need checking. Illiterate applications for editorial positions are posted on our office bulletin board for general mockery. A new hire whose work contains spelling and grammatical errors, or who cannot catch at least 98% of the errors made by others, will simply be a drain on others' time, and will be dismissed quickly and with minimal apology. You have been warned.
Physical Requirements: Constant typing is necessary. A candidate should not suffer from any condition which makes typing difficult or painful (and should take appropriate ergonomic precautions to avoid the possibility of repetitive stress injury).
For more information, or to send in your resume (in ASCII or PDF format), please send email to editorjob@sjgames.com.
Warehouse 23 News: For A Very Limited Time...
Our third mini-sale is: Floor & Deck Plans!
But they will only be marked down until 12:00 pm, May 31st, so don't procrastinate. Don't know what's going on? Take a peek at the announcement and the details.
May 30, 2006: You Know You've Been Playing Too Much Oblivion...
I don't normally get sucked into video games. I find them too limiting, and my reflexes aren't good enough to master the "twitch" factor. However, I've been playing Bethesda Softworks' Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion quite a bit.
As far as computer RPGs go, this one is extremely open-ended, and the graphics are excellent. So good, in fact, I find myself looking at the wildflowers on the side of the road, and wondering what alchemy ingredients I could harvest from them....
Yeah, I've been playing too much.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: Book Of Monsters Or Fanfic Compilation?
The Tome of Horrors III is a lot like high school: intimidatingly large, very hard, and filled with things that want nothing more than to beat the tar out of you. Maybe it's time you thought about getting those few extra levels of fighter . . .
. . . and we're not in the office. The voice mail will still take your message, though.
While we're not here, take a moment to reflect, remember, and honor the men and women who died in military service for their country.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: Fluxx. Only Without All That Gratuitous Nudity
Family Fluxx is a less complex version of the ever-transient card game Fluxx, which doesn't actually have any gratuitous nudity. All the nudity in it is completely justified.
May 28, 2006: First Look At Munchkin Impossible!
Just for you, Dear Reader, a first look at a couple of pieces from Munchkin Impossible! Hot off John Kovalic's pen, we have here a British agent and a Bulletproof Attache Case.
Disclaimer: these images will likely to be tweaked between now and the final product. But we thought you'd like to see them now.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: Y'know What's Fun?
Carcasses. Scavenger Hunt is an excellent illustration of that point. Really. Just trust us on this one, okay?
May 27, 2006: Goodbye, Game Aids Program
For years, SJ Games has attempted to maintain a "Game Aids" program which would review fan-created game aids, both stand-alone software and web pages. The idea was that we would check out submitted programs, make sure that they actually ran and that their documentation was comprehensible, see that trademark and copyright considerations were covered, certify them as worth your while to download, and promote them.
A noble goal. It didn't work at all.
The goal was to encourage and recognize fan-created game support. If anything, it had the opposite effect. Our apologies to the creators of programs that have been stuck in our pipeline for years. As of now, you're free.
There are, basically, two problems, and both are structural. "We'll try harder" could not change the facts.
First, editorial review time for freebies always has to take a priority behind work on actual new products. The only way to get around this would be to hire an editor who knew GURPS and Car Wars and Ogre and Illuminati . . . and whose ONLY job was to work on game aids. And . . . any time we could afford a new editor, especially one whose skills were that wide, we and you would want him to work on more new products!
Second, fan work just shouldn't be put through a professional review process. When a fan writes a program, he's doing it for himself and his friends, because he wants to. Subjecting him to editorial oversight, on a slow schedule, is a sure way to suck all the fun out of the process. The less fun it is, the slower the creator is to create new updates for review . . . until the whole thing grinds to a shuddering halt.
So. Effective today, the Game Aids program is no more. Instead, fan-created game aids will be covered by the newly updated version of our Online Policy. Read it for details, but basically:
- Do what you will, as long as your use of our trademarks and our copyrighted text and art follows the Online Policy. That page includes SPECIFIC LEGAL CREDITS to be copied into whatever you distribute, with links to our site. If we find out about distributions that violate trademark or copyright, or otherwise don't follow the Online Policy, we'll have to write you a letter (or in extreme cases, have a lawyer write you a letter). Please don't make us do that.
- We will create one or more forum groups for discussion of digital game aids. This will help you, the creator, publicize your work, and get feedback. And if you do something really neat, we'll read the feedback there and notice.
- When one of our staff members uses and enjoys a fan-created game aid, he may ask our Webmaster to link to it from that game's web page. That will be the only "official recognition" we will offer, and it'll be entirely up to our staff members in their own capacity as fans. If they use something and like it, they get to recommend it for a link.
- If you want to charge money for a game aid based on our work, the Online Policy does NOT apply . . . you must either get a license from us, or sell us the game aid for distribution as a regular product, and either way we'll hold you to professional standards.
-- Steve Jackson
Notice: Server Downtime Scheduled, Sat. 5/27
There will be a brief outage this Saturday afternoon (Austin time) while we move the servers into the new server room.
Warehouse 23 News: And The Sales Continue . . .
Our second mini-sale is: GURPS For Dummies! Yes, the one heavily discounted item in Warehouse 23 just got cheaper, but only until the end of the Memorial Day Weekend. Don't know what's going on? Take a peek at the announcement and the details.
As you read this, Monica and I should be on a plane over the Pacific, on our way to New Zealand. First real vacation in don't-know-how-many years. Woot! We'll be away for three weeks. Yes, that time includes two conventions, but (a) conventions are fun, and (b) there will be some real sightseeing before, between, and after!
First stop is Auckland, for Conclave, the national SF convention of New Zealand. This is my first time as a GoH at a national SF con. Me jaded? NOT. Excited, more like it. We'll be presenting a multi-hour seminar on game creation, and writing up the outline was a very interesting exercise. And we'll also be seeing a lot of the scenery that Peter Jackson made famous.
The next week we fly to Sydney for a couple of days of tourism, with the redoubtable David Morgan-Mar, creator of the Irregular Webcomic, doing his best to keep us out of trouble. Then it's to Canberra - probably by ground, details not determined - to Conflux. Any convention that has both a medieval feast and a Masquerade Disco is a convention I expect to enjoy!
Then one more day of playing tourist. Then home. And I really expect that everything will be under control and there'll be some great new GURPS drafts to read. I won't put on the pressure by naming names . . . you know who you are!
And yes, yes, there will be pictures. Why do you think I ran out and got that new camera?
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: Viva La Revolución! Um, Again!
What self-respecting banana republic isn't ruled by a ruthless, exploitative Junta? Probably a really happy one, actually, but never mind that! The game is fun, so get dictatoring!
The boss is out of town for three whole weeks, and we plan to make the most of it.
In his absence, Warehouse 23 will run a variety of mini-sales, marking down various Steve Jackson Games merchandise for a very limited time – most sales will last two to three days before the items change.
Not only that, we want to encourage you to place as many orders as possible, even if the sale items don't interest you. Toward that end, we will be holding a daily drawing for a Deluxe GURPS Basic Set!
That's right, every day while Steve is away, we will be giving away a Deluxe Set. Two runners up will receive a random Illuminati Pin. All entries are cumulative - if you order on the first day, your name will still be in the running on the final day. So order early, and order often.
You can find full details here.
Our first mini-sale is: Transhuman Space! That's right, the full line is one sale - and that's after the Third Edition price cut!
-- Shadlyn
Warehouse 23 News: Roleplaying From The World Of Tomorrow!
In the future, clothes don't make the man. Toys do. d20 Modern: Future Tech outlines some of those sweet, sweet gadgets, gizmos, and otherwise technological novelties that will keep your d20 characters on the bleeding edge. And if that's still not enough to satiate your techlust, there's always the Future Player's Companion.
May 24, 2006: An Ultra-Tech Morale Boost
. . . Two days until I leave on my trip.
And I'm very busy, but at least it's a good busy. I'm reading through the final draft of the Fourth Edition version of GURPS Ultra-Tech, which will be released late this year. I think you folks are going to like this one. David Pulver - who was the author of the previous edition - and Kenneth Peters, with the help of Sean Punch and the playtesters, have created a fantastic catalog of stuff that I wish I had NOW.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: Stake Your Claim In The World Of Darkness
With all the ennui in the air, you'd think it'd be easy to keep a bunch of Vampire players in line. Alas, the undead are more restless than you might think. Vampire: The Requiem - Chronicler's Guide to the rescue! And if they still can't keep their fangs clean, perhaps it's time to break out something from Bloodlines: The Legendary.
May 23, 2006: RIAA Raids Comic Con, Handcuffs Bootleg Dealers
That pretty much says it all, but here's the story on Newsarama. The event in question was the Motor City Comic Con, whose dealer agreement specifically prohibits sale of bootleg materials, but 14 dealers were taken to the police station, four of them in handcuffs.
Warehouse 23 News: Two By Two, Plans For You
The myriad of charts and tables on the Serenity Game Master's Screen, handy though they may be, ain't the sole reason to give it a look. It also contains deck plans for a certain famous Firefly-class ship.
Ewout Koldenhof, our MIB cell leader for Benelux, created this Finnish flag out of Munchkin Dice to celebrate his day: Munchkin demos, followed by the monstrous victory of Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest.
Warehouse 23 News: Slashing Prices And Shoppers
When you call something the Mall of Horror certain expectations are . . . expected. Zombies, for example. In that respect, this fine board game does not disappoint.
May 21, 2006: "No More Progress Possible" Says Extropy Institute
OK, no, that's NOT what they said. But the Extropy Institute - a "transhumanist think tank" founded in 1990 - has officially closed its doors, though its website will remain as an online resource, and solicitations for support are still visible on the ExI website.
"ExI deems its mission as essentially completed," said the announcement received by members. I must respectfully demur, as I just checked the mirror and I am not yet transhuman.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: Of Horses And Dwarves
Midnight may be bleak, but it's far from hopeless. Dwarves are rising up (though not very far) to challenge the Shadow and some of the Sarcosans yet defy the night. Get all the grim details in Midnight: Hammer and Shadow and Midnight: Star and Shadow.
Thanks to everyone who had useful suggestions for creative ways to re-string the flagpole. The mundane answer turned out to be "There are lots of flagpoles around town, creating the economic niche of Flagpole Service Companies." So the folks who sold us two new flags and a new rope also brought out their own cherry-picker and installed everything. Not cheap, but professional.
And pretty . . .
(Yes, a shot from my new camera. Practicing for Down Under.)
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: See The Forest For The Monsters
The Monster Geographica series has got monsters for mashing, beasties for beating, and demons for all occasions, be they in a forest or underground.
May 19, 2006: Illuminated Site of the Week: It's Two, Two, Two Elemental Powers In One
The solution has been staring us in the face all the time. The Lightning Path To Ascension holds that, rather than contest the relative benefits of good vs. evil, we should squish the effects of the two into one power. Perhaps that's an indelicate way of putting it (the author states, somewhat more succinctly, "someone has finally been zapped by Light and Dark Forces"), but the upshot is you will become the One God. Apparently it's first come, first served. -- Suggested by Andyzon1
Warehouse 23 News: Conan: What's Best In Life
You know 'im, you love 'im, you could really use some canned adventures for your campaign set in his world. Conan and the Tower of the Elephant has an elephant, Conan and the Lurking Terror of Nahab is terrifying, and Conan and the Heretics of Tarantia - well, we wouldn't want to spoil it.
I have wanted a digital camera for a long time, and, for various reasons, never got one. I finally chose one by the simple expedient of going squeeeeeeee! at the shiny little Canon PowerShot SD550 that Kira is using now. 7.1 megapixels, 3x optical zoom . . . spiffy. You can expect a lot more illustrated Illuminators from now on!
Here's one of the things that sold me: a dragonfly picture I took with her camera at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center here in Austin. This is about half the original image area. It was a quick shot and I had never used the camera before. Wow.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: Things That Go Plush In The Night
Yes, the Chimera Plush and Small Plush Jabberwock are more obviously monstrous than the Plush Pegasus, but that doesn't make the cute flying horsey any less of a monster. Think about it. A flying horse. Hope you own an umbrella . . .
May 17, 2006: The Boat Sinks And The Monkey Dies
Why have we seen no announcement of a King Kong / Titanic crossover? It seems so natural.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: No, It's Not About Epic-Scale Creases
Iron Heroes steps away from the usual fare of namby-pamby magic-heavy fantasy roleplaying and instead gives players a stout sword and a swift kick in the butt. Get some optional rules from Mastering Iron Heroes, find some critters to kill in the Iron Heroes Bestiary, or just grab some level 1 characters and hop in with Song of the Blade. Heck, there's even a BattleBox!
Two staff members left last week to follow other interests: our Managing Editor, Chris Aylott, and production artist Justin De Witt. Best of luck to both of them.
No, this is not an announcement of job openings . . . not yet . . . but we will very likely be interviewing for a (non-managing) editor soon, possibly with telecommuting as an option. I'm adding this to forestall questions, not to invite early applications. Wait till the announcement, please.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: You And Me And Dragon Makes "Aiyeee"!
Have you got what it takes to go face-to-chest with a dragon? The Black Dragon awaits!
May 15, 2006: Lightning Kyriotate Seeks New Host
Orc, the Angel of Networks, manages our Online Roleplaying Policy for In Nomine. However, its former host (Chris Anthony) is downgrading from Soldier status after long and faithful service, and can no longer be possessed on a regular basis. Therefore, Orc are [sic] seeking a new Servant for the duties described in the Online Roleplaying Policy. Apply by sending email to arcangel@io.com.
Warehouse 23 News: Food-Poisonin' Fun
Eating uncooked beef and chicken may not make you feel all warm and fuzzy (well, in a way, they just might!), but these GIANTmicrobes: Plush E. Coli and Plush Salmonella are sure to warm your heart. The Polio, we admit, is kinda creepy looking.
May 14, 2006: GURPS Space: Planetary Record And Worksheet
Every space campaign needs worlds - maybe hundreds of them! Sometimes a GM has something very specific in mind, and sometimes he's willing to let the dice decide. But whichever way you go (or even if you mix the two), GURPS Space's chapters on Basic and Advanced Worldbuilding (on pp. 62-133) take you through the process step by step.
Now e23 makes the job even easier with GURPS Space: Planetary Record and Worksheet, another free game aid! There are worksheets for every step of the worldbuilding process, and a ready-to-go Planetary Record Sheet at the end, waiting for the important data for your next space warlord's home planet, mysterious spawning ground of the enigmatic alien race, or maybe the perfect site for the newest colony. You can do it all with GURPS Space: Planetary Record and Worksheet. And did we mention it's free?
-- Scott Haring
Warehouse 23 News: Fill That Void In Your Life, Already
What have you got? Blue Moon. But what haven't you got? Some expansions! Take a look at Blue Moon: The Aqua or Blue Moon: Emissaries & Inquisitors - Blessings. See? Your life is starting to come together already.
May 13, 2006: For The Video Game Fans....
Like video games? Then you'd loooooove E3, the Electronic Entertainment Expo.
The bad news is that E3 2006 ended on Friday. The good news is G4, the self-styled "video gamers network," was there, and has posted a bunch of clips. They've got trailers from Spore, Halo 3, and Beyond Human, interviews with Peter Moore, Richard Garriott, and Will Wright, and "first impression" reports on the PS3 and Nintendo's Wii.
If you couldn't make it to E3, and want to catch up on the newest announcements all in one place, you could do worse than G4's E3 06 coverage.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: You Gotta Ask Yourself
"Do I feel cyber?" Well do ya, punk?! If you don't, pick up a copy of Cyberpunk V.3 pronto. On the other hand, if you do, theeeen . . . to be honest, we hadn't really thought that far ahead. Um, buy Cyberpunk V.3 anyway.
May 12, 2006: Illuminated Site of the Week: The Red, White, And Ewww
If you think we're a country of excesses, you may be right. Our cars are bigger, our budgets are bigger, our feet are bigger. Er, that is, we have Bigfoot. And the Mothman, and aliens, and . . . well, the list goes on. Not ones for provincial thinking, American Monsters not only broadens its worldview to include cryptids of all kinds, it admits the original mission statement (as represented by the site name) was a bit limited. Critters of the sea, sky, and land (and the carrion they leave in their wake) are all summed up on a single site regardless of diet, religious followers, or country of origin. -- Andy Vetromile
Warehouse 23 News: The Man. The Myth. The Legend.
The board game. Beowulf: The Legend gleefully exploits one of the greatest tales ever to come out of 9th-century Europe.
When it came time to reprint Munchkin 4 - The Need for Steed, we decided -- for a wide variety of reasons -- to change the packaging.
The larger clamshell packages worked well, but they took up a good deal of shipping space (which, at today's gas prices, was a serious drawback) and didn't pack well.
The new tuckbox is slightly smaller, but retains the hang tag and the ability to be displayed both face-forward and sideways. Additionally, it packs more snugly and can be assembled by a machine. And machine assembly speeds the process up significantly.
And if you're a retailer waiting for the reprint, you know what an advantage that is.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: When 100 Starcrews Just Aren't Enough
What's a spaceship without a crew? Boring, that's what! And probably tumbling into a star since nobody is behind the wheel. Kill two Droyne with one stone and pick up a copy of BITS: 101 Starcrews.
Sean Punch and Peter Dell'Orto turned in the manuscript not long ago, and last week was my Read Martial Arts week. (Except for the first chapter, which I devoured almost as soon as it came in.)
Ohhh, this is going to be a GOOD one. I enjoyed it, and left almost no red marks on the pages. Sometimes I really like a manuscript but mark all over it anyway. Not this one. It's darn near perfect.
No, I don't have a link to any samples yet. Sorry. It's just that every so often I have to gloat about being the first one to get to read the new stuff.
But when you see this one, you'll forgive me. Probably.
-- Steve Jackson
Funnier than Great Cleave in a room full of mimes, Order of the Stick is now available in print form! On the Origin of PCs gives you the previously unreleased backstory for the intrepid sextet, while Dungeon Crawlin' Fools collects the first 365 days worth of the online strip.
Oh dear, I have a video.
Tom Smith writes: ". . . less than a day after I did the song, Lance Jackson
whipped up a music video of it." No kiddin'.
Here's the MPG file . . . and here's the much smaller Flash version.
Trouble is, this is now stuck in my head, and ramifying. Paranoia commie traitor cucaracha Baba Yaga barracuda beri-beri Halle Berry halitosis Hammurabi Mata Hari Harry Truman. Manitoba mozzarella Monte Cristo minty freshness Frank Sinatra terra cotta amaretto hot potato Peter Lorre porta-potty. California catastrophic Great Kahuna guacamole epiglottis El Dorado LD-50 Dragon Lady . . .
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: Stuffed And Reloaded
Conker. You know him, you love him, you clearly need a plush version. Fans of the classic game from the days of N Sixty-yore will likely prefer the Conker Single Player Plush. For you next-gen types, there's the Conker Talking Plush. Either way, you'd have to be nuts to pass up this plush, petite, previously pixelated pariah.
While I wouldn't trade our new office for a million dollars, seeing a vacant lot in place of the building that I spend a good deal of time for the past 6 years ... it feels weird.
I don't want to say I miss the creaking stairs and odd office shapes, but dang, that building held more than a few memories.
-- Paul Chapman
Warehouse 23 News: Kill A Lot. Of Time, Of Course. Time.
From gods to heretics, juggernauts to ziggurats, even stuff about some guy called "Ripper," the Dungeon Crawl Classics has something for everyone. Even people who play Castles & Crusades instead of the usual d20 fare!
My apologies to those who might be growing wearied of my happy milestone posts, but I take a childlike delight in seeing the numbers get bigger.
All of the Top 20 Sales offerings on the e23 page are now in three figures. And the GURPS Character Assistant has now sold 1,055 copies - it broke 1,000 well ahead of schedule . . . and just keeps rolling.
And before too terribly much longer, we'll have another kind of milestone to announce. We can see, very close now, our 900th file for sale . . . and in the distance, our 1,000th. And that will be sweet indeed.
Happy PDF-day!
-- Steve Jackson
The Gemini dice will only have you seeing double if you have them hurled at your face, but they are very pretty nonetheless.
May 6, 2006: Illuminated Site of the Week: Just What Do You Package It In?
Most furniture is in showrooms. This stuff? Well, it probably ought to be in "vague hints and suggestions" rooms, because you harbor the sneaking suspicion some of these fixtures might just as willingly sit on you. Never fear, your children may safely leave the house. The furnishings can be found locked away in the Uniquities Gallery. -- Suggested by Hagbar
Warehouse 23 News: A Song Of Ice And Fire. You May Have Heard Of It.
Yeah, some guy named George R. R. Martin wrote a couple books or something. Obscure, I know, but they made an RPG for it anyway. Called it the A Game of Thrones Roleplaying Game. We suppose a few of you might even be interested to know there's a deluxe edition of that very game as well.
May 5, 2006: Free Comic Book Day! Callooh! Callay!
This Saturday, May 6th, is Free Comic Book Day. As the name cleverly implies, this is the day that the comic book industry tries to get you hooked . . . either on new series if you're already a comic fan, or the art form in general if you're new to comics. If past events are any indication (this is the fifth year in a row), the freebies offered should represent a wide variety of genres and interests, from kiddie-appropriate fare to more alternative stuff.
More information is on the Free Comic Book Day website, including a store finder to track down a participating retailer in your area. Check it out and see if there's anything to inspire you to come back some of those 364 days a year when comics aren't free.
Warehouse 23 News: Terror From The Year 3070
It's not just about giant robots, you know. It's about politics, human struggle, and giant robots. Read the news from the front lines in the fight against the Word of Blake in Classic BattleTech: Jihad Hot Spots - 3070.
Well, yesterday's Illuminator struck a chord. Or a nerve. Or something. The responses were . . . interesting . . .
Yoko Ono. Leonardo. Allosaurus.
Black & Decker. Ensign Crusher. Flaming Carrot.
Bora Bora marijuana Merry Christmas futomaki Rocky Horror ocarina Donnie Darko alligator Al-Jazeera Opus Dei.
It was pointed out that The Simpsons used the same tune in their Planet of the Apes musical: Dr. Zaius!
And Tom Smith himself weighed in with . . . THIS. Thank'ee, Tom . . .
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: The Good Just Got Gooder
White Wolf Publishing is slapping the words "second edition" on Exalted and is passing the gaming goodness along to you. Alongside the core book and Exalted Storyteller's Companion, they're releasing the Exalted Character Sheet Pad to prove to those photocopies once and for all that we truly don't need 'em.
So Tom Smith, who is a very silly man, wrote a parody of "Rock Me Amadeus."
He called it "Rock Me Amidala," and it's about . . . just what it sounds like. It is also, in my humble opinion, better than the original in all ways.
But he ends that album with a brief whack at "Rock Me Harry Potter." So I got to thinking of what else you could be rocked by. Oh, my poor disordered brain.
Avocado.
Amygdala.
Arowana. (It's a fish. Look it up.)
Anaconda. Anadarko. Ocka Locka. Ostinato.
Appaloosa. Casablanca. Carambola. Coca-Cola.
Spamarama. Yokohama. Llama llama. Cowabunga. Calamari. Katamari. Conestoga.
Hiawatha. Ipso facto. Orinoco. Rosh Hashana. Oingo Boingo. A cappella. Double-dribble. Asmodeus. Avogadro. Lederhosen. Great Cthulhu.
The mind boggles.
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: You've Been Slacking, Citizen
Paranoia XP: Service, Service! and Paranoia: Criminal Histories should be in your gaming library. Your friend the Computer has taken inventory of your collection 47,366.81 times since this morning and it just can't seem to find them. Maybe now would be a good time to place an order? You do enjoy breathing, don't you?
May 2, 2006: Another Pyramid Heard From
In Bosnia, of all places. A BIG one. Read the MSNBC story.
Warehouse 23 News: Warehouse 23 Top Ten
Check out Warehouse 23's top selling items for April at the Warehouse 23 Top 10 page.
You know, when I discussed submissions yesterday, I really should have linked to our submissions information . . . because about half the query letters I get are from people who have NOT looked at those pages, and of the ones I got today, apparently none had. So . . .
Thank you!
-- Steve Jackson
Warehouse 23 News: No Towel Neccessary
Powered by The Omni System, Atlantis: The Second Age is not nearly as wet as you would expect.
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