Avatar of Foster

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15 days ago
Current A roleplay not for the timid: "The quest to restore the abandoned Waffle House"
4 likes
1 mo ago
I do agree with Yandere's sentiment that words not wording workingly do be a problem this time of year.
1 mo ago
Scratch that, place your bets on polymarket.
2 mos ago
Looks like I'll be working on memorial day weekend. And no, this does not mean place any bets on polymarket.
3 mos ago
due to a typo on my part I was nearly convinced I owed the IRS nearly $3000 in excess taxes this year.
5 likes

Bio

-There will be delays in replies. Largely due to working overtime, voluntary obligations; other RPs and online-things may compete for my attention.

'Bout me:
Started RPing (badly) back in '05, mostly doing nation-RPs with an emphasis on technology and strategy, later edging out to character-espionage and military-tactics before doing "less serious" character roleplays that were outside of the 2005-2008 continuity.

That's when I went to Dead-Frontier, and found the RP community there, joined a clan, did some pretty good roleplays and pretty much loosened-up my online-personality. When the clan-leader decided to move her RPs here, most of the clan followed.

Took a course in technical-writing back in '08, so now I may sometimes use the semicolon correctly.

In 2010 I dusted off the old nation-RP continuity I had, doing a few hetelia-esque RP-shenanigans there..

RP-Habbits: I tend to geek-out on little technical-details, and sometimes infer how those details would impact the background of the roleplay. Great for world-building, not so great when you had a perfectly good plotline and I just MacGyver it off the rails (though I usually er to the side of amusement, sometimes it creates very grim side-stories).

Most Recent Posts

Well, see that rail-line?

Follow that Sout-west (past the int'l airport) and you'll come near Columbia Airport, radio-callsign 4G8.

I'm about 28 km away.

Originally, I thought you were closer to the Cleveland Zoo.

Reasons for being so far out there:
1. He's coming from Wisconsin, so from the west of a generally northern persuasion.
2. As season 1 demonstrated, horse in city = bad
3. This'd make a decent music video... Just dub it over this (let it play 5 sec before music)
@RumikoOhara
Even though your character is very well east of mine, mind if our characters meet-up at some point before running into the main-group?

Since both our chars are pretty much skirting around Cleveland, anyways.

Or are you so far into the city that I may as well trot right up that rail up to the docks?
@FosterYour vidieo through true relys on angles. At the vantage point I have it would bounce and hit the ceeling

More likely it would skip like a stone across a pond, even if fired from a fairly high angle. This is largely due to the softness of the spinning projectile. Flattens-out like a face getting punched in slow-motion then makes like a banana and leaves the crater, twirling all the way.

Due to a ton of variables (including the fact that some shooters aren't nearly as good as they'd like [1 target, 1 shot, no feedback; continue trend until someone invests in a shooting-range in an infected-zone]), this is why "warning-shots" can either unintentionally harm people, or be misinterpreted as just a lucky poor shot from a bad cartridge.
Yes, I'm aware that when trying to be stealthy, you walk along the woodline of the tracks, and not upon the tracks themselves.
-Bayonet-fighting at night, also sucks. Since you aren't 100% sure what you're stabbing.
-Using a machine-gun as a club also sucks, btw. For all involved.

-He had about 6 weeks of training before going overseas.
Republic Firearms,

As William Taggart finally settled on a good infra-red (night vision) scope, he took the scope and rifle inside, pulled out a laser-boresight unit, and proceeded to replace his old Bushnell-scope. When just as suddenly he heard a noise overhead... a plane, the horse gave a few short noises, a bit frustrated that something was irritating its hasty sleep amidst a pile of disused T-shirts and other store-merchandise.

Peeking from a window with a pair of binoculars, he laboriously scanned the sky until he found the source of noise, a drone of some sort.

He kept note of it, as he continued to work unnoticed by his new mechanical visitor; soon, it would go away. Hopefully it would not bring a horde upon them.

With this, he resolved that he must check-out the airfield, tonight; making himself ready to go out there on foot.

He would leave his greatcoat behind, and took only his Mosin (incl. bayonet), helmet, spotting-scope (no tripod), and utility belt of ammunition. He re-dressed the T-shirts he repurposed into socks and placed the package into his shoes before wrapping similarly improvised puttees around his ankles to keep his legs dry and free of cuts or crawler-bites.

The 300 yard trek, much like the previous one, felt very claustrophobic in the dark; going more by sense of sound and touch than by his limited vision, much preferring not to rely on the newly-acquired technology unless he had to, as the scope was mounted to a rather ungainly full-length Mosin 91/30.

Finally he came to a pond, and knew the strip lay due-south of him as he checked the northern-sky for Polaris and the little-dipper. With his bearings secured, he bent low and began to stalk the airfield like it were a wild animal, ready to flee...

After about 200 paces, the trees thinned into scrubbery, the tarmac was in view, and the scrub continued for about 100 more paces along his right. Here, he also encountered a primitive fence; a new addition with dead walkers piled upon its entire length. A defense-perimeter.

Drawing his spotting-scope, he tried desperately to see what was happening be the control-tower. But to no avail... then he took out his rifle, and set it to passive... and the scope lit-up... indicating a plethora of IR-searchlights... Tracing them back, he could also see surveillance-radars and the fumes of a well-muffled generator. He turned off the scope and laid still for a bit, occasionally peering through the spotting-scope until he could see the doorway of an RV parked in the field open to briefly reveal its illuminated contents. A woman was being dragged out of it, he could not tell what was happening, but eventually he heard a shot... and then she went limp.

Now he knew he had to leave. These people had power, of almost every definition, and all of it was getting to their heads. If the drone was theirs, then they knew of the gun-store. If they had raided it already, they knew it had tools and plenty of easily finished firearms; if they had not already looted the place, they were going to ransack it for all its worth.

Carefuly, but with little time to lose, he backed into the treeline on his stomach until he felt comfortably far enough away to safely stand without betraying his presence. He then made back for the rails at a dead-sprint... but was suddenly confronted by a walker that had been stalking him. With little time to think, he clubbed it in the jawline and floored it to the mud with a pile-drive of the rifle-butt before turning his gun over and plunging the fifteen-inch bayonet through its rotten skull and giving it a good swirl to make mush of the insides before pulling-out and moving-on.

He reached the relative safety of the gunshop pretty easily afterwards, and gathered anything useful-looking into the carriage as his newfound equine companion whinnied as-though questioning what was the matter with him. William responded by beckoning the horse to stand and be hitched to the trailer. All the while trying his best not to show fear or panic.

They were just going-out for a midnight-stroll.

@ everyone, feel free to tell me to run into some random problems along the way.
Nah, I'm going to run into militants (in short: the guys who stripped the gun-store of AKs and AR-15s) using said UAV to spot hapless travelers and perimeter-security around their fortified-airfield.

Which I'm going to have to cross.

With a horse.

At night.

Hence why I wanted to know what the runoff on the north side of the field looked like, in case there's a sniper in the control-tower.
@FosterIn response to your queston. Horse feed isnt needed to feed horses. As you may know horses are herbevors, give them some oats or grass and they will be fine. If the UAV isnt working and doesnt give off to much sound then it shold be fine. But given that we are at a walking dead universe it will either not be running or if it is, it will run on secondry or thrid back up genoragtors and the make TONS of noise. If that is true then you have yourself a zombie rave and maybe some survivors to keep the UAV running. Anymore questions please PM me.


-I was thinking one of the earlier converted gasoline model-plane UAVs.
I remember first seeing gimbal-mounts (with tiny functional instrument-displays aboard the plane) being developed for consumers in Canada back in '06-'07.

Da, found it
'Pls excuse the music selection, is from '06, and Canada. Needless to say they had fun with it until the fun-police banned it.

IIRC, that particular model had a range of 30 km. So naturally I had my hopes up that in America we could buy surplus Predator-drones by now.
-Compared to what they were working on making mainstream back then, the toys that are getting banned now are shit they could've cobbled together with duct-tape.

Thing can glide, though.
BTW, I'll be using this video in addition to Google for info regarding airfield 4G8, Columbia.

Note the railroad-cut.

Same field, other direction

Also, ran across Morton's Feed & Garden Center (old grainery by the railside, lots of garage-bays).
-Not sure if horse-feed will keep for an entire year, but worth a shot.
@Error would like confirmation on whether or not such a place would be a good place to move a horse to.

Also @themadhatter420 if your family has a farm with horses nearby, would it be likely you know of said feed-mill?

*Apologizes a bit for being the foot-dragging outlier of the group.
I usually take the lazy approaches.

Maps: Google Earth
Pros: Fully interactive, can readily designate precise locations, zoom function, street-view, can link to websites of local businesses and buildings to figure out what that place is about well enough to reasonably contact the owners and get permission.

Cons: Bandwidth-hog, it's google, only does RL locations, can get lost (yes, on a map, using a map), and some people don't like the idea of you playing 'pretend' using their property as a basis for anything.
(upside is, at least you aren't LARPing on their property)

Existing images:
Pros: readily available, minimal art skill required, time-saver for common objects in need of extreme detail
-May also work for strict fandoms

Con: Can spend a lot of time cruising for the "perfect" image, generally not interactive.
-When working with strict fandoms, this may happen.

Composite of existing images:
Pros: allows players to use readily available images to mix and match the appearance of things using that thing called imagination, allows for customization.
Con: Time spent looking (although not as bad) and requires imagination, not interactive.

User Modified/annotated images: Includes template-drawings/images.
Pros: allows you to have fun with google-maps and make your own maps with minimal effort
Cons: Not very interactive (interactive being, to tell the editor to re-mod and clarify a subject, which is time-consuming)

Freehand drawings:
Pro: You get it exactly how you want it, only have yourself to blame if it isn't right.
Con: HUGE learning curve.
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