Newcomer / Intro What are you up to?

I like the Dune books myself, I think there were five the first around 65, I read them in the 70's. Then I started in on Isaac Asimov and J.R.R. Tolkien and at some point Steven King, no TV growing up in the Sierra's. 🤷‍♂️
Herbert's Dune, Asimov, Tolkien, and King, those are books I've read when I was a teenager, mostly recommended by older people I knew. There was a time like late 90's/early 2000s, when SciFi and fantasy were kind of dispised by the masses or something. Then, a few movies and series revived the flame.
 
I like the Dune books myself, I think there were five the first around 65, I read them in the 70's. Then I started in on Isaac Asimov and J.R.R. Tolkien and at some point Steven King, no TV growing up in the Sierra's. 🤷‍♂️
I started with Andre Norton, Robert A HeinLein, Hugh Walters, Isaac Asimov and the Out of this World anthologies in the 60s and went on from there.
TV was Space Patrol (1962), Fireball XL5 etc, Doctor Who, some Lost in Space and Star Trek.
 
About 3/4 the way to Coleslawnia. There is a podunk surface port here called Polo Harbour. Where I sold the data on the trip up from Gandharvi and it was a nice explorer-y place to presto earn a explorer rank

Boewnst AA-A H87 Nebula
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I started with Andre Norton, Robert A HeinLein, Hugh Walters, Isaac Asimov and the Out of this World anthologies in the 60s and went on from there.
TV was Space Patrol (1962), Fireball XL5 etc, Doctor Who, some Lost in Space and Star Trek.
I recommend giving Stephen Donaldson's "Gap" series a go for science fiction. He also wrote a series more in line with fantasy - Chronicles of Thomas Covenant - which were also great.
 
This is what I've been doing, this one is worth 34 million Cr, I discovered I can stack 2 or 3 missions and get credit for all 3 at the same time plus the bounties gained. They've been interdicting me on my way back to a nearby carrier I've been using for repairs when my hull is almost gone, no cell banks left and shields regenerating, I have to fight interdiction.
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I recommend giving Stephen Donaldson's "Gap" series a go for science fiction. He also wrote a series more in line with fantasy - Chronicles of Thomas Covenant - which were also great.
Ah yes, High Lord... Kevin. Always seemed a bit incongruous amongst all the fantasy names.

Not the most important aspect of the story, I'll admit. On which note I'm not saying they were relentlessly bleak, but there's a game you can play with friends where you open any of the books at a random page and the winner is the first one to find the word "clench".
 
I don't know exactly what kindled my interest in SciFi, but I think it most likely was Star Trek (TOS) in the 80s. Caught a bit of the Next Gen when it aired in the 90s, but due to work, I had not much time to watch TV. Though, a few years later, after the company I woked at went bancrupt, I had more than enough time and caught some reruns of ST:TNG during sleepless nights. The stories that were the most fascinating for me were those that dealt with temporal paradoxons or the multiverse idea. Caught a bit of B5, and I think some Battlestar Galactica, but all this ran at times that were awkward for me to be able to watch. And those night time reruns weren't optimal, either, as I would regularly fall asleep while watching.
In terms of books, there wasn't much happening back then, as I had to cope with little funding for anything, so if I would buy a book, I wouldn't do much experimenting and stick to the stuff I knew I liked. It took up into my mid-teens that I started looking around, thanks to classmates. One thing that was quite popular, back then, was Steven King. Got a handful of his books, over time, but I don't think I read any of them more than twice. Christine made me feel uneasy when I had to go home on foot on a very foggy evening, and Pet Cemetary came back to haunt me last year when our cat was murdered. Aside from these, there is a copy of the "Werewolf of Barker Mills" script, a collection of short stories and "The Stand". But I have to admit that Horror isn't my cup of tea. And SciFi... Well. Although this was a topic that really intrigued me, alongside fantasy, I still had that issue with too much month left at the end of the money and real estate for building an extensive library was equally scarce. Maybe nowadays, where all you need is an internet connection and some storage, I might be able to take a look around.
 
I think one of my all-time favorites was Isaac Asimov's science fiction magazine, it was a bimonthly (I think or quarterly) with a half dozen short stories. I remember reading Arena in it originally published in the mid 50's and there was also a Star Trek episode (the original Star Trak) about it and installments of The Integral Trees, really great stuff.
 
I first read HHGG in the early 80’s when i was still pre-teen - then attempted to play through the text adventure on my Apple ][ a few years later… i read the complete series, as the later books were added to the “increasingly inaccurately named ‘trilogy’”, eventually acquired the old BBC TV series on DVD… terms like “pan galactic gargle blaster” and “infinite improbability drive” are forever part of my vocabulary, just as the number 42 still has special significance to me - though i never did manage to finish that adventure game… :)

*it’s still here courtesy of the BBC btw - think i might just give it a try again… ;]

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I spent some time playing the game online.
It's hard tough.
I whish i had a real boxed version, most of those Infocom adventures had great boxed versions with lots of extras. I had several of them back in the day.
 
@Ryder7 i decided to hand myself in to this prison ship.... so i took the small ship there the cobra mk II. and then

and i fault nah way am i doing that
. i just still your data, to see if ryzer7 onboard : HAHA

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A moment later, unknown Coriolis station:

Bangermsuk: Here's your data.
Employer: Nice, CMDR, here's a million Cr and your g5 mats. We appreciate your discretion.
Bangermsuk: We, pirates, never ask questions, but I must say, I'm curious why would you pay for... that.
Employer: What do you mean?
(Bangermsuk uploads the stolen files, and presses ''play''. One can hear a very badly tuned guitar, and a strong accent from an obviously drunk convict that starts to sing:
''There iiis... A house, in neeew Orleans, they caaal the Rising Suun!''
Employer:...
Bangermsuk:...
Employer: I think I gave you the wrong megaship name. My boss's gonna be ed.
Bangermsuk: Whatever, dude, I have to go, so...
 
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