captainquirk
Mongoose
Can anyone tell me if a book of ordinary Earth-type animals statted for Traveller exists anywhere?
Thanks!
Thanks!
captainquirk said:Can anyone tell me if a book of ordinary Earth-type animals statted for Traveller exists anywhere?
Thanks!
Jon Brazen Enterprises has a collection of creatures for Traveller up at DriveThruRPG. Priced well too.far-trader said:captainquirk said:Can anyone tell me if a book of ordinary Earth-type animals statted for Traveller exists anywhere?
Thanks!
As in named for Terran critters? I vaguely recall one somewhere at some time. Possibly just a fan offering on the net. But that is the best I can remember which isn't much help.
Wasn't there a third party Animal Encounters pdf supplement for MgT? Again the memory is vague.
Mongoose Nick said:Hmm, goes off to look at S&P schedule to see if he an fit something along these lines in the magazine...
Mongoose Nick said:Hmm, goes off to look at S&P schedule to see if he an fit something along these lines in the magazine...
FreeTrav said:It occurs to me that if nobody has done these, someone who wants them might find that it encourages others if they were to pick one or two and do them, perhaps for Signs and Portents or Freelance Traveller, or even just to share on the forums...
I don't think so, unless you have ubiquitous space transport (tm).Pest animals like Rats, Mice and Cockroachs are also going to be common unfortunately.
If we have to use rockets and carefully balanced cargoes to get to the stars, then no unwanted guests will be going with them. They'll be cleaned out to save weight.
locarno24 said:In the Third Imperium, ISO containers loaded with kilotons of goods (including industrial and agricultural products) flow off of and onto worlds every day, and at 275 KCr for an air/raft, access to orbit is sufficiently cheap that you're looking at people closer to White Van Man than NASA responsible for shipping it.
In that situation I think having rats, cockroaches and their alien analogues distributed throughout the stars is probably not as hard as we'd like to think.