Difference between revisions of "Nexus Issue 2 (Magazine)"
m |
m |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
{{BannerSFU}} | {{BannerSFU}} | ||
− | ''He who travels changes only his skies, not his soul. —Horace'' | + | '''''He who travels changes only his skies, not his soul.''<br/>—Horace''''' |
Ever since the legendary Icarus took to the skies on his wax and feather wings, Man has desired to fly. And for nearly as long, he has wanted to expand that flight to the planets and the stars beyond. With that in mind, it is not surprising that the highly popular ''Starfire'' was featured in this issue. | Ever since the legendary Icarus took to the skies on his wax and feather wings, Man has desired to fly. And for nearly as long, he has wanted to expand that flight to the planets and the stars beyond. With that in mind, it is not surprising that the highly popular ''Starfire'' was featured in this issue. |
Revision as of 09:02, 18 March 2023
Published by | Task Force Games |
Released | June-July 1982 |
Advertising |
He who travels changes only his skies, not his soul.
—Horace
Ever since the legendary Icarus took to the skies on his wax and feather wings, Man has desired to fly. And for nearly as long, he has wanted to expand that flight to the planets and the stars beyond. With that in mind, it is not surprising that the highly popular Starfire was featured in this issue.
Doubtless, Horace’s quotation will still apply when Man changes not merely his skies but his planets. It seems that a part of the human soul is rooted in conflict; and so, when Man goes to the stars, warfare seems destined to follow. Thus, Starfire (and the Star Fleet Universe) deals with warfare.
Along with the focus on Starfire, there was a section on Star Fleet Battles (including a new scenario and information on Klingon battlecruisers) as well as reviews of various games and information on Armor at Kursk and Warsaw Pact.
Credits
Publisher: Allen D. Eldridge
Editor: Mike Joslyn
Associate Editor: R. Vance Buck
Associate Editor/Star Fleet Universe: Stephen V. Cole
Contributing Editors: Adam Mishcon, Steve Wilcox
Advertising Manager: Rick Buck
Circulation Manager: Lucretia Perritt
Art in This Issue: Cover, page 18, page 23 — Bill Keith Jr.;
Page 37 — Bill Haggart
Star Fleet Universe
- The Next Frontier
- Star Fleet Universe Questions and Answers
- The Stasis Box: A New Scenario — Andrew Murgas and Arthur Krull
- The Academy: A Unique Look at Star Fleet Battles — Stephen V. Cole
- Klingon Battlecruisers
501.0 The Time Warp
by Andrew R. Murgas and Arthur Krull
In Y152, the Federation Destroyer Xerxes was on patrol along the Kzinti border. Surveying an asteroid field in disputed territory for mineral deposits, the Xerxes detected those peculiar sensor readings which indicate the presence of a stasis box. These boxes hold their contents in "time freeze" until they are opened. The box located by the sensors of the Xerxes could have been placed a month before by an Orion Pirate, or centuries earlier by a long-forgotten race. Its contents could be anything from a pirate's trove to the ultimate weapon. Whatever it was, it was worth bringing home. Upon reaching the vicinity of the box, however, the Xerxes encounted the Kzinti Light Cruiser Mystic, which was looking for the same box.