Official development blog for the PARANOIA roleplaying game. No description is available at your security clearance. The Computer is your friend.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

More Inevitable news 

This past February we mentioned the forthcoming satirical-dystopia boardgame Inevitable, by Jeremy P. Bushnell and Jonathan A. Leistiko -- "people who think Orwell's 1984 is a comedy and the Necronomicon is a romance."

In May Inevitable got some big-time attention -- even more high-profile than this blog, if you can conceive such an idea -- from Gawker Media's increasingly interesting science-fiction fansite io9. Ed Grabianowski writes "Inevitable, the Boardgame of Insane Supercomputers, Zombies, and Sociopolitical Satire." Both designers are on hand in the comment thread to answer questions; Leistiko writes, "My elevator pitch: It plays like a cross between Talisman, PARANOIA, and Illuminati. Yet it's still uniquely its own thing."

Inevitable has been in the works quite a while but now at last seems imminent. A Kickstarter campaign raised over $9,000, triple its original goal. Check the official Inevitable game site for updates.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Kafka's lost works trapped in bureaucratic nightmare 

Lost Kafka writings resurface, trapped in trial (Aron Heller, Associated Press):
JERUSALEM — It seems almost Kafkaesque: Ten safety deposit boxes of never-published writings by Franz Kafka, their exact contents unknown, are trapped in courts and bureaucracy, much like one of the nightmarish visions created by the author himself.

The papers, retrieved from bank vaults where they have sat untouched and unread for decades, could shed new light on one of literature's darkest figures.

In the past week, the pages have been pulled from safety deposit boxes in Tel Aviv and Zurich, Switzerland, on the order of an Israeli court over the objections of two elderly women who claim to have inherited them from their mother.

"Kafka could easily have written a story like this, where you try to do something and it all goes wrong and everything remains unresolved," said Sara Loeb, a Tel Aviv-based author of two books about the writer. "It's really a case of life imitating art."

Literary experts in both cities are sifting through the boxes, and the contents are expected to be of priceless literary and monetary value. What exactly is there remains unknown, but the papers include handwritten manuscripts, letters and various literary works by the famed Jewish writer, said Meir Heller, an attorney for the Israeli National Library, which also claims ownership of the trove.

Loeb says the cache could include endings to some of Kafka's major works, many of which remained unfinished in his lifetime. [...] But the newly emerged writings won't see the light of day until the Israeli court unravels the tangled question of the collection's rightful owner.

Thursday, July 08, 2010

Paranoid Munchausen 

An intriguing topic on the leading PARANOIA fan site, Paranoia-Live.net, discusses adapting James Wallis's lovely tall-tale-telling RPG The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen to an Alpha Complex debriefing.

(Mongoose Publishing sells Munchausen as part of its Flaming Cobra line. Here's Munchausen on Boardgamegeek. I wrote about Munchausen for Green Ronin's 2007 essay collection Hobby Games: The 100 Best, edited by James Lowder.)


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