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Traveller (rpg)

Traveller was one of the first major role-playing games. Set in a far, far future world that seems to draw strongly from Asimov, Dune, Star Trek, Star Wars, and countless other science fiction literature, Traveller provides a game universe where player characters can travel from world to world, engage in battle on the ground or in the sky, and involve themselves in interstellar economics.

Overview

Traveller uses a character generation and advancement mechanism, whereby the player goes through a design process to determine the character's history, career experience, and so forth. Unlike Dungeons & Dragons and its derivatives, in Traveller, character skill and ability advancement is downplayed in favor of positional-advancement - gaining of wealth, gadgets, titles, and power.

The original Traveller gamebooks were distinctive half-size black pamphlets (the so-called "Little Black Books" or "LBBs" for short) produced by Game Designers Workshop (GDW), and many of these half-size pamphlets were printed. Later versions of the game system introduced full sized booklets and new political twists, as the emperor was assassinated and many sectors of the galaxy thrown into strife (in MegaTraveller), or the universe is rediscovered and retamed (in ), or the Third Imperium is begun (in Marc Miller's Traveller), or an alternate history is followed where the emperor is not assassinated (in GURPS Traveller).

The spelling 'Traveller' is what was used on the books printed and distributed in the U.S., even though it is a spelling more commonly used in Commonwealth English than American English.

Editions

  • Classic Traveller (1977-1986) The original game system, set in the Golden Age of the Imperium
  • MegaTraveller (1986-1991) Revision of the game system, set during the Rebellion which shattered the Imperium
  • Traveller: the New Era (1992-1995) Revision to conform to GDW's house system. Introduction of the Virus.
  • T4. Marc Miller's Traveller (1996-1998) Produced after the demise of GDW. Set in the early days of the Third Imperium.
  • GURPS Traveller (1996- ) "Created on a handshake with Steve Jackson of Steve Jackson Games." An alternate timeline with no Rebellion and a much-diminished Virus.
  • Traveller 20 (2002- ) The D20 system version set at the turn of the millennium, and a forthcoming follow-up to the New Era.

Despite the title, GDW's Traveller: 2300 RPG was not part of the same universe, and was later retitled as 2300 AD.

See also: MegaTraveller, , Marc Miller's Traveller

External links

Referenced By

Aslan | CoSims | Computer wargame | FASA | Games/RolePlaying | Journal of the Travellers Aid Society | List of aliens in fiction | List of fictional aliens | List of role-playing games | Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game | Role-Playing Game | Role-Playing Games | Role Playing Game | Role playing games | Roleplaying Game | Science fiction/Space Opera | Space Opera | Star Frontiers | Traveller | Wargame | Wargaming

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Traveller (rpg)".

 

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