spedoinkle has written
oh leaf, that's what those crazy germans were trying to say by blatt. it translates to sheet on babelfish
You do know that there's an English version of the game, don't you?
Gast has written
ok, some other questions. what the heck do you do with a starfish and what the heck do you do with the pearls you get?
In the campaign: nothing in particular.
But the script system of Stranded II is flexible, so you could for example make a quest in which the native chief wants to make a pearl necklace for his wife and asks you to get some pearls.
Or the native cannibals want to cook the hemp grandfather and you can make a deal with them, that if you get enough starfishes to make a yummy starfish soup as replacement, they set him free (and anon, you benefit from that in some way).
Brandon has written
Wow, I didn't know that there are computers in army...
Can soldiers play computer games there?
(Of course not! I think)
1. Of course. The armies of the world are not stuck in the pre-computing era.
2. Depends. I heard about a tank commander of a German Army Leopard 2 that spent most time of Kosovo War playing first person shooters on his laptop while the rest of his crew drove and fired. It seems like real war was not thrilling enough for him
Or in the US Army, they use PC Games to train their soldiers. Since that doesn't help you to learn how to aim out in the field, this part of training is mainly about infantry tactics. edited 1×, last 12.01.08 11:13:58 am