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Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Mon, 17 Apr 2000 22:54:57 GMT
Viewed: 
2380 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
In lugnet.castle, Paul Davidson writes:
I was thinking about the effort a large scale castle minifig war would take,
and decided that having a Lego version of Warcraft (that wonderful Blizzard
game, go Canada!) would rock.

Blizzard moved from Irvine, California?
WHAT!!!!!!!  It was in Irvine????
I live there! When was it there?


Imagine having your own army of dozens or hundreds of little Lego soldiers
scurrying around your screen, preparing to attack your buddies who are
playing against you over the Internet?  Send some guys to go scout the
territory, station some more sentries around your castles, build a few more
catapults, add another blacksmith shop to one of your castles, enlarge your
stables, move your king to a safer location, etc. etc.

The economics of the game could be based on harvesting timber (for weapons
and buildings) and metals (for more exotic weapons and buildings).

You could have maybe three types of forces (the equivalents of species in
Warcraft and Starcraft) -- Crusaders, Forestmen, and Fright Knights, all
with different types of units and buildings.  The Crusaders would be strong
and good fighters, the forestmen would be good at stealth and marksmanship,
the Fright Knights good at magic and dragon taming, etc.

Anyone other ideas?


I like the idea, but better to pitch it to whomever has the Lego software
rights than to Blizzard.  I imagine the actual depiction of Lego violence • would
freak Lego - no matter how appropriate to the subject matter it may be - so I
wouldn't hold my breath.

Bruce
Bruce

Alex
Alex


Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Mon, 17 Apr 2000 23:52:33 GMT
Viewed: 
2348 times
  
Maybe they're there now.  They were in Canada before (where they started).

--


Paul Davidson


Alex <legowiz@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:Ft6nnL.89v@lugnet.com...
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
In lugnet.castle, Paul Davidson writes:
I was thinking about the effort a large scale castle minifig war would • take,
and decided that having a Lego version of Warcraft (that wonderful • Blizzard
game, go Canada!) would rock.

Blizzard moved from Irvine, California?
WHAT!!!!!!!  It was in Irvine????
I live there! When was it there?


Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Tue, 18 Apr 2000 04:40:51 GMT
Viewed: 
2432 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Paul Davidson writes:
Maybe they're there now.  They were in Canada before (where they started).


Blizzard (originally Silicon and Synapse, then Brainstorm, now Blizzard) was
founded by Alan Adham (Allen?  I forget).  Much of his early contract work was
for the company he lived near, Interplay Productions.  Interplay has been in
Orange County (Southern California) for its entire existence - the latest city
being Irvine for almost a decade.  Blizzard has never been in Canada to my
knowledge.

Bruce


Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Tue, 18 Apr 2000 04:44:51 GMT
Viewed: 
2242 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Alex Roode writes:
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
In lugnet.castle, Paul Davidson writes:
I was thinking about the effort a large scale castle minifig war would take,
and decided that having a Lego version of Warcraft (that wonderful Blizzard
game, go Canada!) would rock.

Blizzard moved from Irvine, California?
WHAT!!!!!!!  It was in Irvine????
I live there! When was it there?


Always.  Still is (my question was rhetorical).

Bruce


Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Tue, 18 Apr 2000 17:53:30 GMT
Viewed: 
2519 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
Blizzard (originally Silicon and Synapse, then Brainstorm, now Blizzard) was
founded by Alan Adham (Allen?  I forget).  Much of his early contract work was
for the company he lived near, Interplay Productions.  Interplay has been in
Orange County (Southern California) for its entire existence - the latest city
being Irvine for almost a decade.  Blizzard has never been in Canada to my
knowledge.

Didn't know they were ever called Brainstorm.  Silicon & Synapse (after
creating great games like The Lost Vikings and Rock & Roll Racing) had decided
to change their name, mostly because no-one could pronounce synapse.  They
decided to change their name to a common word known to most gamers that
everyone (so they thought) could pronounce: Chaos (maybe this was just after
Brainstorm?).  They got tired of getting phone calls for "Chows" and "Kows" and
decided to change the name again.  This time, it would be another word every
gamer should be able to pronounce: Ogre.  After their first phone call referred
to them as "Ahg-gray" they knew they needed another name.  It was winter, and
there was a headline on the newspaper that day saying something like "Blizzard
Kills 23" referring to a terrible snowstorm.  They clipped out the headline,
stuck on the front office window, and they were Blizzard from then on.

The owners of Blizzard (and most of the employees) are big fans of the
miniatures game, Warhammer.  As you can probably tell, they were hugely
influenced by it in the creation of Warcraft.

Tony


Subject: 
Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Tue, 18 Apr 2000 18:29:16 GMT
Viewed: 
2601 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Tony A. Rowe writes:
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
Blizzard (originally Silicon and Synapse, then Brainstorm, now Blizzard) was
founded by Alan Adham (Allen?  I forget).  Much of his early contract work • was
for the company he lived near, Interplay Productions.  Interplay has been in
Orange County (Southern California) for its entire existence - the latest • city
being Irvine for almost a decade.  Blizzard has never been in Canada to my
knowledge.

Didn't know they were ever called Brainstorm.  Silicon & Synapse (after
creating great games like The Lost Vikings and Rock & Roll Racing) had decided
to change their name, mostly because no-one could pronounce synapse.  They
decided to change their name to a common word known to most gamers that
everyone (so they thought) could pronounce: Chaos (maybe this was just after
Brainstorm?).  They got tired of getting phone calls for "Chows" and "Kows" • and
decided to change the name again.  This time, it would be another word every
gamer should be able to pronounce: Ogre.  After their first phone call • referred
to them as "Ahg-gray" they knew they needed another name.  It was winter, and
there was a headline on the newspaper that day saying something like "Blizzard
Kills 23" referring to a terrible snowstorm.  They clipped out the headline,
stuck on the front office window, and they were Blizzard from then on.

The owners of Blizzard (and most of the employees) are big fans of the
miniatures game, Warhammer.  As you can probably tell, they were hugely
influenced by it in the creation of Warcraft.

Tony

Chaos.  Yes, I seem to remember that one, too.  People don't understand how to
pronounce the greek CH sound in this country sometimes.

The guy from company X is coming today, someone would say, and it would be
Allen Adham.  "But wasn't your company named...?"  And he would have to
patiently explain to me that well, that name had a problem and it was now
company Y.  More than once, I assure you.  :-)

Never saw any of 'em with Warhammer, but Allen bought a lot of Magic cards
from me a few years back.

Bruce


Subject: 
RE: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Date: 
Tue, 18 Apr 2000 20:28:59 GMT
Viewed: 
2648 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
In lugnet.castle, Tony A. Rowe writes:
The owners of Blizzard (and most of the employees) are big fans of the
miniatures game, Warhammer.  As you can probably tell, they were hugely
influenced by it in the creation of Warcraft.

Never saw any of 'em with Warhammer, but Allen bought a lot of Magic cards
from me a few years back.

After conferring with a couple of friends who worked at Blizzard, I need to
correct what I said.  Most of the employees were fans of the game Warhammer,
and many also were really into the game Necromunda.  The artists who worked on
Warcraft were heavily influenced by Warhammer (which is where the influence on
Warcraft bled in).  Allen was not necessarily a big player.

Also, Blizzard has never been out of Irvine.  They did buy another studio (who
was working on the proto-Diablo at the time) in Northern California (I think)
and named that Blizzard North.

Tony


Subject: 
Getting off-topic (was Re: Lego Warcraft would be soooo cool...)
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle, lugnet.gaming, lugnet.dear-lego
Followup-To: 
lugnet.off-topic.fun
Date: 
Wed, 19 Apr 2000 17:32:31 GMT
Reply-To: 
mattdm@(stopspam)mattdm.org
Highlighted: 
(details)
Viewed: 
3754 times
  
Hey guys -- time to maybe move this discussion?

--
Matthew Miller                      --->                  mattdm@mattdm.org
Quotes 'R' Us                     --->               http://quotes-r-us.org/
Boston University Linux             --->                http://linux.bu.edu/


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