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In lugnet.pirates, Christopher L. Weeks writes:
> In lugnet.pirates, Frank Filz writes:
>
> > I'm not sure if it's worth chucking just because we only have 6 players.
>
> If we can put something together with 6-10 players, I'm still wildly interested
> in playing. But the nature of the thing changes substantially.
>
> > It does suggest we don't want to pay for Steve Jackson to come (however,
>
> The venue I had in mind was open to us because it would be worth it for the
> shop to host the event if we were bringing Steve Jackson. Without His
> presense, we may not have a location. When I was closely affiliated (grad
> student, full-time staff, committee member, etc.) with the University of
> Missouri, it would have been trivial to obtain playspace. Is anyone out there
> so affiliated and able to grab up space (even if they're currently on another
> continent...hint...hint)?
I am a student and employee at Frostburg St. University in western MD. Would
this be an acceptable location? Frostburg is right off an interstate (68),
but the nearest real airport may be Pittsburgh. Let me know if you guys want
me to look into getting space - I really want this to happen!
-Marc Nelson Jr.
>
> > if he wanted to come on his own, that would be cool). I'd love some more
> > opportunities to run the game, and 6 players would be enough to at least
> > have a game. We would just be changing the focus of the event to either
> > a general gaming event (with perhaps some Brickwars thrown in). I
> > suspect that if we had the game going, that we would get some drop ins
> > from the gaming crowd. Note that Steve Jackson has run the game very
> > successefully at SF and Gaming cons with almost no LEGO fan base. Of
> > course getting 20-30 players from a 500+ member con (not sure about the
> > sizes of the various cons) is a lot easier than getting 10-15 players
> > from a 50-100 person gaming event.
>
> Which is why we need to line it up in advance.
>
> Another thing for us to consider is whether we're willing to speculatively
> gamble that we'll get enough players. Some smallish group of us could fund
> Steve's participation, thus opening the original venue, and be "paid back" out
> of the revenue from the event. If we set it up this way, I suspect that the
> shop (keeper) would participate in the gamble.
>
> > Another factor is that many folks don't start committing until about a
> > month or so before an event like this (how many people were signed up
> > for Brickfest 2000 by the middle of March?).
>
> Maybe so. But unless someone is willing to fund it at a risk, how do things
> happen? It must be planned in the next couple of weeks, or let go. The
> important shop folks are in Las Vegas for the GAMA trade show, I'm on vacation
> to Ohio for half of April, and by then time will just all be gone. Plane fare
> will increase, Steve's calender may fill, more notice to potential players
> means better ability to commit, etc.
>
> > Of course another factor is that we are awfully close in time frame to
> > Brickfest. Perhaps it would work better to do it in the fall (and to
> > some extent, for Lindsay's new found friends on the other side of the
> > pond, I would be inclined to reccomend they come to Brickfest over
> > Piratefest, I think if I was buying a ticket to Europe I would want to
> > be going to a fairly general type event, though of course a very
> > specific type event would also be good).
>
> I think it depends on their goals. It will be hard to get 30 hours of
> piratefesting in at Brickfest because there will be so much other stuff to do.
> I know a couple who fly to London for dinner once a year. My mind boggles at
> the conspicuity of the consumption, but whatever. My point is that for some,
> flying to the NYC area isn't that big a deal. Another option would be to push
> it back even closer to Brickfest so that visitors could make a longer vacation
> of it. I'm not sure how that works for the rest of us, but it might actually
> be better. (eg Frank, you could do Piratefest, head up to Boston for a few
> days, and back down to DC for Brickfest.)
>
> Oh, and the carpet is that short dense commercial stuff in a neutral color...it
> isn't blue.
>
> For a less formal thing, we could meet at my house and sail on the lawn!
> Actually, that's a dumb idea for a pirate game. But our property (1.7 rocky
> wooded acres) has great terrain for land-based brickwars type events. Hmmm...
>
> Chris
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