Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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I don't know what you're talking about. My CS is finished.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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Very interesting twist on the ubiquitous 'zombie apocalypse' trope that seems to have infected the current premise of roleplays. Most roleplays that use zombie apocalyptic settings usually have it set during modern times. It's typically extremely hard for a person to justify a zombie apocalypse happening in the modern era and causing the societal collaspe of humanity without resorting to contrived justifications. Here, it's justified because it takes place in the 1940's during the Great Depression of all eras which creates a realistic setting where a zombie outbreak could reasonably occur. This removes any need for suspension for disbelief as zombies are a outside context problem.

However, I have a few questions. I assume that most of these questions will be explored in the RP.

1. You said that these zombies will 'ignore any wounds that are not immediately fatal such as decapitation or destruction of the brain.' Is this a typo or is this actually an element of the RP?

2. Are these zombies able to disobey the laws of thermodynamics and continue to walk for weeks on end without a source of food or will they naturally perish after some time?

3. I'm also assuming judging by the description of stags being affected by the virus, I'm assuming that there will be animal zombies in this RP as well?

4. Is this outbreak local in Florida only or across the entire USA? (This is probably a spoiler question but I'll just ask out of curiosity.)

I'm a history student but I'm a little rusty on the historical setting of the USA during the 1930s and 1940s. After the Prohibition Era is where my memory goes south. I'll try to brush up on it a bit before I consider joining this RP.

Anyway, very good concept you got going on here and the trait system is a nice touch. Hope this roleplay can last for a long time.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by spicykvnt
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Genni
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With the number of American Veterans or sons of WWI veterens around we really need there to be a reason for why so many would be in the same place at the same time. As I said before, only just over 1% of American troops who went to Europe during WWI were actually killed, with a further >3% injured.

The best reason I can think of to explain this concentration of veterans would be that they deliberately sought each other out due to their similar circumstances, something which did happen in the real world during the Great Depression where service veterans and their family built entire shanty towns together to help support one another.

The largest concentration of American casualties during WWI was the Battle of the Argonne Forest in late 1918, involving 1.2 million American soldiers, and leading to 26,277 killed and 95,786 wounded. This included elements of both the 1st US Army, which had been formed in August 1918, and the 2nd US Army, who had been brought together in October 1918 specifically for the purpose of pushing the American lines forward. Both ended up in a 'meat grinder' conflict with the German front lines, which lasted until the Armistice of 11 November 1918, 47 days later.

The 1st were mainly comprised of newly recruited soldiers who had been sent to Europe 'green', but who'd had about nine months of experience in the trenches before the push. The 2nd were pulled in from veterans of the Spanishโ€“American War under Lieutenant General Bullard, who were more used to the stand up fighting seen in that conflict to the trench running of WWI. Characters in their early to mid-thirties would've most likely been in the 1st Army, while any forty-fifty or older would've likely been from the 2nd.



I'm a history student but I'm a little rusty on the historical setting of the USA during the 1930s and 1940s. After the Prohibition Era is where my memory goes south. I'll try to brush up on it a bit before I consider joining this RP.

The RP is set literally right after the Prohibition era, with the action starting in 1934 and Prohibition ending in December 1933, and given the rural setting very little would've changed culturally in the few months since the law passed so I think you'll be good.
EDIT: An important note to consider is that although the Federal government repealled Prohibition in December 1933, Florida still had a constitutional ban on liquor until November 1934, which makes Henry Tackettt's basement full of booze illegal, and explains his reluctance to let menfolk into the main house.

Having said that, this article has some useful clip notes on the state of the nation to get a general feel for wider cultural points which would've affected the characters at the time. Apart from Prohibition being repealled the New Deal programme has just started affecting the American population as well, leading to an economic boom for people such as Farmer Tackett, who'd have started receiving economic support from the government a couple of months before the RP begins.

This could also explain the sudden influx of new characters, since many unemployed people and their families were moving around the country at this time, finding work in places where it hadn't been available until a short while earlier thanks to the New Deal.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Genni
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@The Bork Lazer A Negro who likes horses, and a racist farmer's daughter who also likes horses. MJ's gonna make Stumps's life truly miserable.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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@The Bork Lazer A Negro who likes horses, and a racist farmer's daughter who also likes horses. MJ's gonna make Stumps's life truly miserable.


I'm a glutton for punishment.
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I'm a glutton for punishment.

MJ: "Did you just talk back to me, boy?" ~reaches for her riding crop~
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Stitches
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I wonder - is it possible to play a character who is not incredibly racist in this time period? I'm thinking more about my singer/flapper girl; you'd think that the dive bars and gentlemen's clubs of the time would hire African American performers, coupled with the fact the whole purpose of a flapper was to turn social norms on their head, would allow a character that at least doesn't treat people of colour with open hostility? I'm thinking my Alice will view them as objects of curiosity as well as trying her damnedest to treat them 'normally', even though her upbringing makes it difficult.

EDIT: Actually, whilst I'm here - I'm looking the traits list. Are they are hard and fast rule? I put my girl down as 'Foreign' because she has 'strange customs' (see above) that, to a conservative country hick in a farm, would probably build up prejudice.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by SimplyJohn
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Spreading the word of our Lord, while womanising and boozing along the way.

Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Genni
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@SimplyJohn How weak is McNulty? For some reason Iโ€™m picturing him with a walking cane which he barely needs to use.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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I wonder - is it possible to play a character who is not incredibly racist in this time period? I'm thinking more about my singer/flapper girl; you'd think that the dive bars and gentlemen's clubs of the time would hire African American performers, coupled with the fact the whole purpose of a flapper was to turn social norms on their head, would allow a character that at least doesn't treat people of colour with open hostility? I'm thinking my Alice will view them as objects of curiosity as well as trying her damnedest to treat them 'normally', even though her upbringing makes it difficult.

EDIT: Actually, whilst I'm here - I'm looking the traits list. Are they are hard and fast rule? I put my girl down as 'Foreign' because she has 'strange customs' (see above) that, to a conservative country hick in a farm, would probably build up prejudice.

I suppose that entirely depends on your character and how you justify their opinions on race and class. My character, Abigail, is not particularly bigoted as for reasons explained in her personality but she is still very much from a bigoted family in that of her father and elder sister.

I think Deadbeat intended for these traits to be loose guides (you don't have to be particularly religious to want your character to be less than privy to kill people despite that trait referencing the church), though I think interpreting them too radically away from their design would be unwise. I think Deadbeat might be too concerned that certain traits are being selected too commonly like clean cut.

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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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I wonder - is it possible to play a character who is not incredibly racist in this time period? I'm thinking more about my singer/flapper girl; you'd think that the dive bars and gentlemen's clubs of the time would hire African American performers, coupled with the fact the whole purpose of a flapper was to turn social norms on their head, would allow a character that at least doesn't treat people of colour with open hostility? I'm thinking my Alice will view them as objects of curiosity as well as trying her damnedest to treat them 'normally', even though her upbringing makes it difficult.


There have been examples of AFrican-American singers and flappers in the 1940s. However, most of those singers performed in Europe. It would be especially hard to see the justification for an African-American singer in America, especially in the South where they're more harshly treated.

However, as long as the justification for your character seems novel, it would be completely fine.

EDIT - Yes, it is possible to make a character that's not racist.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mickilennial
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There have been examples of AFrican-American singers and flappers in the 1940s. However, most of those singers performed in Europe. It would be especially hard to see the justification for an African-American singer in America, especially in the South where they're more harshly treated.

However, as long as the justification for your character seems novel, it would be completely fine.

I do not believe that was their question. They were wondering if their [white] flapper would be racist and so forth.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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<Snipped quote by The Bork Lazer>
I do not believe that was their question. They were wondering if their [white] flapper would be racist and so forth.


Ah shit, sorry for misreading then, @Stitches
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Genni
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The real problem would be the "Southern Attitude", since African-Americans were far more readily accepted in the northern states than in the Deep South. This was part of the reason for the mass exodus of coloured free men moving north during this period of history.

As far as African-American musical acts, a lot of them were around from 1890 onwards, with celebrities like Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton, and James P. Johnson actively performing and touring around the US as early as 1904, with a large increase of acts during the 1910s. By the time we get to the 1930s African-American music had been established as a valid artform, in the northern states at least.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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Alright, time for trivial calculations.

Food Required to feed the Tackett Farm and all of its employees
Henry Tackett approximately has about 50 or so workers under his employment along with himself and his two daughters and his wife. The minimum amount of people on the farm is about 54 people while the maximum amount from that statement is about 63 people.

The amount of food required to feed all of these people is hard to calculate due to the relatively normal distribution of the age of workers along with the chaotic variables of the Tackett family's diets. From a research paper detailing nutrition in the U.S.A from 1900 to 1974, the average American ate around 3260 calories of food per day during this period. This meant around 429 grams of carbohydrates, 51 grams of animal protein, 39 grams of vegetable protein and 134 grams of pure unadulterated fat per day. Assuming that Tackett is a business man who isn't on the level of Mr Burns when it comes to worker safety, we can do a relatively simple arithmetic solution.

Minimum calculation - 176040 calories per day.

Maximum calculation - 205380 calories per day.

(Revision coming soon...)
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Little Bill
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@The Bork Lazer Farmer Tackett provides them paltry breakfasts and dinners, which are mostly comprised of coffee, porridge, stew, canned meats, boiled vegetables, and chicken/eggs, which are always readily available. The workers do not have lunch breaks so much as daily quotas, so food consumed in between meals is to have been purchased in advance at the town's general store. There exists an economy within the farm of buying, selling, and trading snacks and other goods as well. Additionally, men have been fired in the past if they are caught killing/cooking extra chickens.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Genni
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There exists an economy within the farm of buying, selling, and trading snacks and other goods as well.

MJ certainly enjoys all the extra snacks she ends up with.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Bork Lazer
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<Snipped quote by DeadbeatWalking>
MJ certainly enjoys all the extra snacks she ends up with.

Master - You have some particular talent in which you are an absolute expert. Please specify exactly what this is when you choose it, e.g. "Master Baiter". +5


Well, at least, the one above is more subtle than the one down below.
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