Far future universes need machines and technology that makes the average spacefarer’s life easier. Everything from the robots to computers to weaponry and vehicles, the future should feel exciting with tech everywhere. Ideal for any setting, Mech Tech ‘n’ bot is your supplement series to making your game feel futuristic.
Ships streak across the sky, carrying cargo and passengers within a solar system. Fighters battle pirates and other disasters of space. This indispensible tech keeps the wheels of commerce flowing from outlying bases and outposts to major worlds. Fighters and Small Ships details these support vessels for your game, making your universe come alive.
Mech Tech ‘n’ bot: Fighters and Small Ships is the latest release from Jon Brazer Enterprises for the Traveller system and is available now in Print and PDF. Check out our other products at our PDF store and our Digital Print Store.
“Traveller” and the Foreven logo are Trademarks owned by Far Future Enterprises, Inc. and are used with permission. The Traveller Main Rulebook is available from Mongoose Publishing.
As our last preview of Mech Tech ‘n’ bot: Fighters and Small Ships for the week, we’re displaying two more pages. Today we’re showing the two page spread for the Proxima P Series Torpedo Bomber. Designed to be sold to less advanced worlds, this series of bombers have been used by less advanced worlds to repel invaders and protect defenseless citizens. Click on the picture below to see all three variations of this low tech space craft.
This week is going by much faster than I had been expecting. Since I missed a preview yesterday, I’m giving a supersized preview today. Instead of just sharing a stat block, here are two pages of the book with both stat blocks. Click on the thumbnail below for the full size image. Enjoy.
Guardian Industries: Kraft Interceptor
Mech Tech ‘n’ bot: Fighters and Small Ships will be available from Jon Brazer Enterprises on Monday Nov 23 and can be purchased from our Digital Print store or for PDF download from DriveThruRPG.com.
Twinsai from Krown IndustriesThe naming contest ended this past weekend with Twinsai being voted the ship’s name. Congratulations to Darkjoy for submitting off the winning entry.
Throughout the week, Jon Brazer Enterprises will be releasing previews for Fighters and Small Ships. This 16 page supplement details six different class of ships, each with several variations. Each ship receives a two page spread with two or three stat blocks, detailing the ship in different configurations. For the first preview this week, we bring you the cover art. Check it out and share what you think.
With Mech Tech ‘n’ bot: Fighters and Small Ships being released soon, I probably should discuss the design philosophy behind the book. My philosophy had two main sources for inspiration: modern cars and airplanes. When Boeing makes a 737 they customize it to their customer’s needs, but they tend to fall into one of several groups: passenger transport, cargo transport, or military applications. The passenger transport version is fitted with seats, a galley a standardized gangway entrance, and legally required safety features. The cargo variant is fitted with latching hooks to keep the cargo from moving during the flight, sections for large cargo and small cargo, and a standardized gangway to make loading and unloading cargo easier. The military variant could possess a hatch for dropping bombs, enhanced electrical for operating sophisticated radar and other detection equipment, or others depending on its specific use. But all the while, the general design, cockpit, engines, fuel tanks are relatively unchanged. This helps keep the costs down for Boeing while making aircraft for wide applications.
S172 by RenStarIn the same way, the S172 by RenStar Avionics possess several variations. First there is a passenger variant designed to transport 40 passengers from a planet’s surface to orbit and back again in relative comfort while still packing them in like sardines. Next there is a short range cargo variant that carries considerable cargo for its size while changing as little as possible to the basic structure. Finally there is a long range cargo variant that can operate for two weeks in the vacuum of space with little refuelling. This version possess a larger engine and power plant to increase its range and a single weapon to help defend itself. … What was that? A military variant? I’m sorry that is classified.
Yes, I know that cargo transports are the coolest and all, but what about fighters. What inspiration was used in designing a fighter? For this, I looked at the Infiniti car manufacturer. When you look at an Infiniti, you know it is an Infiniti. They design a specific look into their cars to make them instantly recognizable. Every commercial has their the single wavy line to help brand the appearance of every model. Kraft by Guardian Industries In the same way, space fighter manufacturers would want their products to stand out, making each to appear similar. Enter the Kraft by Guardian Industries. This fighter travels as fast as a missile regardless if it is the light or medium interceptor variants. But because GI wants their fighters to stand out, the fighters appear almost identical. So when you see the basic configuration, you know that the owners of those fighters must be rich enough to be able to afford these fast fighters.
Mech Tech ‘n’ bot: Fighters and Small Ships will be available on November 23 for Print at Lulu.com and for PDF download at DriveThruRPG.com
Religion is meant for the masses, not the clerics and the paladins alone. While not everyone can cast divine spells, anyone can live a life dedicated to their god and anyone can pray. Now, the gods listen when your character prays.
Book of the Faithful: Power of Prayer gives you ideas for your next Pathfinder character. Concept ranging from the newly converted to the those that lived their whole lives surrounded by their faith to those seeking to learn an aspect of their faith more deeply than they had before. Additionally there are seventeen new feats, a new magic item and three pieces of equipment ideal for the faithful seeker’s enlightenment and protection.
Pathfinder and associated marks and logos are trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC, and are used under license. See paizo.com/pathfinderRPG for more information on the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game.
Religion is meant for the masses, not the clerics and the paladins alone. While not everyone can cast divine spells, anyone can live a life dedicated to their god and anyone can pray. Now, the gods listen when your character prays.
Book of the Faithful: Power of Prayer gives you ideas for your next Pathfinder character. Concept ranging from the newly converted to the those that lived their whole lives surrounded by their faith to those seeking to learn an aspect of their faith more deeply than they had before. Additionally there are seventeen new feats, a new magic item and three pieces of equipment ideal for the faithful seeker’s enlightenment and protection.
Pathfinder and associated marks and logos are trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC, and are used under license. See paizo.com/pathfinderRPG for more information on the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game.
I’m currently in the hospital so Book of the Faithful (JBE’s 1st Pathfinder RPG supplement) might be late, but i do believe it will come out on Monday as origionally planned. Mech Tech ‘n’ bot’s Fighters and Small Ships should still come out in november, but it might be the very end of the month.
In the meantime, I am hoping to give birth to a 3.5 mm kidney stone today. If you’re looking for some inspiration for future tech for your game, they’re going to use a laser inside me. How cool is that!
I gotta save cell battery for calling the family so I probably won’t update again until I’m back home. Until then, stay safe and have fun.
In addition to the website here, I am now maintaining a blog of playing experiences and design notes over at ENWorld. Stop over and subscribe to the feed so you don’t miss a post. So far I have only posted about Pathfinder, but I will soon be posting some about Traveller as well.
Additionally, you can also find Jon Brazer Enterprises on Facebook, Role Play Media, in addition to Twitter. Join the group and be apart of our growing network.
This morning on my way to work, I stopped at my local Wawa for breakfast (bad for the waist line, but still good) and there was a guy from the local newspaper there handing out free copies of their paper. I didn’t take one and as far as I could tell no one else did either. It amazed me that they were still trying to keep that end of the market alive. Why weren’t they offering some kind of “try our online subscription free for 30 days” or something like that. This might sound harsh, but when the nation’s largest newspaper (the New York Times) could spend HALF as much money by buying every single one of their subscribers a Kindle and letting them read it there instead of printing the actual paper, your industry needs to find a different business model, and fast.
My next thought though was: how does this apply to RPGs? The print side of the market has been shrinking for years while the electronic side as really been the only growing part. While the total market for electronic books is miniscule compared to the print market, those numbers will not be that way forever. But when Amazon sales of Dan Brown’s book The Lost Symbol are selling better on the Kindle than in hardcopy, the rest of the market cannot be far behind. Keep your mind open for the whole of the RPG market to be on those devices in less than 5 years.
What else is changing? Sci-fi-like battlefields are finally here. If you have not seen this video yet, check it out. Surfacescapes Demo Walkthrough for D&D from Surfacescapes on Vimeo. Throw a network connection on there, and you’re set to game with the rest of the world.
But back to my newspaper musings, I see some RPG companies getting it and some not. Some companies post the whole of their system up on a wiki and others that do not place bookmarks in their PDFs. Now we’ve got the Nook from Barns and Nobles that is full color. Printing full color costs a ton; displaying full color images on the device costs the same as black and white. Why print when you can do that? Companies need to be ready for the future, because the future is here. As Michael Stackpole put it, “The war between digital and print is over. Digital won, print just don’t know it yet.”
How will you be reading your RPG material in five years? Have you ever tried reading a book from your phone or an eReader device?