The Traveller Adventure

The Traveller Adventure is a 1983 role-playing game adventure for Traveller published by Game Designers' Workshop.

Plot summary

The Traveller Adventure follows the crew of a subsidized merchant vessel, the March Harrier, through a series of explored in the Aramis subsector.[1]

Reception

Craig Sheeley reviewed The Traveller Adventure in Space Gamer No. 70.[1] Sheeley commented that "I was pleasantly surprised by The Traveller Adventure [...] it is reasonably price. It is, on the whole, one of the best products ever made by GDW."[1]

Stephen Nutt reviewed The Traveller Adventure for Imagine magazine, and stated that "I rate the Traveller adventure in the top five best role-playing products that have ever been placed on the market. In the context of Traveller it is the best thing GDW have ever produced, simply a must for anybody running a Traveller campaign."[2]

Andy Slack reviewed The Traveller Adventure for White Dwarf #57, giving it an overall rating of 9 out of 10, and stated that "this is a superb campaign capable of entertaining a group of up to 8 players of any experience for up to a year."[3]

Reviews

gollark: There aren't taxes on arbitrary transactions in most places as far as I know.
gollark: Yes, some country really should have caught onto this by now.
gollark: Technically, as it counts transactions, you can just transfer that money back and forth several trillion times a second and outcompete all other economies.
gollark: I mean, they can say "we'll exchange X currency 1 for Y currency 2" for any value of X and Y, but for many values it would be a bad idea to.
gollark: What? They can't just set prices to anything they want, it depends on the unfathomable machinations of the market.

References

  1. Sheeley, Craig (July–August 1984). "Capsule Reviews". Space Gamer. Steve Jackson Games (70): 42–43.
  2. Nutt, Stephen (September 1984). "Notices". Imagine (review). TSR Hobbies (UK), Ltd. (18): 41.
  3. Slack, Andy (September 1984). "Open Box". White Dwarf. Games Workshop (Issue 57): 12–13.
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