Thoughts about d20 Past

Heh, I'd rather blame the U.S. for failing to switch to a largely (but not completely) superior system. Then again, I was also in school when the changeover fizzled...

The Auld Grump, don'tcha worry now, we'll switch over in '79 rather than '76 like we originally planned...
 

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Embracing metric? Doable.

Dropping imperial? Over my dead body.

If you guys can learn English in addition to your native tongue, it shouldn't be a problem learning our measurement and the conversion formulas to metric (and vice versa).
 
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Sebastian Francis said:
Ah, I hate to break the news to you, but it isn't just Canadians that use the metric system. It's the *whole frigging world*. Minus the USA, of course.

Have the Brits switched to metric? I've never really looked into that. :)
 

MrFilthyIke said:
Have the Brits switched to metric? I've never really looked into that. :)

The situation in the UK has to be seen to be believed. Actually, come to think of it, I live here and I sometimes can't believe how shambolic things are.

In schools children have only been taught metric and not imperial measurements for decades.
In supermarkets all packaging is metric (but some goods seem to be sold in very odd quantities that only make sense when you realise that it was a round number in imperial).
We buy our petrol (gas) in litres. But all our road signs and speed limits are all in miles. Ever tried working out how many miles to the litre your car gets?
People tend to quote their heights and weight in imperial measurements. I think that I'm probably the only one that doesn't!
Weather forcasts give the temperatures in celius but 99% of the time the presenter will also say what that is in farenheit (sp.)
Needless to say, going to a hardware store can be an adventure!

Britain is stuck in a strange limbo somewhere between metric and imperial and what's worse is that it's been stuck there for decades and there's still no sign of any progress. The whole conversion process was started but not finished which makes things a bit of a joke.
 


Krieg said:
No if he had wanted us to use the metric system our feet would be a meter long.
Good answer!

:)

I'm really looking forward to some good ol' fashioned Victorian-era imperial hubris: searching for the source of the Nile among the Mountains of the Moon, crossing the Khyber Pass on a mission to Samarkand, sneaking into the Forbidden City, chasing Malay pirates across the Java Sea...
 

Hubris is one of my favorite aspects of Victoriana...playing characters who are completely confident in their own righteousness.

There's a little bit on d20 Past in the Preview section at Wizards.com...hopefully next month we'll get a preview with a bit more meat on it.

Two very good books..."Anno Dracula" [vampires take over England after things go haywire halfway through "Dracula"] and "The Bloody Red Baron" [WWI in the same continuity, with biplanes vs. giant vampire bats]. Both by Kim Newman, both chock full of "shared universe" cameos by everyone from Dr. Jeckyll to the Shadow.
 

D20 Past Fantasy Roleplaying?

I'm pretty sure that I saw some info about using the modern (Past) system to run generic fantasy adventures somewhere on the products homepage. If there is any truth in this matter, I have no doubt that I will be purchasing it.
 

Crazy 'Scaper said:
The situation in the UK has to be seen to be believed. Actually, come to think of it, I live here and I sometimes can't believe how shambolic things are.

In schools children have only been taught metric and not imperial measurements for decades.
In supermarkets all packaging is metric (but some goods seem to be sold in very odd quantities that only make sense when you realise that it was a round number in imperial).
We buy our petrol (gas) in litres. But all our road signs and speed limits are all in miles. Ever tried working out how many miles to the litre your car gets?
People tend to quote their heights and weight in imperial measurements. I think that I'm probably the only one that doesn't!
Weather forcasts give the temperatures in celius but 99% of the time the presenter will also say what that is in farenheit (sp.)
Needless to say, going to a hardware store can be an adventure!

Britain is stuck in a strange limbo somewhere between metric and imperial and what's worse is that it's been stuck there for decades and there's still no sign of any progress. The whole conversion process was started but not finished which makes things a bit of a joke.

When I studied there, I was thrown yet another curve....someone said they weighed a "stone and a half" or something like that. :uhoh:
 

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