Difference between revisions of "Talk:Outbreak"

From Ludocity
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[http://www.hasbro.com/default.cfm?page=browse&product_id=18080 Glow in the dark ammo] might be good for post-game cleanup, and for making hits and misses clearer. I assume you can convert your own ammunition with a bit of phosphorescent paint, though.
 
[http://www.hasbro.com/default.cfm?page=browse&product_id=18080 Glow in the dark ammo] might be good for post-game cleanup, and for making hits and misses clearer. I assume you can convert your own ammunition with a bit of phosphorescent paint, though.
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|date=11:07, 13 October 2008
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|user=[[User:Kevan|Kevan]]
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|comment=In fact, those glow-in-the-dark Nerf darts are just "eight foam darts and glow-in-the-dark labels", so yes, might as well just make your own.
 
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Revision as of 11:07, 13 October 2008

Kevan said:

A way to run this with less prop expenditure would be to invite players to buy and bring their own Nerf guns if they wanted an edge in the game - these players could be the police or military, or the hardcore survivalists who were prepared for the zombie apocalypse. You could probably get by with just one game-property gun, in case nobody felt like bringing their own.

(And you could bulk the armoury out with some cheap Shaun of the Dead type weapons, in soft foam rubber - one-shot blunt instruments which you have to drop when you hit a zombie with them.)

Glow in the dark ammo might be good for post-game cleanup, and for making hits and misses clearer. I assume you can convert your own ammunition with a bit of phosphorescent paint, though.

Kevan said:

In fact, those glow-in-the-dark Nerf darts are just "eight foam darts and glow-in-the-dark labels", so yes, might as well just make your own.