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Because it looks like 4E D&D might be the next year's campaign but what would be a good quintessentially '80s name for a superhero?
The basic idea that I'm toying with is that the guy hit his PR peak around 1989 because as we know superhero rpg universes reflect the comicbooks of the time. In 1988 and 1989, wisecracking masks who enjoyed what they did but who didn't do anything unsavoury were in but by the early 1990s people wanted to hear about depressed superpowered thugs beating the crap out of other depressed superpowered thugs. Even though this guy was stilling doing what he did as competently as ever, nobody cared. Or cares. He's still sticking with his old schtick twenty years on despite the lack of acknowledgment. It's what he knows and anyway it's a lot more fun than the famous guys are having.
The basic idea that I'm toying with is that the guy hit his PR peak around 1989 because as we know superhero rpg universes reflect the comicbooks of the time. In 1988 and 1989, wisecracking masks who enjoyed what they did but who didn't do anything unsavoury were in but by the early 1990s people wanted to hear about depressed superpowered thugs beating the crap out of other depressed superpowered thugs. Even though this guy was stilling doing what he did as competently as ever, nobody cared. Or cares. He's still sticking with his old schtick twenty years on despite the lack of acknowledgment. It's what he knows and anyway it's a lot more fun than the famous guys are having.
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Date: 2008-12-26 02:02 am (UTC)And she came up with an old adventure that Speed Metal would have been involved in Back in the Day.
See, part one would be a murder mystery titled "The Death of Disco". Someone killed the hero Eight-Track (a low-powered speedster with extra limbs). And they had to investigate to find out why.
In part two, titled "Video Killed the Radio Star", they discover that the murderer was the cyborg BetaMax and have to take him out.