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Private
Posts: 29
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Doing a little survey... I'm curious as to:
Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play?
Me?
A.1) I collected comics when I was younger (about seven or eight) and when my family moved to a different side of town I had to find a new comic store. One day when I stopped in the new local shop (this was in the early '90's) I found a group of six or so people crowded around a table covered in a gridded map; figures, dice, and paper scattered everywhere. Immediately I saw that there was not only a rather complex system, but unlike the complexities of a card game (which I had no taste for), it was visualized. The information was all on the field, on the paper, waiting to be manipulated and explored.
A.2) Every time I venture to a new place I end up eventually trying to organize a Battletech group. For one, the number crunching has always been a good way to clear my head. Secondly, and this is more important the older I get, I'm really fascinated by how new players pick up the game, and what I can do to explain or teach, over time, its complexities — which may be completely foreign concepts to those who have only played risk and stratego.
Thanks!
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Master Sergeant
Posts: 357
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I was 15 when I got into Battletech. AS with you, I was into comics. The difference is people didn't play games in shops as they do now. I just saw a Robotech mech on a box, and said great a mech game. I bought it and fell in love with it. I loved Robotech and Japanese Anima that had giant robot cartoons.
Battletech seemed real, in an abstract system. It wasn't like Japanses cartoons with One giant mech fighting hordes of hordes, but more like Robotech with it's own history and stories. I got Battletech as soon as it came out. I got my friends into it, they didn't buy it, I did all the buying but they played with me.
Sadly I gave it all up about 10 years after starting so I can't play anymore. But I just found out BT is still alive and well and once I have money saved, I will be buying minis again once I find a store close by to me.
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Lieutenant
Posts: 1571
Your friendly neighborhood Periphery pirate!
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? A confusing but interesting one. My friend trying to teach me the game didn't really have a solid grasp on the rules himself, but we still had fun. I was about 14 at the time, I think. The aforementioned friend started talking about MechWarrior 2 one day, and I said, "I think I have that game." So I checked it out and started playing it. Then he got me and another friend to play this game called BattleTech, which was cool, but confusing. So I bought my own copy of 4th edition, learned the real rules, and then taught both of them the correct way to play, and we had a blast for the next several years. Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play? 'Mechs, 'Mechs, 'Mechs! I played my first game in well over a year this past weekend, and it was a thrill. I mean tabletop game, not MegaMek, which has been a few months since but not over a year.
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Master Sergeant
Posts: 210
Chrrrgh
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My first game was in good company. The demonstrator (not an official agent or anything, just the guy who knew the rules) made a good effort, although the fact that I'd basically been waiting for a chance to play BT for several years since investigating the MechWarrior series helped hugely. So yeah, I was among people I know and like, and I think the game just clicked for me because I want something that's complex without being too insane. BT seems to provide it.
What do I think when I've got the itch to play? Mostly that I haven't played in a while. I'm doing a really terrible job of translating my obsession with this game and its accompanying universe into any sort of local campaign. Although, having found that I'm apparently quite good at RPG GM-ery (I'm not convinced, but several of my players keep saying it), I'm thinking that A Time of War may be the way forwards.
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Lieutenant
Posts: 1249
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I started playing Battletech when I was nineteen. It was my Freshman year of college and I'd read a couple of the novels before and I like the world. I'd been playing D&D and a number of other RPG's for six or seven years by that time (Cyberpunk 2020, Shadowrun, and various Whitewolf games mostly). One of the guys in a Werewolf game I was playing asked if anybody wanted to get together and play a game of Battletech over the weekend and I said sure.
As for what goes through my mind when I get an itch to play? I'm not really sure. Mostly it's a desire for something more tactical then whatever else I'm doing. I mostly play RPG's so Battletech is often a break from more RPG intensive activities.
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Recruit
Posts: 7
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My introduction to BattleTech was through the old FASA House Books. Looking for some science fiction to read, I picked up the House Davion manual. That was enjoyable so I picked up the House Kurita manual. Well after the 4th House book I decided to look into the game system itself. At the time I had just joined a gaming group that had formed in Kuwait during the Gulf War and continued on back home in Iowa. I was thinking about a Robotech campaign for the group, but thought there would be more material for BattleTech. Since then, we have played many game systems but BattleTech always gets played on a regular basis.
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Warrant Officer
Posts: 432
Not going anywhere for a while?
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I first found Battletech in the form of a 2nd Edition boxed set in a Waldenbooks in upstate NY. I took it home and figured out how to play, at first playing both sides of the battle since I didn't have anyone to play with. Eventually I picked up the Compendium at the same bookstore and went in search of Battletech minis once I saw the pictures in the painting section. I was about eleven or twelve at the time and none of my friends were into it. I finally located a comic book store that carried the products and got the PlasTech boxed set and then some novels and the 3rd Edition plastics that were actually sold in a separate set from the game box. More novels followed, then metal minis, and when I was in high school I finally found a group of three guys that were willing to play. We played it completely wrong the first few times and then gradually learned the rules as we went. My buddies picked up the CityTech 2 sets that had hit our local bookstore and we played every weekend for most of an entire winter. Because I had so few people to play with I spent a lot of time reading the background material and painting the minis, which I then sadly sold off most of when I graduated college and needed money to move out of my parents' house. I got back into the game (the tabletop game, not the video games which I've played all of as they came out) about six months ago when I got laid off. I found out that the unseens were coming back and before you could say "Ral Partha" I had the small remainder of my old minis back from my parents' basement and I was cruising eBay for MIB Marauders and Warhammers to replace thones I'd sold. I found a great recurring game in Mount Prospect IL with a large player base and here I am, looking forward to it every month as an excuse to feel like a kid again. So glad it's still here after all those years. It all started withthat boxed set, though, and I can still remember vividly the nigh I brought it home.
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Monsters in the Sky!
Moderator
Posts: 20560
Luft Konteradmiral, K.u.K. Luftflotte
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1) I was still at uni, postgrad, long-term wargamer, and familiar with Robotech the series from TV. I walked into a games shop and there was a box with a Destroid Excalibur on the cover. Sold!
(As a related point, I like big, clunky technology. Thunderbirds, pre-Dreadnought battleships, giant stompy robots, Soyuz spaceships, you name it. The synergies are obvious)
2) At the moment, 90% of my 'game time' is actually kitbashing, modifying, and painting minis. My over-the-table time is strictly that - over a table - because for me any gaming is about the socialisation, the interaction of a group of friends, the sharing of the ups & downs. (Probably explains why I don't bother with cons much either, after some scarifying experiences). The mini work is a great way to escape the largely cerebral hassles of my job.
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Warrant Officer
Posts: 550
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? A. 1) Okay, Battletech is a very social game so it's hard to play without friends who have the desire and patience to play such an intricate game. Even though I knew what Battletech was since I was 13, I didn't actually play the board game until I was 20 years old, and it was only because a friend took me to a game store and showed me what it would be like. My first experience was good, it was a clan campaign run by a game master. I got into painting miniatures shortly thereafter.
I play for several reasons. First, the game has so many different opportunities that I never get bored or feel like it's just another game. Every time we play it's something new. I also enjoy painting the miniatures, thanks to the beautiful work displayed on camospecs. I also stay because of the fine products produced by Catalyst.
Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play? A. 2) I can only play on weekends, so when I feel the need on a weekday I paint or browse a sourcebook. Finding someone to play with isn't really a problem.
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Sergeant
Posts: 110
Organized Chaos
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? well my first time playing the game was so very long ago...like, just under 48 hours ago with CharlieTango, and it was a freaking blast. i'd been dieing to play this game for quite some time and finally got the opportunity. sure i made some noob mistakes...i'm sure of it... sure i also had some beginners luck... and both of us got hit with hellbie's dice at least a couple of times (although ct claims they were only his own dice  ) yeah...it was a blast...can't wait to play again Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play? given my level of ocd due to tourette's...it would be easier to ask what's going through my mind when i don't have an itch to play,
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Catalyst Demo Team
Posts: 4151
Yup, Systems Normal, All Frakked Up
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you?
I was 15, just moved back to the United States and started at another high school. Met a gamer at a local store (long gone) and he invited me over. Sitting in his living room, running a T-bolt against his Marauder, I was in love (with both Battletech and the T-bolt) before I went home that night. That was 1987. No clue what happened to that guy, I think we only played one more time and then went our separate ways. Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play?
Time to run another demo usually. Though, on rare occasions, I think: Hey, time to have the guys over, have a fun game with much trash talking and at least a little beer.
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Master Sergeant
Posts: 374
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Doing a little survey... I'm curious as to:
Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play?
1.My neighbor came back from college with a cool new game called "Battledroids ". We were the best of friends when I was growing up so I read the rules and we played the game with some of his friends . I was either 10 or 11 ,I can't really remember . At that age it was a bi deal to be hanging with college kids . It was an even bigger deal that I cleaned their clocks for 3 games strait .  For the third game we each made 4 custom mech variants . 3 were made from what was available and 1 used a fictional larger autocannon that we created ourselves . ( It wound up being nearly identical to the later autocannnon 10 ) I made a custom Marauder ,Shadowhawk with the A/C ,and 2 Wolverines that by chance were almost identical to the later Wolverine 6M . (The only difference was where I put the medium lasers ) If custom mechs are available in a 3025 game ,then I play that same Marauder ,A/C 10 wielding Shadowhawk,and 2 Wolverine 6Ms to this day . I've played those same mechs for 25 years ! 2. I like to play new players and surprise them . I still play mostly 3025 and a lot of players don't expect to see anything new or different done .I tend to use combined arms forces a lot and like to change which variants a lot and use uncommonly used vehicles . I always wonder if I'm going to surprise a new opponent ,or even surprise one I've played before .
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Captain
Posts: 3106
Better watch out, there's Ravens above!
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My introduction to Battletech came when a friend of mine purchased the cutaway Marauder blueprint in... oh 87 or 88. I thought that was really cool and investigated the game. Didn't play much until I moved in 92 and met a guy who knew the rules quite well. We'd set up games in our high school cafeteria and make faces at those who mocked us.
I've had a very on again off again relationship with Battletech, but at its core it has always remained my favourite game, which is why I was ecstatic when my RP group agreed to play.
I play because I love the setting and getting a chance to control big stompy robots. And the tactics that some people will use against you are highly entertaining.
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Lieutenant
Posts: 876
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Q1 I first played on a school trip with some friends, it was a blast, I was 14--met my wife during the game.
Q2 It is exciting thining about big mechs jumping around blasting stuff. It seems sort of infantile as I type it, but I enjoy blasting things, getting the drop on other players, getting blown up, and blowing up other stuff.
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Corporal
Posts: 81
Hot Time in the Battlefield!
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Q1) So, back in Elementary School, a friend got me into the card game (although I'm pretty sure we never did get the rules quite right). From the card game, my brother and I made the leap to the TROs and the novels, and from the novels we made the leap to some of the field manuals and Mechwarrior 2 for Windows. In High School, I got some of my friends into the universe, and we were interested in playing, but couldn't find the core rules. But then one of my friends played Megamek and we would play on there for a while.
Eventually, at some point early in my college career, I saw that intro box set in the window of a local comic shop, and got it for my brother for Christmas.
Q2) What goes through my mind when I get an itch to play? Well, first of all, I have to be at my brother's place, since he has the rules (my memory is good, but I don't play often enough to have the rules memorized). Usually, we'll be watching TV or something, one of us will look at the other, and say, "Print off some record sheets. It's time to blow crap up."
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Major
Posts: 3450
All your rez points are belong to us.
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For the first question my answer is this. I thought it was different from anything I had seen up until that point. But I didn't even know it was a game until I say it in a bookstore, I knew the series from the books. Buying the game came naturally, though it took some convincing to get my group to give it a try. It was back in early 1994 if I remember correctly which would make me 16 at the time. A few months later I joined the USAF and after boot I discovered alot of servicemembers played. As for the second question, what goes through my mind, well anticipation of course!  What goes through second is disapointment that there aren't more groups out there playing.
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Corporal
Posts: 55
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1) I first encountered CBT back in seventh grade back in 1990/1. Friends of mine were big into RPGs, (We had played Palladium, D&D up to date) and they brought the Second Edition along. I was asked to choose a BattleMech. I remember choosing a Warhammer first - hey it was on the box! They said no, someone else was using it. I then looked through the pictures of Mechs and chose one that called to me - a Tbolt! We were supposed to play after school that week, but for whatever reason it never happened. A couple years later, I had moved to a new place. That summer, my folks signed my brother and up for tennis lessons....of all things. I met a friend, Chris. We started to hang out and he had CBT. We started playing then and continued to play through the summer. I started off playing a PHX-1 Pheonix Hawk. 2) With the exception of a game here and there, I haven't played in years. When I get the itch, I go on the boards or read a sourcebook. 
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Lieutenant
Posts: 1362
Death comes on wings of steel
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1.)My best bud and I myself stated watching the awful BT cartoon, we both agreed the show wasn’t the best but really got into the BTU. He found the BoK novels at a Barns and Noble followed by the 3rd Edition. He clamed the Crusader and the Marauder as his own while I feel in love with the Warhammer on the box art.
2.) Two things; 1: God I love Mechs 2:Where the hell am I goeing to find a game
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Corporal
Posts: 59
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1.) I'm another kid pulled into the universe by watching the cartoon. I really liked the show and picked up the Somerset Strikers sourcebook at a FLGS. Devoured all the stats about the episodes and the mechs, only to discover these weird scenarios in the back half of the book. On a later trip to the store I found the 3rd edition box set, made the connection between it and the scenarios, and never looked back.
2.) I don't play very often currently, no stores in the area. My friends and I do get together around the holidays and play a couple quick games. I've tried Megamek, but it just doesn't have the same feel to me. I need everything physically laid out in front of me.
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Major
Posts: 4809
A creature of duty
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I've told this story before, but I'll always tell it again...
Q1: A friend in my Sophomore year of college called me and told me to come over to his room, since he'd just bought this awesome new game and needed more people to play it. He lived just down the hall in the dorm, and when I arrived he and another friend were reading over the rules for something called "Battletech". They had a 2nd Ed Boxed Set, the Solaris Boxed Set and TRO 2750. They gave me a quick run-down on most of the rules and we laid out a mapsheet (The Factory, IIRC) and began to play. One of them had some King Crab S7 variant with a claw and LPLs and the other was using some S7 Wolfhound variant. I went with the Black Knight from the TRO 2750. I won initiative, ran up to the "King Crab" and unloaded everything. Even the Small Laser. I hit with about half of it, took some damage in return and then my friends turned the page and said, "Now, we add up heat!"
I was like, "What's heat?" They had neglected to tell me that very important part of the rules. Needless to say, I shut down and was quickly reduced to scrap metal by the "King Crab's" claw. While my two friends finished the game, I picked up the TRO and began to leaf through it and was instantly hooked by the universe. The very next day, I went to my FLGS and picked up my own 2nd Ed. Box Set (which I still have), TRO 3050 and put a TRO 3025 on order.
After reading all of the fluff and familiarizing myself with the rules, I went to see another friend and was like, "Hey, I found this awesome game called Battletech! Have you ever heard of it?" He smiled and dug around in a footlocker and pulled out a copy of a 1st Ed Boxed Set. We probably spent hundreds of hours over the course of the next couple of years playing CBT. We did a Cluster on Regiment battle that lasted all weekend, we got about a third of the way through Tukayyid and started at least a dozen campaigns. The friend who had first introduced me to the game eventually moved on to other games, but I was hooked and still am.
Q2: I play because I love the CBT universe. Or at least I did until recently. I love that there are no aliens and despite the fact that it is set over 1000 years in the future, people are still people and fight over the silliest things. I love that the universe is grey and ambiguous and not everyone is a shining paragon of virtue.
Most of all, I play to have fun.
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Captain
Posts: 2243
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1: In my pre-teen years, I had a nascent interest in gaming. I had a copy of Space Crusade, Marvel comics were running ads for the TSR RPG, and for some reason I had a couple of issues of Dragon magazine, some of which had adds for Wolves on the Border, the Warrior Trilogy, the NAIS military atlasses, and Crescent Hawks' Inception in them.
One day, I was ambling around the newly opened Virgin Megastore in Dublin, looking at computer games when I spotted a massive section of board games too, and there were a few racks full of cool looking stuff with robots in it. I looked at the backs of a few books and decided this "BattleTech" thing was pretty awesome - also, it had a mech from Robotech on the box! I got a FASA catalogue from the freebie pile and pretty much fell in love right there. Asked my parents for the BT 2nd edition box as a Christmas present and never looked back. Well, after I got the box swapped for one that didn't have a French rulebook in it. Oh, and about 5 years spent playing 40K almost exclusively.
2: I get to play regularly so I don't really get overly excited or worked up by the novelty of a game or anything. I'll spend a bit of time working out my force based on what army I've not used in a while and the like, but for the most part it's "BattleTech this Wednesday, excellent"
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Captain
Posts: 2934
Legio Patria Nosta
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1. Early on in primary school i discovered Mechwarrior 2. i had all the games, promo art, i went down and played on the tesla pods atr intencity and had all my first place awards printed out and stuck up on my wall.
then i walked into the tin soldier. bought a lance of mechs, some protomechs, and the black thorns scenario book(i had no idea what was what) i goofed around with the minis, but ended up shelving them for other model kits, waiting till i could get the rulebook.
a year or so later, i walked into the tin soldier again, and was regrettably informed that the game no longer existed, and that everything was gone. saddened i searched for more btech stuff but couldnt find any.
at the end of primary school, i stumbled into a games workshop, recognising the minis in the window from the tin soldier, i went in to investigate the possibility of purchasing some battletech minis, and needless to say for a young person in a gw store, i walked out of there with a bucket full of space marines.
later on i discovered ebay, and started pulling things in from there.
2. POLITICS! i find this to be what every other sci fi setting lacks. i have always loved factions that arent "EVIL" but are just people, following their own code of conduct. i also love that in such a neutral setting that HEROES can rise above it all, do their heroic stuff, and be knocked back down. i also love having a storyline that keeps moving. And, to be honest, i love these forums, without which (and its inhabitants) i would probably not be back in the game at all.
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Major
Posts: 4754
Everything old is new again.
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I was 12 years old when I started playing with friends. We didn't really know anything about BT, but were really into Robotech and the box had a bunch of Robotech mecha on it. I drifted away from the game once I started college, but I came back a few years ago after the FanPro restart of CBT caught my attention. The richness of detail for the universe as a whole is what has kept me interested. I don't play on the table top much, but I LOVE designing and fluffin' mechs - they're like little bits of fan fic to me - reflecting my view of how the universe works (and occasionally how I think it should work - Omnimechs and standardized systems FTW!).
Cheers, LCC
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Warrant Officer
Posts: 405
THOMAS HOGARTH'S!!!! knife!
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1) Well I was formally introducted by Mechwarrior 2 (I guess that is why overall my leanings are toward the Clans), and I always liked the snake clan's emblem (Steel Viper) so I always played them in skirmish mode... fast forward several years and I was in a card shop (I think at that time... much to my eternal shame... I was playing Pokemon or something like that) and they had some Battletech CCG and I reconised the Timber Wolf on the box so bought some packs... soon me and my friends were collecting the Battletech CCG. Now I was a Steel Viper fan (by this time I discovered their true name), and I figured out about the Crusader packs (the ones that gave CSV more than just the Shadow Cats), but I could not find the packs anywhere (I think the game had died at this point). One day I decided to look up one of the companies that was on the box (FASA) on the internet and that is where I discovered the miniatures... I was estatic and I ordered a Warhawk (no longer have  ) and Jenner IIc... Then it just went from there... funny thing is BEFORE this I had Adam Stiener's Axman from the cartoon series but never associated it with Mechwarrior... 2) I like the game system... while a lot is on luck and such (what miniature game isn't) I love the fact that proper movement is important and allows for advance tactics like flanking. 40K it doesn't matter which direction the miniature is facing and a well executed flank only affects tanks, and the infantry (pretty much most of your forces in 40k) don't have a facing... Battletech movement is key... you make one vital mistake and you will be feeling it soon... also the fact the faster you are actually makes you harder to hit...
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Lieutenant
Posts: 1105
Oh Scrap...
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Why did I start playing Battletech? As a kid I always liked giant robots and military stuff ie. Transformers, GI Joe, etc. Why do I play Battletech? Because when you think about it, Battletech has both.  There are probably more reasons, but this is what it really breaks down to. 
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Private
Posts: 29
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Hey! I just wanted to say thanks for all the sharing!
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Captain
Posts: 2796
vitesse et puissance
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Sometime in the mid to late 80's I was given a Battletech box set as a birthday present because I've always been in to sci-fi and wargames. I stuck with it through the army and quit when I got married and lost touch with a gaming group. I picked it back up when my kids got old enough to play and the advent of MegaMek has allowed me to keep playing. I play because I like big stompy robots, tactics, and dakka-dakka. Please fix 3025 AC's, by the way. I also play because it's good bonding time with my sons.
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Private
Posts: 36
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1. I started at about age 9 with MW2 and the CityTech box set. It had giant robots, and my big brother liked it; it was unquestionably cool. I had only played some games with him before Fasa closed shop and everybody around here lost interest.
2. When I start craving some 'mech action, I usually turn to a sourcebook or novel. Hopefully the free release of MW4 will be here soon. It would be a lot easier to convince someone to play a free computer game than to play the tabletop game. Even my aforementioned brother finds BattleTech too slow and tedious now.
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Master Sergeant
Posts: 312
Is this what is left of the mighty Decepticons?
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1. Lets see I got into Battletech through other media, Mechwarrior 2, The cartoon, the Novels. I didn't really start playing until i was in high school when i got a 4th edition box set and started forceing my friends to play..
2. I love the setting I like that the game takes awhile to play. Plus it has the right mix of strategy and pure blind luck to make an excellent game.
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Recruit
Posts: 18
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1) It was 1985 or 86 and I was about 12 or 13. We'd been playing DnD for about a year when a buddy of mine got a hold of the Battletech box set after we spotted it in a local Shinders comic book store. All being robotech fans we were a shoe in for BT fans and that led to about 6 or 7 solid years of BT gaming.
2) The experience was fantastic and my first taste of miniatures gaming. We mostly still played with the cardboard cutouts but I recall one of my buddies got "innovative" and used some of the woodlands scenic green foliage for tree hexes and our imagination was set off! We found the box set rules to be easy to udnerstand and fun to play.
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Lieutenant
Posts: 1449
Look Ma! No Faction!
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you?
I was ~22, & found 2nd hand copies of TRO3025 & 3050 at Travelling Man in Leeds. I thought they looked really cool, but was short of cash & bought SR2 suppliments instead. Then I got the MW2 PC game. I got Win95 solely to play the "enhanced" edition. (I ended up w/ 3 copies of MW2 - original, 3dfx and PowerVR). That sold me on the universe, and when I finally made contact with the local RPG&WG group a year or two later I got to have lots of fun playing MW2 RPG with 4E box set and a few minis for when we were in the cockpit. Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play?
"Where did I put my minis?" "Lets fire up megamek on that standalone PC at lunchtime" "I wonder if I can get a group together at the club next session." "Lets see if I can make that legal (starts up HMPro)" "I wish I had more time."
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Master Sergeant
Posts: 365
Coyotes Are Survivors
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Q.1) What kind of experience did you have when you first encountered the game? How old were you? Q.2) What goes through your mind when you get an itch to play? 1.) I had dabbled in BT at around the age of 13, after being introduced to it by a cousin of mine who had played for years. I liked Gundam, Zoids, other nerdy things. It was fun, different, and interesting. I am 24 now. A few years ago, shortly after the death of Grandfather, I began to get interested in it again. I wanted a hobby that would be more than just a collectible game, something more than CCGs or CMGs. Battletech offered a fun mini's game, with mini's I could customize both physically and statistically. I have since given up all other CCG's and play only Btech and boardgames. 2.) I usually get the itch when I get new pieces. Right now, I'm waiting on a new Pariah, Canis, and Elementals to come in before I play again. Can't wait to get them!
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