classic traveller reprint

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RPG Item: Books 0-8: The Classic Books

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CT-TTB-The Traveller Book

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The  Traveller Book  consolidated the core rules (Books 1-2-3) into a single 8.5 x 11 book and added additional material on how-to-play the game. It also added the short adventures  Shadows  (from Double Adventure 1) and  Exit Visa . It weighs in at 160 pages.

Classic Traveller  (indeed, all Traveller  editions, including later editions) was inducted into the Adventure Gaming Hall of Fame in 1997 on its 20th anniversary of its publication. Designer Marc Miller was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1982.

Traveller  was featured as part of Games Magazine's Games 100 in 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, and 1991.

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Classic Traveller

classic traveller reprint

Traveller , sometimes referred to as Classic Traveller, is the original edition and was published between 1977 and 1986. This edition is known for its " little black books "; most of the rules and supplements came as mostly black with a single offset color. The Adventures and supplements for this edition start in 1105 and advance through 1115 .

This article refers to specific information about this edition, for information about the game in general please refer to the Versions of Traveller .

  • 1.1 Overview
  • 1.2 ‎Popular Artists & Authors
  • 2.1 Meta-history & Background
  • 2.2 Bibliography-Ludography (Published Products)
  • 2.3 External Links
  • 3 References & Contributions (Sources)

Description ( Specifications )

The game system introduced a unique character generation system that helped it to stand out from other Role-playing games of the time. Players took their characters through a career development path (usually in the military) where the character rolled for different assignments and gained extra skills, rank and retirement benefits. Leaving a character in service for longer before the game would lead to more skills and beginning cash but could also mean that basic attributes (such as strength) would begin to degrade with old age.

The game became known for its character generation system in which characters could die or be injured before a player finished rolling them up.

The Classic Traveller core rules actually exist in three different rulesets. Logic would suggest using the most recent released edition; but in this case, there are rules elements of interest to the collector which would not be included.

The original 1977 release of Traveller contained three books – Characters and Combat , Starships , and Worlds and Adventures . This set of rules contains everything needed to play Traveller. However, in 1981, GDW took advantage of a need to reprint the core rules to also address and clean up the rules. This "second edition" actually adds quite a bit to the rules, but there are also some items dropped from the rules. This second edition also incorporated errata printed in Mercenary for the original 1977 edition.

This cleaned up "second edition" would be used for producing The Traveller Book in 1982, along with some additional material, including a special introduction for new players, two adventures, and additional details on what was becoming the Official Traveller Universe (OTU). Some additional rules did slip into The Traveller Book that appear nowhere else.

Finally, in 1983, GDW released Starter Traveller , intended at giving a younger audience a streamlined and simpler set of Traveller rules. This release dropped some of the more complicated rules, but added a different starship combat system (using range bands, much like the personal combat system, as opposed to vector movement) which many consider a great improvement on the original. Except where noted, Starter Traveller uses the 1981 edition rules. This final version includes yet a few more rules changes or clarifications as well as one major change in the form of a simplified star ship combat system that uses range bands instead of 2D vectors.

‎Popular Artists & Authors

  • David Deitrick
  • Jennell Jaquays
  • Marc Miller
  • Loren Wiseman

History & Background ( Dossier )

Classic Traveller was replaced in 1986 by a new version called MegaTraveller which not only radically revised the mechanics of the game (notably a task based system) but also the format of publication (now in books) and the background setting (the timeline was advanced several years with a shattered Third Imperium fighting a Civil War ).

Meta-history & Background

Etymology: The word Traveler and its British English orthographic variation Traveller refer to individuals who travel . In practice this refers to tourists, nomads, gypsies, exiled or expatriate peoples, and the like. In the Traveller RPG universe , it refers to sophonts who travel the stars , a special group of beings with an adventurous spirit.

At the beginning there was only some very basic background material as to the Traveller universe. It appeared that like most other RPG games of the time that individual game masters would develop their own universe to adventure in. It was originally intended to be a flexible, multi-purpose, general ruleset. As more adventures and supplements were developed the rich character of the standard Traveller universe began to evolve.

Most of the Classic Traveller books are available in compendium volumes from www.farfuture.net - Marc Miller's Far Future company, who are the current copyright and trademark holder of all forms of the Traveller game.

Bibliography-Ludography (Published Products)

This edition is best known for the following products:

External Links

Here are some additional links:

  • Classic Traveller Bibliography
  • Publications
  • Wayne's "The Little Black Books" - Classic Traveller
  • "Traveller Section by Section Comparison"

References & Contributions ( Sources )

  • Contributor: Lord (Marquis) and Master of Sophontology Maksim-Smelchak of the Ministry of Science
  • Articles at intermediate completion state
  • Pages using DynamicPageList parser function

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classic traveller reprint

Double Adventures #1-6 + The Classic Short Adventures

By: Far Future Enterprises

Type: Softcover

Product Line: Traveller Reprints (Far Future Enterprises)

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classic traveller reprint

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2018 Primetime Emmy & James Beard Award Winner

Reviving classic Russian cuisine

Oct 19 2018.

classic traveller reprint

Roads & Kingdoms talks to Russian chef Vladimir Mukhin of Moscow’s super-restaurant, White Rabbit.

Still in his mid-30’s, Vladimir Mukhin is already one of Russia’s best known chefs and the leading culinary light of the White Rabbit Group, which has 16 restaurants around the country. The most well-known of these, Moscow’s  White Rabbit , was named one of the 50 best restaurants in the world last year. Roads & Kingdoms’ Nathan Thornburgh talked to Mukhin in Moscow about being a fifth-generation chef, reviving classic Russian cuisine, and finding good product in the age of embargoes.

Nathan Thornburgh: Tell me about White Rabbit, what is the food? What are you trying to accomplish there?

Vladimir Mukhin: The White Rabbit is a big restaurant. We’re trying to revive Russian cuisine. I’m a fifth-generation chef, so I’m passionate about the food we create. During the Soviet Union period, we killed Russian food. Classic Russian recipes became too simplified. For example, usually you drink tea, but if you want to be, just to be creative, want to make the tea with milk, you can’t. It would be like stealing milk from the government. People went to jail.

When I was growing up, I remember my grandfather coming to the kitchen and crying because he couldn’t experiment with his food.

Thornburgh: Wow. I remember this famous photo session with Che Guevara which came up with some of his best pictures, maybe two incredible iconic portraits came from an entire roll of film, and the photographer went to him and showed him this roll of film and Che said, What the hell are you doing? You wasted all of these images. You took 30 pictures to get one? That’s the government’s film. It’s a similar mentality.   So you’re telling the story of a kind of cuisine that was lost on the Soviet history and now you’re playing with this idea of finding it again. What does your process look like? Do you get as many grandmothers as you can round up and just kind of shake recipes out of them? How were you doing this?

Mukhin: I just try to work with as many local farmers and producers as I can, so we can use as many Russian ingredients as we can.

Thornburgh: So this is a close relationship.

Mukhin: Yes. I traveled throughout Russia—not just the big cities, but also the villages to talk with older people.

Thornburgh: You know I think people don’t understand the vastness of Russia, and how big it’s collection of cultures and languages and cuisines is. What parts of the country influences your food?

Mukhin: I’m inspired by the whole country. It’s a big territory, and sometimes it feels like it’s too big. I try and use different techniques and ingredients from all over the country, which I think makes my menus distinct.

We have an a la carte menu with about 50 dishes of classical Russian food. Everything looks modern because I’m a young chef. But if you close your eyes and try these dishes, you’ll taste 100% classic Russian flavors.

I want to highlight all aspects of Russian cuisine. Before the Olympic Games in Sochi, we opened a restaurant there, not just to make money, but to expose people visiting for the Olympics to Russian food. That’s why we opened The Red Fox restaurant. It’s all about Russian ingredients.

Thornburgh: Sochi, at least when I’ve been there, is like a Miami Beach. It’s like a place to get pizza and sushi, and go to the nightclubs.

Mukhin: You been?

Thornburgh: Yeah.

Mukhin: It’s crazy.

Thornburgh: It’s a little crazy, but it’s interesting to bring in Red Fox and sort of say okay, because people are coming out, let’s bring Russia to Sochi.

Mukhin: It was incredible. We had thousands of visitors at the restaurant.  

Thornburgh: So you really looked internally for inspiration. Did working outside of Russia motivate you to focus on Russian cuisine?

Mukhin: Yes. I spent time working in Avignon, France. I worked with Christian Etienne, and he would make a special Russian meal once a year.  It was crazy.

classic traveller reprint

Thornburgh: How was the food?

Mukhin: It was shit. I told him that I would cook real Russian food for him, and I did. I cooked borscht, blinis, and other classics. He liked it and said that once a year we should use my recipes, but with his influence. I agreed, and we went on to make amazing food. Eventually, I wanted to come back to my motherland. So I left and I started working on making White Rabbit a reality.

Thornburgh: When people go to White Rabbit, what are they going to find?

Mukhin: Someone once told me that there is a new Russian cuisine and an old Russian cuisine. I think Russian cuisine is going through an evolution. So I hope people will come and see evolution at White Rabbit.

Thornburgh: Great. Always good to end on an invite. Thank you.

Mukhin: Thank you so much.

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21 Things to Know Before You Go to Moscow

Featured city guides.

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20 most BEAUTIFUL buildings in Moscow (PHOTOS)

classic traveller reprint

1. The Kremlin

classic traveller reprint

Perhaps the most recognizable building in Russia and beyond. But did you know that Italian architects were responsible for this symbol of Russian power? Their skills were highly valued back in the days of Muscovite Russia. In the 15th century, Ivan III invited a team of architects from Italy, consisting of Aristotle Fioravanti, Aloisio da Milano, Antonio Gilardi, and Pietro Antonio Solari, to transform the capital’s fortress. It was they who designed the first   Kremlin towers , as well as the churches and palaces inside its walls.

2. The State Historical Museum

classic traveller reprint

This museum of incredible beauty — dedicated to ancient Russia and the imperial era — looks as old as the nearby Kremlin. In fact, it was built only at the end of the 19th century, but its neo-Russian style blends seamlessly with the Red Square ethos. Today it houses over 5 million exhibits.

3. The Grand Kremlin Palace

classic traveller reprint

Built on the territory of the Kremlin in the mid-19th century by order of Nicholas I and used for the coronation of Russian emperors and audiences with foreign monarchs, today it is the ceremonial residence of the Russian president (who works in the Senate Palace next door). Anyone can enter the Grand Kremlin Palace, but only as part of a tour group ( see here for details ).

4. The Cathedral of the Assumption

classic traveller reprint

The oldest of Moscow’s fully preserved buildings and the tomb of almost all Moscow patriarchs is also located inside the Kremlin. Constructed in the 15th century, it was considered the main cathedral of the Russian state, where Byzantine relics and treasures were brought and housed. Also stored here is the decree of Emperor Paul I, son of Catherine the Great, according to which a woman was not entitled to rule the empire (Paul detested his mother). Since then, Russia has never had a female leader, royal or otherwise.

classic traveller reprint

GUM (the Russian acronym for State Department Store) is not only a shopping center teeming with branded goods from classic luxury to modern Russian designers, but also a monument of architecture dating back to 1893. The main facade opens onto Red Square and matches the style of the nearby State Historical Museum.

6. St Basil’s Cathedral

classic traveller reprint

The most famous Russian church appeared in its iconic location in 1555-1561 by order of Ivan the Terrible, and in fact contains   nine churches in one . The idea of ​​a multi-sectioned cathedral was intended to symbolize the Kingdom of Heaven (New Jerusalem). The architects conceived the “promised city” in the form of multiple churches on the same foundation.

7. The Cathedral of Christ the Savior

classic traveller reprint

What we see today is an exact copy of the church that was built here in honor of Russia’s victory over Napoleon in 1812. But the original building did not survive the Bolsheviks. In 1931, they decided to blow it up and erect the futuristic Palace of the Soviets in its place. Either God exacted revenge or the foundations were too soft, but the half-completed construction had to be abandoned. Instead, the site was used for the largest swimming pool the country had ever seen. After the collapse of the USSR, the swimming pool’s days were numbered, and it soon made way for the cathedral mark 2.

8. Building of the Rossiya insurance company

classic traveller reprint

These commercial premises, built at the very beginning of the 20th century, quickly caught the eye of the creative intelligentsia. In Soviet times, they housed various literary, musical and film organizations, as well as art workshops. The studios were a focal point of the Moscow underground, whose illustrious denizens included Ilya Kabakov, one of the most highly-valued contemporary artists of Soviet origin.

9. Igumnov House

classic traveller reprint

The house of the Igumnovs, a family of Yaroslavl merchants, had an eventful time after the 1917 revolution. It was named after Nikolai Igumnov, who himself gave the building to the Soviet government, after which it served as the Soviet Institute of Blood Transfusion, the Institute of the Brain and, lastly, the residence of the French ambassador to Russia.

10. Bykovo Estate

classic traveller reprint

This manor house, located in suburban Moscow, resembles a Disney castle. Today, it is in fact an   Orthodox church , having once belonged to various eminent families close to the imperial court. One of the owners was Mikhail Izmailov, a conspirator in the coup that brought Catherine II to the throne.

11. The Federation Tower

classic traveller reprint

The tallest skyscraper in the Moscow-City business district, and the second highest in Europe. It stands 374 meters and 96 floors high. The architectural project is the brainchild of Sergey Choban and Peter Schweger. Besides offices, it contains numerous shops, restaurants, and premium apartments.

12. Tsaritsyno Palace

classic traveller reprint

This magnificent palace atop a hill in southern Moscow has been given a new lease of life. Conceived as the Moscow residence of Catherine II, it was never used. Abandoned and in a terrible state until the late 20th century, the palace underwent major restoration work in the 2000s.

13. The Bolshoi Theater

classic traveller reprint

The Bolshoi is one of the most famous opera and ballet theaters in the world. Its iconic facade is defined by the majestic colonnade crowned with Apollo’s chariot. However, what we see today is in fact the fourth   Bolshoi building , constructed in 1835, the three previous ones having burned down.

14. Melnikov House

classic traveller reprint

This masterpiece of 1920s Soviet constructivism was conceived as an architectural experiment: architect Konstantin Melnikov wanted to populate the entire city with round houses, believing that the cylindrical shape would save money on materials. However, his architectural solution was rejected by contemporaries, and the house remained one of a kind.

15. Main building of Moscow State University

classic traveller reprint

In 1947, Moscow celebrated its 800th birthday, in honor of which the government decided to erect   eight high-rise buildings   intended to project the might of the post-war Soviet superpower (partly inspired by US skyscrapers). In the end, only seven materialized (the so-called Stalin’s sisters). One of the most famous is the building of Moscow State University.

16. The Dominion Tower

classic traveller reprint

This office center, designed by world-famous architecture star Zaha Hadid, looks like a stack of books or a cake with skewed layers. Zaha Hadid Architects describes the idea as “​​spatial flight.” Despite its arresting appearance, the project is still less flamboyant than most of her creations elsewhere, having been slightly adapted to the harsh Russian realities.

17. Skolkovo campus

classic traveller reprint

This building in western Moscow resembles a monument to suprematism and the works of Malevich. In fact, it is a business school, built in 2006 and designed by British architect David Adjaye, who also created the National Museum of African-American History and Culture in Washington and the Museum of Modern Art in Denver.

18. Pashkov House

classic traveller reprint

Legend has it that architect Vasily Bazhenov, offended at Catherine II for not allowing him to remodel the Kremlin, designed this magnificent mansion directly opposite to underscore her error of judgment. However, there is no real evidence of this, or in fact that Pashkov House was the brainchild of Bazhenov. And that’s not the building’s only secret. It’s rumored that deep under the hill upon which it stands the lost   library of Ivan the Terrible   full of priceless ancient manuscripts lies hidden.

19. Petrovsky Palace

classic traveller reprint

This palace was built in honor of victory in the Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774) on the orders of Catherine II, and used as a residence for nobles journeying from St Petersburg to Moscow. It even housed Napoleon and his guard for a night during their retreat from Moscow in 1812. Today, the palace contains a boutique hotel, allowing anyone to stay there.

20. Garage Museum of Contemporary Art

classic traveller reprint

A superb example of the elegant minimalism of Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas. The basis of the project was an empty 1968 Soviet modernist building in Gorky Park, which had long accommodated the Vremena Goda (Seasons of the Year) restaurant. After its closure, the building stood abandoned for 20 years, and was only rejuvenated a decade ago. The museum interior decor preserves a unique mosaic and other architectural elements of Soviet times.

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IMAGES

  1. Classic Traveller Reprint: The Basic Books (1-3) by Marc Miller

    classic traveller reprint

  2. Books 0-8

    classic traveller reprint

  3. Books 0-8

    classic traveller reprint

  4. Books 0-8

    classic traveller reprint

  5. Games 1-6+

    classic traveller reprint

  6. Double Adventures 1-6+

    classic traveller reprint

VIDEO

  1. Opening BASE SET Reprint 2023 / Classic Collection

  2. The Spinward Marches Campaign

  3. Travelers Notebook Flip Through

  4. Classic Traveller

  5. Traveller

  6. Classic Traveller Journey #1: "Starter Traveller" Thoughts

COMMENTS

  1. The Classic Books

    Volume One in the Classic Traveller Reprint series contains all nine original rules books. 0- Introduction to Traveller, 1- Characters and Combat, 2- Starships, 3- Worlds and Adventures, 4- Mercenary, 5- High Guard, 6- Scouts, 7- Merchant Prince, and 8- Robots. Table of Contents . No information yet available. Classic Traveller Books

  2. Classic Traveller Facsimile Edition

    PDF + Softcover, B&W Book. $9.00. $20.00. Average Rating (71 ratings) This is the original text of the 1981 edition of Classic Traveller based on page image Scans. It includes Books 1-2-3, with errata and corrections inserted (where possible; and additional material in an errata appendix). This text is essentially an errata corrected edition ...

  3. The Little Black Books

    Now the canon for this award-winning series is again available . . . the rules, the adventures, the supplements, the source books, the board games, and the alien modules, in convenient individual reference volumes. Volume Two in the Classic Traveller Alien Reprint series includes: 1 - Droyne. The Last of the Ancients.

  4. PDF Guide to Hardcopy Classic Traveller Reprints

    Guide to Hardcopy Classic Traveller Reprints The hardcopy reprints are facsimile reprints (directly reprinted from existing books). Each is softcover binding. Digest-sized pages from the original Little Black Books (page size = 5.5 wide by 8.5 high) are reprinted side-by-side two to a full-size page (11 wide by 8.5 high).

  5. Classic Traveller Reprint: The Basic Books (1-3): Marc Miller

    The character record system is elegant, to say the least: This is a typical Traveller character: John Sample Age 32- 4 terms-Navy 75A6B9 Jack of Trades-2 Vacc-Suit-1 Pistol-2. That's it. Unlike the increasingly voluminous character sheets for the D&D games, you can literally record your character's stats on an 3x5 index card in Traveller.

  6. Classic Traveller Reprint Series

    Traveller: the science-fiction role-playing game... chornicles the living events of the far future... of the Golden Age of the Third Imperium. Now the canon for this award-winning series is again available... the rules, the adventures, the supplements, the source books, and the board games, in convenient individual reference volumes. This page ...

  7. CT-TTB-The Traveller Book

    The Traveller Book consolidated the core rules (Books 1-2-3) into a single 8.5 x 11 book and added additional material on how-to-play the game. It also added the short adventures Shadows (from Double Adventure 1) and Exit Visa.It weighs in at 160 pages. Classic Traveller (indeed, all Traveller editions, including later editions) was inducted into the Adventure Gaming Hall of Fame in 1997 on ...

  8. Review of Traveller: The Classic Books

    Advice I read there over a decade ago still comes in useful. This is a magnificent little volume. Book 1: Characters and Combat provides a character creation system, task resolution rules and the all-important combat system. Character creation in Traveller is bonkers. Truly unique. One-of-a-kind.

  9. Adventures #1-13

    Description. Enough adventure material to keep your player characters busy for many a gaming session! This third volume in the Classic Traveller Reprint series includes ALL thirteen original adventures. The book cover retains the classic Traveller appearance a solid black cover with the white type and yellow stripe.

  10. PDF Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society No. 25

    Classic Traveller Reprint Series Distributed as a promotion for the publication of Far Future's Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society 25-33. Please do not re-distribute or post this file. Far Future Enterprises will provide a copy to interested Traveller players on request. To request a copy of this Portable Document File,

  11. Classic Traveller in Print : r/traveller

    The white reprint hard copy I have has at least one mistake that was corrected in the pdf. The combat table is from '81, but some of text is still '77. ... If you want all classic Traveller materials from far Future, you are looking at 5 archives at $35 each, but there is a special where you get the fourth for free. Reply reply More ...

  12. Classic Traveller

    Traveller, sometimes referred to as Classic Traveller, is the original edition and was published between 1977 and 1986. ... However, in 1981, GDW took advantage of a need to reprint the core rules to also address and clean up the rules. This "second edition" actually adds quite a bit to the rules, but there are also some items dropped from the ...

  13. Classic Traveller 08 by Marc W. Miller

    Volume One in the Classic Traveller Reprint series contains all nine original rules books. 0- Introduction to Traveller 1- Characters and Combat 2- Starships 3- Worlds and Adventures 4- Mercenary 5- High Guard 6- Scouts 7- Merchant Prince 8- Robots" Genres Gaming. 256 pages, Paperback.

  14. FFE- Errata

    Consolidated Classic Traveller Reprint Errata FFE 004 The Short Adventures The pages are mixed up in Double Adventure 4. A complete replacement book is provided. FFE 005 The Games The Combat Chart and Identification Chart for Imperium is missing, and provided here. Page 20 of Fifth Frontier War is missing and provided here.

  15. Classic city tour of Moscow. Popular excursions in Moscow, Russia

    Classic city tour of Moscow. Price per person. 8010 . View details. About the tour. 4 hours. Moscow. Moscow City Tour is a good chance to get acquainted with the largest city in Russia. During the city tour you will see all the major sights including the Red Square, the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, the Novodevichiy Convent, Poklonnaya and ...

  16. Double Adventures #1-6 + The Classic Short Adventures

    Description. Even more adventuring material to keep your player characters busy! This fourth volume in the Classic Traveller Reprint series includes ALL 6 original double adventures, including 4 extra short adventures, and 3 special supplements from the page of the Journal of the Travellers Aid Society. More.

  17. Moscow Tours

    This tour of Moscow, St. Petersburg and the Golden Ring explores the places that shaped Russia's history - past, present and future. Uncover Moscow's ongoing revolutionary spirit, before journeying back in time to rural, medieval Russia. End in St Petersburg, a city of royal splendour and undeniable romance. 11 days From(EUR) €2,264 ...

  18. Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Classic Traveller Reprint: The Basic

    A slim book with a newly-commissioned cover (I've seen the original Traveller covers, and I prefer them for their minimalism)that holds reprint copies of the three original booklets, plus a new short story and some rather crowing sales figures (if I'd had my druthers, I'd have jettisoned the publishing figures, as 99% of the audience is ...

  19. Reviving classic Russian cuisine

    Oct192018. Roads & Kingdoms talks to Russian chef Vladimir Mukhin of Moscow's super-restaurant, White Rabbit. Still in his mid-30's, Vladimir Mukhin is already one of Russia's best known chefs and the leading culinary light of the White Rabbit Group, which has 16 restaurants around the country. The most well-known of these, Moscow's ...

  20. 20 most BEAUTIFUL buildings in Moscow (PHOTOS)

    8. Building of the Rossiya insurance company. These commercial premises, built at the very beginning of the 20th century, quickly caught the eye of the creative intelligentsia. In Soviet times ...