The Orion Nebula (game)

Last updated
The Orion Nebula
PublishersOrpheus Publishing Corporation
Years activeJanuary 1990 to April 1991
Genres Role-playing, science fiction, space opera
LanguagesEnglish
Playersunlimited
Playing timeunlimited
Materials requiredInstructions, order sheets, turn results, paper, pencil
Media type Play-by-mail

The Orion Nebula is an open-end, mixed-moderated, play-by-mail (PBM) space opera. It was published by the Orpheus Publishing Corporation in January 1990 after playtesting. The game was playable by postal mail, email, and CompuServe. The game was a space opera on a massive intergalactic scale. Exploration, economics and combat were elements of gameplay. Players could roleplay various positions including: Starships, Cities, Starbases, Ground Parties, and Black Markets. The game tied for 8th place in Paper Mayhem's Best PBM Game of 1989.

Contents

History and development

The Orion Nebula was an open-ended, mixed moderated PBM game published by Orpheus Publishing Corporation. [1] The publisher launched the game in January 1990 after playtesting in 1989. [2] Email and postal mail were orders options. [3] Players could also use CompuServe for orders. [2] In its September–October 1991 issue, the editor of Paper Mayhem announced that Orion's Nebula and its publisher were no longer running. [4] The company's president stated in a letter to the editor that the game stopped in April 1991 due to financial issues and offered the game for sale. [5]

Gameplay

The Orion Nebula was a space opera with a massive intergalactic setting. [1] Exploration, economics and combat were elements of gameplay. [6] Although open-ended, the game had due dates for turn orders to enable simultaneous turn processing. [3] Each turn comprised 150 time points of 2.25 hours each. [3]

Players could roleplay various positions including: Starships, Cities, Starbases, Ground Parties, and Black Markets. [3] Additional options of government types affected availability of spaceships and other factors. [3] Groups of ten or more players could also custom-design a government type prior to game start. [7]

Reception

In its January–February 1990 issue of Paper Mayhem, the game tied for 8th place in the Best PBM Game of 1989 listing along with Continental Rails , Duelmaster, and Fleet Maneuvers . [8]

See also

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References

Bibliography

Further reading