Since "Adventure!" is set in the 1930s, it's only natural to have historical figures appear from time to time. So it would be quite funny to collect a few people from the real world and think about how and in which role they could enrich an adventure campaign. The first person to work with for Adventure! comes to mind is not as well known today as he once was. But I think he's really predestined - especially since what little is known about him makes him seem as if he were actually a character from a novel himself:
B. Traven
Millions of readers have enthusiastically devoured his novels The Death Ship and The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. But the public knows next to nothing about the author. There are reasons for this, because B. Traven is not only a writer, theater actor, machinist and world traveler, but also a true expert at concealing his identity. B. Traven, alias Ret Marut, alias Traven Torsvan, alias Otto Feige is an anarchist and had to flee Europe in 1924 under adventurous circumstances. He is currently in hiding in Mexico, but has made repeated excursions to other parts of Latin America. It can be assumed that he has experienced some of the adventures he writes about in one form or another...
Now the only question is: which allegiance would B. Traven have to do with? And what would a notorious anarchist and critic of capitalism like B. Traven think of Max Mercer?
B. Traven
Millions of readers have enthusiastically devoured his novels The Death Ship and The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. But the public knows next to nothing about the author. There are reasons for this, because B. Traven is not only a writer, theater actor, machinist and world traveler, but also a true expert at concealing his identity. B. Traven, alias Ret Marut, alias Traven Torsvan, alias Otto Feige is an anarchist and had to flee Europe in 1924 under adventurous circumstances. He is currently in hiding in Mexico, but has made repeated excursions to other parts of Latin America. It can be assumed that he has experienced some of the adventures he writes about in one form or another...
Now the only question is: which allegiance would B. Traven have to do with? And what would a notorious anarchist and critic of capitalism like B. Traven think of Max Mercer?
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