Just in case I've never made this clear, I don't just include stories I like on this blog.
War Eagles makes me a little sleepy...but I include pages that interest me, illustrate how well my game
Hideouts & Hoodlums emulates these comics, points out ways it could do so better, or just things I need to rant about after reading.
This page is the second of those, and it illustrates that administering first aid only required intent and physical contact; you do not need a first aid kit (they do help, though!).
Hoo hum, the ol' "Guards, come quick!" trick worked again like a charm and...ooo, what's this? One of them doesn't make it out? Now,
this woke me up and made me take notice. We so seldom see failure in the comic books, but of course it's quite easy to hit a fleeing opponent, particularly with a high rate of fire. And missing your hear noise roll? Sure, that can happen in game.
Of course, Kermit is only supporting cast. Would they have turned around and gone back for a player character?
It looks like the boys are escaping in a Fokker, or maybe a Heinkel, but it has to be a two-seater and that canopy looks odd for either plane. The pursuit planes look like Stukkas, and it's amusing to think of a Fokker outrunning a Stukka - but hey, it's comic books, and random chance is king in
Hideouts & Hoodlums as well.
Oh, these crazy kids. The number of things that have to go right for this plan to work...no wandering encounters en route to the air field, landing unseen near the airdrome, finding a single guard out of sight of all other guards...
...the guard knowing where the prisoner is, the guard giving up that information, the guard's uniform fitting, getting a surprise turn for the bombing run, not getting shot by anti-aircraft guns on the way out, only one guard left guarding the prisoner...
Mind you, a lot of these are familiar tropes of the genre, but still...
"He ain't heavyyyyy, he's my brotherrrrr" -- Oops, wrong war!
What? Tom is still flying around bombing the fields? Where are those anti-aircraft guns? Why are four soldiers manning a machine gun instead?
Yeah, the kids easily win in the end, so no surprises there. This next feature is
Captain Valor, and with a witty script by unknown-to-me scribe Abner Sundell (a name to watch for here!) and lush visuals by Mort Meskin, I'm feeling like we should just ignore the jaundiced look of the orientals and soak in the rest of the story...but at the same time, it occurs to me that there must be a lot of junks floating around in the sea and, if Tsin hadn't fired on them, Valor would never have known this was the right one...
This mobstertype is going in
Mobster Manual part II: M-Z as a pseudo-giant, a bad guy who is bigger and tougher than a thug, described as a giant, but obviously isn't literally a giant by any literal measure.
"Bullseye!" seems to suggest a critical hit, but it also could have just been maximum damage.
"That spinach I ate" -- great Popeye reference!
Hmm...here I was just raving about Meskin, but...look at those awful, stubby arms in panel 3...
You'd think that Valor would be taking continuous hit point loss by hanging from his thumbs, but he seems to be feeling like he just woke up from a nap here.
I've no objection to the half-pint escaping from being tied up; supporting cast get skill checks too. And last-minute rescues are one of the reasons to keep supporting cast around!
Valor doesn't seem to be actively recruiting supporting cast here, so the Editor must be elaborating on a very positive encounter reaction roll here.
Heyy...where did that flare gun come from? Did they tie him up with the flare gun still on him?
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