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  2. Nuclear Destruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_Destruction

    Nuclear Destruction was the first game offered by Flying Buffalo Inc., and started the professional PBM industry. [1] It was the first professional PBM game. [2] Flying Buffalo Inc. offered the game through mail initially, but it is a play-by-email (PBEM) game in the 21st century as well. [3]

  3. Nuclear War (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_War_(card_game)

    Nuclear War Bonus Pack #2 — India/Pakistan War Variant (1999) Combines the Nuclear War game with the India Rails game. Weapons of Mass Destruction (2004) More cards for the game including new cards usable as either a missile or a warhead and a Deluxe Population deck featuring characters from Nodwick, Kenzer & Company and Dork Tower.

  4. Rick Loomis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Loomis

    Loomis acquired Nuclear War and began publishing it in 1972, soon becoming one of Flying Buffalo's best sellers. [5]: 35 [10] Ken St. Andre asked Loomis to sell 40 copies of Tunnels & Trolls at Origins in July 1975, and when those sold out Flying Buffalo acquired the rights to the game and published their own second edition in December 1975.

  5. Flying Buffalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Buffalo

    Flying Buffalo Inc. (FBI) is a game company with a line of role playing games, card games, and other gaming materials. The company's founder, Rick Loomis , began game publishing with Nuclear Destruction , a play-by-mail game which started the professional PBM industry in the United States.

  6. List of play-by-mail games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_play-by-mail_games

    In the early 1970s, in the United States, Rick Loomis of Flying Buffalo Inc, began a number of play-by-mail games; [4] this included games such as Nuclear Destruction (1970). This marked the beginning of the professional PBM industry. [2] Other publishers followed suit, with significant expansion across the industry in the 1980s.

  7. Starweb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starweb

    Starweb (or StarWeb) is a closed-end, space-based, play-by-mail (PBM) game. First published by Flying Buffalo Inc. in 1975, it was the company's second PBM game after Nuclear Destruction, the game that started the PBM industry in 1970. Players today can choose a postal mail or email format.

  8. There’s an arms race in Haiti, and it’s fueled by Florida’s ...

    www.aol.com/arms-race-haiti-fueled-florida...

    Even with Haiti cut off from the world, with its main international airport and government port shuttered since early March, and its border with the neighboring Dominican Republic sealed, weapons ...

  9. Steve Crompton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Crompton

    Steven S. Crompton is a Canadian-born artist, author and designer who has worked in the role-playing and comic genres since 1981. In the gaming industry he is best known as the artist for the Grimtooth's Traps books as well as other Catalyst role-playing game supplements, Tunnels & Trolls and the Nuclear War card game.