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Ancient History
Tech'nicl'y, I suppose this could go in the main forum, but what the Hell. This is just a heads-up take on some of the SR-stuff they're selling on EBay these days. 'cause I'm too lazy to blog.

Damn near everything from previous editions is going dirt cheap - you can pick up a stack of modules for $4-$7 each and probably get a deal on shipping. A few of the rarer sourcebooks still cost a bit more, but Hell, that's to be expected.

Sprawl Maps
Case in point. You may ask yourself why you're paying $8 for maps of Seattle when you can go down and get them from AAA, but if so you've already invested far too much brain time. The correct answer is "It Must Be Mine!"

Grenadier's Eastern Dragon
If you did collect SR minis back in the day, it felt special to whip out a scale-model (well, close enough) dragon to make your players cack their britches. These came in three versions: the Eastern Dragon, the Corporate Dragon (A western with a wristwatch), and the Feathered Serpent. Of the three, the third one is least prefered - it's mostly made of light blue plastic. All three have long been out of production, and make nice collectables.

Shadowrun Duels Demo Kit
I've never seen one of these for sale before, but if you haven't gotten into Shadowrun Duels yet, it's probably a good way to start.

The DMZ
The DMZ boxed set was a miniatures combat game with an SR setting; the simplified combat rules were actually preferred by a couple groups, but it didn't exactly take off.

GenCon Circuit Board Pin
You don't see many of these for sale. Hell, you don't see much SR con memorabilia for sale, at least not at once.

Shadowland Magazine
Of all the Shadowrun magazines and fanzines, Shadowland is probably the easiest and cheapest to get back issues of. If you're hardcore, you can browse for old issues of White Wolf Quarterly, Challanger 54 and Shadis for their few articles on Shadowrun (and Earthdawn), some of them by past SR luminaries like Nigel Findley and Steve Kenson.

Shadowrun for Super Nintendo
This is mainly for the education of the American crowd. Any of you that have the American version of the Shadowrun SNES game should be able to immediately pick out that the art on this cartridge and accompanying manual et al. is different. This is the UK version of the game. Nintendo employed regional lock-outs for the SNES system (and indeed, associated products like the Super Famicom and SNES 2). The cartridge is of a slightly different design than the North American version, and there's a regional lock-out chip, so a UK game cannot be played on a North American SNES console, and vice versa. Well, there's some hardware hacks for that, if you're truly obessessive about it, but you're not missing much in my opinion.
Jrayjoker
And don't forget the elusive Denver boxed set. On sale now for the low, low price of $50 plus shipping with the added bouns of both NAN books thrown into the mix...Denver: City of Shadows + NAN 1 & 2
Black Jack Rackham
Ebay, my guide to the satisfaction of my obsessive completionism. Course now that you've told me about shadis, white wolf, and that cool GenCon pin, I'm gonna have some more stuff to grab up... Damn you biggrin.gif
Mark
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