b e a t y * s o a p ====================== === -- - - (c) 1999, 2007 TNSP a production by ccr - code & graphics fgcl - music ideas by both MIDAS by Sahara Surfers - reqs - * 486DX/2 or Pentium1 class CPU * MS-DOS or compatible (DOSBox for modern platforms) * some 500kB of basemem, I think * some EMS mem * GUS/PAS/SB or similar card supported by MIDAS - the lowdown - this intro was never finished and is released "as is" now 8 years late. it stops at the greetings part, but was supposed to have two more effects/parts after that (as long as the s3m module plays). it isn't packed and there are few bugs left in too - read the longer story below if you can be arsed. - the story - during one beautiful spring friday of 1999, ccr was traveling home from SA-INT (finnish army, where he was enjoying a 6 month vacation at that time), when he got a idea of drinking lots of beer. after arriving to home ccr called fgcl and asked if he had anything of importance to do. having none, ccr asked if they could do some serious boozing together. fgcl thought that it was ok and asked ccr to pick him up. quickly they visited a kiosk, buying many liters of alcohol, (mostly beer) which is usually served as a "creativity drink" in TNSP brainstorming sessions. ... after 3 days of drunk coding, drunk drawing and drunk composing, a short intro was starting to form. unfortunately, as it has been traditional with TNSP productions, the intro was never finished. ccr lost interest, and not enough effects were finished, so the code was basically left rotting on his hard disk. however, now in late 2007 - nearly 8 years later, mr. ccr got bored, fired up DOSBox and installed Borland Pascal, MIDAS v0.40, and fixed up the old crappy libraries and code of his ... with one night of cheap magic tricks, the old code was blown into life - still very unfinished, and short - but working. now this piece of productive alcohol usage is at your reach... I didn't bother compressing the exe or building any kind of final version, so the data files are separate, etc. - ccr/TNSP in november 2007