Cast

Player Characters

Dr. Daniel Jackson played by Dan

Dr. Jackson is an archaeologist, anthropologist, culturologist and linguist — in fact, it’s easier to list what he isn’t. His player plays the game mostly for immersion and exploration of the fictional world around the characters — a characteristic which leads him to clash with more action-oriented players. He tailored his character for his style of play, maxing out social and lore skills at the expense of basically all stats that would, well, actually be useful in a military-themed campaign.
Lt. Charles Kawalsky played by Charlie

A USAF officer, Kawalsky is a typical military grunt — follows orders, shoots at things, doesn’t talk until asked to, and has his own peculiar sense of humor. Charlie, his player, has a tendency to be overly cautious andturtle behind other players, only going somewhere if everyone else does and lacking initiative on his own.
Col. Jonathan O’Neil played by Jack

O’Neil is a grim, remorseless, no-nonsense military officer who can reliably carry out missions of questionable morality. Or he would be, if Jack actually cared that his character has to follow orders. He has a wife, and has a weak spot for children since his son accidentally shot himself with his gun (an irrelevant backstory detail that Jack inserted merely for color and roleplaying XP).

Non-Player Characters

Catherine Langford

This elderly woman is surrounded by an air of mystery. The only thing that’s more mysterious than her medallion is her unexplained connection to secret United States military projects. The players have to cope with her as a source of plot exposition, but aren’t exactly happy to have her tagging along.
Maj. Gen. W.O. West

General West, USAF, is in charge of the Creek Mountain complex, a top secret military base in Colorado. This means, in theory, that the players must obey him. In practice, they rarely even notice him, much less care about his orders.
Gary Meyers

Meyers is a scientist at the Creek Mountain installation. He apparently considers Daniel’s his rival. Maybe that’s because Daniel succeeded where Meyers didn’t, or maybe because he envies Daniel’s ability to make things up on the fly…