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| unknown member writes: |
Same as McDonald for food service. It is easily available to everyone, simple to eat whenever one feels like having a quick snack. Food is standardised and well displayed, there are fun themes and lots of little extras one can enjoy. No reason to complain for something we really needed in the hobby. |
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©1994-2010 Bill Armintrout
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| VOTING RESULTS | |||
| Answer | Votes | % | Chart |
definitely a good influence | 149 | 36% | |
|---|---|---|---|
more good than bad | 145 | 35% | |
no influence | 23 | 6% | |
more bad than good | 21 | 5% | |
definitely a negative influence | 12 | 3% | |
not familiar with Flames of War | 42 | 10% | |
not a WWII tabletop gamer | 23 | 6% | |
| POLL IS CLOSED |
| POLL DESCRIPTION | |
Flames of War from Battlefront is a popular WWII ruleset that encourages tournament play, and which is published with a series of supplements not unlike the Codexes for GW's 40K. In your observation, how would you assess the influence of FoW on the WWII tabletop gaming hobby? |