Grafster &
Decrepit: Ive sent you each a PM to establish what you do or dont know about the adventure, but Im happy for both of you to play.
Assuming that they are both in then weve got six players, so the recruitment is now closed. Anyone else who applies will go onto the Reserve List.
Grafster wrote:At the same time I remember being told (admittedly by a different keeper who may have had a different take on the game) that some degree of practical detective work would be useful.
Thats my take on it as well, in fact Id say its essential. Personally I like your PI character.
Id rather your character had a connection to
immes dilettante than the three Russians, as Ive pretty much decided to make her the character who Jackson Elias contacts. So if you go with the academic character there isnt any need for a St-Petersburg connection.
If you lost the lame aspect of the Chinese PI character he could be a bodyguard or chaperone type for Elizabeth, the kung-fu would make up for his small stature (esp. in the 20s when such skills would be very exotic). She would probably have had a minder of some sort before she met Andrei in France so the presence of the Russians wouldnt effect his suitability to accompany Elizabeth.
Alternatively sticking with him as a lame character, I dont see any reason that he couldnt have worked for Elizabeth or her family as a PI in the past, though Id rather he was permanently employed by her/them in some way - I'm sure that her rich family could have a reason to employ somebody for those 'odd jobs' that might need doing.
I cut these bits from the Wikipedia article on New Yorks Chinatown.
wikipedia wrote:Chinatown started on Mott Street, Park, Pell and Doyer streets, east of the notorious Five Points district. By 1870, there was a Chinese population of 200. By the time the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was passed, the population was up to 2,000 residents. By 1900, there were 7,000 Chinese residents, but fewer than 200 Chinese women.
wikipedia wrote:Until the 1960s, the bulk of the population was Toisan and Cantonese speaking, coming from a small area of Guangdong province and Hong Kong with a small minority of Hakka also represented. Mandarin was rarely spoken by natives even well into the 1980s.