----------------------------------------------------------------------------- _ _ ______ ____ | | | | | ____/\ / __ \ | |__| | __ ___ _____ _ __ | |__ / \ | | | | | __ |/ _` \ \ / / _ \ '_ \ | __/ /\ \| | | | | | | | (_| |\ V / __/ | | | | | / ____ \ |__| | |_| |_|\__,_| \_/ \___|_| |_| |_|/_/ \_\___\_\ v1.2 Maintained by M. Long ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This FAQ is about the series of multi-user chat servers known as "Havens". This FAQ is maintained by M. Long (tsunami@khazad-dum.ccsi.com) who, should any of your team be caught or killed, will disavow any knowledge of your actions. This FAQ is designed in several large sections consisting of about 2-5 broad questions each. Each section was written to be read as a whole and will cover a different facet of using a haven. Jumping into the middle of a section is a sure-fire way of getting confused and bringing the laughter of the Gods upon yourself. This FAQ will be posted to alt.internet.talk.haven promptly whenever I remember. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- REVISION HISTORY (I know y'all don't care, but record keeping must be done) 1.2 - New smart aleck Table of Contents header (was CONTENT OF TABLES) Fixed my email address Added .m and .M Added more sacred mooers Fixed Angelo's haven description Added more haven resources History of channels revised "Respond in kind" rule added to etiquette 1.1 - Added sacred bovines and haven resources 1.0 - Initial Version ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- THE TABLE OF OUR DISCONTENTS 1) What is a haven? (a.k.a. What's the beef?) 2) How do you connect to a haven? (a.k.a. What do you do with beef?) 3) How do you use a haven? (basic) (a.k.a. How do you eat beef?) 4) Common terminology (a.k.a. What's a vegetarian?) 5) Etiquette (a.k.a. Mouth closed?) 6) Haven types and locations (a.k.a. Where's the beef?) 7) People to know (oldbies) (a.k.a. The sacred cows) 8) Haven Resources (a.k.a. The steakhouses) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) What is a haven? Q: OK, so what is a haven? A: A haven is a multi-user chat server originally written by Chris Eleveld (The Insane Hermit) in September of 1991 at Purdue University. Since then, there have been many variations of the haven server written by a variety of people, but all have preserved certain features which make it a haven. Q: There are lots of multi-user chat systems out there. What makes a haven unique? A: First of all, the use of line numbers. Every person connecting to a haven is assigned a unique number. Most commands refer to a user using this number. The use of line numbers is often much faster and easier than other systems which refer to a user by his or her full name. Second, havens use very short commands. Most all commands are inputted with a delimiter (usually . or , or /) followed by one or two characters. While this alone isn't all that unique, combine this with the efficiency of line numbers, and you have a very fast system. Third, the way text is shown is completely unique. The general format looks like: talking: (12, Myst) hello yelling (see below): (*12, Myst*) hello page (see below): (12,p Myst) hello No other chat system looks like this. 2) Connecting to a haven Q: Okay, havens sound cool. How do I connect to them? A: Well, the easiest way to connect to a haven is using telnet. Because havens were designed to be clientless, you don't need to download any special programs to use it. You probably already have access to a program that will connect to a haven just fine. However, if you are going to use a telnet program, make sure it can connect in linemode (cooked mode), and you have some form of screenwrap on. While most havens offer features to emulate these features if you don't have them, not all do, and they don't work for everyone. If you are using telnet from UNIX or VMS, you need not worry, every haven will work fine for you. If you are using TNVT, Clarkson telnet, NCSA telnet from a PC or Mac, you might have some difficulties. Check your manual or online help about linemode connections and enabling client-side screenwrapping. Q: You mentioned something about clients. What are they? How do I use them? A: Telnet (although it technically is a client) is really the ugliest and worst way to connect to a haven. The only advantage telnet has over more specialized clients is that its widely available. There are, however, many many special programs available that will make your life a lot easier. These programs, called clients, will autoformat text for you, give you a lot more control over how you use a haven, enable you to program it to automate some things, and generally make your life happier. The most popular client used by haveners is called TinyFugue, written by Ken Keys. Usually referred to as simply "TF", TinyFugue offers scores of features that are ideal for havens such as hiliting, triggers (commands executed automatically when certain text is received), and the ability to connect to multiple havens at once. TF, however, is only available for UNIX and OS/2. There is a VMS version of TF, called tf-vms, but it is so far behind the UNIX-OS/2 version its not right to really call it the same program. Some clients you can use include: TinyFugue ftp://tf.tcp.com/pub/tinyfugue/ tf-vms (VMS) ftp://ftp.math.okstate.edu/pub/muds/clients/VMSClients/ tintin++ (UNIX) ftp://princeton.edu/pub/tintin++/ WinTin (Winsock) http://port8zero.com/tintin++/ zMUD (Winsock) http://www.trail.com/~zugg/zmud.html MUDDweller (Mac) ftp://ftp.tcp.com/pub/mud/Clients Mudling (Mac) ftp://imv.aau.dk/pub/Mudling This is hardly an exhaustive list. A better list is found at: http://www.math.okstate.edu/~jds/mudfaq-p2.html Q: But these are all MUD clients... aren't there any clients made specifically for havens? A: There are two. The first, called HHC, was also written by Chris Eleveld. He doesn't support it anymore, and not many people use it. The second, called VTR, was written by Larry Daffner and was an attempt to hack together a haven version of TF. He met with moderate success at it too. They are both available only for UNIX and can be downloaded from the haven homepage at http://www.cadif.cornell.edu/~haven/ 3) Using a haven (basics) Q: Okay, I know how to connect, now what? A: First, lets get some basic concepts in order. When you first connect, you are assigned a linenumber (see above). For the duration of your connection, you will have this number. You are assigned a new number every time you log in. Every person on the haven also has a handle, usually referred to as their name. Your name can be any combination of letters, numbers, spaces, and symbols up to about 20-25 characters in length. When you first connect, you are assigned a default name, traditionally "?". However, many havens have their own default name. Many havens will not let you communicate until you change your name to something else. The haven is organized into channels. Many people think of channels as rooms in which you and your friends can talk. The concept of channels came around with early versions of the haven. There were 5 channels at the time, labelled a-e. Each person was "tuned" to a certain channel and communicated on that channel. If they wanted to talk on a different channel, they "tuned" themselves to a different channel. This was a mimic of a crude HAM radio system. However, as havens progressed, the fixed channel idea was abandoned for a system where you can make up your own channel names (up to 9 characters or so) at your whim. Now the idea of "tuning" between channels has been completely replaced with "joining" and "leaving" user-defined areas which are still known as channels. When you first connect to a haven, you are put into a default channel, called "the main". This channel is traditionally "0", but many havens have their own main channels. Its an interesting historical note that the concept of channels between IRC and havens grew parallel yet essentially separate from each other. If you've ever used IRC, you should have a good understanding of channels. Q: Okay, this is all fine and good... but HOW DO YOU USE IT? A: Fine. To talk, just type what you want to say and hit that [RETURN] key. However, to do anything else, you need to issue a command. Commands are issued by typing a delimiter (either . or , or /) followed by the command. For purposes of this FAQ, all commands will be preceded with a period (.), although you may use , or / just the same. Also, things in angle brackets <> are required fields. For example, .n means you type .n followed by your name. YOU DO NOT INCLUDE THE < AND > WHEN ISSUING THE COMMAND! The # symbol also stands for the linenumber. For example, .f# means you type something like .f23. YOU DO NOT TYPE THE # SYMBOL WHEN ISSUING THE COMMAND! .n - This will set your name to . Some havens have a registration system where you can put a password on your name so no one else can use it. If you have put a password on your name, use .n =. .c - Go to channel . This will make you leave your current channel and join you to channel . You can only be in one channel at any one time. .s - Secure the channel. If you issue the .s command, no one else is allowed to enter the channel. You can not secure the main. NOTE: Some havens have this command as .l (lock) .w or .W - Who is on. This will give a complete list of everyone who is on the haven. Some havens show slightly different information for .w and .W .w# or .W# - Who is on line #. This will show you just one line. .w .W - Lists everyone who matches the in their name, host, or channel. .f - (finger) Short who list. Lists everyone in a three column format. .f# - (finger #) Give detailed information on line #. .p# - (page #) Send a private to line #. A page appears to another person like: (23,p Terminator) hi. Note the 'p' after the number. This denotes a private message. .e - (echo) With this on, all your pages are echoed back to you. .hi - (hilite) With this on, all pages you receive are bold. NOTE: Some havens have this command as .H .y - (yell) Send a to all channels. This is a way you can send a message to everyone who is both in your channel as well as everyone not in your channel. For many havens, yells have their own constant thread of conversation. Yells look like: (*23, Terminator*) I am yelling .hu - (hush) This will suppress all yells. While this is on, you can not hear yells, nor can you yell yourself. .g# - (gag) Should a person be too annoying for you, this will suppress everything line # says, yells, or pages to your screen. .m - (message suppress) This will suppress all announcements of people entering and exiting the haven. .M - (Some havens only) This is a SUPER message suppress that not only suppresses entering and exiting, but channel joining and departing as well. .q - Quit the haven. NOTE: a few havens have this command as .Q .? - Help. This is your best friend. All havens have help on it. Use it. Love it. Live it. These are not even close to all the commands. However, this set will get you started. I recommend looking at each kind of haven and its set of commands and choose the havens which best suit you. See below for a comparative list of the types of havens in existence. Q: Okay, I talked for a while on the havens and I really liked it. However, I noticed people were able to do actions, how do you do that? A: "Actions" are called emotes. They are done by starting a with a colon (:). For example, :smiles will produce (23) Tsunami smiles Emotes work in normal talking, yells, and pages. So you can also yell an emote like .y :waves producing (*23*) Tsunami waves or a page an emote like .p12 :lix producing (23,p) Tsunami lix Q: I also saw someone do a [to Someone] thing. How do I do that? A: SOME havens have what's called "posing".. which is an emote directed to one person in the style of a stage pose in a play. To do this, use the backtic or grave key (`) followed by the linenumber of the "posee" as your emote. For example: `12 hello would look like: (23) Tsunami [to Terminator]: hello Stage poses can also be used in yells (but not pages). .y `12 boo would look like: (*23*) Tsunami [to Terminator]: boo NOTE: The ` is NOT an apostrophe ('), it is the backtic or grave. It is usually found to the left of the [1] key under the [~]. Q: I have this person saying things I don't like... How do I make him go away? A: Alas, 'tis true... sometimes a moron comes around and tries to make your life hell. However, there exists a system so that all your woes magically go away. It's called "gagging". You can make just about anyone who is giving you troubles go silent (as far as you are concerned). Type .g# where # is the victim's linenumber and *poof* everything he or she says and does will magically not appear on your screen. If someone is giving you a hard time, gag him. Do not bother the HavenOp (see below) over it... he or she will proabably just show you the help page for gag. Complaining to an Op instead of gagging someone yourself will just make you an annoyance to them. Don't forget that Ops are haveners too, and don't really want to hear about everyone's petty arguments. Some havens do not allow you to gag Ops. 4) Common terminology Newbie: A newbie is any person who is new to the haven. I would like to think that the term 'newbie' shouldn't be a derogatory term. Such attitudes take us back to elitism and the childishness that's often associated with elitist societies (hazing, superiority trips, etc). Everyone was a newbie at one point or another, and being new is nothing to be ashamed of. Without new people, the havens as we know them today wouldn't exist, and the few people who used them at the very beginning would have long since dropped it. The newbies are the backbone of the haven. In the words of Chris Eleveld (The Insane Hermit), "I'll always be a newbie." Newbie fuckwit: These are the people who are not only new, but think they run the joint or think they can say whatever they want. Usually, Newbie fuckwits are looking to provoke a fight with racism, sexism, religism, or is just looking for netsex. You can usually spot a fuckwit from a mile away. Look for lots of repeated punctuation, all-caps, and inflammatory remarks. These people should be gagged on sight. Oldbie: If the newbies are the backbone of the haven, the oldbies are the heart. Oldbies are a very small group of veterans who have made some significant contribution to the havening community as a whole. They might have contributed through programming, culture, institutions, or just being there enough that their presence made a change... although in many cases, the contribution they may have made have not been for the better. HavenOp: A haven operator or someone on a haven with special privileges. A HavenOp's job is to maintain control over the haven, both on the technical and social side. HavenOps have the final say on everything. If you don't believe me in that, feel free to tell one you think so. It's hard to say what a "good" HavenOp is. Some people think that tough HavenOps are the biggest S.O.B.'s ever to walk the earth, but prefer their havens because they are the ones with the fewest fuckwits. Others like loose HavenOps because they can do or say practically anything they want on their havens... but that means that fuckwits thrive there. Its all a matter of taste. There is a kind of voting mechanism in place as well. If someone is a "bad" HavenOp, people won't go to his or her haven, and the haven dies. If you don't like how an Op run his or her haven, don't complain about it, just don't go there. Ban: A HavenOp has the ability to keep you from returning to his or her haven by putting your site in a list of banned hosts. If you get your site banned, whining to the HavenOp about it is a sure way to keep your site on that list a LONG time. Lix: (verb) a variation on "licks". Its a form of informal greeting on the havens. Wap: (verb) An old muddism that means something vaguely like a 3 Stooges style slug. Wapfests are somewhat common, and a cherished part of haven life. Yuk Yuk Yuk. Misfire: The event where a person appends the wrong linenumber to a .p, thereby sending a page to the wrong person. Quite embarrassing and often confusing. AntiHaven: The AntiHaven is a haven, however, its usage is restricted to oldbies. The haven lives in infamy. It is currently run by Robin of Locksley at an undisclosed location. Please do not ask Robin for the address. If you are wanted there, you will be invited. Idling/Idle: A lot of people have the ability to send their network connection into a suspended or backgrounded state while they are not actively at the keyboard. While they are away, the connection's idletime (the amount of time since they've done something) increases, hence the name. Mav: Another muddism referring to an embarrassing error by sending a message meant to be said privately to a lot of people. Often the best mavs are sexual in nature. An example is saying on the main something like: p.23 You wanna get funky? Registering: Some havens allow a user to be added in a database with a password so only that person can use that name. Registering puts a user in the database. Usually done with the .R command. Pinging: Another word for paging. Came from .p'ing. Z-mail: Some havens have an in-house mailing system. It is always referred to as Z-mail (pronounced Zed-Mail NOT Zee-Mail to distinguish it from the UNIX mail agent). It was named after the two commands that read and send Z-Mail, .z and .Z Query: A page-locking mechanism found on hotel-type havens. Allows a person to talk normally, but everything is sent to one person. Emote: Using the : delimiter to pose an action. See above. CH/Coffee House: A haven from yesteryear. This haven had NO havenops. The place was total anarchy. In the words of one oldbie, "you'll never find a greater hive of scum and villainy". To have a haven compared to the Coffee House is generally considered an insult. (Sorry CC) Edgars: Every year, the haven community has a mock awards presentation. This occurs every April and goes on through May. Haveners are nominated for certain awards by other haveners. The nominations are counted and put to vote by the havening community. Awards are given for things like "Best/worst choice by aliens as representative of the human race", "Most easygoing in bed", and "Biggest flirt". The Edgars are currently run by Terminator. Mailing list: There is a mailing list for haveners. This list is a forum for loosely haven-related issues at it's best, but can boil down to large flame wars and whining at its worst. The mailing list is also run by Terminator. Lag: Sometimes the network or the server can't keep up with the traffic its being sent causing things to stop for a little bit. Lag happens. There's NOTHING anyone can do about it. Please don't yell "lag" over and over if you are lagged. It only makes it worse. Common abbreviations: BBL - Be Back Later BBIAB - Be Back In A Bit ROTFL - Rolling On The Floor Laughing ROTFLHAO - Rolling On The Floor Laughing His/Her @$$ off. IAB - I Am Back TTYL - Talk To You Later TTFN - Ta Ta For Now IMHO - In My Humble Opinion 5) Emily Havenpost presents: Although every haven has its own set of rules, every haven follows a basic set of etiquette that you should adhere to. Failure to follow these rules is a sure way to get gagged, killed off havens, banned, and generally disliked. Some people go out of their way to break these rules of etiquette, but they usually wind up as outcasts from haven society. By and large, we haveners welcome newcomers into our family, so follow the rules, be friendly, and meet some the best friends you can have in the world. Break the rules, and gain a couple hundred new enemies, some of which can be very dangerous. Rule #1: Do NOT speak in all caps. It's annoying. It's the same as shouting everything you say. On top of that, studies have shown that when a person communicates in all caps, the text is mostly ignored by those who read it. Therefore it's in your best interest to speak in all lower or mixed case. Rule #2: Respect people who differ from you. There are haveners all over the world and each have their own unique qualities. Racism, sexism, comments against a person's sexual orientation, and religism are really looked-down upon. Feel free to think how you want about these things, but keep your comments to yourself. Rule #3: Don't spam. Spam is loads of worthless text. Don't do it. Just don't. Rule #4: If you are looking to pick up a hot date on the haven, turn your computer off and hire a plastic surgeon. If you meet someone special while on the haven, great! But "trolling" on the haven for netsex or phonesex is looked upon just as if you walked around a party asking "you wanna fuck?" Rule #5: Watch your mouth. Sure.. we all swear, but if everything you say is laced in profanities, it grows tiresome and makes you look stupid. Also, keep sexually explicit or profanity out of your name. No one wants to listen to someone called "Hot Cunt" or "Shit on a Brick", ok? Rule #6: Respond in kind. This means reply to yells by yelling. Reply to says by talking normally. Respond to pages through pages only. Never quote pages aloud. (I realize even oldbies do this sometimes, but that doesn't make it any less rude.) However, it is acceptable to take conversions you heard in says or yells to private .p messages (and often desired). 6) Haven types: There are a lot of different variants of the Haven server. The following is a list of these server and its genealogy. Hermit's Haven (original) - Written by The Insane Hermit. This is it, the haven that started it all. In fact, a couple of havens still run this code. Twilight Zone/TZ (deriv of Hermit's Haven) - Written by Visual Mark. This haven brought a lot of new features to the havens and is still being run in a few remote locations. Lorien (deriv of Hermit's Haven) - Written and maintained by Creel. This haven is very popular and is being run a lot of places. First haven to have password protected names. Sherwood Forest (deriv of Hermit's Haven) - Written by Robin of Locksley. First haven to have subjected help, among other things. Haven is extinct. Coffee House (deriv of Hermit's Haven) - Written by CC. This haven was the first to have a lot of things. The features found in this haven created the measuring stick against which all other havens were compared. To my knowledge, this haven was never distributed although it's been stolen a couple times. The Coffee House stands out as the first haven to be run completely without any HavenOps. Currently Maid Marion and The Fallen Angel are running this haven (without power). AntiHaven (original) - Written by Blackbird, Parry, et al. This haven, written to compete against the original Hermit Haven, had a lot of neat features no one sees anymore, including listening on multiple ports and the ability to de-bind the ports to keep new people from connecting. It also protected itself from process-killers running on the Purdue computers. The current AntiHaven is running Hermit code. This code is extinct. Hotel California/HC (deriv of Twilight Zone) - Written by Tsunami. This haven was the most robust haven ever built. Many of the "new" features found on recent servers were developed on the Hotel first. the Hotel California had over 200 different commands and just as many features. This is the first haven that was able to connect to other havens. By the death of the project, Tsunami couldn't even remember everything it could do. Opium Den/OD (original) - Written and maintained by Val. This haven is wildly popular mostly because its highly portable and simple. This haven was the first to have asynchronous DNS lookups and hot reboots. VCD (original) - Written and maintained by Angelo. This haven was built up from an aborted haven by Schrodinger. The features are an odd mix between OD and HC. If those two havens could have a child, VCD is what it would be. Those who use it are very dedicated to it. MiniHaven (original) - Written and maintained by Tsunami. This haven is both very powerful, but easy to use. Those who use MiniHaven are also very dedicated to it. The installation is menu-driven and controlled by interactive shell scripts. This haven is also the most customizable. The major drawback is that its hard to add new commands to it. Schrodinger's Box (semi-original) - Schrodinger took a neat idea and ran with it. He created a completely character-mode oriented version of a haven. Written for Linux, this haven had a completely original feel to it. Its only drawback was that it really hosed up TinyFugue. Common Thread (original) - Written and maintained by Tiamat. This experimental server was written in Java. Tiamat is still working on it, but it looks promising. Temple of Slack (deriv of OD) - Operated by Tiamat. This cute twist on the OD server has all kinds of features not found on any other haven such as games, really freaky power features, and things of that nature. ToS is a haven written to be fun to play with rather than to chat on. Capsi (deriv of OD) - Written by Capricorn. A cute variation of OD. Has a lot of neat features on it and would give VCD a run for its money if only it was more stable. Capsi tends to crash a lot. * Current locations of popular havens (as of 2 May 1997): Opium Den (OD) omnisolve.com 1234 Illusions (HC) xanadu.io.com 6969 Metaverse (OD) curryco.com 1111 Melrose Place (OD) curryco.com 4616 Bud Chatline (OD) curryco.com 3333 Freezone (Lorien) walker.cioe.com 2525 BackStage (HC) petri.cs.louisville.edu 6969 Pub (Lorien) brain.uccs.edu 1973 Castle Greens (VCD) sherwood.brevard.com 6969 PLUR (Lorien) piglet.cc.utexas.edu 7587 Coffee Shop (MH) piglet.cc.utexas.edu 5555 Feind's Corner (MH) zeal.net 6060 Jade (VCD) zeal.net 6969 Bover's Oasis (MH) wavecom.net 6969 Floodlands (Lorien) moloko.insync.net 2525 Darkness (MH) navajo.dtcc.edu 2525 Coffee House (CH) sherwood.brevard.com 2525 St James' Heaven (HC) vulture.dcs.king.ac.uk 6969 (please contact Tsunami to make changes to this list) 7) Sacred Cows - Oldbies who made a distinct impression on havens and are still seen in places other than the AntiHaven. * The Insane Hermit - The father of the havens and the creator of the first haven. Hermit is very highly respected and is considered a friend to all. * Creel - Creator of the Lorien server. * Windswept - Maintainer of the Haven Homepage at http://www.cadif.cornell.edu/~haven/ * val - Creator of the Opium Den * CC - Creator of the Coffee House * Visual Mark - Creator of Twilight Zone, VTR, and other pieces of haven code. * Robin of Locksley - Creator of Sherwood Forest and HavenOp of the AntiHaven. He is also the master of idling. * Tsunami - Creator of the MiniHaven and Hotel California servers and the FAQ maintainer. * Terminator - Maintainer of the Mailing List and Edgars. Always trying to prove his ego is bigger than Vampyre's. * Blackbird - One of the original haveners. Helped write the AntiHaven server. The following people have been on the haven so long that they have helped create the climate of the havens. These people, for the most part, have been on the longest and are respected the most. Although they haven't contributed to the havens codewise, their contribution can be felt every day. * Maid Marion * Krelin * Amy Rochelle * Tiamat * Vampyre * Eliste * Random * Tank Girl * Jacanath * Flim-Flam * Space * Phoxxy * wren * 8-ball * T-Bird * Casimira (she worked so hard to prove it to me) * Beemer * Kazi * The Fallen Angel * Marble * Crazy (prolly quite a few I forgot... tell Tsunami please) 8) Haven Resources * Haven Homepage - http://www.cadif.cornell.edu/~haven/ Maintained by Windswept. The Haven Homepage contains archives of haven-related logs, documents, source code, pictures and email addresses of haveners and much more. This site is the "official" haven homepage on the web. * Haven Mailing List - Email: termie@laf.cioe.com The Haven Mailing List is the "official" mailing list for havens and haveners. Often this list is one long flamewar after another. It is also a lot of fun for all involved. Email Terminator at the address above to request being added to the list. He will give you the email address of the list once you are signed up. * Opium Den Resources: WWW: http://www.hemi.com/~joelw/opium.html FTP: ftp://ftp.hemi.com/pub/users/joelw/opium_den MAILING LIST: opium-den@hemi.com * Illusions Resources: WWW: http://www.io.com/illusions/ FTP: ftp://zeal.net/pub/ MAILING LIST: To subscribe to the Illusions listserve send mail to listproc@mcfeeley.cc.utexas.edu with no subject and the body of: subscribe illusions firstname lastname * Hotel California and MiniHaven Resources: WWW: http://www.u.arizona.edu/~mlong/ MAILING LIST: There is a MiniHaven mailing list. To subscribe, compile MiniHaven using the Installation script. Then fill out the online registration form that you are presented with. when asked if you want to be added to the mailing list, type "yes". * Lorien Resources: WWW: http://khazad-dum.ccsi.com/~creel/Lorien/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- SPECIAL THANKS goes out to the people who helped me maintain this FAQ by sending me corrections and suggestions: Jacanath Kazi Space Melon Terminator Snoflake ftg Maid Marion Windswept Cochese Robin of Locksley [END OF FAQ]