Journal of the Travellers Aid Society

Journal of the Travellers Aid Society is a role-playing game magazine devoted to Traveller, commonly abbreviated JTAS.

Journal of the Travellers Aid Society
Journal of the Travellers Aid Society issue 1 - Annic Nova. Cover by Winchell Chung.
PublisherGame Designers' Workshop
FounderLoren K. Wiseman
Year founded1979
Final issue
Number
1985
25
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish

History

In 1979 Loren K. Wiseman created a magazine to support Traveller, which resulted in Game Designers' Workshop'sThe Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society (JTAS), which Loren Wiseman would further develop as editor over its history.[1]:55 J. Andrew Keith's writing for JTAS was so extensive that he had to take the pseudonyms John Marshal and Keith Douglass (he was later 'caught' when a reader did a word-use analysis of his articles and determined that they were all written by the same person).[1]:56 Marc Miller decided that, rather than using modern dates for the magazine, each issue would instead be based on the in-game Imperium's calendar, and the calendar advanced about 90 days every quarterly issue.[1]:55 JTAS #2 (1979) began printing excerpts from the 'Traveller News Service', which provided information on 'current' events in the Imperium; that issue, dated 274–1105, offered two news excerpts from Regina sector, dated 097-1105 and 101–1105.[1]:55 JTAS #9 (1981) GDW developed their metaplot for Traveller by describing the start of a war with an alien species named the Zhodani.[1]:55 GDW's original magazine ended with The Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society #24 (1984); it was soon replaced with a new magazine, Challenge, which continued JTAS' numbering with issue #25 (1986) but covered all of GDW's games, not just Traveller.[1]:58

Imperium Games published Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society #25 in 1996, and published their second and final issue of the Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society in 1997.[1]:333

After Steve Jackson Games licensed the Traveller setting, Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society was resurrected as an online magazine in 2000.[1]:111 JTAS was revived once again as a weekly, then bi-weekly subscriber-supported web magazine in February, 2000.

Mongoose Publishing produced six volumes of Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society in 2020 as part of their Traveller licence.

Name

The Journal of the Travellers Aid Society takes its name from the fictional Travellers' Aid Society (TAS) that was first mentioned in the original incarnation of the Traveller game published by Game Designers Workshop [GDW]. In the original Traveller game, it was not too uncommon for characters to obtain membership in the TAS during character creation. The idea of the TAS is that it is an organization that exists to support what are basically 'transients,' or 'wanderers' ['Travellers' in the game's terminology] around the galaxy. It does so by maintaining low-cost hostels at many of the large starports, and, most importantly, by maintaining its 'rating system,' which warns of the dangers inherent in visiting certain worlds. Under this system, a world which should be approached with caution is denoted an 'Amber Zone,' and a world that should not be approached at all is denoted a 'Red Zone.' x§

Issues

GDW

GDW JTAS in Challenge Magazine

Imperium Games T4 - Marc Miller's Traveller

GURPS Traveller The Best of JTAS - Steve Jackson Games

  • The Best of JTAS, Volume 1 (2000)

Far Future Enterprises

These are collections of the earlier GDW publications.

  • Journal of the Travellers Aid Society Issues #1-12
  • Journal of the Travellers Aid Society Issues #13-24 ISBN 978-1558782068
  • Journal of the Travellers Aid Society Issues #25-33 (2004) ISBN 978-1558782075

Reception

The Journal of the Travellers Aid Society won the H.G. Wells award for Best Magazine Covering Roleplaying of 1979.[2]

William A. Barton reviewed the "Merchant Prince" supplement from Journal of the Travellers Aid Society #12 in The Space Gamer No. 53.[3] Barton commented that "Although it probably won't totally supplant Merchants & Merchandise as the book for generating merchant characters, Merchant Prince is a well-conceived and viable alternative to M&M. Its inclusion in the Journal makes it a special bargain. I recommend it to every Traveller player, especially those who find the merchant life the most appealing."[3]

References

  1. Appelcline, Shannon (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702-58-7.
  2. "1979 Origins Awards Winners". Archived from the original on December 16, 2012.
  3. Barton, William A. (July 1982). "Capsule Reviews". The Space Gamer. No. 53. Steve Jackson Games. p. 32.
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