Bill wrote:2000ft or a mile tends to require a very large table while characters that are able to travel at 100mph are difficult to put on a hex or quadrant grid and tedious to move around.
Bill, don't be too sluggish about it.
To use your minis properly,
you merely need access to 1 football field to simulate 1 mile x 1 mile for 5 feet squares. AND, all the stadiums have these nifty machines to paint lines, no reason why they would not accomodate you painting the 5x5 feet squares there.
It is off-season soon (sadly) so you have a real window of opportunity here, in the warming seasons to boot."Math" behind it (hopefully correct): 1 mile has 5280 feet. The scale would be 1 square is 1 inch and represents 5x5 feet. 5280 feet times 5280 feet thus require 1056 squares x 1056 squares, each square 1 inch x 1 inch. Thus (1056 inch = 88 feet) you only need a measly area of 88 times 88 feet. A football field (counting the end zones, no reason to waste those and imagine how much fun a kill in the end zone would be) measures 160 feet times 360 feet.
This would set the grand stage for your game just fine, and with area to spare for those rockets and such! And with the distances (when you try to find that smallish scale tank battalion) you do not need a "fog of war" type thing. Maybe you can even use those fly over cameras for recording your game from all sorts of cool angles.
And, see, even those 100 mph ... no problem, all big football fields have HUGE parking areas and great access to those highways, just send your player running to where he needs to go (according to scale, of course). (1) That will make them think about using those speeds the next time (overshooting your target can make him to have to jog - walking would not do, he cannot hold up the game too long - for a couple of miles). But do not worry, (2) in-game radio communication and positioning can then be simulated in a first class manner by using those smartphones everyone has these days. And, if the quick mini does not overshoot - they will learn that fast - then you will just have to make him run fast from one side of the field to the other - you know, for that realistic game approach - as he would cover the mile (88 ft) in 36 seconds (doable as it is easily below the record for the 100 yard (300 ft) dash). Your chance to say hut hut, or hubba hubba if you feel smug, as GM!
But you also need not despair when no football field can be commandeered. Parks work really well, too, especially when you like millenium trees (you do not need a mini for that any more, just say "it's that oak over there", so it is a money saver as well) and you can have a stylish picnic in the grass instead of munching that pizza which at the average game table only disturbs the minis and tends to splotch your notes. No longer!
If you would rather play inside and for example simulate play in
Rifts:Canada or the upcoming Arctic world book you could use an ice hockey rink (200 × 98 ft).
If you were to be a sissy about it and rather play inside with a tee, you can always use your college or, if you are and feel grown-up about it, a NBA basketball court (94 × 50 ft), although either would not be wide enough to give you the full simulation of a mile in length, guess you would end up with ~1000 yards times 1 mile, but that's not so bad either.
Admittedly, maybe 5 times the size (for simulating the 1 foot in 1 second move easier) would be a bit awkward. You would need about three football fields side by side and a bit on top of 'em. But then you can always GM in a golf buggy and use a megaphone for added impact.
Come on, people pretend to play golf because of all the excercise they get from walking. I feel RPGs could be the next golf!
What about a RIFTS: Play Outdoors! supplement?
Playing outside is healthy, there will be a lot of excercise, and playing in a football stadium and such gives great exposure to the game (good PR!). I see large crowds flock to your game. Imagine, you can finally ask for money for people watching you GM.
Rockstars fill stadiums, why not you when your GM'ing rocks stars. Surely, a new day is dawning for the RPG industry and gaming!
Plus,
finally, gamers can use that jock line when asked by the ladies what they do on Saturday (etc): "I go to the stadium to kick ass!" I see all sorts of cool and novel opportunites here.
Son, that is really what gaming is about: GM'ing, kickin' ass and giving names! And if you need a football field for that, that is what the hard rockin' gamer needs to get his dice on!
Cheers
Hendrik