Thanks! It took about 40 hours of back-and-forth to put it all together, not counting about 800 page of study re: the Katanga revolution pre-Jam. I'm glad to see it paid off!
A hundred years ago, roughly 2014, I ran a scenario for a homebrew Dungeon World inspired modern Shadow Operative Conspiracy Thriller that featured a memetic lifeform trapped on a cassette tape. (It was kind of like FIST, only with collectively agreed on custom Traits and a focus on Encumbrance / Inventory ala Torchbearer.) The players never listened to the tape - it was clearly smuck bait, and they didn't fall for it. After the session I congratulated them on their good choice and mentioned that I had a script, but had originally planned on actually recording it and bringing a cassette tape player to the session. I'd've handed it over when their characters got it. All of them immediately admitted they'd've played the tape if they had a physical object, even though they knew it would be a bad idea.
Since then I've been all about props and handouts. Used right, they can really change the way the session plays out and how involved players can get.
Viewing post in Operation Copper Glow [FIST] jam comments
That was something I intended to mention as well but forgot, I LOVED that you included links for further information for the real-world events that inspire the mission, I did a bit of research into Cairo for my own submission and found out a lot about how the opera house featured was the first in Africa, but burned down in the 70s and now the site is a multi-story car park which is really sad.
That's very cool regarding the cassette tape, though I know how painful it can be to write a lot of copy that never gets used because the party takes an alternative route, maybe that is why sharing my creations is so satisfying because at least someone will see it other than me :D
Cairo is interesting, you picked a great place to set a globetrotting adventure session. For example : they don't pay full rate real estate taxes until a building is completely finished being constructed, so huge chunks of the city have exposed concrete support struts and rebar on the roof because "it's not finished yet" even though people live in the buildings and nobody ever works on that last phantom floor. Squab ranching is illegal but openly done, so there are all these sniper-tower looking structures randomly plopped on top of buildings in areas where the police know better than to go, full of renegade pigeons with known breeding histories. Don't get me started on how the city layout tanked their sanitation infrastructure. - suffice it to say there are a lot of biohazard rich improvised fighting trenches throughout the city outskirts.
It's a super interesting place, is what I'm saying. Hard to explain it well enough to bring to the table.