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Dundjinni 1.07 installation not found
Dundjinni 1.07 installation not found











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Apparently all the calls were hard-coded to look only in a folder in the root directory.

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Worse yet, said program allowed you to install it elsewhere, but if you did so, it wouldn’t work.

#Dundjinni 1.07 installation not found software

In case you’re wondering (and of course you were), Gamer Bling once worked for an insurance company whose rate-quoting software installed itself in the root directory of his laptop’s hard drive. Namely, by default this program installs itself into C:/Program Files/Dundjinni Enterprises/Dundjinni folder. The install is fast and uses good programming techniques unlike those used by many entertainment softwares enjoyed by Gamer Bling Expansion #1 and Gamer Bling Expansion #2. Nonetheless, Gamer Bling left Gen Con with a retail pack of Dundjinni, which had inside a nicely manufactured CD of Dundjinni version 1.04 with a Dundjinni logo as well as a last-minute hand-made CD of Dundjinni 1.07 with an Office Max logo. Really, now, how are six gamers and a DM going to crowd around a map the size of a postage stamp? Unless you use colored pins for your miniatures gaming and have far better eyesight than Gamer Bling.

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Even though Gamer Bling can see why he won over the other submissions.Īs an example of the program’s power, on the back cover of the CD clamshell is a map of a dungeon with room containing what look like an evil temple, a pit of lava, a cave with water, plus what realtors call “a bonus room.” According to the caption below the art, this 100×115 map “was created in 25 minutes.” Of course, the map measures not even quite 1.5 inches square, so Gamer Bling approached this review with serious doubt about the program’s utility. They say “Your world will be the next big thing everyone talks about!” Which promise probably sold them a lot of copies during WotC’s New Fantasy Setting search, won by Keith Baker for Eberron and not by Yours Truly, for which Mr.

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And Gamer Bling means that even for you unwashed masses who don’t get free review copies.ĭundjinni promises to be the best mapmaking tool for your tabletop game. What is not exorbitant is the price for Dundjinni. George Fern can pay people highly because they charge exorbitant rates for everything, but that’s a digression for another review at some point, so Gamer Bling will leave it be for now.

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Which is of course why she left the gaming industry and became a highly paid professional at George Fern. Ten-T” radio call, which, to the best of his recollection, which is ever more resembling Swiss cheese, Gamer Bling first heard of at one of the pre-con meetings hosted by the fantabulous Dorcas Bean, who is about as fantabulous a convention person as one could hope for. Gamer Bling will leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine the concept behind the “I.D. So if you are talking with a gaming professional and he suddenly starts scratching his nose, catch a clue. The nose scratch is a signal that you are in dire need of having someone come up to you and inform you of an important meeting / phone call / required potty break / appointment with the dentist / ANYTHING to get you away from this loser who is now talking about his kobold’s dentation of all things. The trick, of course, is to get your booth workers to scratch the outside of their nose. The most time-honored tradition that Gamer Bling is aware of, predating even the venerable “I do NOT want to hear about your character” t-shirts, is scratching the nose. The reasoning behind the development of such techniques is that gaming professionals do not get paid enough to have to listen to such drivel. I mean, when some blathering idiot starts telling you in painful detail about their way-cool 10th-level sorcerer/rogue flying kobold and his nifty fire breath, there is no convenient way to get out of the unidirectional conversation without assistance from another booth worker (or paying customer with actual money instead of a whiny request for review materials). Gamer Bling is well acquainted with this quandary, which is why gaming industry professionals (a term loosely used in many cases) have developed several methods of extricating themselves or their honored co-workers from the socially binding clutches of polite conversation with impolite people. But most likely it was something along the lines of: “How much trouble will I get into for giving this review copy away, and how does that balance out against getting this curmudgeon out of my face?” Yes, Gamer Bling did say “nervous.” Reasons that the volunteer was nervous include (a) that he might be giving away a free copy that Gamer Bling would never review, (b) Gamer Bling had this lascivious look in his eye that made him look psychotic, or (c) Gamer Bling threatened to bring over the Poles from Q Workshop as character witnesses. Gamer Bling received a review copy of Dundjinni from a slightly nervous volunteer at the Dundjinni booth at Gen Con this year.













Dundjinni 1.07 installation not found