Quality.Originally Posted by (plaintiff1 @ Mar. 26 2006,20:05)
As for the original discussion.
I can't believe that you are actually entertaining this silly idea. You want to find out once and for all? Ask the author. Jeez.
Quality.Originally Posted by (plaintiff1 @ Mar. 26 2006,20:05)
As for the original discussion.
I can't believe that you are actually entertaining this silly idea. You want to find out once and for all? Ask the author. Jeez.
ANNN Question that came uppp !!!!
Is ressitance campaign taking place before CWC ? its unknow ?
1 reason that it takes place after CWC:
Theres a mission in CWC that Guba sends a tape that says that 1000 russian troops will invade malden bla bla bla, and Gostawski Asks Who is he ?
But it raises question in the end.
It says in Red Hammer campaiugn that russian sends in normaly troops to capture Guba. so what army does exctly Guba Command in the Resistance campaign ?
Strange thing isn't it . .
Sorry to bump this, but I had to mentino this. Gastovski isnt really a Russian name. Most Russian last names end in -ov, -in or -ev.
This sounds like a Polish last name. Looking on wikipedia, in the top 15 last names of Poland, there are 10 names that end with -ski.
Gastovski isnt a Russian name, so there isnt a link.
Sounds more Czech or Slovak to me
Original OFP-er and 'old' on here, with little to no idea what's going on these days, so go easy on me. Cheers mate!
to me it sounds kinda greek
http://www.erepublik.com/en/referrer/Cozza Its tempting to click that
Well whatever it is, it is not Russian.Originally Posted by (Shashman @ May 15 2006,09:25)
The '-ski' ending is typical for Polish surnames. However in Polish there is no 'v' only 'w'. Anyway many people that left Poland and went to US changed spelling of their names so Americans could prounance them correctly (Polish 'w' is prounanced more like English 'v' than English 'w' ). So James Gastovski could only be American whose family came to the US from Poland some years earlier. The other problem is that 'Gast' doesn't mean anything in Polish and the most of names ended with '-ski' are created like adjective for example 'most' means a bridge and 'Mostowski' is an adjective (like Bridges?). Anyway 'Gast' is a bit like 'Guest' (Polish 'Gosc' - Polish surname 'Goscinny' - name of one of the creators of Asterix comes from that BTW), maybe it's in Czech or Slovak?
Ok. The lecture is over. You can go and play now![]()
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Blessed are those who have nothing to say but yet remain silent.
lecholas aka lendrom
Actually it was Armstrong who asked it.Originally Posted by (mp_phonix @ April 03 2006,00:04)
James answered him.
The Red Army? In Red Hammer/CWC (dunno about Resistance) Guba didn't follow orders from Kreml but had his own point of view about things. And he had lots of loyal Soviet troops and officers that followed him, like the two Lukin captured in the end of RH. AFAIK Guba was still following orders from Moscow in Resistance, maybe his relations to Moscow went cold after he had failed to invade Nogova.Originally Posted by (mp_phonix @ April 02 2006,22:04)
As for Gastovski, Poland was one of the countries of the Warsaw Pact (Warsaw is the capital of Poland, huh), and thus, having a Polish feller serve the Red Army (and even the Russian army if he never returned to Poland from the spetsnaz) seems reasonable enough to me. Gastovski is a strange feller, never liked him as much as Armstrong anyway.