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From Create Your Own Story
Choose Your Own Adventure is a wiki that contains stories where the reader assumes the role of the main character. In each page you choose how the story should progress. If you don't see an option that you would like to pursue, click the edit tab on the top of the page and add a new path to the page. Then you get to write in your own adventure for the hero.
Kid Stories
FOR ALL AGES:Please keep it G - PG. Please remove any other content that exceeds this.
Story | Status |
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy | (10+ pages) |
Kalew | (35+ pages) |
The Kitty in the Window (Now with PG, hard to find LOTR expansion!) | (260+ pages) |
Princess Carkegee | (5+ pages) |
Visiting the Zoo | (90+ pages) |
You Gotta Read This | (5 pages) |
Normal Stories
FOR 10+: Please keep it G - PG-13. Please remove any content that exceeds this.
Story | Status |
Atom kid (a super hero adventure) | (30+ pages) |
Boromir's Quest (an LOTR adventure) | (60+ pages) |
Crusader (an action-adventure fantasy) | (220+ pages) |
Paladin (Crusader 2) | (25+ pages) |
Dead Kid | (40+ pages) |
Fantasy Quest | (60+ pages) |
Heroes And Villains (A story about beating the bad guy) | (1 Page(s)) |
Hunting again for Red October | (100+ pages) |
Jo-Ann the Librarian (a Comedy) | (30+ pages) |
Lost Memories | (10+ pages) |
Mogloween (an AdventureQuest adventure) | (3 pages) |
Morrowind (An exciting action adventure) | (25+pages) |
Pirates of the Caribbean (action-adventure) | (50+ pages) |
Quest of the magician | (110+ pages) |
Red Mercenary | (10+ pages) |
Sabatoge (a Star Trek: TNG adventure) | (About 10 pages) |
The Secret Island of Utobi | (29 pages) |
Star trek (Another adventure) | (65+ pages) |
Star Wars: Republic | (26 pages) |
Superdickery Superman Adventure | (100 + pages) |
Tribute: The Greatest and Best Quest in the World | (14+ pages) |
The Trigger And The Hilt (a free-roaming action game) | (10+ pages) |
Rated R Stories
Content normally found in R rated movies, no adult content:
Amnesia | (50+ pages) |
Druglord | (10-15 pages) |
In The Army | (15+ pages) |
Slasher | (10+ pages) |
Week of the Zombies | (8 pages) |
Worlds End (A game of survival) | (35+ pages) |
Adult Stories
FOR 18+: No limits to content.
Legend of the Trailer Park | (60+ pages) | ||||||||||
Lonely Stallion in the Sweet Green Pastures | (2 pages) | ||||||||||
The Quest For Treguards Treasure | (150+ pages) | ||||||||||
Smutty Sex Romp | (2200+ pages) | ||||||||||
The Story of Jack Foster | (100+ pages) | ||||||||||
University Daze | (80+ pages) | ||||||||||
Victim | (50+ pages) |
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InstructionsStarting TemplateCopy and paste this for new pages: Page text here Do you: *[[Adventure/Option 1]] *[[Adventure/Option 2]] *[[Adventure/Option 3]] {{Status|Equipment=''Equipment''|Health=#|MP=#|Level=#}} [[Category: name of story you're working on]] The next to the last line here is the status indicator. The status indicator shown here is the basic status indicator. Different stories use different status indicators, and some use none at all. Look at the edit screen for the page you're starting from and copy that status indicator to the new page you're adding. Modify as necessary. To edit a pageJust click the edit tab on the top of the page To add an option[[Adventure name/New option name]] Options that appear red on the page have no content. Click the link, paste in the above template, and then add your own content.
Tips
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RulesPeople have a tendency to create branches where the character dies. To prevent the story from being just a tree with all dead ends:
To Do List
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The Lowdown on Rehabilitation Drug addiction is one of the prominent iconic symbols and a pressing predicament that perpetually induces grave problems on the 21st century society. It is true that despite numerous efforts by the government and various independent social institutions, apparent and significant drug abuse-related problems continue to linger on within the crevices of modern society. One potent and already feasible solution to this on-going problem is placing drug-dependent individuals on a rehab program. However, it must be stressed that complete rehabilitation that aims to rid an individual from any signs of drug craving is extremely a complex process.
Take a Rail: Fast Facts on Heroin
A plethora of various illegal substances have been bombarding society for the past decade. However, the most common or typically used illegal drug substance which is the culprit behind most drug addiction cases comes in the form of heroin.
Also known in the streets and dark alleys as Crank, Smack, Junk, and H, heroin is made from morphine, which is an innate substance in the seedpod of the Asian poppy plant. This drug typically appears as a brown or white powder which can be intravenously injected, snorted, or smoked. Major known health risks include heart infections, HIV/AIDS from needle-sharing, hepatitis, miscarriages for pregnant women, and even death from overdose. Constant intake of Heroin can also lead to tolerance. This simply means that heroin users, in due time, will require increasing dosage of this drug to achieve its intended effect on the body. This, in turn, will lead to serious drug dependence which ultimately leads to an insatiable addiction.
The Essentials of Rehab
The first and also the very crucial factor of making a drug rehabilitation successful is the individual's firm commitment and strict compliance with the rehab's pre-designed program. This individual's sincere "will" to submit himself/herself to the program is only a quarter of the essential necessities in successfully overcoming drug addiction. In addition to this firm will and determination, an adequate dose of medical or in some cases psychological treatment, must be administered to compliment the individual's endeavor to successfully kick drugs out of his/her system. Lastly, each individual has his or her own respective reasons for resorting to drug abuse; however, no matter what the reason may be, it has been pointed out that family and friends or any from of confidant plays a very crucial role in aiding this individual to succeed in his/her drug rehab endeavors.
Sources: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/heroin.html http://ezinearticles.com/?Drug-and-Alcohol-Rehab&id=231119 http://www.nida.nih.gov/ResearchReports/Heroin/Heroin.html