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Space Quest 6: Roger Wilco in the Spinal Frontier is a comedic point-and-click adventure game developed and published by Sierra On-Line in 1995. It is the sixth and final game in the Space Quest series and, like the previous titles, features numerous parodies of science fiction media.
Roger Wilco is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Space Quest series, introduced in Space Quest: The Sarien Encounter in 1986. Roger is depicted as a bumbling but well-meaning everyman character. He is a spacefaring janitor who has a tendency to attract trouble and stumble into dangerous or interesting situations.
Nick Carter (character) Colonel Cathcart; Holden Caulfield; Lemmy Caution; Hagbard Celine; Rebecca Chambers; Nick and Nora Charles; Frederick Chilton; John Clark (Ryanverse character) Claudia (American literary character) Clay (Less Than Zero) Peter Clemenza; Rooster Cogburn (character) The Continental Op; Anthony Corleone; Carmela Corleone ...
Roxanne Ritchi, reporter and love interest of the main character in Dreamworks' Megamind. Ruth Sherwood, magazine writer played by Elaine Stritch on My Sister Eileen; Sam Miller, publisher of the Wilcox Clarion of Wilcox, Arizona, in five episodes of the western series 26 Men (1957–1959)
Extraterrestrial characters in literature (1 C, 2 P) F. Female characters in literature (11 C, 458 P) Fictional LGBTQ characters in literature (2 C, 58 P) M.
Roger Wilco may refer to: "Roger, Wilco", procedure words for radiotelephone meaning "I have heard, I will comply" Roger Wilco (software), one of the first VOIP client programs designed primarily for use with online multiplayer video games; Roger Wilco, a character from Space Quest "Roger Wilco", a song from Shawn Colvin's 2001 album Whole New You
Wilcox is also the author of three short stories that were published in The New Yorker between 1981 and 1986. He was the subject of an article by James B. Stewart in The New Yorker 's 1994 summer fiction issue; entitled "Moby Dick in Manhattan", it detailed his struggle to survive as a writer devoted purely to literary fiction .
The titles of the following works of literature generally consist of the name of the male protagonist only. The title need not include the character's entire name, and may even consist of a diminutive form, alias, nom de guerre, or nickname.