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Among the uses of pregnancy and reproduction themes regularly encountered in science fiction are: other modes of sexual reproduction; [1] parthenogenetic reproduction; [1] the use of technology in reproduction; [2] [3] The phenomenon of pregnancy itself has been the subject of numerous works, both directly and metaphorically.
Space Marines John York Cabot "Sergeant Shane Goes to War" 1942 Space Marines Duncan Farnsworth "Flight from Farisha" 1942 Space Marines D. D. Sharp "Pillage of the Space-Marine" 1943 Space-Marines Bob Courtney "Aid to the Enemy" 1943 Space-Marines Robert A. Heinlein "The Long Watch" 1949 Space Marines Theodore Cogswell "The Spectre General" 1952
Space Marines were first introduced in War hammer 40,000: Rogue Trader (1987) by Rick Priestley, which was the first edition of the tabletop game.. The book Realm of Chaos: The Lost and the Damned (Rick Priestley and Bryan Ansell, 1990) was the first book from Games Workshop to give a backstory for the Space Marines.
Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine is a third-person shooter hack-n-slash video game developed by Relic Entertainment and published by THQ. The game was released for PlayStation 3 , Windows , and Xbox 360 in North America, Australia, and Europe in September 2011. [ 1 ]
After the 1987 release of Games Workshop's Warhammer 40,000 wargame, a military and [1] science fantasy [2] universe set in the far future, the company began publishing background literature to expand on existing material, introduce new content, and provide detailed descriptions of the universe, its characters, and its events.
The earliest known use of the term "space marine" was by Bob Olsen in his short story "Captain Brink of the Space Marines" (Amazing Stories, Volume 7, Number 8, November 1932), a light-hearted work whose title is a play on the song "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines", and in which the protagonists were marines of the "Earth Republic Space Navy" on mission to rescue celebrity twins from aliens ...
Omegaverse supposes the existence of a dominance hierarchy among humans, as similar to wolves and other canids. Omegaverse, also known as A/B/O or α/β/Ω (an abbreviation for "alpha/beta/omega"), is a subgenre of speculative erotic fiction.
In the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Unexpected", Trip Tucker becomes pregnant with the offspring of a female of another species, described late in the chapter, set in mid-22nd century, as being "the first recorded instance of a human male pregnancy". In the video game The Sims 2 male characters can be impregnated via cheat codes or alien ...