A I F is a science fictionrole playing game which takes place about 3000 years into our future. Human beings have met countless species, and with them, have explored and colonized a space encompassing over three galaxies. Technology has expanded such that no corner of reality is unexplorable, or unexploitable. Societies range from the truly utopian, to horrible despots that wage war on an inconceivable level. It is a setting where science is beginning to pry into the deepest recesses of time, space, and existence.
...and adventure is the best reason for living.
A I F (also seen as A.I.F. or just AIF (not to be confused with the Australian Imperial Force)) is a free science fictionrole playing game from NastiDyne. NastiDyne being actually the combined efforts of two people - Dave Littley and Clayton Castle.
Background
A I F was originally developed as an alternative to D&D that allowed the creators to role-play in settings more interesting to them, which were obvious derivatives of their Star Wars and Star Trek influences. The original system was very simplistic in terms of game mechanics, relying more on story-telling. As the number of players and contributers increased, a more-involved game system was gradually developed, as well as extremely elaborate histories and vast arrays of fictional gaming elements.
There then followed a period of sporadic development that dramatically shifted A I F from being primarily a story-telling game to also being a game with potentially intense tactical considerations. The timing of this period corresponds conspicuously with when the primary co-creators (Dave and Clayton) graduated high school and started attending university. This is also about the same time that Dave and Clayton ceased producing loose-leaf game manuals and began publishing A I F on the World Wide Web.
External Link
A I F (http://www.nastidyne.com/aif/) by NastiDyne
In this scale, the freezing point of water is 32 degrees Fahrenheit (written "32 °F"), and the boiling point is 212 degrees, placing the boiling and freezing points of water 180 degrees apart.
Thus the unit of this scale, a degree Fahrenheit, is 5/9ths of a kelvin (which is a degree Celsius), and negative 40 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to negative 40 degrees Celsius.
Absolute zero is at −459.67 °F. The Rankine temperature scale was invented to use degrees the same size as Fahrenheit degrees, and so that at 0 °R would be absolute zero.