         	                Half Life: Counterstrike
			              Strategy Guide
                                 By Lord Zero
                              (lord_0@yahoo.com)
                                  Version 1.0

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Index:

1.- File History.
2.- Introduction.
3.- About this file.
4.- Starting things.
5.- Playing CS: by yourself.
6.- Playing CS: Teamwork. 
7.- Snipers.
8.- Battleground survival.
9.- Frequently asked questions.
10.- Credits.
11.- Legal Stuff.

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1.- File History.

- 0.1 Start of the file (10/27/2001, 12:08)

- 1.0 File Ready (29/10/2001, 17:09)

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2.- Introduction.

Welcome to this guide.

Counterstrike is a MODification of the FPS (First Person Shooter) Half 
Life, which, while it hasn't been the most successful FPS game in history
(That spot will remain owned by DoOm)has spawned a legion of MODs and 
gamers looking into it. While the original Half Life was played on a
somewhat futuristic setting, Counterstrike simulates Counter-Terrorists
missions with objectives to accomplish.

The game plays on two teams, the Terrorists (the bad guys), and the
Counter Terrorist (The good guys). While the game can be won by simply
killing everyone on the other team, is much more satisfactory to play
by the rules. Game modes include VIP (One player assumes the role of
the VIP, and has to escape poorly armed from the map while the Terrorists
have to kill him or her), Defuse the Bomb (The Terrorist have to plant
a C4 bomb on a marked site while the CT have to either prevent it, or
disarm it once is planted), and Hostages (The Terrorist have to keep
the CT from rescuing the Hostages), and more. This has made this game a
hit, and one of the points (and precisely the one I love) is that
choosing a weapon actually requires to know it, unlike, say, Quake III,
when you only need to know that the Rockets explode and the slugs kill.

This guide is a general strategy guide designed to give you a text
idea of how does a good player plays. This guide has been wroten after
a lot of hours, by personal experiences and watching better players
fighting, as well as careful observation of tournaments I've been. This
isn't an "ultimate" guide: is just a cornerstone for your own strategies.
CS rewards creativity. Use this as a scrapbook for your works.

Good luck! You'll need it ^_^.

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3.- About this guide.

I recommend reading this on 800 X 600 to avoid scroll moving, which is
annoying, believe me.

This guide is meant to be use alongside my other guides about this game: 
to this time I've wroten four more guides besides this one:
-Weapons guide.
-Siege Map strategy guide.
-Assault Map strategy guide.
-Militia Map strategy guide.

This is a general strategy guide to help new players to get into the game
with a good idea of what's going on. Veterans may find a couple of good
strategies for them to use. Any comments are more than welcome- I'm not
a god for this game, so there might be quite a lot of things I haven't
discovered. 

I WILL BE USING THE REAL NAMES FOR THE WEAPONS- Just check any guide to
know the equivilents, or just go and check my weapon's guide (It's cool
and detailed, and blah, blah, blah)

*************************************************************************

4.- Starting things.

Counterstrike, as stated before, is a simulation of terrorism and counter
terrorism moves, just as you saw on TV on SWAT rescues, and so. It isn't
incredible realistic, as you may know now, Terrorist don't go around with
a C4 bomb to blow up things, it's just a game, but it's a lot of fun.

It's very different from Quake III or Unreal. Things are more like real
life: A very nice touch is that is you are getting shot, you have trouble
to move: This is just one of many things to look for. I will start with
several changes important to note:

* You don't find weapons laying around. You get equipped at the start, 
and you only have four weapons: A handgun, a main gun, a knife, and 
any grenades you may have. You still may arm yourself with any weapons
you may find from dead bodies.
* You keep a money count: Weapons cost money, and you need weapons to
live for awhile.
* The game keeps tabs on your armor, which is kevlar armor- acts 
differently than your standard 3/2 armor. It seems to react differently
which different bullets.
* You play forcefully in two different teams, with different weapons.
* There is a time limit (!)
* There actually are objectives to accomplish

And more importantly: Life hangs on the second. Each round only allows
an initial spawn: once you are killed, you can't go back. Another nice
shot is that once dead, the server may have allowed you to see the 
action as an espectator, or, even better, when you die, your screen
turns fades to black- It's extremely cool, and in LAN games, much better
to avoid smart asses from looking at neigborhgs screens.

The game is much more strategic than, let's say, Quake. Battles lasts
seconds or several minutes, and three bullets from some guns may 
send you to the other side, while another may need 15 hits to kill you.
There is no Rocket Launcher or Railgun to give you easy frags, you have
to use your senses and feelings of your weapons- It's not who pumps more
rounds, is the where do those rounds go.

It's why an strategy guide is nescesary. You can tell people how to get
better. You can teach people how to survive: Is up to them to use the
information at hands.

A good way to start playing is to find a keyset which is comfortable to
you. I can show you mine for example:

MOUSE 1(left button) = Fire weapon.
MOUSE 2(right button) = Jump.
W = Forward.
S = Backpedal.
A = Strafe left.
D = Strafe right.
R = Reload.
F = Flashlight.
E = Use.
G = Drop weapon.
1 = Primary Weapon.
2 = Secondary weapon (handguns).
3 = Knife.
4 = Grenades.
5 = C4 Bomb.
Spacebar = Secondary function for primary weapon.

Right handed weapon, bleah, blah. There's not much to change, as you see.

Next step is choosing a weapon: People ussually get blasted, and get 
frustrated for not knowing the weapons, such as trying to snipe with a
shotgun (probably remembering good old Shotgun from Doom). Now it's
the time to go check my weapon's guide, also available in gamefaqs.com
where every weapon is in detail.

For your comfort, however, I've added a quick and dirty guide for weapons
to know what to choose for a quick battle.

Close quarter Weapons: FN P90, Desert Eagle, Shotguns, AK-47, MAC-10, Steyr
TMP.
Long Range weapons: Any rifle but the AK-47, G3.
Medium range: Any Submachine gun, any handgun.

This is to teach you to avoid using weapons when you don't have to use them.
This is much more complicated, but for the effort of making this guide as
simple as possible, the weapon's guide is available, and there you can
find a lot of info.
(What a shameless plug)

Is important to note that weapons also affect your movement. Rifles are
ussually heavier than most weapons, and the knife and the grenades
are the lightest weapons.

My ussual set are a MP5, Kevlar armor and helmet, an HE grenade and a 
Flashbang. This costs about $3100, which what you'll ussually have at hand,
and it works for me, though a newcomer may need a more powerful weapon
such as the FN P90, which does the work for them at close range. This is
a very important rule:

IF YOU ARE A BEGGINER, DON'T EXPECT TO WIN AT LONG DISTANCES. TAKE IT
CLOSE UP AND PERSONAL.

As weird as it may sound, CS' weapons are much harder to manage at long 
distances than most games. Veterans may take you out from 50 meters with
an MP5, while you may have trouble to hit them two meters away with a 
shotgun.

Next, choose an skin. CS team has made all skins very bright and easy to
see, so this is not as important. For your information and 'coz I feel
like saying it, I use Phoenix Connection when playing T, and SAS when
playing CT (The gasmask... Slipknot!)

Well, the setup is ready. Get yourself a name (I go by LoRd ZeRo or 
Blossom when I feel like being silly), a color (I use black), and a
graffity (I use the "smiley face"), and jump into the battle.

Which side should I choose?

There is little to no difference between the sides. The CT have more
subtle and easy to use weapons, the T have more powerful and hard to
use weapons. Most maps have the advantage thrown to the T side, but
any good player can override it. In conclusion: Is your choice.

What music should I play?

I play Linkin' Park ;^), but it's better to play with no music. I
only do it because my headphones sound like there's no tommorrow, and
'coz it gets me in the mood. And 'coz I damn like it.

When playing CS, the sound is important. Footsteps can give location
away, sounds of battle, and communication are notes to take, and
sometimes when you can't make out which weapon is your opponent using,
the sound of the weapon may help you.

Now, onto the gameplay.

*************************************************************************

5.- Playing CS: by yourself.

First, as a CS player, you are a target. And you want to live.

Playing CS by yourself means has one objective: get on top. You want to
be the top player by yourself. All other objectives are team-based. But
earning more kills and less deaths is what first pushes you to play. And
you have to first be a player by yourself before you can play as a team.

Finally, this section is the basic of the guide.

LESSON N 1: Don't stop moving.

(That's the name of a song) Run around. Don't stop. Though is not advised
to run ramdonly back and forth in the map, is better than to stop near a
door to catch your breath. A good way to learn how to move is to follow
someone who's among the top players, because he's supposed to know what
is he doing. Bassically, much of the game bases on knowing how to move.

You don't run randomly, you run towards somewhere. Where's that somewhere,
that's up to you to find. Don't just run around the map: name a location,
and go there. Is as simple as that. With practice, you will start to run
by instinct where you have to go, and to avoid dangerous places while
taking the safest frags.

LESSON N 2: You are a good player.

Well, I will start this saying that I honestly hate self-help books. Like
"Who moved my cheese?", or whatever was its name (Though it's right by
saying that people think too much). But if there's a problem among new
players, that is the fact that they enter the game thinking "I will
take down a couple with some luck".

Take your cheese, I mean, your luck away from the game. If you kill
someone, that was you, not some luck, or the weapon. Lack of confidence
will kill you. You have to learn that when death's 'round the corner,
you can beat it. You can beat two or three players at the same time.
You can mop the floor with the best player in the server. You can
take the damn AWM rifle from that sniper's hands and stick it up to
his ass so hard he'll be walking funny the rest of his life.

You just need to practice if you can't do it right now. When you have
confidence to kill those three players, you will find tactics, you will
forget the fear of being killed, and the feeling of survival will awake.

LESSON N 3: Don't take on battles you can't win.

Well, be brave, but don't be stupid. If you are wielding a glock, and
your enemy has an AWM and a Desert eagle, you can beat it, but it
will take a helluva bitchin' lot of work to do it. 

If you are using an MP5, and have 5 bullets on your chamber, and 10
extra bullets, broken kevlar, and a Desert Eagle, look at your enemy.
On this particular position I found myself on a game on cs_assault,
and I was with about 30 health, and ended one-on-one against an
FN P90 fighter looking for my blood. I could have taken the eagle
and jump against him, but instead, I forced myself to stay on the 
warehouse, waiting patiently, and shooting him with my MP5 from far
away, and running away when he go near. Eventually, this frustrated
him, and he started to taunt me. I hid behind the boxes near the backdoor
and carefully heard his footsteps. I did a round run to catch him from 
behind, and started shooting him with the eagle. He missed a lot of
shots, and when he started to fight me controled, I noticed he was
firing his Tactical. The poor bastard was as damaged as me, which is
why he didn't fired at me at distance.

If he would be using a shotgun, I could have taken my chances and
firing him with the eagle. If he was using an AWM, I might as well
force him to get inside the house, but simply, don't try to push your
luck.

LESSON N 4: Count your bullets.

This is the final lesson you need to learn, but the most important.
Half of the time, you'll get killed when you are reloading.

The best way to learn this lesson is to buy an AWM or and Scout, and
forcing yourself to camp. If you practice yourself with an AWM, then
you are thrown on an MP5 duel against an strafing opponent, you will
have learned to fight when you have to, not when he wants you to 
fire. The point is that you fight when your crossairs and your enemy
are about to converge. Don't wait for your crossair to get above your
target, or you will most likely miss a few shots.

The easiest way to save bullets is by shooting enemies down hitting 
their heads. By having headshots as an habit, life gets much easier.

This is also important when fighting multiple enemies. First off,
don't fight them at once: Find a way for them to crossfire, or
a place where only one of them might fight you.

Simply, make sure the fight is over before attempting to reload.
If you absolutely have to do it, you might as well better go using
your handgun before trying to reload.

And lesson number 5: ALWAYS CROUCH WHEN FIGHTING!!!

*************************************************************************

6.- Playing CS: Teamwork. 

Any other objectives besides getting big kills are team-based, and that
includes the mission objectives, or most likely, win the match.

The first lesson you need to known is when to be offensive, and when to
be defensive. When I talk about being offensive, is about taking the 
battle against the enemy. Being defensive means waiting for the battle
to come for you.

As Sun Tzu says, when you have few soldiers, you are forced to be 
prepared against the enemy. When you have many soldiers, you are forcing
the enemy to be prepared against you. Namely, when you are alone with
a partner against five enemies, you won't get anything from charging
against them. You need to be defensive. Wait for the enemy.

When waiting for multiple enemies when being outnumbered, the best 
weapon you may wield is a AK-47. Its massive firepower is what's needed.
Your friend should do the same.

When you have the number advantage, you need to take the fight to the
enemy. Unless your enemy is incredible stupid, your best way is to stay
together and outnumber the enemy from different sides. This takes us
to a golden rule in CS, and that is to stay together, but don't stick
like a bubblegum to your partners.

I have all kinds of histories for this, but the point is that there are
three things which shows you why should you keep your distance. A) You
can't walk over your partner. This, on a heavy firefight, acts like
a wall, and you will have to find another way to take cover, because
your so-called partner is f*cking blocking your way. I hate this, and
has happened to me so many times, that I have customed myself to turn
the flashlight into their faces to take them out, or simply fire them
if they keep on ignoring their stupidity. B) For an inteligent enemy,
two enemies clustered together are easier to take down, is simply
because some of the missed bullets aimed towards one target will most
likely land on the other one, and there's no need to watch for another
side. C) Because the AWM and the AK-47 (and probably the scout) have a
funny habit to pierce through people ^_^.

I remember the first time I played this game, I can't remember who was
playing, but as a CT, ( I was playing on de_dust) there was always 
somebody who went first, and choose one side of the tunnel to enter,
and sent messages to the team. He threw a HE grenade, then said to
go inside. He was always damn right about what to do, he was probably
a bot ^_^, but the point I want to make is that we were winning because
of this guy guiding us. CS always favors coordination, and a leader is
what's needed for this.

To be a leader, you don't need to be a god on this game, you just need
to know any strategy at all, and to be confident on yourself. You are
taking the role of the main guy, you have to take the responsibility of
the actions. You may have to prove your worth to your team by making
inteligent actions and taking right decisions, but once you have the
trust of the team and they follow your directions, you have a great
advantage.
You might as well try to keep yor orders easy to understand. The game's
pre-recorded orders are pretty much all you need, as long as your 
partners know what are they doing. When I ask for "Report in, team", I'm
asking for the situation they are facing. I expect to receive a message
from a guy who's under attack which actually says they are taking fire,
but instead they say "Reporting in!". Now this is idiotic. The simple
message "report in, team", is just to remind people that the team is
is there to help them in case they need it. If you need help, don't
be afraid to ask for it: the purpose of the T vs CT game is to force
people to play on teams. You won't see a SWAT corporal strafing around
and screaming "I wanna be a macho, macho man!" when they are alone
facing three terrorists aiming to his eyeballs.

Comunication is important, friends, and be sure to get the best of it.
Is way easier for me to know that my partner has found an elusive sniper
if he says "Enemy spotted", and probably he may use his flashlight or a
shot towards the place where he thinks the enemy's in, than if he simply
screams like a madman and starts running against the sniper. I may think
that he's crazy, or he's suffering an epileptic attack, all but that he's
found the target.
Try not to type using the "U" key. It takes valuable time. Simply try
to use the pre-recorded orders to the best of their possibilities. I've
had my very best games when using the vocal orders all the match, even if
it's between me and just another guy, and I've enjoyed them much more than
any other match. Ask for backup, tell the team to regroup, notify that
an area is clear: Things will go much more smoothly and it will be much
more fun for everyone.

Speaking of team comunication, and mostly team thingies, remember there's
an objective to accomplish: Either plant a C4 bomb, or rescue the hostages,
there's always a reason for all those bullets and grenades looking for a
new host.

When playing Ts, and you have the bomb: Make it your priority. Go to the
bomb site and plant it. There are many ways of making it more difficult to
defuse: First, you can try planting in where everyone sees it, and wait
patiently with an AWM sniping it. You will have plenty of time to aim and
kill them when they are defusing a bomb.
Second, you can ask a friend to crouch near a box, then jump on top of
him, then you will be able to jump over the box, and planting it there
only makes it much more difficult to spot, but also makes it impossible to
defuse if there's only one CT left. Whatever you do, always try to guard it,
even if you die, the team wins if it explodes.

When playing CT, always try to find the hostages and get them to follow
you. You will earn money, and more funny, people will try to avoid them and
shoot you down. Which is pretty hard ^_^.

*************************************************************************

7.- Snipers.

Well. I can recall how did this "sniper thing" came by. I think it was 
with Quake when people began to realize that the dark spaces were useful
for hiding and killing people without them knowing what hit them.

This has evolved to the point that there are actually sniper weapons, which
prove to be powerful and have an unmatched ability to hit far away objects.
I think that the first one was "Goldeneye" for the N64, though I might be 
dead wrong.

CS provides player with two specialized Sniper rifles, the Artic Warfare
Magnun, and the Steyr Scout. Both have X4 scope, and have the power to 
bring an enemy down in less than three hits. However, both are quite
useless in close combat, and so is ussually recommended to buy a Desert
Eagle as a handgun to help survival in close quarters.

Honestly, while being an sniper before was arguably an unskilled tech
(I've never considered so: myself have enjoyed being an sniper ever since
Quake had shown how to be an sniper), on this game being an sniper is the
summun of the difficulty, and the summit of the expertice of CS.

First off, the main lesson to learn is to go completely armed when you go
on a camping-sniping trip. Don't go off wandering without having everything
you need. If you don't know, the best set I've found is the AWM, the Desert 
Eagle, two Flashbangs and an HE Grenade, and of course full kevlar armor 
and helmet.

In fact, don't go off wandering (That's the damn name of another song!).
An sniper in CS needs the following previous training before engaging
on an enemy platoon:
*Basic aiming skills: The weapon do all of this for you, you just got to
follow the enemy.
*Patience:(I won't say it & I) the patience to know where you have to press
the mouse button to fire. This is indeed the essence of being an sniper.
*Previous recon of the location: Don't camp on a map you don't know like
the palm of your hand.
*And finally, the will to stand the incredible ammount of insults and
bitchings that will follow each one of your proud frags.

Because they will remind you of the fact that you have a mother pretty
often. A serious sniper is an ussual sniper: You don't get "lucky" on
a round and get several kills just to get an MP5 on the next round and
try to get more kills. You have to choose to be an sniper. Failing to
remind yourself of your sniper nature will result on trying to take down
targets at 100 meters with a shotgun and trying to assault the warehouse
on militia armed with the Artic.

When the sniper starts the round, and gets everything he needs, the first
step is to find a suitable location to hide and abuse of the short sight
of most players. Myself have found on the warehouse in Militia in the
corner of two boxes directly in front of the main gate to be an incredible
place to snipe people, but keep this in mind: the darker and more unussual
the place is, the much better it is. Also, keep two things in mind : Try to
find a place which has only two or one ways of reaching it, and keep your
ears sharp.

Next, learn when to shoot. Wait for the enemy to center on your sight. Also,
is important to note that when an enemy is ducking, you are more likely to 
hit his legs or his arms, resulting on a lesser hit. If the enemy's standing,
aim for his chest or his head (I advice the chest, because the very slight 
recoil of the Artic or the Scout is enough to miss), but if he's kneeling,
aim for his head. 

Don't shoot until you are fairly sure you will hit him. Shooting just
to "try" is a waste of time, and a dangerous thing (pretty much like sending
an Nuclear Strike on Starcraft "just to test you", right, Ice M@n?). You
have to hit them.

Third, learn when to switch weapons. I've surprised myself taking down an
enemy with the Nighthawk when the assault my position with surprising ease.
First off, when you switch weapons, and the enemy doesn't expects it, it's
a surprise advantage.
Second, when you switch the weapons and he doesn't notices it (quite rare,
but it has happened to me), he doesn't adjust his strategy.
And finally, you are good as dead if you have the funny idea of killing
him.

When you are being attacked, and you switch weapons (THE DESERT EAGLE!!!),
don't back off. Charge against him. The less he notices of your handgun
being drawn out, the better the chances to survive. Is pretty difficult
to deceive the enemy when wielding such an good lookin' thing like the
Dual Elites (the berettas), but if you charge against him, he's on a
harder time to decipher what's on your arms.

If I'm wielding the berettas, I often find it much more useful to...
first I scream like a girl for help, then I backpedal while shooting.
The monstruous fire rate of the berettas couple with the very loud
bullets will seriously annoy the guy, who will probably look for cover.

You better go very far and hide like a coward to smack a bullet on his
forehead ^_^.

I reccommend using the x4 scope as much as possible. First, because it's
obviously more accurate, and second because it only asks me for a single
hit of the spacebar to go into the normal mode and ask the guy how does
a Eagle bullet tastes.

*************************************************************************

8.- Battleground Survival.

Basically, on a normal day, being an average player, you're just another
frag on the charts of another much better player. This is completely
normal, it's quite a goal to be the top player of a server, especially
over the 'net.

The point is that you need to kill people while staying alive (& II). 
This is your actual goal when you enter a game, there's a lot of time
to think about being the god of the map. As I told ya before, the main
thing to do is to always keep on moving, but there's another point:
always stay the closest you can to the walls. Unlike Quake, there isn't
any rocket to fear, and fighting close to a wall makes up for the lack 
of speed eliminating a side from where you might been attacked otherwise.

When patroling around, always listening to the sound, take a little moment
to understand the sound of the weapons. Most weapons have different sounds
when fired: The AWM has a ridiculous loud blast, as well as the Desert
Eagle. The MP5 has a very subtle noise, while the shotguns sound, well,
spread. With this you have the info necesary to face an enemy. This is
something I really take in care: The enemy's weapon:

*Shotguns: Go back shooting.
*AWM: Switch to your knife and seek cover. Calculating your movement 
between the rifle's reload, keep going nearer, then send your HE grenade
to confuse him, then attack.
*MP5: Depending on your weapon, but ussually works just charging and
unloading.
*AK-47: Run.
*FN P90: Run too.
*Other Rifles: Keep strafing to make them get the minimum accuraccy.
*Handguns: Pick them from a distance.

This helps a bit when fighting a single opponent. On cases of multiple
opponents, just try to crossfire them. I always play with friendly fire
on, so this really screws us up.

The point with AWM wielders are important. The AWM is, well, the weapon
to beat on this game, I won't lie to you: At least half of your deaths
will be caused by some idiot firing with the artic. HE grenades are the
best thing you can do: the scope won't help them getting out of the blast
way. Gas grenades aren't as useful: they help them more than they might
help you (Unless you have them directly breathing over the grenade).

Also, be careful to crouch whenever you're in a fight. It's hellish hard
to hit a crouching target. Take advantage of the eviroment: Don't be
afraid to think new strategies, everything's allowed. 

*************************************************************************

9.- Frequently asked questions.

Q.- Why did you made several different guides instead of a big one?
A.- Because it would look fairly incomplete, and wouldn't be as simple
as I intend it to be.

Q.- Favorite Maps?
A.- Siege, Militia, Assault, Italy, pretty much every "rescue the hostages".

Q.- WHich side has the final advantage on the game?
A.- I'm tempted to say the Terrorists, but in the end, I'm afraid the
ability is much more important than the side you are fighting for.

Q.- Is there any game like this one out there?
A.- Damn right. Any game of the Rainbox Six series have similar themes, 
though are much more complex. Also, there is a game which I haven't played,
and frankly I can't remember its name, but it had voice communication, and
you had to drive a tank or several vehicles, and one player had to act as
the general, other as the striker and the other as the driver. It has to
be incredible fun, but, alas, I DON'T KNOW ITS NAME.
And of course, there is Return to Castle Wolfestein, which has to be also
pretty fun, but on the 'net is impossible to play, and I haven't played
it with big groups of people. It looks awesome, though.

*************************************************************************

10.- Credits:

- Many thanks to Wavehawk for his ilustrative FAQ for the real weapons.
It helped me to recgonize the weapons and their fake names, it really
made me dizzy. (cybertrooper@edsamail.com.ph)
- Thanks, somehow, to Jonat4z, Yunqu3, MaNsOn, Marilyn, Phantom Phreak,
and all the guys who lurk in Time Net and like to get slaughtered by me
(Yeah sure... ^_^).
- To my hands, as always.
- To CjayC for hosting this guide on his site.
- To Gorillaz for giving me a new sound to listen before I get a full-time
rock monster.
- And to everyone I would like to thank but I can't recall them or they
have nothing to do with this faq, but thanks anyway ;^)

*************************************************************************

11.- Legal Stuff.

This file is copyrighted -2001 by LORD ZERO (lord_0@yahoo.com)All rights
reserved. 

Feel free to make the link  INDIRECTLY to the file (Link to the HTML 
page where its present, not to the TXT page), since its gamefaqs.com 
policy to dont allow this kind of links to the page, and thats the 
place where I post my guides.
I'm making an exception with this game: feel free to drop me a line if
you want to post this on your site, with your URL included.

This file IS NOT made for you to make a page out of it. Dont ask me for
it too.

Copyright -2001 By Lord Zero.

The last version can always be found in gamefaqs.com.
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  /       Lord Zero (lord_0@yahoo.com)  / |||| / / /|   \ /\
 <      --------------------------------<  ||||/ / / |    < @
  \__________________________   ______   \_||||_/_/__|   / \/
                        _____/ / _____/ /  ||||       \_/__/     
                       <______/ <______/   ||||        
                                           ||||
                                           /||\
                                           \__/


