The Squad Field Manual written and maintained by the players.
We are currently maintaining 2,925 pages (513 articles).
Based on DrEinsteinium's tWiki mod and on abluescarab's WikiSearch mod, QWiki is a tModLoader mod that allows you to search the Terraria Wiki for whatever is under the mouse cursor. Configuration options available. Press Q to search the wiki while hovering over any item, NPC, or tile. Now has mod support!
- You may, however, use Qwiki as your personal notebook, a collection of links to websites you like, or as a collaboration tool for small groups. The layout of Qwiki is heavily influenced by the first-ever wiki, WikiWikiWeb. If you don't like the way it looks, feel free to change it. All page templates lie in templates.
- The Squad Field Manual written and maintained by the players. We are currently maintaining 2,917 pages (513 articles). The wiki is far from finished and is constantly evolving. It needs your help. WIKI NEWS: Read more. 2021-02-24: Squad 2.0 was released - see wiki project page 2020-09-23: Squad 1.0 was released - see wiki project page 2020-07-02: All Maps pages are now driven by Cargo data.
The wiki is far from finished and is constantly evolving. It needs your help.
WIKI NEWS: [Read more..]
- 2021-02-24: Squad 2.0 was released - see wiki project page
- 2020-09-23: Squad 1.0 was released - see wiki project page
- 2020-07-02: All Maps pages are now driven by Cargo data - Read more..
MORE INFORMATION:
Communicate. Coordinate. Conquer.
Squad is a game being created and developed by Offworld Industries. It was approved on Steam Greenlight, Kickstarter-funded and is currently has left Steam Early Access for full release.
Qwikidata
Squad is an online, team-based, military themed first-person-shooter where high levels of teamwork and communication are crucial to success.
Built from the ground up in the Unreal Engine 4, Squad pits teams of up to 100 players against each other in white knuckle modern day combined-arms combat scenarios, with both conventional and unconventional forces.
The players dictate how the scenarios unfold with base-building and interactive environments, intuitive squad command and management tools and large-scale warfare where strategy and leadership are just as important as a quick trigger finger. [Read more..]
CURRENT RELEASE VERSION: 2.6 [See all release versions..]
MORE INFORMATION:
Factions (Factions (more))
Russian Ground Forces
Canadian Army
Irregular Militia
Gameplay
Sync outlook for mac with contacts. Learn how to play the game
Others
Map (Maps (more))
Fallujah | Lashkar Valley |
Al Basrah | Yehorivka |
Chora | Narva |
Modding & Cinematics
You can create your own modifications and cinematic videos for Squad.
CURRENT SDK VERSION: 2.5 [Version History..]
Server Administration
If you want to run your own dedicated server(s)
Qwiki co-founder, Doug Imbruce, defines his Quick Wiki as resource which turns “static information into a beautiful interactive experience” (Youtube video Qwiki Demo with Doug Imbruce). His inspiration was to create a research tool which aggregated the key elements of all information searches – maps, pictures, texts, and links – into one multi-media presentation. At first glance, Imbruce certainly seems to be redefining the future of on-line research. Quick, slick and visually appealing, it is far more enjoyable to read, or should I say experience, than a Wikipedia search. However, in its public alpha stage, it is pretty clear it has much work to do before it can be deemed the online research tool of choice.
As Imbruce outlined in his presentations, Qwiki certainly attempts to be an information experience for its users. The audio narrative, the variety of images, timelines and scrolling text, are congruent with the type of multi-media presentations our Net generation of learners expect. However, as mentioned by others, there still are many limitations. Although I appreciate Qwiki is in its infancy stage, I experienced similar frustrations expressed by others – annoying and quick voice reading with numerous mispronunciations, superficial research details, and lack of verifiable contributors. My children (ages 7 and 10) served as my testers, and they quickly identified its flaws; furthermore, it is certainly not ready for more sophisticated researchers, high school and college students. However, I think once Qwiki catches up (similar to Wikipedia in its early stages when it proclaimed my small Saskatchewan hometown to be the gold mining capital of Canada – false!), it will surpass other Wikis as the source of choice due to its experiential style. In particular, I see great potential as a resource for struggling readers, EAL students, and as an adaptations tool to scaffold learning – perhaps simplifying facts for readers and serving as a preliminary foundation of knowledge on which the student can build.
To try Qwiki out for yourself, try clicking on the link to Qwiki Homepage and type in your topic of choice. Let me know your thoughts!
Qwikip
Finally, in my attempt to create a quick search for my students on the subject of William Shakespeare, I devised the following concept map which allows students to click on links to web sites, videos clips, timelines, and text information on related topics – Shakespeare’s life, Elizabethan times, the Globe Theatre, and his lasting impact on literature and drama. Check out the attached document below: