The Engines of Creation: Stronghold Opposition for Q3A (V.2) — by Remco SithLord Mooijweer

"q3strongholdv2.bsp — Stronghold Opposition for Q3A, version 2.0, by Remco SithLord Mooijweer, April 12, 2001, for Quake III Team Arena. Stronghold Opposition for Q3A is a CTF map based on Quake 2 CTF's q2ctf2.bsp — Stronghold Opposition, but built from scratch. Additional credits to id software for Quake III Arena & Quake III Team Arena — Kiltron for his texturepacks — Evil Lair for the crate textures — Dave 'Zoid' Kirsch for the original mapdesign — Eraser, Lynx, Mr SDI, Menno de Benno, Nerdshuntress, r3tina, Unrevocable History and WayWard for play-testing and design tips."

Stomped.com: Paul Steed’s QuakeCon ’99 Wrapup

Paul Steed shared his QuakeCon '99 photos and summarized, "Whoohoo! How 'bout them Booth Babes!  I think while they didn't exactly make the show, they didn't hurt it either. They had a great time and were genuinely fascinated by the scope of QuakeCon99. Thanks to that organization Fuh-Reak, Anna Kang and the support of all the diligent volunteers, no one can deny this was by far the best community event in a long time."

Quake Football League: QFL and KOTS Quake 2 mods by Norb

In speaking with this major prick of the Strogg and telling him about Earth, you acquire a signal to Earth's television broadcasts.  You flick through the channels, but he keeps stopping you at a football game.  He was very impressed how one team just marched up and down the field, totally decimating the other team.  He comments on how fun the game could be with weapons.  They were probably watching the Eagles (I'm from Philly).  A deal is made and a date is set, the battle over planet Earth will occurr on a football field.  Team Marine vs. Team Strogg.

PC POWERPLAY 27, August 1998, Australia: Do-It-Yourself LAN Parties by Munley Leong

LAN (Local Area Network) parties can be fantastic experiences, but they can also be difficult to set up and run. Fear not though, Munly Leong will walk you through it. What is a LAN Party? A LAN (Local Area Network) party is basically a local network get together. A bunch of people bring over their computer somewhere, hook them all up, play network games and engage in other network-ish activities. Why a LAN party? No matter how much fun playing against the computer A I is, nothing beats the adrenaline rush from playing a live, thinking (usually) human being.