The TRIAD FAQ V1.4
-- Triad trivia for the masses
Maintained by King Fisher and Jerry of Triad, last updated summer 2000. Most information on "old" Triad supplied by Arrow.
Contents:
- Introduction
- What is the meaning of the word "Triad"?
- How old is Triad, and who founded the group?
- What is the difference between "New" and "Old" Triad?
- Are there hidden meanings of the classic Triad intro?
- What about the "HK Electronics" incident?
- What is "System Four"?
- What happened when Bob formed Censor?
- What was "the Gamers Guide"?
- What was "15 minutes of fame?"
- Who were some important key-members of Triad?
1: Introduction
Why have we made a FAQ about Triad? Well, it is not that complicated
really. Our group has always caused a lot of debate and controversy, and since
people still claim some very strange facts about Triad, there is reason enough
to straighten out the most common questions raised concerning us in Triad and
our members. Also (we admit it) we are very proud of having a genuine and
dramatic history, which is even exciting to people who don't know very much
about computers.
2: What is the meaning of the word "TRIAD"?
The name Triad has always had a marvellous impact on people. There's
a reason for it. Philosopher Georg Simmel once distinguished two basic
type of groups: the Dyad and the Triad. The Dyad consists
of two people and is doomed to disappear once any of its members decides to
leave it. The scene have seen plenty of these two-men groups die when either
of the two main members decide to split. Then there is the Triad.
The Triad in its basic form consists of three members. The group is
therefore independent of its members - if one leaves, there is still two left
and the group will stay alive. The basic meaning of the word Triad is thus
that it's a group that will survive its members. To the members of a Triad,
the group is more important than their own personal careers.
In fact, the Triad is the basic element of any society, such as the Scene,
the Town, or the whole UN. To put it straight with Simmels' own words:
"I have three chairs in my house: one for solitude, two for company,
three for society."
The Chinese and Japanese syndicates of drugs and software are also called
Triads. These mafias have the same basic group philosophy: if one member is
killed, the others carry on. No member of the Triad carries the group on his
own shoulders.
It is not known whether the founders of Triad knew about this fact or not,
but somehow all people more or less feels the inherent power of the word,
archetypical as it may be.
In the case of TRIAD, the C= 64 computer underground group, the name
came natural. The people involved in the founding came from three
cities and three different groups: CoD (Crackers of Dawn) from
Gothenburg, 3001 from Västerås, and Mr
Z and his pal RND from Stockholm. The latter duo was an
informal group without a name, but it actually worked as a group.
Addendum my friend Andreas comes up with the surprising
fact that "triad" backwards, which is obviously "diart" actually means
something too, in Celtic / Irish:
Dear Andreas Altermann,
dairt is an Irish word indeed. It has the meaning 1. yearling heifer, 2. small measure
of land, 3. dart (loanword from the English).
Yours sincerely,
Beatrix Ferber
CELT project Mnager
3: How old is Triad, and who founded the group?
Late 1986 Arrow and Fred of CoD were swapping intensively with guys all
over the world. Typically they would recieve 4-8 parcels a day with new stuff.
Arrow got in touch with Ixion in 3001 and soon got to know they had a somehow
stable access to originals. CoD and 3001 began cooperating for some time, as
CoD had lots of contacts abroad, and 3001 had fast, short, high quality
cracks.
3001 also knew Mr Z and his friend "the old man" RND. Now these
three gangs (3001, CoD and Mr Z + RND) with three distinct
functions (Originals, Spreading and Cracking) saw a possibility of forming an
interdependent Triad.
As a result Triad was founded 1986-07-28 at 21.30 by
Arrow, Fred, Skydive, Ixion, Lucifer,
RND and at last, but in no way least: Mr Z. On 1986-08-08 the
heavy-metal lover Arrow and Fred spread a simple intro with a Swedish flag on
top of the screen announcing the event.
This was a time when a lot of groups had begun flourishing the Swedish
Scene, eg WASP (We Against Software Protection) and CCS (Computerbrains
Cracking Service). The oldest and most famous Swedish group at the moment was
SCC (Swedish Cracking Crew), but they were lagging off and hadn't released
much for some months. WASP were quite new and growing wild with their own
circle of swappers, and as CoD and 3001 were already cooperating - where 3001
produced the wares while COD arranged the spreading - it came in natural to
form a group.
Ixion, bearing the name of the greek Overlord, was the coordinator pulling
the strings, and naturally became the leader. It was also he that came up with
the name "Triad". Later this year, WASP split up, and WCC (West
Coast Crackers) was born.
At christmas 1986 all of Triad met at the WCC copyparty in Gothenburg to
which they surprisingly brought their friends in SCC without asking WCC - who
happened to be their worst enemies... (As WCC later broke up in 1987, their
most prominent member, No.1, changed his handle to Strider and formed
Fairlight.)
4: What is the difference between "new" and "old"
Triad?
Jerry recalls: As a grown up and in those early days, I didn't
understand all the unwritten laws of the scene and of the pecking order.
When the scattered remains of TRIAD wanted me to step in to revitalize
TRIAD after IXION left for University, it was important to me to earn my
own brownie points, not to sponge off of the old fame. Thus, I demanded
we call the group the NEW TRIAD and Janitor promised to deliver an
updated version of the good old intro to get us going in a hurry.
However, the new intro never arrived and meanwhile the older active
members, 801DC, TWILIGHT, TITAN, ACU and the AMIGA folks, let me
understand that the group they were in was TRIAD before my presence and
still was TRIAD. To them it was the one and the same group only with
some new members like it had always worked. The denotation New TRIAD was
still used here and there in an intro and a scrolltext, but that was
more for teasing and showing outsiders that we did it our way, whether
they liked it or not. The use faded with time.
It is important to understand that Ixion, the original leader of TRIAD,
had handed over the Golden Triangle to 801DC, leaving him with the
responsibility for keeping the TRIAD alive. 801DC in turn handed it over
to Jerry and the remaining active members were all in on it. Old
veterans like MR.Z, 3D and others joined in at the early "new" TRIAD
private gatherings, coding, having a beer and a pizza or fighting a pin
ball tournament. Or if you like, bonding and keeping TRIAD alive and
friendly.
From time to time, someone outside TRIAD has stated that "new" TRIAD is
not the real TRIAD in an attempt to score personal points in a twisted way.
Like for instance Euzkera, later in CENSOR. The funny thing is that he too was
present at one of those early TRIAD meetings with the legends. Go figure out his
thinking!
5: Are there hidden meanings of the classic Triad intro?
In case you woundered: Yes, there are. Some people ask us about this. The
classic intro with its 40x6 characters in one of 6 different combinations
colours and a four-coloured, massive or striped scrolltext below it, do
hold a secret.
The colour of the 40x6 logotype is a rank of the games' quality in the eyes
of the cracker who performed the act of liberating the game from its
copy-protection. The rank goes on an ordinal scale from black to gold, where
Black is worst and Gold is... Gold. The scale is as follows: Black, Grey,
Green, Red, Blue, Gold. Some may say there is no gold colour on the C= 64,
well OK then, it is Yellow. Yellow cracks are the best. Pleased? As you can
see Red colour is for mediocre games, and that is why you see the Red colour
so often.
The inventor of the colour-code was probably Ixion. It is the kind
of things he would come up with. The original designer of the 40x6 logo was
Skydive.
Another thing about Triad cracks you should notice, is that in some old
games you can press "C" or "T" instead of Space to get
into Cheat / Trainer modus. Sometimes this is mentioned in the scroll,
sometimes it is not. This feature was first put into some cracks on request
from Ixion, who found out that Mr Z played through all games he cracked to
make sure they worked properly. Of course he could not do that in reasonable
time with the game in normal modus, so he cheated. Ixion then convinced Mr Z
to include cheat mode in the cracks through this mechanism, and that is how
Triad became the first group ever to support cheat mode in cracks.
6: What about the "HK Electronics" incident?
Throughout the autumn 1986 Triad was really into the groove. Ixion counted
80 cracked games in 3 months, and the wheels kept spinning. Both Ixion and
Skydive were "in" the computer business (ie they worked in a
computer store in Västerås, Sweden), and had thus instant access to
new games. However another member of Triad knew some guys at the importing
company HK Electronics. (For personal reasons, we will not name this person.)
HK Electronics was a company stared by Heikki Karbing, and was the dominant
importer at the time.
During the autumn 1986 the guys from Västerås understood it was
no use buying the games through the store, as they could get them instantly
through HK Electronics instead. They were of course instantly cracked.
So, in the spring of 1987 a Triad member got a call from HK Electronics
inviting Triad to a chat. Sales had decreased by 80% in Västerås
and 20% in Stockholm - in just three months. They wanted to get Triad
and other crackers on "better" thoughts, to think about what they were
doing in hurting the software vendors.
Prior to this, someone had been trying to frame Triad. Up to the 1st of
January 1993 friendly swap for non-profit was not illegal in Sweden, so noone
could be nailed for merely swapping stuff, warez, pirate copies or whatever
you call them. However it was seen as absolutely illegal to sell such copies.
(In fact it wasn't illegal, as the copyright law in Sweden was much too
outdated, but you could always nail someone selling games for tax-crimes or
similar, like running an unregistered enterprise.) Cyberpunks like Triad were
all safe and legal.
For example: someone called up a Triad swapper and wanted to buy a
copy of the by then quite old game Flight Simulator. The Triad swappers
knew it was illegal to sell pirate software and didn't sell any copies.
However Fred had an original of the same game around which he sold instead.
Later someone called up Arrow and said he had talked to Ixion, who should have
promised him to buy a game through Arrow. Arrow refused. "We're not
into that kind of business", he replied. On running a double-check,
he found out Ixion had never talked to this guy.
Many people thought Triad was a real cool group and wanted to join these
days. There were some two "hangarounds" who called themselves
members of Triad, but were in fact not. One of these guys had placed an
advertisement in Dagens Nyheter (Sweden's biggest newspaper) offering games 3
days prior to release date! These were games Triad had obtained in advance.
Some members of Triad went to see the guys at HK Electronics. They offered
HK a "deal" - if HK would keep supplying Triad
with originals, Triad would not spread the cracked games in Sweden at all,
just abroad - mainly the United States. HK didn't buy into that idea.
Unfortunately we don't know very much about what happened then - just that
the Triad member who had used his contacts at HK in order to obtain
originals was somehow put under pressure by HK. He didn't like this
and quit for all time, reluctant to even talk about C= 64 and
underground hacking for a long, long time. An overly mild guess would be that
he took this incident very hard.
For a long time following this incident, Ixion refused to spread any Triad
warez in Sweden. Only the most trustworthy were given the latest cracks.
Note: Earlier this FAQ stated the company was called "Soft Express".
Memories die out when you grow...
I've heard from some sources, notably "Attle Barktunga" from the
Swedish magazine "Hemdator Hacking" that the company "Soft Express" never
even existed. Mr Z says the company was HK Electronics in an interview in
MaxiData (#3 2000). Soft Express might be some startup or "grey import"
(or even "black import" = smuggling) firm. Also HK Electronics and
Soft Express may be confused here - we might have gotten originals from
Soft Express earlier, and then later from HK, and then the supplier was
busted... If you know any facts please tell me.
7: What is "System Four"?
In fact only one person knows exactly what "System Four" is. That
person is its' inventor: Jeff Smart. "the Story of System
Four" was a monthly column in his underground zine
"Illegal" which was widely appreciated but seldom understood
for what it was. In a way, "System Four" was what C= 64 hackers know
as "the Scene", a fantasy dream world that existed in every European
C= 64 hackers' head during the 80's, and could be described as a hacker's
paradise. "System Four" was an utopian future society of hackers
placed in the year 1991 AD, in which year the whole world is politically
divided into hundreds of sectors, called "Systems". Most people in
"System Four" live in the capital called "Snatchos".
"System Four" is not a democracy, but rather a kind of huge
corporation (comparable to these huge corporations that plays an important
role in many cyberpunk novels), which somehow gained political control over
System Four and which takes care of all young software geniuses. You are
selected from some of the other sectors to join the competing hacker groups in
System Four and if you do not behave, you could be kicked out of the sector
for good. People also move inbetween different systems for other reasons:
System Four is for C= 64 computer hackers only. Other computer brands have
their own systems, eg Amiga hackers belong to "System 16",
Archimedes hackers to "System 50" and so on. Another curious thing
about System Four is that the police seems to be an independent authority,
separated from the established political power, similar to the Judges in
"Judge Dredd".
In System Four you don't have to go to school if you don't want to, since
the authorities know it is much more important to hack. All young hackers are
given their own apartment and can dispose their life freely, but they have to
adhere a certain hierarchy: all youngsters living in System Four and other
hacker systems belong to a hacker group, which in turn belongs to one of 10
cathegories, from "a-group" to "j-group" whereof the
"a-group" is the elite. Hacker groups can exist in several systems
at the same time.
There are about 50.000 hacker groups in System Four, so the contest is
rough. No girls participate in this ever-going contest, but live in a certain
sector of System Four called "Cockis". Girls are (as usual?)
attracted more by status than anything else, and would prefer dating an
"a-group" boy ahead of any other, no matter his physical looks.
Only 4 groups actually belong to the "a-group" as the story of
System Four starts out. These are: Fusion, Fairlight, Hotline and Triad.
Members of the "a-group" have some privilegies that the other 10
cathegories lack: they have special locations to meet and chat, and can bring
out outright orders to people in the cathegories "b" thru
"j".
It is clear that "the Story of System Four" was just Jeff Smarts'
way of writing allegorically about his own views of the happenings in the
European hacker Scene without getting himself any enemies. Somehow it was also
a kind of parody of the happenings in the obscure hacker world and the psyche
of the youngsters engaged in it, especially that of Jeff himself. Not
surprisingly, the first character we meet in System Four find the hacker world
a horrible place and commits suicide. Note that "System Four" was
Jeff Smart's brainchild, and he continued writing both "the Story of
System Four" and the whole "Illegal" magazine after
leaving Triad. (Jeff Smart was a part of "old" Triad, up to late
1988.) "System Four" is yet a very important part of Triad
mythology.
After Illegal was stopped, Mark of Subway started publishing a
magazine (paper) called "News from System 4" which was
rather famous in the Amiga Scene at it's time.
8: What happened when Bob formed Censor?
During the very first phase of "new" Triad after the initiating
crisis, early 1989, 801 DC and Jerry found a whole new batch of members. Some
of these (Notably Sensei and Taito) were former members of
TPI (The Pirates International) who had applied for membership already
in April 1988, but at that time were not let into Triad. Some of them were
somehow newcomers in the C= 64 scene. Almost the whole new batch came from the
capital of Sweden, Stockholm or its suburbs, and beared names like:
Contring, Euzkera, Shark, Psycho and
Dragon. These new members socialized a lot even beyond computing and
peped each other to new, astonishing acheivements. No doubt, this was a
winning team. With demos like "No Booze" and
"Cocktail" they showed the world that their coding abilities
were above standard.
Now, a piece of information which is absolutely necessary to understand
what happened inside the group from this moment on. As I said many of the new
members came from Stockholm or its suburbs. If you ever lived in a city of
that size you probably know what kind of mentality youngsters aged 13-19
adhere in this climate. This is a world where kids need to be slammed into a
brick-wall the day they are born in order to learn that this is a rough world.
They keyword is respect, you have to have an attitude, dress
cool, say cool things, and intimidate or fight everyone who dare step on your
pride. This is the kingdom of street-law, and the psychopaths with hearts of
stone are kings.
Of course the members from Stockholm, living in this climate and facing it
in person each weekend, while at the same time spending the rest of their
sparetime in a elitist underground computer scene, were fighters:
better burn out than fade away. There were no second places or
consolation prizes in their world. They would code for endless nights, fight
for pride and aim at the top. There was no turning back, smash and
grab, divide and conquer, the world at our feet, ON YOUR
KNEES BOYS!
Was this all a fantasy or is the world really such a rough place? Who
knows. As you all know this attitude worked out fine, especially American
groups clearly understood the attitude behind these words, and the phreaker
world is already a place as rough as the streets of Stockholm a late Friday
night.
However not everybody appreciated this attitude. Notably Jerry
didn't. Jerry had a softer approach; stressing cooperation, apprenticeship and
teamwork rather than individual or groupwise "attitude". To Jerry
releasing a good demo had a value of its' own, what the rest of the world
thought about it wasn't at all that important. To the Stockholm guys,
releasing a good demo was more a means of earning more respect, as was the
cracks. If they were put in a situation where they would have to choose
between fame and quality, they would probably, at least at this time, choose
fame.
Probably this is a more accurate truth than the impression you could get by
reading notes and scrolltext from the time of the split-up, referring to an
incident where Bob arranged a cooperation between Triad and Virgin Factories
as the trigging factor. The truth was that there were several disagreements
among the members long before this happened.
As Jerry had been in the group before the new batch joined in, and also had
the formal right to use the name Triad, the group remained with him. The guys
from Stockholm formed a group under Bobs' supervisory bearing the name
Censor Design - a name taken from a Skinny Puppy album. Perhaps this
was all just as good, as the difference in scene approach was so vastly
different.
9: What was "the Gamers Guide"?
The Gamers Guide was one of these digital disc-magazines released for a C=
64 audience. It was highly appreciated throughout the Scene and was released
in 25 issues (or 26 to be exact, since Jerry decided to make an extra issue
entitled #15.5) until finally put on the shelf in 1995. "The Guide"
was a magazine dealing with something many people would find very
questionable: it reviewed cracked games for the C= 64, thus encouraging the
crackers to improve their cracks: make them better, shorter and add in more
trainers (cheat options). Every now and then "The Guide" would make
nasty remarks on cracks of low quality (eg if the game "crashed")
and partly served as a media and public face for Triad. All issues of the
magazine should be available from the Utopia Hacktic Archive.
The Gamers Guide was invented on 1989-12-15 by Injun Inc of Triad
and realized in 1990. Some controversy broke out every now and then as other
groups claimed to be the first to raise the idea of reviewing cracks, but in
issue #10 of the Gamers Guide this discussion was dismissed for good by a
proof so obvious that noone ever again bothered to discuss the matter. Along
with issue #10 was the textfile that Injun had written in late 1989 and as he
had by then left the scene, anyone with doubts could double-check the facts by
calling him up themselves. Some might claim this was a silly discussion after
all, but however amusing.
10: What was "15 minutes of fame"?
"15 minutes of fame" was a concept developed by modern artist
Andy Warhol. The idea was that as every human wants fame, and as everyone
wants to be on the TV, all humans should share the transmission time equal.
This would give every human approximately 15 minutes of TV-time to talk to the
world, and that would be all. King Fisher coined the term for an incident in
September 1996 when the CIA (yes, the Central Intelligence Agency) homepage on
the Internet was altered by a Swedish hacker group called "Power Through
Resistance", by breaking into the CIA World Wide Web-server.
In the incident, the contents of the homepage were altered to contain the
message "Stop lying Bo Skarainder" (Bo Skarainder being the
prosecutor in a hacker case involving the SHA - Swedish Hackers Association)
and links were added to the Triad Homepage and two SHA protocols stored in the
library at the Triad page. (They are still there in the "Philez" section.)
This resulted in the Triad Homepage being linked by CNN, Svenska Dagbladet
and a lot of other online publications. No doubt this is the greatest media
attention in the "real world" ever given to Triad, possibly the
greatest attention given to any C= 64 group ever. So we had our 15 minutes of
fame.
King Fisher was accused by some journalists of having performed the hack.
He didn't. Being able to code C= 64 demos doesn't mean you're able to crack
into a public CIA webserver.
11: Who were some important key-members of Triad?
As stated earlier in this FAQ, a Triad is a group independent of its
members. Members come and go, see the light of the Scene and retire during a
groups life. Most old Triad members say they still regard themselves as Triad
members of honour, though they have dismissed their activities. However, some
people in Triad gained fame and fortune for their work, and ofcourse we
wouldn't want to withhold you some basic facts on these people.
Ixion, born in 1964 and former member of The Pact and 3001 was the
founder of Triad. He came up with the name and organized the group. He was
also the man responsible for a lot of strange scrolltexts and Triad mythology
which yet 1995 haven't ceased to puzzle people. He retired in August 1988 as
he went on to university studies.
Mr Z is the idol of many Swedish hackers. To most early C= 64 people
Mr Z was THE Hacker, spelled with a big H. Many say he was the first
real Swedish hacker ever, and he started cracking already in 1983. He
used a funny intro with horizontal rasterbars which has since then been
spotted all around the globe - Russia, USA and Turkey included. Mr Z was born
1970, and retired from the Scene in 1987, since then refusing to have anything
to do with it. He was also one of the original Triad members and the most
active cracker in the group during 1986 and 1987.
Further information from Warren Pilkington:
Mr Z also contributed numerous listing POKEs to the famous computer magazine Zzap! 64 in 1987. Amongst his most famous listings that appeared were ones for The Last Ninja, Head Over Heels and Star Paws. Obviously as European release dates were ahead of the UK by two weeks, it meant he could get the games earlier to work on and then send off his listings to Zzap! who were appreciative of his work.
3D - Dator Destruction Department was a renegade hacker known to
Swedish C= 64 freaks most for his games entitled "Crackers
Revenge" 2 and 3 respectively, and a nasty demo in cooperation with
Mr Z called "Swedish Erotica". Born in 1969 (of the same age
as Mr Z) his first meeting with a computer was when he got a Spectrum 48K.
Along with Ixion he is regarded as one of the more "outspaced"
hackers Sweden had in these early years, with a strange sense of digital
humour which was later reincarnated with Kaktus and Mahoney.
Janitor was a member of WCC and Relax before joining Triad as a main
cracker in the late 1987. He was born i 1970 and gained broad attention for
his hard work on several cracks, somehow introducing level-packing as a
standard. His most well-known and widely appreciated crack was "The
Last Ninja" for Relax in 1987. He retired in february 1988 but made
some few comebacks over the years. His friend from Relax, Mr Pinge,
stayed active until August 1988 when he retired aswell.
The Sarge was certainly not the first paint artist on the 64, but he
was one of the first really good ones and not only that: he was productive
like no one else before or after. During his time in Triad starting after the
summer of 1987, he shelled out heaps of pictures. There was at least one, but
often 2 or 3 fresh pictures on most every spread disk and the disks were
numerous in those days. He also designed 5 games using the
SEUCK-editor. From the graphical point of view, most of those are the
best ever done in SEUCK. He travelled on to the AMIGA and later PC and the
proffessional game world.
Jeff Smart was a member of Triad, born 1968, active in Triad during
1988. He was most known for publishing the magazine "Illegal"
which was one of the first ever to review and write about activities in the C=
64 underground Scene. This magazine was published on paper, and if you have
some few copies around: lock them in a safety deposit box!, they will
be valuable sooner or later. One of the most appreciated columns in Illegal
was "The Story of System 4", a causerie of the Scene
containing heaps of additions to Triad mythology. In fact, Illegal was one of
the first magazines ever to publish "Charts", ranking groups
in different categories. After "old" Triad's decline Jeff joined
Scouse Cracking Group (SCG) in late September 1988. In May 1989 he was busted
by German Police for swapping pirated software. The case was dropped due to
lack of evidence but Jeffs equipment was destroyed in the process, and he was
told never to publish a cracker fanzine again. It is no secret that Jeff never
liked "new" Triad.
801 DC was in fact one of the most important Triad members ever.
Following the retirement of Ixion in 1988, Triad almost died. The Triad eras
before and after this crisis are sometimes refered to as the "old"
and "new" Triad respectively. But Triad didn't die! There was
one person who kept the fire burning, and that person was 801 DC. He
and the Sarge released some demos from August 1988 until Jerry joined as the
new leader two months later. He tragically died in an airplane accident on
midsummers eve 1991, missed by all his friends in Triad.
Jerry born in 1943 has been the organizer of Triad since October
1988. Still, 1996 he keeps the Triad fire burning within the Swedish C= 64
underground. A fan of visual arts and C= 64 counterculture, he has the perhaps
greatest demo collection in the world with thousands of disks stacked up in
his home in the middle of Sweden. He is constantly bothered with the matter of
preserving all of this information for the afterworld. One of his ideas was to
transform all of his disks to paper tape. That's Jerry in a nutshell: always
having these odd and weird ideas floating around in his mind. Jerry never
seems to give up though he says he'll quit it all from time to time. The next
day he calls up some members, energically explaining an idea that popped into
his mind some hours ago. Probably there is still a lot to come from Jerry.
Chorus and Daw are mostly remembered as a team, but
Daw was the first to join Triad. His friend, the well-known musician
Danko suggested Daw to contact Triad. After having heard the music by
Daw and having seen his code, he was instantly invited. At about the same
time, Chorus sent in an application for membership and was just as
instantly accepted into the team. Chorus painted 64 graphics and introduced a
new style in typeface for charsets and logotypes. Daw and Chorus worked
together the first time att an internal Triad meeting in Bålsta and the
result of that was a demo called Suckpipe. They did three more demos as
a duo but they also teamed up with other members for other demos.
The music by Daw was very special and he had a knack for using sampled
sounds in the music. When he left the scene, Chorus decided to join Flash
Inc, but after a time he rejoined Triad to make one more demo and also
most of the graphics for Red Storm that was released a year after
Chorus had left the scene.
King Fisher (born 1972) had worked in known groups like
Byterapers and Royalty when he was invited to form
Rebels. When they couldn't achive what they had hoped for, they wanted
to join Triad and the majority of the Rebels members were invited. Like
Janitor, 3D and Mr Z, King Fisher is the sort of coder that has learned all
aspects of the 64-system down to the very core of it, allowing him to master
every sort of copy protection or any sort of demo effect. King Fisher is the
only person to have appeared simultaniously on the cracker and coder charts
more than occasionally. Not only that, in several magazines, he held his
position for as long as two years. For the last 3-4 years, King Fisher has
supplied the foundation for making ideas and dreams come real in Triad.
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