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The Delta Green Toolkit
version 1.1
(c) 2001 Gil Trevizio
The following is a list of items that a Delta Green agent might find
useful during a Night at the Opera. The list does not include weapons
or explosives, though some of these items can be used as such. The list
has been created based on posts from the Delta Green Mailing List.
There are four forms of toolkits: plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag,
and car trunk. The plainsclothes toolkit is small enough
to be carried concealed on the belt and in the pockets of your average
government agent dressed in professional business attire. The tactical
toolkit can be carried on an assault vest, large purse, and/or
in the many pockets of an agent dressed in SWAT/military BDU-style attire.
The gym bag toolkit includes larger items that can fit
in a duffel-sized bag or backpack. The car trunk toolkit
has all the heavy and bulky tools that can fit in a waterproof Rubbermaid
box, itself sized to fit in the rear of the trunk of a four-door American
sedan (behind enough items to conceal it during a cursory search). The
equipment listed for a particular toolkit may not all
fit in that toolkit, but each individual piece of equipment should be
able to. It is ultimately up to the Keeper to look over the equipment
and where it is distributed and decide if it is all kosher.
- Acid
- (gym bag, car trunk)
- Ever seen La Femme Nikita? A few liter bottles can make many
problematic items (files, hard drives, bodies) go away. Acid can also
be useful for cutting through locks.
- Cable Ties
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Besides being used to tie cable, these can also attach various stuff
to other various things, and make excellent restraints when there are
too many cultists and not enough handcuffs.
- Cellphone
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Though not really a cellphone, Globalstar
or Iridium phones offer the agent almost unlimited coverage worldwide.
Even though neither these nor digital cellphones should be used for
secure communications, easily-hacked analog phones should still be avoided
like the plague. If possible, the phone should be WAP-enabled for using
a microbrowser to browse (at least some) of the WWW and download email.
The phones used with Globalstar are good for data transmissions at around
9600bps, which means downloading The Lord of The Rings trailer is out
of the question but getting off an emergency message using a book cipher
should be okay. The phone must have the vibration option, as it's never
good to be sneaking up on cultists when your mother calls to bug you
about not having a girlfriend.
- Chainsaw
- (car trunk)
- Good for both for combat and evidence disposal, it also makes a decent
tool for an instant autopsy that isn't particular about forensics.
- Chemical Lightsticks
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Though they don't last as long or give off as much illumination as
flashlights, lightsticks can be used at just about any depth underwater
and are still useful as field-expedient lighting. They can also be used
as flares.
- Digital Audio Recorder
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A palm-sized recorder is useful for recording observations, conversations
(covertly or otherwise), and as an ad-hoc "bug".
- Digital Camera
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- These cameras now come in a wide variety of sizes and features, but
the best choice would probably be a medium-sized camera with a powerful
zoom lens. A directional mike would also prove useful, as would some
night-vision capability. A PCMIA adapter is a must to hook the camera
up to your notebook computer.
- Duct Tape and Super-Glue
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- So many uses, so little space.
- Emergency Oxygen Tank and Mask
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Saw one these in The Perfect Storm. It's a small oxygen tank
with a built-in mask that can be strapped to the ankle and used in an
emergency. There are several situations where a DG agent might find
themselves suddenly in need of their own personal air supply, and this
can provide one in a pinch.
- Entrenching Tool
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Otherwise known as a shovel, this is the kind that folds up into a
handy package. Always useful when there are bodies to be buried. Often,
the edges are serrated to be used as a saw. Spetsnatz also teaches its
soldiers the fine art of killing people using a sharpened entrenching
tool as an axe.
- Evidence Kit
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A good kit will include latex gloves, a laser pointer, large and small
ziploc plastic and paper bags (plastic can degrade certain evidence),
large and small envelopes, metal cans, marker (to label bags and envelopes),
specimen containers (styrofoam cups and seals), cotton swabs, glass
slides, write-on tape, a folded cardboard box (to place weapons), plastic
ruler, handyman knife, and fingerprint brush and dust.
- First Aid Kit
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- This is a small basic first aid kit, including band-aids, adhesive
tape, gauze bandages and pads, a triangular bandage, tweezers, scissors,
burn cream, anti-venom, a CPR mask, latex gloves, medicinal alcohol,
eye drops, iodine, and some aspirin.
- Fire Extinguisher
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Of great utility when dealing with auto accidents, picking up after
getting rid of evidence the Zippo way, and making fire vampires your
bitch. Can also be used as a club. There are some extinguishers small
enough to fit on a tactical vest, but the usual kind would require a
gym bag or more.
- GPS Handheld Reciever
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- The Global Positioning System can provide latitude and longtitude
at any place on Earth. The handheld recievers are not the most precise,
but are good enough for most purposes, accurate to about 25 meters.
Military GPS systems are much more accurate. There are some recievers
that can be used through a PDA or notebook computer, which combines
two useful tools in one for the DG agent.
- Geiger Meter
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- There are several Mythos creatures that bear radioactive signatures
and there may even be some relationship between Mythotic domains and
levels of radioactivity... or perhaps not.
- Go-Bar
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- An oversize pry-bar used by SWAT teams and special ops to open doors.
About 4-feet long and sometimes made of titanium, they are capable of
prying open steel fire doors.
- HAZMAT Suit
- (gym bag, car trunk)
- The thick, heavy protective suits worn in the most dangerous environments
is a little more than is necessary for most DG operations. A lightweight
and non-pressurized suit is a better choice. With an oxygen tank, a
character will be able to operate for 40-60 minutes in a completely
sealed HAZMAT suit, though for most a properly-filtered gas mask alone
will suffice. While a full HAZMAT suit might prove too bulky for most
agents to carry on operations, a pair of HAZMAT protective gloves would
still be a good choice to bring along, as it is always good to something
more resilient than latex gloves when you're investigating things that
should not be.
- Lockpicking Tools
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- The classic set of picks still works for most locks, but the gun-style
picks are quicker. A card-version that hooks up to a PDA and break locks
that use swipe-cards can also prove useful.
- Magnifying Maplight
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- For reading those maps or tomes when the lights go out, and also for
checking out the details of circuitry and such.
- Mini-Flares
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Useful for both illumination and rescue efforts. Flashlights can be
dropped during combat and be useless, but flares can be dropped and
still illuminate a large field. Those with the pull-string ignition
can also be rigged with a can of gasoline to create an ad-hoc incendiary
mine.
- Multi-Band Scanning Reciever
- (gym bag, car trunk)
- Besides radio and television bands, a radio that can also scan police
and military bands would prove most useful. There are some very recent
backpack models that are capable of VHF military bands, UHF public safety
bands, and SATCOM satellite burst transmissions, with all communications
digitally-encrypted.
- Multi-Purpose Tool
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Useful for a variety of different functions, these kind of tools often
incorporate blades, drivers, pliers, wirecutters, and other tools all
in one handy package. Such a tool can often be enough to fufill any
equipment requirements to make a Mechanical or Electrical Repair roll.
A good choice would be a custom-designed Gerber Multi-Plier in a belt
case with a pouch for a pocket flashlight.
- Night-Vision Optics
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A face-view design with a hands-free setup mounted over the head through
straps or attachment to a Kevlar helmet is essential. A night-vision
scope is also a good idea to have in some situations, especially with
weapons like the new M4 carbine and M16A3/A4 rifle that have guide rails
for quick and easy fixing of optics. Some night-vision equipment use
infrared (IR) beams as a target designator, and acts like a laser sight.
A portable IR lamp is also useful as even the best image intensifiers
won't work well under certain conditions. IR lamps shouldn't be used
when expecting resistance from those similarly equipped, as the lamp
will shine like a beacon to those equipped with night-vision gear. Recently,
thermal imaging technology has become advanced enough to be as portable
as image intensifiers, and does not require an IR lamp. However, thermal
imagers could prove dangerous for DG agents due to a lack of heat signatures
for certain Mythos creatures. Other features for night-vision gear include
flash protection and dual-depth technology that allows undersea use.
- Notebook Computer
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A notebook computer can be essential to DG
communications. It can also be useful for running detailed CD-ROM
maps, photographic analysis (especially with a digital camera), the
usual practice of writing reports, and just about anything capable of
being done with a desktop computer. Full internet access is now available
through connections available in many hotels and motels. While wireless
modems can be used for remote access, this only works in areas that
provide such service, which still doesn't cover much of the continental
United States, much less the world.
- Oven Spray
- (plainclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- The spray breaks up grease, so it is useful for removing fingerprints.
- PCP
- (plainclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Otherwise known as phenycyclidine, a vial can be dropped on suspects
to justify an arrest or shooting, especially those suspects who require
two dozen .44 Magnum slugs to the head to take down.
- Personal Digital Assistant
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Besides the usual jobs of taking notes for reports, a PDA can also
serve the well-equipped DG agent with accessories like a compact flash
port for a GPS receiver (not as precise as a handheld GPS machine),
a wireless modem for email and web browsing(service only in major metropolitan
areas), and even a low-quality digital camera for instant photos of
suspects and evidence. You can also play games to stay awake during
long stakeouts or red-eye flights to Arkham.
- Plastic 1-Gallon Cans
- (gym bag, car trunk)
- A few cans filled with water are good for survival purposes, and some
filled with gasoline are good for getting a few miles out of vehicles
in remote areas as well as unusual purposes like destroying evidence
or nests of incarnate evil, or as an innovative method of interrogation.
- Pocket Flashlight
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A small flashlight is always useful, even if just as backup for a
large Mag-Lite. A good choice would be a high-powered Surefire light
that can be mounted on the agent's pistol for tactical use and is sealed
for underwater conditions at shallow depth. As with all flashlights,
these should come with red filters to preserve night vision.
- Pocketknife
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- A good choice would be the Spyderco Police Model with a 4-inch serrated
blade and one-handed opening for cutting out of seatbelts when the car
is on fire again.
- Rappelling Gear
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- 50-100 feet of nylon rappelling rope with a climbing harness, carabiners,
pitons, a pulley, and a grapple, and never again need you fear a Climb
roll. It's also good for when you want to play SAS at the Embassy and
come charging through the window guns-a-blazing.
- Smoke Grenades
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Along with mini-flares, these can be used to mark out a landing zone,
as well as provide concealment for an escape or disruption for an assault.
- Snakelight
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Though not as durable as a Mag-Lite or as handy as a pocket light,
a Snakelight can be folded over a seat to shine down on a passenger
seat (equipment\scanners or maps), wrapped around your neck to illuminate
what you are working on, or just coiled to stand on it's own to light
up the job at hand.
- Spray Paint
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Most useful for marking up evidence scenes or for leaving a trail
to backtrack, and can also be used to differentiate between the nice
trees and the ones that move and have mouths with big pointy teeth.
- Tactical Radios
- (tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- Modern "walkie-talkie" radios usually work two-way, have a range of
2-5 miles, and are now small and light enough to fit comfortably in
the average jacket pocket. Digital encryption, frequency hopping, and
whisper operation are also possible with some high-end models. Many
of these radios can be fitted with a hands-free setup, and some can
be clipped to a belt and used with an earplug reciever and wristband
mic for plainsclothes communications.
- Toolkit
- (gym bag, car trunk)
- This is the usual kind, with tools useful for Mechanical or Electrical
Repair, and Electronics rolls as well as paraphenalia for an innovative
session of interrogation. Such kits can often vary greatly in size,
and some are small enough to fit in plainsclothes or tactical packages.
The most common though fit into a plastic or metal two-tray kit, and
include screwdrivers (an electrical driver with a set of heads is good),
nails, nuts and bolts, cables and wires, a hammer, chisel, electrical
tape, G-clamps, wire cutter and stripper, cable stripper, folding hex
and torx key set for the screwdriver, pocket multimeter, needle-nose
vise grips, telecomm scissors, and a set of jumper cables.
- Trauma Bag
- (car trunk)
- This is a much larger cousin to the first aid kit, similar to the
equipment used by ambulance personnel. It would fit inside a large gym
bag, and would include gloves, CPR mask, airway tubes, emergency blanket
(for shock victims), stethoscope, EMT shears, blood-pressure cuff, penlight,
cold packs, gauze pads and bandages, dressings, tape, burn sheet, burn
dressings, syringe, glucose, ammonia, nitroglycerin tablets, saline
solution, thermometer, tourniquet tubing, splints, oxygen tank with
masks, water, cervical collars, KED (flexible backboard-style device
used to extract patients from automobiles), and a backboard. If you
add in some sutures, scalpels, anaethesia equipment, a heart monitor,
and maybe another bag full of surgical equipment, you might have enough
to perform Surgery rolls at MASH-level performance.
- Wet-Naps
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- You can never be too clean...
- Zippo Lighter
- (plainsclothes, tactical, gym bag, car trunk)
- From torching villages in exotic far-off lands to lighting a Lucky
Strike to cut the edge off of having to put down your best friend after
he went native to dropping one in a pool of gasoline dripping out of
a wrecked car with a bunch of Bronsons trapped inside, this has been
in the suit pocket of every Cowboy since way back. Get one, even if
you don't smoke, because you will start. Soon.
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