{"id":13558,"date":"2024-05-17T15:35:28","date_gmt":"2024-05-17T15:35:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/bluecorona2.fullstackondemand.com\/bc-dbs-remodel\/?p=13558"},"modified":"2025-12-30T10:51:37","modified_gmt":"2025-12-30T10:51:37","slug":"solo-shuffle-player-vs-player-leaderboards-113","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bluecorona2.fullstackondemand.com\/bc-dbs-remodel\/2024\/05\/17\/solo-shuffle-player-vs-player-leaderboards-113\/","title":{"rendered":"Solo Shuffle Player vs Player Leaderboards"},"content":{"rendered":"The whole cycle consists of some 2900 pages of manuscript, not all of it easily legible. There follows an extended, densely written plot outline, and then a final plan detailing further narrative developments. Hundreds of pages of Acts II and III of its final section are only roughly drafted; many consist of a few scattered words per line, and some of not much more than rhyme words jotted down the right-hand side of the page. In all, the play offers over four hundred speaking parts and would take the best part of a day to perform. They are, however, by no means its sole concern; Roussel introduces character after character, and the act unfolds as a seemingly endless series of new people, new conversations, new stories, from grisly murders to mild flirtations, from aesthetic theories to unsettling dreams.\r\n