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==Impact==
Early concepts, techniques , and perceptions of [[playingstyle]]s in [[Norway]] is are deeply rooted from in the everyday situations that arise when from playing non-stop for days in a forest, living in cabins heated with firewood, and making and taking food together as a large family, tribe, clan or [[ætt]].
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Pertaining gender and participants, the The winterlarps moved the action away from running in the woods with rubber swords into classic home and family situations of , including negotiating between groups about marriages, resources or religion. Girls were often more clever and conspicious than the young male participants in improvising and driving the interaction between the characters in such situations. These larps were a crucial factor for the relative genderbalanced participantgroups gender-balance of participants in Oslo, and also recruited ; they helped recruit a majority of the first female organisers of Norway.
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Ultimately the The traditions among both organisers and participants of the Winterlarps in Oslo made provided the foundations for [[iconic larp]]s like such as the 2nd World War larp [[1942]] to be possible. This is also the case for , and the westernlarps [[Wanted]] and [[Once upon a time]].
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[[1942]] and [[Once upon a time]] are included in the [[Nordic Larp Book]].
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