Difference between revisions of "Book:Skills"
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==Special Skills== | ==Special Skills== | ||
In addition to the skills listed above, there are two special types of skill ranks: Weapon Skills and Magic School Skills. | In addition to the skills listed above, there are two special types of skill ranks: Weapon Skills and Magic School Skills. | ||
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Revision as of 16:35, 29 December 2010
Skills are the very bread and butter of doing something in this role-playing game. Skills represent your character’s knowledge, strengths, and specialties in comparison to everyone else. While a person may be able to perform a skill, even be decently good at it, a character with ranks in a skill is exceptionally and heroically good at it.
The Skill Check
A skill check is a roll to test a character's ability in a specific task. Each of the thirty-six skills on your character sheet represents a different action that characters can attempt. Every skill is associated with one of the twelve attributes. For example, Search is used to locate things and is associated with Cunning.
The sum of the die roll, skill ranks, attribute points, and any applicable bonuses is your total result for the check. If you take any penalties to the check, you must deduct them from your result. For example, someone with the Scrawny fault takes a −2 penalty to Might checks.
You can make a skill check even if you don’t have any ranks in the skill. Just don’t expect the result to be too high. Some of the skills in this chapter allow you to use equipment to gain an easy bonus on your roll — if you can track down and acquire the tools, that is.
Pass or Fail
The object is to roll the highest number possible. Depending on the skill you're using and how you're using it, there may be different criteria to determine success. Basically, there are three types of rolls.
- Power rolls
- The number you roll translates directly into some kind of result. For instance, as detailed later in this chapter, you can make a Dash check to run faster than usual. The higher your roll, the faster your speed. You can make a Might check to hurl a rock. The higher your roll, the further it lands.
- Difficulty rolls
- You have to meet or exceed a number determined by the GM called a Difficulty Level (or DL). If your result is less than the Difficulty Level, your character fails for that attempt at the task. For instance, you can make a Machinery check to pick a lock. The more complicated the lock, the higher the DL. You can make a Perception check to spot a drop of blood on someone's collar. The tinier the stain, the higher the DL.
- Opposed rolls
- These are the result of the player wanting to perform an action against another character or creature in the game. Your result is compared to the result of a roll made by another player or the GM. Whoever rolls highest wins the check. In the event of a tie, whomever is considered the defender wins the check. For instance, you can make a Disguise check to impersonate someone, but others can make a Discern check to figure it out. You can make a Stealth check to hide your trail, but a pursuer can make a Search check to follow you.
You may voluntarily fail a skill check if you care to. In this case, you don't have to roll at all. However, you do have to accept the in-game consequences.
As detailed in Chapter 2: How to Play, when you roll a 1, it's a Critical Failure, and you fail horribly. When you roll a 10, it's a Critical Success, and you can roll again, adding the new number to the 10 you just rolled.
Skill Ranks
Thirty-six skills are listed on the front of your character sheet. You can make a roll for any of these skills whether you have ranks in them or not.
There are also three types of advanced skills, all located on the back of your sheet: weapon styles, magic elements, and spirit motions. Weapon styles are used in the Attack Roll explained in Chapter 10: Combat. You can wield any weapon in combat even without ranks in the corresponding weapon style. Magic elements are included in the Casting Roll explained in Chapter 13: Magic. You must have ranks in an element to cast magic spells using it. Spirit motions are added to the Focus Roll explained in Chapter 16: Spirit. You must have ranks in a motion to perform spirit arts using it.
You can gain new skill ranks in exchange for Expoints. You can buy 1 rank for 2 Expoints. You cannot normally exceed 10 ranks in any skill. If you gain the Legendary Skill trump (see Chapter 7: Trumps), you may exceed 10 ranks in one skill of your choice.
Remember, skills represent knowledge or practical experience your character earns. She doesn't just slay a dragon and wake up the next day with inexplicable knowledge of opening locks. Like all upgrades to your character, work with your GM to plan what your character learns and how she learns it. At minimum, your character has zero chance of learning a skill without available instructions, mentors, or loads of trial and error.
Time
Some skill checks are instantaneous. That is, used during combat, they cost no Action Points (see Chapter 10: Combat). Some skills are used as part of another action in combat. Some skills have AP costs inherently. A few can take days or weeks. Each skill entry may detail the amount of time, if any, the skill takes to use.
Take Your Time
Slow and steady wins the race. On skill checks that carry no penalties for failure and your character is in no immediate danger, you can choose to "take your time" and use "10" as if you had rolled it (this does not count as a Critical Success). Taking your time takes a while! In game terms, your character keeps trying until the check is done perfectly. Usually, this means multiplying the time required for a single attempt by 10 or more.
For example, Bryan's character Phineas needs to hide in a warehouse so he can eavesdrop on a conversation that will take place in an hour. His bonus to this check including his attribute and skill ranks is +9. He decides to take his time for a result of 19, and the GM describes that Phineas takes almost 20 minutes finding and constructing the perfect hiding place, from which he observes the conversation without detection.
Difficulty Levels
A Difficulty Level (DL) is the minimum target for success when making skill checks. The lower the number, the easier it is to complete the task. Many skills have some example DLs listed, but the GM should ultimately decide this number. As a quick tip, increase the DL by 5 for each major obstacle in the way of completing the task. Minor obstacles should increase it by 1 or 2. Effects that are helpful should similarly reduce it by the same amounts. The following table gives some examples of DLs and who might be able to meet them.
DL | Who could do it? |
---|---|
0 | Anyone |
5 | Even the village idiot |
10 | Your average person |
15 | Only people with related experience |
20 | Experts |
25 | Very lucky experts |
30 | One with maximum human potential |
35 | Someone with powers beyond human |
40 | A legendary hero (or villain) |
Stupidly Impossible Tasks
Sometimes you might want to do something that absolutely defies all rhyme, reason, or logical sense. But even physics and logic are just guidelines in a fantasy game. DLs of ridiculous tasks should be 40 or higher and made by your GM. You might decide you want to try Climbing up an inverted, slippery, solid-marble wall. Your GM laughs audibly and says the DL for such a mockery of physics is 80. This chapter won't list any DLs over 40. Since you can probably come up with far more ludicrous tasks than we can, we’ll leave it up to your GM to figure out their DLs.
Retries
Who doesn't want a re-do when a roll goes sour? The good news is that you've got the option to do this! You can spend a Fate Point (see "Fate" in the Trumps chapter), and either re-roll your attempt or have your opponent re-roll. See the description for each Skill, as some allow a character to retry indefinitely.
Skills
Animal Control
Typically used with: Charm.
In short: command critters. A character with ranks in Animal Control is a comrade to furry creatures everywhere, whether they obey the call of the wild or live comfortably in our homes. You can use this skill to get on their good side, make them listen, and even issue commands. This skill can only be used against creatures of a bestial Nature, meaning you can't use it on legendary creatures, undead animals, or humanoids (no matter how stupid, ugly, or hairy they are).
In order to use Animal Control, the beast needs to be able to at least see, hear, or touch you.
Befriending
Opposed roll. You can make an Animal Control check to enhance your relationship with an animal and improve its Disposition toward you. Wild animals are generally going to begin as neutral or malign. Domesticated animals are often friendly or neutral. Depending on training, some domesticated animals would start as malign (e.g. guard dogs).
To make a furry friend, roll an Animal Control check opposed by the creature's Discern check. If your result is higher, you may improve their Disposition. For each 5 points of difference, you improve the creature's Disposition by one level. If your check is a Critical Failure, you actually worsen their Disposition by one level. You can only attempt this once per day per animal. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes.
Calming
Difficulty roll. You can placate nearby animals and encourage them to resist the effects of a failed Guts, Mind Control, Sanity, or Virtue check. If the result of your Animal Control check exceeds the DL the animal needed to surpass, any consequences of their failed check are avoided. You can calm one animal for each rank of Animal Control (e.g. 6 ranks; 6 animals). Calming animals doesn't take any AP, since it happens in response to some other combatant's action. You can perform this action as many times per encounter as you wish, but each additional time adds a −1 penalty to your roll.
Training
Difficulty roll. This skill can be used to train domesticated or intelligent animals with one or more commands. Teaching an animal a command usually takes 5–7 days. If the check fails, the animal must be trained for an additional period and the check retried. If you have nowhere else to be, you can Take the Best on this check.
An intelligent animal (i.e. one that has an Intellect score of 2) like a rat, cat, dog, horse, or dolphin can learn several commands, sometimes dozens. Less intelligent animals like lizards can only learn a handful — usually just two or three. A domesticated animal can learn any of the following commands, or new ones with your GM's approval.
These have a DL of 20 to teach
- Guard
- The animal will stay and defend itself, you, someone you point out, or an object.
- Sick 'Em
- The animal will attack whatever you point out, but animals will not attack anything unnatural without extra coaxing.
- Track
- The animal can track by scent (if capable).
These have a DL of 16 to teach
- Fetch
- The animal will go get what you point out, or the first thing it sees if no specifics are given. You can point out an object or a person.
- Search
- The animal will go where you point and look for anything odd (or something specific if capable of tracking by scent).
- Tricks
- The animal can perform the usual stupid pet tricks.
- Work
- The animal will pull or bear a load.
These have a DL of 12 to teach
- Come
- The animal will come to wherever you are.
- Down
- The animal will back off and lay down out of harm's way.
- Go
- The animal will go to wherever you point.
- Heel
- The animal will follow and remain close.
- Sit
- The animal will sit down where it is (if its physiology allows for it).
- Stay
- The animal will remain where you point until you return and won't provoke any passersby.
Once a command has been taught, getting an animal to perform a command requires a DL 10 Animal Control check (the character who trained it can skip the check). Animals will only accept commands from creatures with whom they have a neutral or better Disposition.
Instructing
Opposed Roll. You can use this skill to corral, guide, and direct creatures you meet that haven't been trained. This could be steering a racoon into a cage, leading some sheep into a barn, or forcing a mountain lion to stay put. Since complicated commands require several days of patient training, the only commands you can issue are those with a DL of 12 or less to teach.
Make an Animal Control check against their Mind Control check. If your result is higher, the animal follows your command. An animal will not follow a command that puts it in harm's way unless it has been specifically trained to do so.
To be able to issue commands to an animal, its Disposition must be neutral or better. Anything worse, and your only choice is to scare it off, which requires an Intimidate check instead. If an animal has been elevated to the friendly Disposition, it will follow any reasonable command it can understand without you having to roll.
Riding
Difficulty roll. The Animal Control skill is also used when riding an animal suited for mounted travel or combat. If it has the strength to carry you, any wild animal that has been elevated to the friendly Disposition will let you climb aboard. Any domesticated animal bred for riding only needs to have a neutral Disposition toward you. Once you're in the saddle, the more complex the request, the higher the DL. Below are a few examples:
Example | DL |
---|---|
Guide mount in proper direction | 5 |
Encourage mount to change speed | 10 |
Urge mount to leap (failure results in being thrown) | 15 |
If you ride a mount into combat that hasn't been bred for war, it has to make a Guts check against a DL of 20 or flee in terror. Thankfully, you can calm a mount who fails this check as detailed above.
You need to make an Animal Control check if you try to push your mount past its limits, such as walking or galloping to the point of exhaustion, or forcing it to carry more weight than it's used to. Any time a mount has to make a Stamina check, you have to make an Animal Control check against the same DL to keep it moving. If you fail a check, the animal refuses to continue and comes to a halt. You can read more about overland movement and its Knockout effects in Chapter 12: Adventures.
Bluff
Typically used with: Persuasion.
In short: lie. Characters with ranks in the Bluff skill are fake as hell. They weasel their way out of trouble with baldfaced deceptions. Most people exhibit physiological responses when they lie, so part of a good Bluff check represents your ability to suppress these signals. If you want to win at cards, stay out of prison, or run for public office, you have to lie like a rug.
Deceiving
Opposed Roll. A Bluff check can be used to look another character in the eyes and lie to their face. Anybody can try to fib, but a solid Bluff check makes it believable. Bluff can be used to mislead others for many purposes including passage ("I'm the emperor, you fool! Let me pass!"), false innocence ("It was like that when I got here"), or boasting ("I'm dating the prince").
Tell your lie and make a Bluff check. The creature to whom you tell this lie makes a Discern check. If their result meets or exceeds yours, they don't believe you. If your result is highest, they buy it hook, line, and sinker. While you can't retry a failed Bluff check (fool me once…), you can try a different Bluff on the same subject (fool me twice…).
Feinting
Opposed Roll. You can lie with your attacks just as well as you can with your words. See the "Feinting" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. If a character is difficult to hit due to an impressive Evasion Roll, you can make a Bluff check to create an opening in their defense. This takes as much AP as using the weapon normally does. The defender makes a Discern check. If your result is highest, the difference between the results can be added to your next Attack Roll.
Distracting
Opposed Roll. You can use this Skill to force any elemental, humanoid, or legendary creature to lose focus and look away. For instance, by pointing adamantly and shrieking "what the hell is that?!" This presents a brief opening for Stealth or Thievery checks while their attention is drawn away. Make a Bluff check opposed by their Discern check. If your result is highest, the other creature looks off toward the nonexistent disturbance and gains the distracted condition for a single round. If your opponent rolls a Critical Failure, they gawk at nothing for one round — the first attack that comes their way during this time catches them wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat).
Climb
Typically used with: Muscle.
In short: hang on. Awe your onlookers with your fearsome wall-scaling abilities. Clutch onto a bucking bronco. Catch a wet bar of soap. Any great feat of strength using your hands and fingers only (or feet and toes, for that matter) is what the Grip skill is all about. Grip can be used to effectively ascend or descend vertical distances as well as maintain solid holds on objects or creatures.
Climbing
You can roll a Grip check to climb out of a pit, up a tree, down a cliff, over the city walls, or across a ledge. The tougher the surface is to climb, the higher the DL.
The ladder into a tree house should be DL 5, and a sheer cliff face should be DL 30. A smooth, flat surface is basically impossible for mortals to Climb short of using magic spells. If you use climbing equipment, you gain a +4 bonus to the Grip check. A device such as magnetic boots, while not magical, allow for climbing of flat, metal surfaces at a DL of 10.
If you fail the check, you fall from your starting point. Not so bad at the bottom, but deadly from the top. See the Guard skill about falling damage.
Depending on how far you're climbing, your GM may ask you for Stamina checks or risk falling. If you're trying to go especially fast (or at least faster than someone else), you'll also want to roll a Dash check. If you're carrying something or someone, you also want to roll a Might check.
Once you start climbing, you gain the grabbed condition (in this case you're wrestling the wall). It's really hard to climb and fight at the same time. A character cannot perform any action that requires the use of two hands (e.g. swing a greatsword) unless, say, the character has more than one set of arms.
Catching
If you want to snatch something out of the air as it zooms past, you can roll a Grip check. The tougher the object is to grab, like being slippery or heavy, the higher the DL. The object needs to be within arm's reach, otherwise you have to roll a Gymnastics or Dash check to get near it first.
If you're climbing, you can try to catch an object or creature that falls from above you. If you fail, whatever it was continues falling. If you roll a Critical Failure, you follow suit in proper arm-flailing fashion.
Grabbing
You can roll a Grip check to grab onto another creature ("Get over here!"). Any time you try to grab a creature, combat begins and the GM should make everyone roll Reaction. See the "Grabbing" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. Your opponent can prevent or escape your Grab by surpassing your Grip check with a Might check (if they're strong) or a Thievery check (if they're agile). As long as you have a hold on them, you both gain the grabbed condition.
Contests of strength between creatures of different Size favor the larger creature. In these opposed combat rolls, the larger creature gains a +4 bonus for each point of Size difference. Thus, if a kulgeri attempts to Grab a firnoy, the kulgeri receives a +8 bonus to his Grip check.
Disarming
You and another combatant can vie for the same held object ("It's my locknar"). If you make a successful Called Shot attack to the defender's held object, you make opposed Grip checks. Whoever has the strongest grasp gets to keep it. See the "Disarming" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat.
If a larger creature attempts to disarm a smaller one, the larger one receives a +4 bonus to this check for each point of Size difference.
Resisting Disarms
When someone tries to disarm you in combat, you roll a Grip check and they roll either a Thievery check (if they use a weapon) or a Grip check (if they use hand-to-hand). See the "Disarming" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. Certain types of weapons, especially those that require two hands to use, grant a +2 bonus to the Grip check. If you meet or exceed the opponent, you keep your weapon.
If a smaller creature attempts to disarm a larger one, the larger one receives a +4 bonus to this check for each point of Size difference.
Discern
Typically used with: Insight.
In short: figure it out. Discern is all about sizing up a person or situation. A powerful general stands high over a battlefield deducing his opponent's objectives. A judge hears a defendant's case, and then determines if he's telling the truth. A powerful wizard sees through the disguise of an assassin posing as one of his servants. All of these are perfect examples of the use of the Discern skill.
You can't retry Discern checks; you either figure it out or you don't. However, you can try to Discern something different about the same subject.
Revealing Deception
When another character attempts to deceive you, using either a Bluff or Disguise check, you must make a Discern check to see through their falsehoods. If you meet or exceed the other character's check, you can tell fact from fiction. If your result is lowest, you believe the lie, but it doesn't necessarily mean that you trust the liar wholeheartedly.
When someone impersonates a specific character, and you actually know the person being portrayed, you gain a bonus to your Discern check. This is based on your Disposition toward the one being impersonated.
Example | Bonus |
---|---|
Benign/Malign | +2 |
Friendly/Hostile | +6 |
Enamored/Hateful | +8 |
Understanding Intent
You can make a Discern check to figure out others' mood, goals, motivation, or reasoning. By reading body language, tone of voice, behavior, and other social clues, you can figure out why a person is performing an action, how they're feeling about a situation, or what their next move may be. The higher your roll, the more specific or accurate your gut feeling. This works just as well in combat as it does conversation, and it works just as well for allies as it does enemies.
If your result is 5 or higher, you can determine a creature's Disposition toward yourself or another creature. Unless, of course, they're hiding their true feelings, in which case you need to reveal their deception as described above.
Maintain Disposition
When another character attempts to improve your feelings about himself or another, you can decline the friend request. You must make a Discern check to oppose a Negotiate, Perform, or Seduce check made to improve your Disposition. Creatures of a bestial nature must make a Discern check to oppose an Animal Control check for the same purpose. If your result meets or exceeds theirs, your Disposition remains unaffected. If their result is higher, your Disposition improves one level for each 5 points of difference. If the opponent makes a Critical Failure, your Disposition toward them actually worsens one level.
A character can also attempt to worsen your bond deliberately. They make a Taunt check to worsen your Disposition and you must make a Discern check to avoid being offended. If your result meets or exceeds theirs, your Disposition remains unaffected. If their result is higher, your Disposition worsens one level for each 5 points of difference.
Analyzing Strategy
You can ascertain the strategy of entire armies. If your Discern check exceeds the commander's Leadership check, you can determine a single aspect of the battle strategy before it unfolds. Some of the possible information one could Discern from battles include: a place, object, or person a combatant is guarding; the next plan of attack; a likely escape or fall-back point.
Disguise
Typically used with: Presence.
In short: play dress-up. If a character wants to look like someone else, or at least not look like herself, the Disguise skill is a necessary tool. The fugitive blending in with the locals, the super spy posing as the (recently, tragically deceased) king, and the undercover martial artist gathering secrets from a rival clan all make use of the Disguise check to its fullest.
Be careful when you're incognito — people might expect specific knowledge of you. Often times you'll need to be good at both Bluff and Lore to really sell that you're someone else.
Impersonating
You can make a Disguise check to assume the guise of another, whether that's a specific person, a class of person (e.g. aristocrat, commoner), or a type of occupation (e.g. city guard, beggar). It's all about how you carry yourself: your demeanor, your voice, your mannerisms. You may be able to look like somebody else, but without ranks in Disguise or points in Presence, you probably won't be fooling anybody.
Gather together your outfit and make a Disguise check. As long as you're adopting that persona, people you meet get a chance to see through your charade. They make Discern checks against your original Disguise check. If yours is higher, your new persona is convincing. If they meet or exceed your roll, they figure out that you're pretending ("Is that a wig?"). You can't retry a failed Disguise check, but you could go find a different outfit and try that one instead.
The following table lists situational bonuses and penalties to the Disguise check.
Situation | Check |
---|---|
Different gender | −2 |
Different race | −4 |
Per point of Size difference | −5 |
Employing a Disguise Kit | +4 |
Penalties and bonuses are cumulative. For example, a male firna, 4 feet tall and 60 pounds (Size −1), with a Disguise Kit, attempting to pass for a female kulgeri, 8 feet tall and 300 pounds (Size 1), would take a −12 penalty to Disguise.
Collecting Information
The Disguise skill can also be used to blend in for the purposes of recon and gathering intelligence. Instead of actively conversing with the populace, you conform to the dress code and hide in plain sight, soaking up the topics of conversation. In this case, an average and forgettable appearance is a good thing while you eavesdrop. The higher the result, the more obscure the information you can gather. Hiding among the populace takes several hours. If you opt to Take the Best on this check, it could take days.
Example | DL |
---|---|
The location of major landmarks, names of local celebrities | 5 |
Current events, rumors, and gossip | 10 |
The location of a specific individual, item, or place | 15 |
Guarded, illegal, or illicit information (e.g. where to buy stolen goods, how to break into a particular building) | 20 |
Highly secret, personal, or valuable information (e.g. who the king's mistress is, where the rebel hideout is, the route the princess takes when she ventures into the city) | 30 |
Dodge
Typically used with: Agility.
In short: get out of the way. Those who excel at Dodging are rather difficult to hit. Every incoming attack a character notices can be thwarted with a successful Dodge check. Less agile combatants may instead elect to evade attacks by parrying, but not all dangers can be smacked away with a weapon!
Evading Attacks
Opposed Roll. When another combatant attacks you, and you see it coming, you have a free chance to defend yourself. Even from arrows and fireballs. See the Defending section of Chapter 10: Combat. Your enemy rolls an attack, and you make an Evasion Roll, which is either a Dodge or a Parry. If your Evasion Roll meets or exceeds the Attack Roll, the attack misses.
If you have gained the prone condition or the grabbed condition, you take a −4 penalty to Evasion Rolls. If you have gained the the immobilized condition, or the unconscious condition, you automatically fail Evasion Rolls. You also automatically fail the Evasion Roll when an attack catches you wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat).
Characters who fail to remove themselves from harm's way need to roll a Guard check to see exactly how much hurt gets laid out.
Avoiding Hazards
Difficulty Roll. The GM can institute a DL for a danger that has no opposed roll, like a collapsing ceiling beam or arrows from that devious trap you just triggered. If you can't get out of the way, it could mean you have to roll a Guard check to determine the damage done. A hazard could have other effects, like a deadly poison, a stream of corrosive acid, or it might just kill you outright.
For instance, if your adventuring party springs a trap and the floor collapses, the GM might ask for a Dodge check at a DL of 15. The characters who pass the check leap to safety. Those who fail plummet into the darkness below.
Focus
Typically used with: Intellect.
In short: think about it. If your character is attempting to do something requiring great mental concentration while in the midst of battle, for instance spellcasting, using a Special Power, or perhaps using another skill, it's time for a focus check. Focus represents your arduous mental discipline to ignore spells, attacks, rough environs, and the like to get things done. It can also be used to remember details about past events or specific people. Note that you must have noticed whatever detail it is you try to recall. If your character didn't perceive it, she won't have a memory of it. You can justify buying ranks in this skill by having your character learn memory improvement and concentration techniques.
Difficulty
If the player is performing some complicated task, and is trying to ignore damage or spell effects to continue performing said task, the DL is either equal to the DL of impending saves, or if damage is dealt, use 15 + 1/HP lost. If the character is being Grabbed, the DL is equal to the opponent's Grab check (Keep in mind that spells requiring gestures are usually impossible while being Grabbed.)
Below are some set DLs for environmental turbulence:
Example | DL |
---|---|
Light rain or wind, a ship's normal rocking, horseback riding | 10 |
Heavy rain, a ship's rocking in a storm, riding at full gallop, minor earthquake | 20 |
On deck during an ocean storm, major earthquake | 30 |
Being pulled into a nearby tornado, on the edge of an erupting volcano | 40 |
If a Focus is failed, you fail the task at hand. If the task is spellcasting or using a special power that requires magic points or spirit points, the points are wasted.
If the Focus is to recall past details, The difficulty for a the check depends on the length of time since the event and how noticeable the detail you wish to recall was.
Example | DL |
---|---|
Recalling what you had for dinner 3 days ago | 0 |
Recalling the name of the tavern | 5 |
Recalling the name of the waitress | 10 |
Recalling a verse from a song the minstrel in the corner was singing | 20 |
Recalling what your friends ordered, how long before it was out, and the total on the check | 30 |
Opposed Rolls
If the Focus is in response to a spell, special power, or Grab check, you must make two checks — one as per usual in response to the attack, and the Focus at the same DL to see if you ruin what you're doing.
Gymnastics
Typically used with: Agility.
In short: move or steady your body. The Gymnastics skill is used to determine a character's ability to balance, leap, cartwheel, dive, flip, tumble, somersault, kip-up, roll, and other acrobatic maneuvers.
Balancing and Tumbling
When you find yourself on a tightrope or pitching ship, you can roll a Gymnastics check to steady your weight and keep from falling. Similarly, you can use this skill to land a couple of cartwheels and a back handspring. If you're a gymnast or a break dancer, this usage of Gymnastics is for you. The higher the DL, the more difficult the maneuver. Staying balanced in a sailboat might be DL 5, whereas a flawless Olympic floor routine might be DL 30.
If you gain the prone condition, it takes 2 AP to stand up. However, you can use Gymnastics to kip up from the ground in 1 AP with a DL 15.
Balance is important in the saddle, too! With a DL 12, you can steady yourself while mounted if you're trying to line up a shot. With a DL 18, you can roll safely from the back of a mount slain in battle and prevent yourself from being trapped underneath.
You can use Gymnastics to slip right past a foe blocking your way, but it's risky. Make a Gymnastics check if you try to pass through the space occupied by an opponent. The DL is 20. For every point of difference in Size from the creature you're prancing past, you receive a +2 bonus on the Gymnastics check. It's easier for a bigger creature to vault over a smaller one, and it's easier for a smaller one to dive under a larger one. This means a human gets +10 on the check if they're tumbling past a juren, and a kulgeri gets +4 on the check if they're leaping over a firnoy. If you fail the check, your movement stops adjacent to your opponent.
Resisting a Trip
You can roll a Gymnastics check to keep from being tripped. See the "Tripping" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. To try to knock you down, your opponent rolls a Might check. If your Gymnastics check meets or exceeds their Might, you remain standing. If you fail, you gain the prone condition.
Contests of strength between creatures of different Size favor the larger creature. In these opposed combat rolls, the larger creature gains a +4 bonus for each point of Size difference. Thus, if a firnoy attempts to Trip a kulgeri, the kulgeri receives a +8 bonus to his Gymnastics check.
Horizontal Jump
You can roll a Gymnastics check to leap across an open chasm or from rooftop to rooftop. The result of the skill check equals the number of feet the character can move. Thus, if a character rolls a 30, they can jump 30 feet. (For perspective, a world record for the long jump is 29.36 feet).
Characters need a good running start to gain sufficient momentum to jump this far. If you don't build up enough speed beforehand, the GM should determine what impact it has on the distance. (For example, a record for standing long jump is over 12 feet. The GM may say that the result should be halved or thirded).
Vertical Jump
DL | Feet |
---|---|
5 | 1.25 |
10 | 2.5 |
15 | 3.75 |
20 | 5 |
25 | 6.25 |
30 | 7.5 |
Leap over a fence or out of a pit. The result of the skill check divided by 4 equals the height the character can jump. Thus, if the character rolls a 30, they can jump 7.5 feet. (For perspective, the current world record for the high jump is 8.03 feet). Characters need a good running start to gain sufficient momentum to jump this high. If you don't build up enough speed beforehand, the GM should determine what impact it has on the distance. (For example, the record for the standing high jump is about 6 feet, so the GM may say that the result of the check divided by 5 equals the height you can jump).
Landing
Gymnastics can be used to soften a fall (for instance, by righting yourself in mid-air, grasping an awning, or tumbling properly once you land). For every 5 points of your Gymnastics check, you can subtract 5 feet from the distance fallen. If there's anything left over, you can make a Guard check to turn some of the falling damage into steps down the Knockout Track. The rest comes straight out of your HP.
Intimidate*
Typically used with: Presence.
In short: compel through fear. Street thugs and interrogators have one thing in common: an ability to cow others to do things. Using Intimidate puts the ball in your court (whether or not you've actually got game or not). This check doesn't necessarily mean a growl, scream, or overt display of power. Sometimes a meaningful glance at the bloody weapon at your side is enough. Those who you successfully cow are much, much more likely to do what you ask.
Scaring
You can use Intimidate during combat to instill a sense of fear into a single opponent. Make an Intimidate check opposed by the creature's Guts check. If your check is higher, the creature gains the rattled condition (meaning it takes a −2 penalty on all rolls during the encounter). If the creature's check is a Critical Failure, they surrender or flee the fight immediately.
Intimidating another combatant takes 4 AP. A single opponent can only be intimidated in this manner once per encounter. You may attempt to Intimidate any creature that hasn't gained the unfeeling condition. Most bestial creatures that fail the check will attempt to run from you regardless of a Critical Failure, but if they're backed into a corner or otherwise incapable of fleeing, the claws come out and they defend themselves at all costs.
Coercing
Whether it's torture, armed robbery, or law enforcement, you can make an Intimidate check to force an unwilling creature to follow your instructions. There's no point in coercing allies into obeying your commands — anyone whose Disposition is benign or better will help you anyway. Make an Intimidate check opposed by their Guts check. If your check is higher, the creature gives into your demands out of fear. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes. As soon as you leave their presence, their Disposition toward you falls one level. You may attempt to coerce any creature of an elemental, humanoid, or legendary Nature. You may also attempt to coerce any fabricated, plantlike, or undead creature with an Intellect higher than 1.
You need to present tangible consequences for their refusal to comply, like threats of punishment, violence, retribution, or sabotage, and you need to be capable of "making good" on those threats. You can't use this Skill to force a creature to endanger itself. Be careful when you bully others into submission. It's possible you'll attract the attention of the authorities or garner resentment and vengeance from dangerous people.
In combat, you can coerce your opponent into surrendering, holding their fire, or letting you go. This action takes 4 AP. See the "Diplomacy" entry in the Socializing section of Chapter 10: Combat.
Leadership
Typically used with: Charm.
In short: take command. Characters with ranks in Leadership have an unshakable aura of confidence and authority about them. All great generals, kings, and ringleaders make use of this Skill. You can use it to motivate others into action or calm them in a pinch.
You may use Leadership against any creature of an elemental, humanoid, or legendary Nature. You may also use Leadership against any fabricated, plantlike, or undead creature with an Intellect higher than 1.
Motivating
Your unwavering morale is a comfort to others in the face of adversity. You can use this Skill to galvanize those nearby to resist the effects of a failed Guts, Sanity, Mind Control, or Virtue check. Make a Leadership check and a rousing call: "snap out of it!", "pull yourselves together!", or "don't listen to them!". If the result of your Leadership check exceeds the DL the ally needed to surpass, any consequences of their failed check are avoided. You can calm one creature for each rank of Leadership (e.g. 3 ranks; 3 comrades). Motivating allies doesn't take any AP, since it happens in response to some other combatant's action. You can perform this action as many times per encounter as you wish, but each additional try adds a −1 penalty to your roll.
Taking Charge
When danger rears its ugly head, folks tend to look your way to assume control. Whether the wisdom to make the right choice comes from your own ability to Discern or from a trusted advisor, your eminence convinces others that your commands must be the right course of action. Make a Leadership check opposed by their Mind Control check. If your check is higher, the creature respects your authority and executes any of your instructions. Unlike other Skill checks which coax others into following suggestions, you can use Leadership to issue commands that endanger those you're commanding. So long as the situation is dire and the loss of life and limb is a certainty, those who submit to your command will endanger themselves for the greater good. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes. Once you part ways, they'll carry out any final orders to the best of their ability.
Your own allies don't need to be commanded — anyone whose Disposition is friendly or better will follow you to death and glory. Creatures whose Disposition is benign or neutral might need the extra coaxing, though. Anyone whose Disposition is malign or worse automatically passes their Mind Control check ("You're not the boss of me!") unless your orders will directly benefit their own interests. If you have ties to an organization and hold a formal position of power, you don't need to make a Leadership check to issue commands to your subordinates unless your requests are grossly outside the organization's motives.
In combat, you can command your opponent to surrender, hold their fire, or let you go. This action takes 4 AP. See the "Diplomacy" entry in the Socializing section of Chapter 10: Combat.
Recruiting
You can use this Skill to recruit any creature with a Disposition of neutral or better into your retinue (see the "Retinue" entry in the Fame and Fortune section of Chapter 12: Adventures). As long as your proposition doesn't contradict the creature's Motivation, Alignment, or personal obligations and responsibilities, make opposed Leadership checks to hash out the details. If your result is higher, they join the club. If their result meets or exceeds yours, they turn you down. You can attempt this once per day per creature. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes.
Enlisting a character into your retinue grants you a direct report that follows your orders as long as they're pleased with the arrangement and you compensate them fairly — that means you need things like loose cash, food, housing, supplies, mentorship, or a share of the profits. From the moment you enlist their services, they serve you however you deem fit: tagging along, guarding the base, or cleaning your apartment. If you successfully recruit a character with their own retinue, you gain all of the forces who wish to remain and pledge their loyalty.
Concealing Strategy
Once you and your strategists have devised combat plans, you can make sure the orders are carried out in such a way that your opponents cannot successfully analyze the actions of your military. Make a Leadership check. Any opponents can make a Discern check to interpret your plans based on the behavior of your units. If their result is higher, they figure out one aspect of your plans. Some of the possible information one could Discern from battles include: a place, object, or person a combatant is guarding; the next plan of attack; a likely escape or fall-back point.
Linguistics
Typically used with: Insight.
In short: read, write, and speak. For all you cunning linguists out there, the Translate skill brings you what you enjoy most: figuring out all them funny words! Translate can be used to get the gist of writing or speech that you otherwise don't understand. It is also used to communicate with beings who don't speak or understand your language. Just as Discern is used to determine intent through behavior, Translate is used to determine intent through communication.
Your character starts the game knowing the "Common" language as well as a single language from their homeland. When you buy a rank in Translate, your character gets the added bonus of learning to speak, read, and write in a new language. Once you have learned a language, there is no need to roll a Translate check when reading or speaking that language. Talk to your GM about which languages might be available for your character to learn.
If you fail a Translate check, you don't know the interpretation. If you roll a Critical Failure, you come up with an incorrect answer that you believe wholeheartedly. You can't retry failed Translate checks, nor can you Take the Best on Translate checks.
Deciphering Text
You can make a Translate check to decipher the meaning of a passage of text. This could be an old engraving, an ancient moldy scroll, or the sign over a tavern in a distant land. Characters should include ranks from an Occupation which is relevant to the translation (e.g. a scribe perusing an old tome, a diplomat validating treaties, a chemist reading the label on that weird vial of goo you brought back from an adventure). The higher the result, the more accurate your interpretation.
Example | Result |
---|---|
You're not even close | 5 |
You understand a tiny part of it | 10 |
You get a general impression | 15 |
You understand most of it, save for some details | 20 |
You understand its correct literal translation, but idioms are lost on you | 25 |
You've got it exactly down to the cultural references and word inflection | 30 |
If the text is illegible to any degree, or the writing is vastly different from anything you've ever seen before, your GM should give you a penalty on the Translate check. The amount of time it takes to perform the translation certainly depends on the amount of text there is to translate. It takes about 1 minute to translate a page of text verbally and 5–10 minutes to neatly transcribe one.
Communicating
A Translate check comes in handy when you want to convey or interpret a spoken message in a language you don't speak. This involves analyzing or leveraging the tone of voice, body language, pantomime, and even drawings in the dirt. The higher the result, the more accurate your interpretation. The above table lists suitable examples and results for this usage of Translate as well.
Using Translate to communicate verbally could take as much time as needed to get the message across. Combat is not the place to conduct linguistics studies, but simple and important directives can be communicated just as easily as regular speech, and can be done without using AP. Anything complicated or detailed that requires your full attention would require you to spend 4 AP per attempt.
Determining Origin
By analyzing the precise details of a person's speech patterns and vocabulary, you can roll a Translate check to determine the speaker's linguistic origins. You can also perceive socioeconomic status and infer someone's occupation, nationality, affluence, or proficiency (e.g. the soft vowels indicate they come from money, spent years sailing, and hail from the northeast). The higher the result of your Translate check, the more accurate your pinpointing. A roll of 5 means you're not close at all, a roll of 15 means you're close but not specific, a roll of 30 means you've got it exactly down to the street address of their birthplace.
Using Translate to glean origin details takes no time at all; you either get it or you don't. However, you need to be able to hear your target clearly, so the GM may ask for a Perception check in case the sound is too far away. Characters with the deafened condition or who fail the Perception check automatically fail the Translate check.
Lipreading
Through careful observation of someone's mouth as they speak, you can attempt to interpret the words you cannot hear. Make a Translate check. The higher your roll, the more accurate your interpretation. However, if you don't already speak the language, you won't know the meaning and can't attempt to guess without the sound.
Using Translate to eavesdrop on distant conversations takes as much time as the conversation itself does. You must pay complete attention, so your GM should ask for a Perception check in case there are obstacles or distance between you and the speaker.
Lore
Typically used with: Insight.
In short: know the answer. Knowledge is power to those who know. Those with ranks in Lore are learned scholars, unquestionable fountainheads of knowledge, and the people you always want on your team for trivia night. Lore is used any time a character wants knowledge on a subject. Often heard around the game table is "do I know about that?"
Attaining ranks in this skill could mean your character has learned memory improvement and concentration techniques, or maybe they had an all-night cram session with intravenous caffeine and piles of books. You can most certainly add any Occupation ranks to Lore checks when the knowledge is related to your profession.
Lore checks take no time at all; your character either instantaneously knows about a topic or not. If you fail a Lore check, you don't know the answer. If you roll a Critical Failure, you come up with an incorrect answer that you believe wholeheartedly. You can't retry failed Lore checks, nor can you Take the Best on Lore checks.
Recalling Facts
You can make a Lore check to recall historical facts, scientific properties, and theoretical analysis of a person, place, or thing. The higher the DL, the more obscure or ancient the information is.
Example | DL |
---|---|
Something trite (fish don't have hair; deserts are dry) | 5 |
Common information (a king's length of reign; the rumors surrounding a notorious place of mystery) | 10 |
Somewhat uncommon information (vampires cannot see their reflections; the traditions on a major holiday in a distant country) | 15 |
Fairly uncommon or professional information (the family tree of a noble; the cure for a rare disease; the vulnerabilities of a giant slime; the names of all blood vessels in a reptile) | 20 |
Extremely specific or forgotten information (the secret password to open a long abandoned fortress; an ancient queen's tea preferences; the requirements of any single Ritual) | 30 |
"How do you know that?" (the names of all past owners of a particular non-magical walking stick; the tenets and laws of a minor secret society you've never joined; the resting place of a purposefully-hidden relic) | 40 |
Identifying
Leveraging your vast memory, you can roll a Lore check to identify objects, creatures, and phenomena you encounter (or even those described to you). This skill check comes in handy when you're foraging in the wilderness, stalking celebrities, or taking inventory of all the nifty gizmos you just hauled out of that haunted mine. The more obscure, secretive, or foreign the thing to identify, the higher the DL.
There's more to identify about a humanoid than just a proper name. By recognizing the weapons, armor, clothes, or equipment carried by someone, as well as the appearance of these items, you can infer someone's occupation, nationality, affluence, or proficiency (e.g. the expensive clothes they wear indicate they practice fire magic and hail from the south).
You can also analyze an organism's symptoms to produce a medical diagnosis. This could range from simple observation to chemical tests of samples, and it works just as well for discovering what ails the sick as it does for spotting botanical diseases. Even if you correctly diagnose the illness in question, it may or may not have a treatment. If you're too late, you can use the Healing skill to perform an autopsy to determine a cause of death.
Estimating
You can roll a Lore check to formulate professional opinions about a topic by using any available data. The higher the result, the more precise your estimation. A roll of 5 means you're not close at all, a roll of 15 means you're pretty close, a roll of 30 means you've got it exactly down to the last detail.
You don't need any ranks in an Occupation to make these kind of estimations, but they certainly help. Below are some ideas for types of estimations you might encounter.
- Appraisals
- If you watch the market, you get a sense when the price is right. You can determine the quality of an object and project its monetary worth simply by inspecting it. You can also put a fair market price on any given item or service you might need to locate.
- Evaluations
- You can determine suitability or efficiency of an object, such as the speed of a sailboat, the structural safety of a building, or the disrepair of a suit of armor. You can also size up a creature, such as estimating its proximity to death, its skillfulness at a given task, or its natural talents and weaknesses.
- Forecasts
- Based on the current conditions, you can estimate the time until sunrise or sunset, forecast the weather, predict the cycle of celestial events, and anticipate the tides. You can ascertain the best times to hike, sail, fish, and hunt, as well as the best days to plant and harvest.
- Requirements
- You can estimate the resources necessary for something, like the length of time it would take six laborers to harvest an acre of corn, or the volume of black powder necessary to safely blow the dungeon door.
Remembering Events
A Lore check can also be used to remember details about past events you experienced. The DL for a Lore check to recall past events depends on the length of time since the event and how noticeable the detail you wish to recall was. At the GM's discretion, your character may remember something important without a check.
Example | DL |
---|---|
Your name | 0 |
The name of the tavern where you ate three days ago | 5 |
The birthdays of loved ones | 10 |
The lyrics to a song you haven't heard in ten years | 20 |
What you had for breakfast on a specific date twenty years ago | 30 |
If your character didn't perceive the event when it occurred, she won't have a memory of it. For instance, if everyone in your party succeeded on a Perception check to notice the mayor had red eyes, but you failed the check and nobody told you, you wouldn't know about it in the first place.
Machinery*
Typically used with: Intellect.
In short: master machines. The Machinery skill is used to operate, tinker, maintain, circumvent, or sabotage mechanical devices and obstacles of all complexities. This skill is extremely useful for the mechanically inclined, and can allow a player to perform all sorts of handy tasks.
If you make use of tools that are specifically geared for the task (e.g. lock picks), you gain a +4 bonus to the Machinery check.
Unlocking
You can roll a Machinery check to open locks on chests, doors, chains, manacles, and the like. The more complex the lock, the higher the DL. Simple locks carry a DL of 15.
If you're in no rush, and there are no penalties for failure, you can try your Machinery check as often as you like, or simply Take the Best. However, some locks can be outfitted with traps that spring in the event of a failed Machinery check. If you're in combat, an unlock attempt takes 6 AP.
Disabling Obstacles
A Machinery check can be used to disarm traps, diffuse bombs, and subvert machines. The more durable and complex the obstacle, the higher the DL.
If you meet or exceed the DL, the obstacle is disabled. If you surpass the DL by 5, you can leave the obstacle seemingly untouched. If you surpass the DL by 10 or more, you can re-set it after your party has passed by. If you're in no rush, and there are no penalties for failure, you can try your Machinery check as often as you like, or simply Take the Best. However, some obstacles carry penalties for failure, like blowing up in your face. Different obstacles take different amounts of time to circumvent, often 1 minute or more.
Operating Machines
A Machinery check can also be used to operate working devices safely and effectively. The more counterintuitive or complicated the device, the higher the DL. If you fail the check, you can't seem to get the hang of it (e.g. you steer in the wrong direction). If your Machinery check is a Critical Failure, the device breaks down.
In some cases, you and another character will make opposed Machinery checks, such as a vehicle chase.
Performing Maintenance
You can roll a Machinery check to keep machinery in working order. The more intricate, complicated, or damaged the device, the higher the DL. If you meet or exceed the DL, the device resumes normal operation. If you fail the check, the device remains in need of attention. If your Machinery check is a Critical Failure, the device breaks down entirely.
Device maintenance could take minutes to hours, so trying to do so in combat is ill-advised.
Negotiate
Typically used with: Persuasion.
In short: talk it out. Diplomats, lawyers, politicians, and merchants are master Negotiators. This Skill represents the ability to haggle, debate, and discuss a topic with another creature in order to change their mind. Negotiate is used to appeal to someone's sense of reason or goodness — peace negotiations, getting out of trouble, and so forth.
You may use Negotiate against any creature of an elemental, humanoid, or legendary Nature. You may also use Negotiate against any fabricated, plantlike, or undead creature with an Intellect higher than 1.
Suggesting
You can use this Skill to appeal to someone's sense of reason and offer up suggestions. When the situation calls for grace, etiquette, intellectual debate, salesmanship, or formalities, Negotiate can be used to get others to see things your way. Make a Negotiate check opposed by their Mind Control check. If your result is highest, they take your suggestions to heart and act accordingly. Your recommendations can't directly endanger them nor force them to do anything against their Alignment, Motivation, or personal obligations and responsibilities. For instance, you could convince a guard to let you through, but you can't convince him to leave his post.
There's no point in persuading allies into following your suggestions — anyone whose Disposition is benign or better will help you anyway. Creatures whose Disposition is neutral or worse will need some convincing, so your argument should be based in logic. In essence, you're persuading them that your point of view is preferable to theirs. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes.
In combat, you can suggest that your opponent surrenders, holds their fire, or lets you go. This action takes 4 AP. See the "Diplomacy" entry in the Socializing section of Chapter 10: Combat.
Interceding
While Seduce and Perform can be used to improve another creature's Disposition toward yourself, Negotiate can be used to improve another creature's Disposition toward someone else. It's even possible to reconcile the conflict between bitter enemies. To improve a creature's Disposition toward another creature, make a Negotiate check. They make a Discern check. If your result is higher, you may improve their Disposition. For each 5 points of difference, you improve the creature's Disposition towards any creature you choose by one level. If your check is Critical Failure, you actually worsen their Disposition by one level. You can only attempt this once per day per creature. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes.
Haggling
"This looks defective. I'll take it off your hands for a discount." Using Negotiate, a character can attempt to haggle with a merchant for several minutes in order to purchase goods or services at a lower cost. Make opposed Negotiate checks. If the buyer's result is highest, the difference between the rolls multiplied by two is the percentage offered as a discount.
Phineas and a merchant are discussing the price for a bound tome.
Phineas rolls a 26 for Negotiate. The GM doesn't have stats for the merchant, but assumes a result of 15. The difference in the results is 11. The merchant offers a 22% discount to purchase the item. The GM pulls out her calculator. |
Perception
Typically used with: Cunning.
In short: sense it. Characters with ranks in Perception are cognitive masters, picking up the sounds, smells, and sights that the rest of us don't or can't. This skill can be used to see or hear stealthy characters, witness your change purse being snatched away, eavesdrop on conversations, overhear the faint sounds around you, notice minute details of an object, or realize you forgot deodorant.
If you gain the distracted condition, you take a −4 penalty to Perception checks as your attention is fixated on something other than your surroundings. You also take a penalty to your Perception check if you're surrounded by impediments to your senses. Moderately poor conditions (like a patch of fog or a noisy marketplace) impose a −4 penalty. Extremely poor conditions (like inky darkness or a riot) impose a −8 penalty.
The GM might want to inform those who roll successful checks what their characters perceived in private or with notes. Doing this helps any players who didn't meet the DL role-play truthfully, as they weren't privy to the successful result.
Observing Stimuli
Difficulty Roll. You can make a Perception check to pick up on anything that can stimulate your senses. The higher the DL, the less noticeable the stimuli (e.g. further away, fainter, shorter in duration, more obstacles in between). Perception checks can involve any of the five physical senses.
The DL to perceive stimuli increases by 1 for every 10 feet of distance away from you. You can't perceive sights and smells separated by solid walls, but you can definitely perceive sounds that way. The DL increases by 4 if it's on the other side of a wooden wall or door, and the DL increases by 8 if it's on the other side of a stone or metal wall or door.
One Perception check takes no time at all, however a second attempt, trying to see or hear something you did not previously, takes 3 AP. If time isn't an issue, such as when the thing to perceive is stationary or constant, you can Take the Best on this check.
Measuring
Power Roll. This skill can be used to count and measure anything that can be perceived with any of the five senses. You could add up the number of troops on a battlefield, gauge the distance across a chasm, deduce the number of hot peppers added to the stew, or judge the size of a distant wolf pack by its howls. The higher your result, the more accurate your measurement. A roll of 5 means you're not close at all, a roll of 15 means you're pretty close, a roll of 30 means you've got it exactly down to the last decimal place. The same distance penalties listed above apply to this check as well.
Detecting Stealth
Opposed Roll. You must make a Perception check to notice the opponent creeping up behind you or the monster hiding under your bed. If your Perception check meets or exceeds the opposing Stealth check, you notice them. If the Stealth check is higher, you have no idea they're nearby — the first attack from the sneaky fellow catches you wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat).
You must subtract your Size from this roll, as it's easier to notice a larger creature and harder to notice a smaller one. For example, a firna is hiding from a juren. The firna gets +1 to his Stealth check, while the juren takes −5 to his Perception.
Realizing Theft
Opposed Roll. When someone tries to take an item from your person without your knowledge, you get to make a Perception check to notice them before they nab your stuff. If you meet or exceed the opposing Thievery check, you spot the pickpocket and get a chance to hold onto your object. What happens next is up to you, but if the thief wants the item badly enough, combat begins and they'll have to try prying it from your person.
Performance*
Typically used with: Presence.
In short: present. All the world's a stage and you're the star — or so your prima donna attitude would suggest. Characters with ranks in Perform are "the talent," and are superbly good at entertaining others. Such a trade can be used to lighten moods and create diversions.
When you buy a rank in Perform, your character also gets the added bonus of learning a new performing art (e.g. tuba, dance, singing, mimicry, coitus, comedy). Ask your GM if a particular performing art is applicable in your campaign. Usually, you'll need to be trained in an art of performing if you want to make effective use of it for the purposes described below — it's hard to move hearts when you stink at the clarinet. Ranks in an Occupation specific to a means of performing (e.g. violinist, comedian, actor) are always applicable to Perform rolls involving that talent, and obviate the need to buy a rank in Perform to learn the talent.
Entertaining
Power Roll. If you want to impress your audiences, move them to tears, and incite a standing ovation, you're the headliner so you'd better nail it. Make a Perform check. The higher the result, the better your performance. Anything lower than a result of 15 is considered amateur hour. A result of 20 is notable and enjoyable. A result of 25 is absolutely stellar and memorable. A result of 30 is legendary and guarantees your spot in the minstrel hall of fame.
If you're performing in a group (e.g. a band, a symphony orchestra, the cast of a play), everyone has to make Perform checks. You can take the average to determine the quality of the performance. Even though a player with a high roll may stand out (e.g. with a guitar solo or a monologue in the spotlight), the entire production suffers because of those with low rolls.
You can't retry Perform checks unless you want to do the act over again, and no audience would stay for a rerun after they've exhausted their supply of tomatoes to throw. Especially high Perform checks, on the other hand, will attract all kinds of attention from the upper echelons of society, both good (an invitation to play for the emperor) and bad (a record deal).
Befriending
Opposed Roll. You can make a Perform check to build a relationship with a creature and improve its Disposition toward you. Essentially, your performance impresses them enough to fall in love with your talent. To gain a groupie, roll a Perform check opposed by the creature's Discern check. If your result is higher, you may improve their Disposition. For each 5 points of difference, you improve the creature's Disposition by one level. If your check is a Critical Failure, you actually worsen their Disposition by one level.
You can only attempt this once per day per creature. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes. You may attempt to befriend any creature of an elemental, humanoid, or legendary Nature. You may also attempt to befriend any fabricated, plantlike, or undead creature with an Intellect higher than 1.
Enthralling
Opposed Roll. With a high enough Perform check, you can capture the gaze of others and keep them fixated on you. Roll a Perform check opposed by their Mind Control check. If your result is higher, you mesmerize them and they gain the distracted condition. If your opponent rolls a Critical Failure, the first attack from anyone other than you catches them wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat).
The effects of your performance can last up to 10 minutes, but you must perform the whole time. If your performance ceases or something else catches the opponent's attention, the effect ends. You may attempt to enthrall the same types of creatures as listed in the "Befriending" section.
Run
Typically used with: Endurance.
In short: book it. Sometimes in life, an all-powerful, monstrous creature looms up before us, and we're forced to turn tail and run to the hills. Other times, a nefarious foe has liberated you of your coin purse and you must bolt right after him. The Run skill is the weapon of choice for track-and-fielders, marathon participants, and cowards.
The GM should feel free to call for Muscle in the check instead of Endurance if it's appropriate.
Difficulty
Run checks don't have any set difficulties. The result of a Run check dictates the amount of time a character will take to close a distance. The higher the result, the shorter the time it will take to run the distance. Below are some examples DLs for the amount of time it would take…
Example | DL |
---|---|
…pretty much anyone to run | 5 |
…someone in good shape | 10 |
…an athlete | 20 |
…a world record holder | 30 |
Keep in mind the world record speed for the 100m is around 10m/s, and the record for the marathon is just over 5m/s. In other words, if you roll a 30 on your run check, you are running like an Olympic champion, maybe better.
Opposed Rolls
If two characters are vying for first place in a race, or one character is running from another, opposed rolls are necessary. The character with the higher result is the fastest.
Search*
Typically used with: Cunning.
In short: find it. Looking for something? It's always in the last place you look. The Search skill is a favorite of detectives, thieves, wilderness guides, and anyone who is lost. You can use a Search check to follow a set of tracks, find your way, scour for items in rubble, or root around the house for your missing keys.
Tracking
You can pursue creatures by following their tracks on the ground as well as by locating nearby clues, like broken twigs and trampled grass. If your Search check exceeds the pursued creature's Stealth check, you can successfully follow the trail. Each time the trail is broken, such as by crossing a stream, or stepping out of a meadow and onto a rocky hill, the creature being chased can make another Stealth check, while the tracker is forced to make another Search check to pick up the new trail. If you're following a group of creatures, beating the lowest Stealth check can reveal where they went, but beating the highest Stealth check will reveal exactly how many creatures are together.
You must subtract your Size from this roll, as it's easier to track a larger creature and harder to track a smaller one. For example, a firna is tracking a juren. The firna gets +1 to his Search check, while the juren takes −5 to his Stealth.
As long as you're actively following tracks, you gain the hampered condition, as you can't move at full speed while analyzing the environment. If you try to move at your normal speed, you take a −10 penalty on the Search check. If you try to make a Dash check while tracking, you take a −20 penalty on the Search check.
You take a −1 penalty to the Search check for each day since the trail was created. You also take −1 for each hour of rainfall. You take −5 for each inch of snowfall.
A Search check can be used to navigate and find direction. This is done by following trail markers, reading a map, or leveraging the sun, moon, and stars. The higher the DL, the more likely you'll get lost. It's perilous to lose your way in the wilderness, deep underground, or out at sea. You could also make a Search check to escape from an unfamiliar place, like a prison or a dungeon.
If you have a map, you gain a +4 bonus to this check. If you have a compass as well, you gain an additional +4. A compass on its own will let you determine cardinal direction with no check, but without a reference for landmarks, it can't help you find your way any easier.
Locating
You can make a Search check to rifle through a place to locate an object. This could be finding a lost child in the woods, a gem in a desk drawer, an ally among the debris of a collapsed ceiling, or the correct book in a library of thousands. You can also preemptively locate hidden obstacles along your route. This includes spiked pits along the trail, poisoned needles on the doorknob, and arrow slits in the wall. The more well-hidden the object, the higher the DL.
Camouflaged traps and accidentally hidden objects have their own DLs, however items that have been purposefully hidden require opposed rolls. The character who hides the object makes a Stealth roll. If your Search check exceeds the Stealth check, you locate the object.
It takes 6 AP to thoroughly examine an area sized about your height on each side. The bigger the total area you need to scour, the longer it will take. If an entire group is searching for an object, each participant who meets or exceeds the DL helps to cut down the total time it takes. Divide the time it would take one person to search the area by the total number of successful Search checks. For example, if it would take a single character one hour to search a given chamber, then it would only take 15 minutes if four allies passed their Search checks.
If you're competing against another character to locate an object as quickly as you can, roll opposed Search checks. The highest check that meets or exceeds the DL finds the object first. If you're in combat, the first character to pass the check on their turn locates the object first.
Seduce*
Typically used with: Charm.
In short: entice them. For you, it doesn't take more than a smile. Characters with ranks in Seduce could charm the pants off anybody. It helps you make bribes, forge friendships, and "meet hot singles in your area now." Courtesans, spies, and crime bosses are natural born users of the Seduce skill.
You may use Seduce against any creature of an elemental, humanoid, or legendary Nature. You may also attempt to use Seduce against any fabricated, plantlike, or undead creature with an Intellect higher than 1.
Tempting
Opposed Roll. While you can use an Intimidate check to coerce someone into action, you can use a Seduce check to lure them into following your suggestions (or following you home) in return for a reward. There's no point in tempting allies into obeying your commands — anyone whose Disposition is benign or better will help you anyway. Make a Seduce check opposed by their Virtue check. If your check is higher, the creature gives into temptation and follows your advice despite their better judgement. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes. Once you leave, they may come to regret what they've done at your behest, but their Disposition toward you isn't changed.
For this to be carried out successfully, you need to present desirable rewards for their compliance. If you're trying to get a politician to back your cause, bring a sack full of coins. To recruit nobles into your conquering army, offer them positions of power. You can even offer up your services as a reward, as most people need things done for them (or to them, you pervert). Be careful when you tempt others into submission. Bribery, adultery, and prostitution might be crimes depending on your location.
In combat, you can tempt your opponent into surrendering, holding their fire, or letting you go. This action takes 4 AP. See the "Diplomacy" entry in the Socializing section of Chapter 10: Combat.
Befriending
Opposed Roll. Strangers are just friends you haven't met yet; it's easy to make friends when you're charming! You can even get a sworn enemy to change their mind about you. To improve another creature's Disposition toward you, make a Seduce check. They roll a Virtue check. If your result is higher, you may improve their Disposition. For each 5 points of difference, you improve the creature's Disposition by one level. If your check is a Critical Failure, you actually worsen their Disposition by one level. You can only attempt this once per day per creature. Each attempt generally takes a few minutes.
Alluring
Opposed Roll. By turning up the charm and shooting an inviting smile across the room, you can capture the gaze of another and keep them fixated on you. Roll a Seduce check opposed by their Virtue check. If your result is higher, they can't help but look your way and gain the distracted condition. If your opponent rolls a Critical Failure, the first attack from anyone but you catches you wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat).
The effects last for up to a minute, as long as they're allured by your personality. If something interrupts your flirtation and catches your opponent's attention, the effects end.
Collecting Information
Difficulty Roll. You can make a Seduce check to gather the names on others' lips. Through your engaging and charismatic behavior, you flit and flirt about town as a social butterfly, expertly turning the conversation to the topics you're interested in. The higher the result, the more obscure the information you can gather. Visiting with the populace takes several hours. If you opt to Take Your Time on this check, it could take days.
Example | DL |
---|---|
The location of major landmarks, names of local celebrities | 5 |
Current events, rumors, and gossip | 10 |
The location of a specific individual, item, or place | 15 |
Guarded, illegal, or illicit information (e.g. where to buy stolen goods, how to break into a particular building) | 20 |
Highly secret, personal, or valuable information (e.g. who the king's mistress is, where the rebel hideout is, the route the princess takes when she ventures into the city) | 30 |
Stealth
Typically used with: Cunning.
In short: avoid detection. A wise man once said: "the primary element of a surprise attack is surprise." A character with ranks in Stealth knows the best place to stash herself when the chips hit the fan, and knows which floorboards are the squeaky ones when sneaking down a hallway. This skill can be used to tiptoe past the imperial guards, hide among the shadows, stash the evidence, ditch a tail, or follow someone through a dark alley.
You must subtract your Size from Stealth checks because it's easier for smaller creatures to avoid notice and harder for larger ones. This applies to all uses of this skill. For example, a firna is hiding from a juren. The firna gets +1 to her Stealth check, while the juren takes −5 to her Perception.
Hiding
Opposed Roll. You can use this skill to hide yourself from prying eyes. Pick a hiding spot and make a Stealth check. It takes a Perception check for someone to notice you there. If your Stealth check is higher, they have no idea you're nearby, and your first attack catches them wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat). If their Perception check meets or exceeds your Stealth check, they notice you.
In order to prevent oneself from being seen, one needs an actual hiding place. You cannot hide while being directly observed. You'll need some kind of diversion to make observers look elsewhere, for instance, a friend's Perform, Seduce, or Taunt. You could also try to make a Bluff check ("What in the world could that be?!"). A shadow will do as a place to hide, but if the opponent attempting to perceive you can see in the dark or in low light, it's just as useless as if you were in the middle of the room. Any ranged attack you make while hiding will reveal your location.
Stashing
Power Roll. You can also use this skill to hide an object (or several objects, you dirty smuggler). Choose a hiding place for the object and make a Stealth roll. The result of your roll becomes the DL required to locate the object in the future (with Search). The object's Size must be subtracted from your Stealth roll, meaning a small object grants you a bonus, and a large object imposes a penalty.
Sneaking
Opposed Roll. You can make a Stealth check to sneak past other creatures without being noticed. Anyone who wants to notice you creep by must make a Perception check. If your Stealth check is higher, they are oblivious to your movement. If their Perception check meets or exceeds your Stealth check, they notice you.
As long as you're sneaking, you gain the hampered condition, as you can't move at full speed while avoiding detection. If you try to move at your normal speed, you take a −10 penalty on the Stealth check. If you try to make a Dash check while sneaking, you take a −20 penalty on the Stealth check.
Covering Tracks
Opposed Roll. To escape from someone following your trail, you can make a Stealth check to cover up your tracks. Your pursuer makes a Search check. If they exceed your Stealth check, they can successfully follow the trail. Each time the trail is broken, such as by crossing a stream, or stepping out of a meadow and onto a rocky hill, the you can make another Stealth check, while the tracker is forced to make another Search check to pick up the new trail. If you're moving together with a group, everyone must make Stealth checks. Your pursuers can follow if they exceed the lowest Stealth check, but they can't tell how many of you there are unless they beat the highest Stealth check.
Favorable terrain grants bonuses to your Stealth check, while unfavorable terrain imposes penalties.
Situation | Check |
---|---|
Extremely soft terrain (e.g. mud, snow, wet sand) | −8 |
Soft terrain (e.g. desert, farmland) | −4 |
Normal terrain (e.g. plains, forest) | +0 |
Firm terrain (e.g. gravel) | +4 |
Extremely firm terrain (e.g. stone, wood planks) | +8 |
Swim
Typically used with: Endurance.
In short: don't drown. This is a skill in which heavily armored characters will want to invest. Verily, their life depends on it. When submerged in water, or slime, or any other liquid that allows for movement, a character can Swim to move, but more specifically to stay afloat.
The GM should feel free to call for Muscle in the check instead of Endurance if it's appropriate.
Difficulty
The DL for a swim check is determined by the strength of the current. It is also increased by the amount of weight the character is carrying.
Example | DL |
---|---|
Calm water | 5 |
Water with a slight to moderate current | 10 |
Water with a moderate to strong current | 15 |
Choppy, turbulent water | 20 |
Nasty riptide | 25 |
Extremely active water, such as in an ocean hurricane or Class 5 river rapids | 30 |
Here are some situational penalties and bonuses to Swim checks.
Example | Check |
---|---|
For every 10 pounds the character is carrying, not including their own body weight | −1 |
Character is employing the use of swimming-aiding devices, such as fins | +5 |
Character is wearing a life preserver or other floatation device | +10 |
Retry
Swim attempts can be retried as many times as necessary, but there are usually penalties for failing a swim check in dangerous waters.
Taunt*
Typically used with: Persuasion.
In short: provoke. Taunt is similar to Intimidate in certain regards. Instead of an imposing demeanor, a character with ranks in Taunt uses a litany of verbal jeers and jabs to upset opponents. While intimidation instills fear, taunting entices anger, which quickly leads to slip-ups.
Taunting another character in combat takes 4 AP. You may attempt to Taunt any creature that hasn't gained the unfeeling condition.
Tormenting
Opposed Roll. During combat, you can use Taunt to incite rage from a single opponent, increasing their chances of mistakes and carelessness. Make a Taunt check opposed by the opponent's Virtue check. If your result is highest, your rude gestures and stinging comments hit their mark, and they're pissed. They gain the rattled condition. A single opponent can only be intimidated in this manner once per encounter.
Signaling
Opposed Roll. You can also use this skill to steal an opponent's attention. Make a Taunt check opposed by their Virtue check. If your result exceeds theirs, they look your way with great annoyance and gain the distracted condition. If your opponent rolls a Critical Failure, the first attack from anyone but you catches them wide-eyed (see Chapter 10: Combat). The effects of failure last a single round.
Instead of imposing the distracted condition for one round, you can opt to turn an opponent's violence toward yourself, drawing it away from an ally. This is extremely useful when a comrade is outnumbered or outmatched.
Alienating
Opposed Roll. A good insult can make sworn enemies out of close friends. Make a Taunt check opposed by their Discern check. If your result is highest, you may worsen their Disposition toward you. For each 5 points of difference, you worsen the creature's Disposition by one level. You can only attempt this once per day per creature.
Thievery
Typically used with: Agility.
In short: swiping and release. This skill isn't as nefarious as it sounds. Thievery represents the art of legerdemain, pilfering, and escape artistry. This skill can be used to draw a small weapon unnoticed, snatch an item away from a table, pick someone's pocket, and other movements that require the hand to be faster than the eye. It can also be used to slip out of tight bonds or another character's Grab.
Stealing
It's like taking candy from a baby! Except a wallet is usually more valuable than candy. You can roll a Thievery check to deprive someone of their coin purse, swipe an object from a merchant stall, or slide the ring off the countess' finger, all without being noticed. The victim of the theft rolls a Perception check. If your Thievery check is higher, the item is yours. If their Perception check meets or exceeds your Thievery check, they immediately spot what you're doing and get a chance to hold onto the item. If you still want it, you can begin combat and make a Grip check to take it.
You really can't swipe or hide an object that someone is actively watching. You'll need some kind of diversion to make them look elsewhere, for instance, a friend's Perform, Seduce, or Taunt.
If the object is very small or otherwise easy to conceal (e.g. a marble, a dagger, four aces), you gain a +2 bonus on the Thievery check. If the object is large, heavy, or otherwise very noticeable (e.g. a Dachshund, an axe, a sack of potatoes, a longsword), you take a −4 penalty on the Thievery check.
Disarming
You can use a Thievery check to knock the weapon out of someone's hand. Essentially, you're using your own weapon as a tool to swipe the other. Your opponent must roll a Grip check. See the "Disarming" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. If your Thievery check beats their Grip check, you knock the weapon to the ground. Certain types of weapons, for instance whips and chains, grant a bonus to the Disarm check.
Escaping a Grab
You can roll a Thievery check to escape another creature's Grab. See the "Grabbing" entry in the Tactics section of Chapter 10: Combat. Using Thievery to escape from a Grab takes 3 AP. To try to pin you down, your opponent rolls a Grip check. If your Thievery check meets or exceeds their Grip, you're free of the Grab.
Escaping Obstacles
When you're trapped between a rock and a hard place, you can wriggle your way out. You could be wearing manacles, beneath a net, or stuck in a chimney. The tighter the hold on you or the more sophisticated the obstacle, the higher the DL to escape.
Any time you find yourself completely tied up, you gain the immobilized condition. The good news is that you can slip out of your rope bonds with a successful Thievery check. The better you're tied up, the higher the DL. In this case, the DL is taken from the Craft check of the character who tied you up.
Vitality
Typically used with: Endurance.
In short: stay healthy. The Vitality skill is used to keep intrusions upon your health at bay, such as illness and contaminants. This skill essentially represents your ability to flex your immune system and physical composure. If you want to get on all of the carnival rides, even the spinning ones, Vitality is for you.
Healing
A character heals an amount of HP equal to the sum of their Endurance and Vitality for each full night of rest. No roll is required.
Resisting Illness
You can make a Vitality check to ward off illness, the impairment we all experience under detrimental circumstances (e.g. emotion, stress, disease, parasites, diet, drugs, odors). Each cause of illness presents its own DL to resist — the higher the DL, the more unavoidable the illness.
You might need to overcome motion sickness. Someone may have replaced your milkshake with chocolate laxatives. Maybe you're sailing a quarantine ship. If you meet or exceed the DL, you remain healthy. If you fail the check, you contract the illness in question and receive one Death Mark for each level of severity (see the "Illness" entry in Chapter 9: Adventurers Beware).
A fightable illness allows an unhealthy character to combat the illness at repeated intervals. Each illness featured in this book will list this frequency (e.g. fightable every 12 hours). A successful check releases one Death Mark imposed by the illness. A Critical Failure imposes an additional Death Mark. Once all of the Death Marks imposed by the illness are released, the creature makes a full recovery.
A limited illness, on the other hand, will go away on its own (assuming you live through it).
Resisting Contaminants
You can also make a Vitality check to repel body-invading substances and organisms. Each contaminant has its own DL — the higher the DL, the more aggressive the intruding agent.
If you meet or exceed the DL, you resist the contaminant and its effects. Otherwise, you experience all the benefits and drawbacks the contaminant has to offer. For example, poisons inflict Continual Damage, pathogens impose illness, and stimulants wake you up. See the "Contaminants" section of Chapter 9: Adventurers Beware for more information.
Resisting Spells
Certain spells call for a Vitality check to resist, for instance Disease, Blood Corruption, and Sicken. In this case, you may add any points in Magic Defense to this roll. The mage makes a Casting Roll. You make a Vitality check. If your result meets or exceeds the Casting Roll, you elude the effects of the spell.
Special Skills
In addition to the skills listed above, there are two special types of skill ranks: Weapon Skills and Magic School Skills.
Occupation
The only place where success comes before work is the dictionary. A character can use his skill ranks in an Occupation to perform a trick of the trade, make a quick buck, or dazzle onlookers with occupational knowledge.
When you buy ranks in a specific Occupation, you are allowed to use the ranks as a bonus to a check that's related to your occupation. For example, if a character has 3 ranks in Occupation and has chosen the livelihood of Sailor, the GM may allow that player to conditionally apply the +3 on Search checks for navigating, Craft checks for knot tying, Grip checks to climb ropes and rope ladders, and Dash and Might checks for swimming. As always, ask your GM if your Occupation bonus applies to a check.
Most characters have learned some skill or trade along the way. For instance, a sneaky type may have once been a locksmith, or a strong type may have been a blacksmith. Occupations need to be specific; doctor isn't specific enough, but surgeon is. The list below provides some example occupations, but feel free to come up with your own and run it by your GM.
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Weapon
Ranks in a weapon skill represent intense training your character has devoted to a particular category of weapon.
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A character's ranks in the weapon figure into combat maneuvers, such as attacking, parrying, disarming, and the like. See the Combat chapter for more details on the use of Weapon skill in combative rolls.
It is important to note that a character does not need to have ranks in a weapon to use it in combat, nor does the character take minuses for trying to use an unfamiliar weapon. Obviously, Attack Rolls with a weapon in which the character has no ranks will be fairly low.
If a character is unarmed and in danger, it makes perfect sense to pick up and wield whatever is nearby that could be considered painful to an attacker. Improvised weaponry uses the weapon skill that is closest to the object. The leg of a bar stool is similar to a club. A broken bottle is similar to a dagger. A wet towel is similar to a whip.
Magic School
- REDIRECT Elemental skill