Difference between revisions of "Death Mark"
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Revision as of 03:24, 14 March 2022
There are forces in the realm of mortals that inspire its name. These effects keep us from living forever, quite actively, in fact. A situation that inflicts lethal trauma upon a creature through physical, magical, or spiritual means could potentially hand them a Death Mark.
When you receive a Death Mark, part of your life ebbs away. A Death Mark first moves you down one stage of the Knockout Track. Second, it occupies that stage; it steals that portion of your energy. Not only do you sustain the −2 penalty to all rolls that a stage of the Knockout Track brings, but you continue to sustain the penalty until the Death Mark is removed.
What that means is that no amount of napping or coffee can unburden a creature of the malaise and fatigue that accompanies a Death Mark. When creatures bear five Death Marks, they gain the unconscious condition. A creature bearing six Death Marks must pay the toll to the ferryman.
Life Marks
Normally, only living creatures can hold Death Marks (i.e. creatures of a bestial, humanoid, legendary, or plantlike nature). For undead creatures, Death Marks work in reverse; effects which normally impose Death Marks remove them from undead, and effects which normally remove Death Marks impose them on undead. An undead creature with five Death Marks gains the immobile condition, and six will destroy them in dramatic fashion.
Conditional Marks
A creature can find itself in circumstances directly harmful to its health that prove fatal if left unchanged. For example: hypothermia, strangulation, or starvation. These kinds of situations just keep handing Death Marks to a creature on a recurring interval. If a creature is freed from the harmful conditions (e.g. finding a warm cabin, fresh air, or a hero's feast), the Death Marks vanish as quickly as they accrued. For example, Death Marks received at a rate of once per hour will vanish one per hour.