Daring dudes doing stuff doingly !
What all this should look like.
The Century Goose destroys the KMS Death Sun with a lucky shot (tm)
The earlier post jumped right into character generation. here are the two semi-mandatory "how to roleplay" and quickstart parts.
PseudoFAQ
How do I play this? What
do I do ? Where is My Butt? I’ve used
both hands and I can’t find it !!
Okay, here
is the topline: You pretend to be a someone else having a bad day, otherwise
called a HERO having an ADVENTURE.
·
Since adults argue even more than five year olds playing cowboy
(got ya ! Nuh UH!) we have numbers and
rules to make decisions easy and (sorta) impartial.
·
To do stuff you roll dice to see if what you want to do works,
and how well. The better you are at
stuff, the more dice and higher numbers you generate –which is good, because
harder stuff needs bigger results.
·
When you screw up, bad things can happen, like when you fail to
jump a chasm (you fall to your doom), or fail to not be punched (you get
ouched). In which case, since no one here
is very creative, usually this means you get hurt or lose cool stuff. Sometimes
you die. Again, we have numbers and
rolls to determine when or if this happens (see: playing cowboys).
·
Players work together , dealing with a scenario designed and run
by a referee. Everyone says it isn’t
player vs GM, but we all know the truth after our first game.
·
If you make a point of doing well, you can get better at what
you do, or learn new things. Plus, you get to keep cool stuff, especially when
the bad guys “don’t need it any more”.
·
Got all that ?
How do I know what to roll ?
Here is the quickstart
version for those too excited to actually read the rulebook before play;
nowadays, this is invariably described as the universal resolution mechanic,
which, as far as I’m concerned, illustrates much that is wrong with RPG design
these days (future rants on this topic will include the terms “engine”, edition
versioning, rules “patches”, GNS (?) theory, “standard modifier”, “immersive
fiction”, fiction as example”, "cultural models", "quickstart" and probably more….)
·
So, to do
stuff, you roll some six-sided dice, add modifiers to each dice, and determine
how many get a 7+. These are successes. Then add automatic successes for the
final total.
·
The number of
dice you roll is 1 + the career relevant to what you are doing. Basically each career is rated from 0-5
indicating how long you have been doing that, or how good you are.
If you have no relevant
career, and you cannot whine beg and rationalize a way to use one that you do
have, you roll only the one dice. Plus, you should be ashamed to call yourself
a gamer.
·
The modifiers
to each dice are whatever stat is relevant to the task. Again, they are rated from 0-5, strictly
indicating how good you are at that kind of task. Note that having a stat at 0 = kinda screwed
·
Roll your
career dice, add your stat to each one.
All rolls that get a 7+ are a success.
·
Harder things
need more successes, extra successes mean you succeed elegantly.
·
Finally, if you
have a relevant advantage, and an advantage is anything from a prop to an
amazing physical ability, you get a free success. Multiple advantages can give you multiple
extra successes. Yay team !
So, easy tasks should
either only require one success, or be a gimmie. A skilled task (one an
unskilled character couldn’t be able to do) should require 2, 3 or 4. Note that
with a six dice max roll, hitting a 4+ for successes pretty much requires
having some free successes from advantages. Plus, there are mechanisms to burn
GRIT to get better results. Read on. Or play.