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#1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
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I'm wondering... can you use Acting or some other skill to trick your foe into thinking that you're still stunned after you've recovered, hoping he'll AoA and leave himself open?
Can you use Acting or some other skill to play up a hit and pretend to be stunned for the same purpose? |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Austin, TX
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Dungeon Fantasy (DF2 p 11) suggests an Acting roll after you drop and let go of your weapons to play dead, with a bonus for the amount of damage taken. Foes roll at the higher of Perception or IQ to notice it. I've actually seen it used in play once - the party's druid wanted his buddy Berserker minotaur to attack someone else, and played dead for a few rounds until the minotaur moved away.
For your trick, I'd probably allow an Acting roll at a penalty, say -3, to convince the foe that you're stunned. It would require a Concentrate maneuver, so you wouldn't be able to do much else. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Remember also, that it is the kind of thing that attracts a Reputation as in Martial Arts if you aren't careful. The durty tricks rules might also be pertinent.
__________________
Steal Energy- giving Dungeon Fantasy wizards a pretext to learn healing magic since 2004. |
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#4 |
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Computer Scientist
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Dallas, Texas
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The Samurai seemed okay with it when Tom Cruise used in THE LAST SAMURAI.
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#5 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Also, if you're happy with a more abstract resolution you could call it an Acting-based Ruse (Martial Arts p. 101).
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
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No. On 4, Bob does nothing but recovers. He has the -4 to his defenses, but can retreat, etc, and is no longer stunned.
5. Alice can tell Bob isn't stunned, even though he still has -4 to his defense. She attacks normally. |
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#7 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Quote:
"Someone who is conscious but stunned or surprised must take [Do Nothing]. On each turn of Do Nothing, he may attempt a HT roll to recover from physical stun or an IQ roll to recover from mental stun. On a success, he recovers at the end of his turn - that is, he Does Nothing this turn, but may act normally next turn." They go on to say: "If you are stunned, however, your active defenses are at -4 until your next turn - even if you recover." Therefore, after 4, Bob is still stunned for the -4 and has Do Nothing as his current maneuver. "Retreat", p. B377, says that "You cannot retreat (...) while stunned." There is no way for Alice to tell that Bob is no longer stunned because he remains stunned until the start of his next turn (6 in my example). |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
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#9 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
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Quote:
1. Alice hits Bob and stuns him. 2. Bob Does Nothing, does not recover. 3. Alice AoA's Bob because he's obviously stunned. 4. Bob Does Nothing, but recovers. Note that he remains stunned until the beginning of his next turn (p. B364). 5. Alice AoA's Bob because he's obviously stunned. 6. Bob attacks Alice, who cannot defend herself because of her AoA. So unless Alice managed to KO Bob in 3 or 5, she is defenseless in 6 because of her AoA strategy. |
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| Tags |
| combat, trickery |
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