04-18-2021, 02:59 AM | #1 |
Join Date: Feb 2018
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Effects of Increasing Intelligence
I have about a 35 year history with various editions of D&D, but I am new to The Fantasy Trip. Only heard of it, recently and purchased the Legacy in PDF format, about a week ago, after reading Melee and I'm trying to get a good understanding of the rules before sharing anything more than Melee with my friends that play D&D. I really hope that they like it and want to be as accurate as I can be in understanding the rules before introducing it to them.
Please, excuse what might seem to be a few very basic questions. Apologies if they've been asked, before, but my searches were ineffective. 1. In TFT: Wizard[/I], does my wizard automatically learn new spells if his intelligence increases? 2. In In the Labyrinth, does my figure learn new talents and/or spells if his intelligence increases? I think the answer to both of my questions is no, but am hoping that I'm wrong. Thank you. |
04-18-2021, 05:58 AM | #2 |
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: London Uk, but originally from Scotland
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
In the old rules, as a figures IQ increased, they could automatically attain new spells and talents as long as they met the requirements.
With the Legacy rules, I’m not 100% sure. The details are on p45 of the new ITL. I use the older way. |
04-18-2021, 07:01 AM | #3 |
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: New England
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
In the Wizard microgame, yes, one gets another spell slot when increasing IQ. However, if using the more expansive rules from the Legacy Edition of in the Labyrinth, new spells and talents need to be bought with XP, so an increase in IQ merely opens new possibilities.
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04-18-2021, 07:51 AM | #4 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Pacheco, California
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
See the difference between:
Wizard rulebook page 4: "The number of spells a wizard knows is equal to his IQ" and ITL page 16: "The number of spells a wizard can start with is limited by his IQ,"
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-HJC |
04-18-2021, 09:09 AM | #5 |
Join Date: Feb 2018
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
Thank you, everyone. Much appreciated.
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04-19-2021, 03:17 AM | #6 |
Join Date: Jun 2019
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
Welcome Hrothgar!
The 1st edition of ITL from the 80's had some very clear rules for learning new spells and talents that don't appear in the Legacy edition. Basically a character had to list on their record sheet from 1 to 2 things they were learning/studying. A formula determined how long each spell or talent took to learn. If that much "game time" had passed by the time they raised their IQ, they could take the spell or talent as soon as their IQ increased. If their IQ increased before the required learning time was up, they still had to wait the required learning time before they could start using the skill or casting the spell. Back then there was no XP cost for these things, you just had to have enough IQ and have waited the required time to add new ones. I still prefer the older rules.
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"I'm not arguing. I'm just explaining why I'm right." |
04-19-2021, 08:06 AM | #7 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Pacheco, California
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
The advantage of 1st edition over legacy edition is that 1st edition severely limited the ability of wizards to learn lots of talents and legacy edition has halved that penalty.
https://www.hcobb.com/tft/legacy_first.html#XP
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-HJC |
04-19-2021, 09:13 AM | #8 |
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Boston area
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
It's not at all simple as what Henry says.
Wizards have a strong incentive to increase IQ. In old TFT, this meant they got additional spells and talents, but increasing IQ is expensive so once you had a high attribute total, you got few new skills. But of course, this was true for everyone and probably affected heroes more than wizards, because they would have spent early points on ST and DX. Beginning wizards are worse off with Legacy, because they could have used the initial cheap attribute points to gain talents and spells early on. It's true that everyone with high attributes gained talents and spells very slowly once they hit a high attribute total. Henry sometimes forgets that some characters are not wizards. This fact may confuse new players who wonder why his comments apply only to wizards. In fact, a starting wizard in the old system might have spent three of his first four attributes on IQ (not Henry's Molly, who starts off seriously deficient in DX, of course) and gained three new points to spend on spells or talents for only 700XP. Under the new system, to gain four attributes of any sort and three new talent points costs 1500XP more. Once the character is at 40 attribute points, a new talent point would require an increase in IQ and so 1000XP under the old system. Under the new system, it costs only 500XP but if you also want the increase in IQ, it's 8500XP. In that sense, if a wizard with 40 attribute points wants to learn a new one point talent under the old system, it cost him 2000XP instead of 1000XP under the new. I'd hardly call it "the" advantage of old over new. (Thanks to Henry's link, I've edited my comments to include the first edition TFT XP costs for attribute increases.) Last edited by phiwum; 04-19-2021 at 07:05 PM. |
04-19-2021, 03:25 PM | #9 |
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Haubstadt, IN
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
To the original post, I think the answer is "it depends". Under Learning New Spells and Talents, the last paragraph on ITL45 states " When you add a new ability (spell or talent), you can use it immediately. It is assumed that you were practicing. . . ". However, the next paragraph on ITL46 says "A few talents require roleplaying to gain. Thiefly talents must be learned from the Thieves' Guild. . ."
My advice is to run with the situation and what makes sense for you. If you are doing arena combat with Melee/Wizard then add the talent as soon as the IQ is earned. If you are transitioning a world you have already created, then add the roleplaying requirement where it makes sense for your game. |
04-20-2021, 01:16 AM | #10 |
Join Date: Jun 2019
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Re: Effects of Increasing Intelligence
Wait, what am I missing here Henry? Legacy ITL clearly states the XP costs double for wizards adding more talents, and triple for non-wizards adding new spells.
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"I'm not arguing. I'm just explaining why I'm right." |
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