Low powered class, one of the mere mortals of RIFTS Earth, basically a tracker with nice bonuses to survival skills. RIFTS: Ultimate Edition adds three special abilities:
- Trail Blazing: The ability to cut and mark trails for others to follow.
- Cross-Country Pacing: The ability to pace your journey.
- Cartography: The specialized art of mapmaking.
- Group Camouflage: Basically, mass stealth. With a successful roll, the Wilderness Scout can hide his entire team in wild terrain as if they all made their stealth* rolls. If time-keeping is important to you, it takes 1d4 minutes per person. If launching an ambush surprise attack, every member of a Wilderness Scout's group gains one extra attack during the first round of action. A failed attempt means that it's time to roll for initiative. Base Chance: 35%, +5% per level.
- *Oddly, with the plethora of skills available, there is no actual Stealth skill in RIFTS: Ultimate Edition, the closest thing is Prowl.
- If you're a fan of critical failures and successes, which for me equals rolling doubles on a success or failure, a critical success grants two extra attacks to everyone, and a critical failure gives initiative and one extra attack to the other side.
Anybody familiar with this blog knows that I love Palladium Books regardless of inconsistencies and contradictions in the rules over many books and sometimes within the same book. I mean, who cares, especially from an OSR, DIY point of view? Yet, I would agree that changes could be made. They won't be, which is understandable, because there's too big of a catalogue that could made obsolete. So, we make these changes ourselves.
The three barriers preventing people from enjoying Palladium Games, as far as I see it are:
- Character creation takes FOR-EV-ER! Skill selection is a drag. I never write down that a character can speak his native language at 95% or can do basic math at 85%. These things are simply not worth recording.
- M.D.C./S.D.C. My solution, as I've stated before: Scrap M.D.C. Mega-Damage weapons would simply get a multiplier, be rare and dangerous to use.
- No ready-made monsters and NPCs. And they just released a very nice Bestiary, but you still have to build EVERYTHING, which is fine, but, simplified ready-made stat-blocks would be incredible.
So, using the Wilderness Scout as an example, here's how I would present character creation:
- Roll your Attributes as normal.
- Roll Hit Points/S.D.C.
- Record Special Abilities.
- Record automatic skills, then roll for others (see below.)
- Roll starting money.
- Ignore the listed starting equipment, because, holy shit that list is extensive! Just take the important things. You don't need to record that your character has a hat or a pair of sunglasses.
- Choose alignment.
- Athletics
- Climbing (+15%)
- Horsemanship (+20%) this includes exotic animals.
- Hunting (+20%) percentage taken from Track Animals which is essentially... Hunting.
- Land Navigation (+20%) This includes the 3 special abilities from above.
- Pilot (+10%) motorcycle or hovercycle.
- Prowl (+15%)
- Radio: Basic (+10%)
- Wilderness Survival (+20%) Identify Plants would be combined with this skill.
- W.P. Knife, Archery, Rifle, Handguns
- Hand to Hand, I love the idea of rolling this randomly, 25% chance for either Basic, Expert, Martial Arts, or Assassin.
- Actually, for this class I might make it:
- 01-50: Basic
- 51-70: Expert
- 71-90: Martial Arts
- 91-00: Assassin
What I would rather do, after recording your automatic skills, is roll randomly, say, 10 times on a custom skill chart (or series of charts) containing mostly related skills and the automatic ones, but also including some possible outliers to see what other skills you have. If you roll an automatic skill, you get a further 5% bonus every time you roll it. If you roll a new skill, you get it at the base 35% and a further 5% bonus every time you roll it again. If you roll a physical skill that you already have, you get those bonuses a second time (e.g., if you roll Athletics and you already have it, now you have Athletics x 2.) If you reroll a weapon proficiency you get an extra +1 bonus.
Then when you level up, at even levels add 5% to all of your % skills and at odd levels add +1 to any weapon proficiencies. Also each time you level up, you get to roll on the class skill chart 4 or 5 times, or 1d6 times (for further randomness.)
Special Abilities improve at the listed rate or at the same rate as % or +1 skills (even and odd levels.)
Unfortunately, designing these charts for every class would be beyond tedious, so this dream really is dead on arrival.
Unless...
You turned the already existing skill lists in random roll charts and said something like: Roll 3 times on your Automatic Skills chart, Roll 2 times on the Rogue Skills chart, Roll 3 times on the Wilderness Skills chart, once on each W.P. chart, and twice on a randomly determined chart.
Hmmm...
I'm a dreamer, but like I said earlier, take the obvious automatic class skills and stop right there!
I'd put all my Palladium books on the shelf hoping to never have to tinker again... but now I have to tinker again. :P
ReplyDeleteIt is the ultimate toolbox!
DeleteLove this! A few years ago some of my friends and I got together to play Rifts again after having not done it since the 90s'. We spent what felt like forever making up characters and by the end of it we were exhausted and ended up never actually playing.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Years Brutorz! I feel your pain...
DeleteThere does need to be a Simulacrum with public access (SRD), preferably not tied to the OGL or anything someone can pull.
ReplyDeleteI love your, 'roll x times', version of the solution.
Hello and thank you Timeshadows! But don't hold your breath on any kind of SRD.
DeleteIt would have to be based on the Simulacrum, but yeah, no breath held.
DeleteWas revisiting your Rifts illustrations! Great stuff! Any chance of a Dog Boy sometime?
ReplyDeleteI'll put it on the agenda...
DeleteWoo hoo!!
Delete