I've been musing a little
bit about one of my main issues with Skill Lists that have been
inserted into D&D and the various clones over the years. I
understand that defining the chances of success at a given task was
an important driving factor behind this, but I chafe under the
limitations it tends to impose. If a Skill List is provided, players
have a tendency to use it as a guide what their character is capable
of and this is a little anti-ethical to a certain style of Old School
Play. Conversely, extensive skill lists also do tend to inform play
by reminding a player of options that might not be readily apparent.
There seem to be many
approaches to handle this issue:
One is to keep the skills
and capabilities of character's relatively unbound/undefined, at
least initially, and explore or flesh them out through play or
background. “My father was a blacksmith. Can I shoe this horse?”
or “Have I ever encountered the language of Lizard Men before?”
This approach relies on a lot of inspiration from Players, and a fair
amount of negotiation with the DM. It works over time. There is
usually very little interaction with the standardized hidden skill
subsystems (like finding Secret Doors, or being surprised), and most
rolls can be resolved by a myriad of variations on the venerable
Ability Check.
Another quickly devolves
into more comprehensive lists of skills and options. Players look in
askance at their Character Sheet when confronted with a problem, and
dare not attempt things they do not perceive themselves as “good
at” for fear of the wrath of the Random Number Generator. They know
their strengths, but still fear failure. Usually these systems
divorce the chance of success from ability scores to a degree, or
become more level dependent.
In each case the character
ends up defined and differentiated by what they're good at, but they
all have distinct pros and cons.
I'm wrestling with a very
different approach.
What if characters were
actually defined or differentiated by what they were “bad at” or
“incapable of doing” rather than what they are “good at” or
“capable of doing.” In a way, flaws are essential for interesting
choices and characters, but other than the occasional low ability
score (increasingly rare in more modern systems with standard arrays,
cracked and subverted bell curves, and point buys) limitations above
something broad (“No Edged Weapons”) or vague (“I'm Lawful, I
wouldn't do that”) are still conspicuously absent from most D&D
games.
They may develop through
play or be informed a little by Alignment choice, and the classics
always crop up: “My Dwarf is Greedy,” “My Fighter cannot tell
a lie” “My Thief is a Kleptomaniac” but there's nothing up
front to encourage or direct players to behave in this fashion, other
than this wonderful spontaneous development during play or
occasionally a seed of an idea on the Player's part (informed by
fiction or the prior imagining of something that “seems like it
would be fun or interesting to try to play,”) or maybe even as a
rationalization of low Ability Scores (I've messed with this a bit
before with my previous post on Ability
Score Tags).
So instead of a
comprehensive skill list, or waiting for skills to develop through
play and negotiation, what if part of character generation spelled
out some of the character's flaws and deficiencies with a specific
eye toward “You can't do this?”
I smell a table, Roll or
Choose Three. Optionally, you can roll or choose one less (minimum of 1) for each
ability score penalty you possess (these already go a long way to
informing play):
I
am fairly capable at most things I dare to attempt, but...
|
|
Roll
Or Choose
|
ἁμαρτία
|
1
|
I
Always Cheat or Favor Short Cuts
|
2
|
I
Always Donate 10% Of My Wealth to The Church or Charity
|
3
|
I
Always Overestimate My Capabilities
|
4
|
I
Always Manage To Disappoint My Family and Friends
|
5
|
I
Am A Buzz-Kill
|
6
|
I
Am A Compulsive Gambler
|
7
|
I
Am A Coward
|
8
|
I
Am A Glutton
|
9
|
I
Am A Vegetarian
|
10
|
I
Am A Very Heavy Sleeper
|
11
|
I
Am Addicted to A Drug or Other Unhealthy Substance
|
12
|
I
Am Always Right
|
13
|
I
Am Inconveniently Bad With Names
|
14
|
I
Am Bloodthirsty
|
15
|
I
Am Bowlegged
|
16
|
I
Am Exceptionally Callous
|
17
|
I
Am Color Blind
|
18
|
I
Am Completely Tone Deaf
|
19
|
I
Am Cursed
|
20
|
I
Am Distrustful of Magic
|
21
|
I
Am Dyslexic
|
22
|
I
Am Easily Distracted
|
23
|
I
Am Easily Startled
|
24
|
I
Am Excessively Impatient
|
25
|
I
Am Greedy
|
26
|
I
Am Hated by The Gods
|
27
|
I
Am Honest To A Fault
|
28
|
I
Am Inconveniently Careful
|
29
|
I
Am Inconveniently Old
|
30
|
I
Am Inconveniently Overweight
|
31
|
I
Am Inconveniently Short
|
32
|
I
Am Inconveniently Tall
|
33
|
I
Am Inconveniently Thin
|
34
|
I
Am Inconveniently Young
|
35
|
I
Am Miserly
|
36
|
I
Am Nosy
|
37
|
I
Am Slow To React
|
38
|
I
Am Startled By Loud Noises
|
39
|
I
Am Terrible At Math
|
40
|
I
Am Terrible At Riding
|
41
|
I
Am Ugly/Unattractive
|
42
|
I
Am Untrustworthy
|
43
|
I
Am Very Bad With Money
|
44
|
I
Am Very Gullible/I Was Born Yesterday
|
45
|
I
Am Very Quick To Anger
|
46
|
I
Am Very Shy
|
47
|
I
Am Very Superstitious
|
48
|
I
Am Very Unlucky
|
49
|
I
Bully The Weak
|
50
|
I
Can't Lift Heavy Things
|
51
|
I
Can't Read
|
52
|
I
Can't Remember My Past
|
53
|
I
Can't Swim
|
54
|
I
Cannot Appreciate Art or Beauty
|
55
|
I
Cannot Be Stealthy, or am Very Noisy
|
56
|
I
Cannot Climb
|
57
|
I
Cannot Handle Strong Drink
|
58
|
I
Cannot Not Tolerate Torture or Cruelty
|
59
|
I
Cannot Operate Under Pressure
|
60
|
I
Drop Things
|
61
|
I
Experience Flashbacks
|
62
|
I
Frighten Animals
|
63
|
I
Get Lost Easily
|
64
|
I
Get Winded if I Run
|
65
|
I
Had A Very Poor Education
|
66
|
I
Have A Bad Back
|
67
|
I
Have A Bad Reputation
|
68
|
I
Have A Sensitive Stomach
|
69
|
I
Have A Terrible Temper
|
70
|
I
Have A Very Distinctive Appearance
|
71
|
I
Have A Weak Grip
|
72
|
I
Have A Weak Heart
|
73
|
I
Have a Weak Immune System
|
74
|
I
Have Difficulty Finding Clothes That Fit Properly
|
75
|
I
Have Difficulty Telling Right From Wrong
|
76
|
I
Have Horrible Hangovers
|
77
|
I
Have Missing Fingers
|
78
|
I
Have No Sense Of Humor
|
79
|
I
Have Severe Allergies
|
80
|
I
Have Shaky Hands
|
81
|
I
Have Trouble With Learning Languages
|
82
|
I
Have Troubling Nightmares
|
83
|
I
Lack Faith
|
84
|
I
Never Bathe
|
85
|
I
Never Forgive A Slight
|
86
|
I
Never Retreat or Surrender
|
87
|
I
Often Misread The Intentions Of Others
|
88
|
I
Require A Lot Of Sleep
|
89
|
I
Smell Bad
|
90
|
I
Stutter
|
91
|
I
Suffer From A Crippling Phobia
|
92
|
I
Suffer from Arthritis
|
93
|
I
Suffer From Delusions
|
94
|
I
Suffer from Migraines
|
95
|
I
Suffer from Motion Sickness/Vertigo/Seasickness
|
96
|
I
Swear A Lot
|
97
|
I
Walk With A Limp
|
98
|
I
Will Never Turn Down A Drink
|
99
|
My
Eyesight Is Very Poor
|
100
|
My
Hearing Is Very Poor
|
The object here initially
was to highlight “anti-skills” or “incapability” more so than
“flaws” or GURPS-style “Disadvantages” but that's what it
morphed into as I started trying to brainstorm and fill out d100
table.
Entries like “I Can't
Swim” are much more in tune with the original intention, this
limits a Player's options very succinctly and concretely and could
lead to interesting situations, back-story expansion, and tough
choices. Binary characteristics like this have a more obvious impact,
but naturally it's difficult to come up with a negation for every
potential skill.
I can't shake the feeling
that beginning play with a few examples of INCOMPETENCE or INEPTITUDE would immediately and directly inform play in a pretty different way.
Instead of “I Can't Sneak Around because I'm Not A Thief” this
option remains open or on the table (unless you choose or roll “I
Cannot Be Stealthy, or am Very Noisy”
of course).
A
careful reading or additional exposition about the nature of the flaw
itself in some (or most) cases leads to the deficiency skill-wise if
it's not otherwise obvious: Why would the vegetarian know how to cook
this steak or butcher this doe? How does this dietary restriction
impact reactions from the chiefly carnivorous Barbarians of the
Frozen Wastes? Some are definitely more obvious than others, but
looking at things side-ways or thinking on what the converse of the
limitation represents can help here.
Need
to resolve or determine if a character can do something that isn't
clearly contravened by their limitations? In the spirit of fun and
freedom, I suggest “Say
Yes, but...”
or “Tell
me how...”
to close the gap. If all else fails, state consequences and chances
and have them decide if the risk is worth it and roll something. The intent here isn't to model what the
character is capable of, or how to determine success of an action,
but to automatically determine a few points of failure and try to highlight that anything not precluded is possible.
Some
results or choices create interesting collisions with Ability Scores
(“Why can't my Strength 18 Fighter Lift Heavy things?”) and
Alignment (“Why is my Lawful Character Untrustworthy?”). I feel
this is a feature. Generous DMs could supply
commensurate/commiserative Ability Score adjustments or other bonuses
to compensate for spectacularly limiting flaws. I don't think I'd do
this, if the flaw is too far against type or doesn't seem fun, just
pick another one.
I'm
sure a system could be worked out to allow the character to overcome
their flaws through play, but I've always had a soft spot for the
hapless hero and protagonists with this kind of dimension. A
tiny subsystem like this might go a long way to insure that each and
every character has an interesting (or exploitable) weakness of some
sort from the start, and at the very least inform role-play a little
more broadly than your standard skill list.
I'm interested in hearing
thoughts about this, or if anything similar has been attempted
elsewhere for inspiration. I know it sort of flies in the face of
“fun” to a degree (heroes are capable, not "bad at things"), but we all have different definitions of what
is “fun.”
I've found there is nothing quite so thought-provoking as those complex contradicting traits. Also, I don't think this flies in the face of "fun" at all. Rather than the players having to ask "can I...?" quite so much, they can just look at their character sheet. They *can't* do this specific thing, but they probably *can* do things that are in the same category. They can't swim, but they can run and jump and climb. They can't use computers, but they can trawl through phonebooks and check out the neighbourhood. They can't fly spaceships, but they can shoot laser guns.
ReplyDeleteI have shared this excellent post with my fellow DMs and they love this concept. Thank you for your excellent work on this and so many other tables. I’m running my first short campaign, part homebrew, and your work has been incredibly helpful throughout. We wanted to have some more whimsy in our adventure so one of the NPCs is The Very Unusual Rabbit who poops out two candies each morning, and we roll on the d100 smells/tastes table to see what the poop is like, then on a curated wild magic table when the players consume it (usually right before combat). Thanks for all you do!
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