If this principle were applied to European armor, then several aesthetic and mechanical things could be accomplished:
- It allows players to be more whimsical in their character conception through armor
- It has more potential for respresenting historic armor types from a wider range of time and place.
- It allows the shield to be something other than an AC modifier
- It conceptually makes more sense with a Weapon vs. AC table than the traditional "+shield" AC progression.
- It suggests a simple encumbrance rule where AC (modified by STR or DEX) x10 = movement (I must admit, I am borrowing this from something I read in the blogosphere, but I cannot remember who was the originator).
- It can make helmets mechanically important.
In addition, the torso and lower body can be divided into parts. Each part can have different styles of armor. Add up the different parts, divide by the number of parts (rounding down) in order to get the AC. For example, a retiarius gladiator is often depicted wearing heavy armor on one arm, but none on either the chest or other arm. Thus -3 +0 +0 = 3; 3/3 = 1. In addition, they are often depicted with a heavy armor helm. Thus, the final AC would be 5.
Movement rate = ACx10. This can be modified by the STR bonus. Thus, AC 0 with a 13 STR would allow a movement of 10 ft. If the character is wearing nothing but light armor, the STR bonus can be substituted for the DEX bonus.
I must admit that I am thinking of using this set-up in context of the 1 hit = 1 hp experiment I came up with over the weekend. Therefore, the following are directly related to that concept; however, with a little fiddling I can see them applicable to a variable damage system as well.
- Shields can negate one attack per round; however, the character using the shield cannot attack the creature whose attack was blocked that round.
- Two-handed weapons do +1 damage (x1.5 in variable?)
- Wielding two weapons affords a +1 to hit (allow the character to add their DEX bonus to hit?)
I started out with something like the AC + 3 = Move in tens of feet/yards, but modified it by rounding to 3 + the closest multiple of 3: AC 9 = Move 12, AC 7 or 5 = Move 9, AC 3 = Move 6.
ReplyDeleteMmm. The shield rule is a potential stalemate though. It should be very good at blocking but not that good. That's my problem with "defensive" rules in general, there's no real reason to use them unless you are defending someone who needs to recover or use a slooow-acting power. Players want to generally hack, and if they can't hack then run.
ReplyDelete@Roger
ReplyDeleteMmm. In one-on-one situations, correct. Possible fixes:
Characters cannot use a shield against the same target two rounds in a row.
With variable damage, they can act as damage resistance. This could be randomized by shield size (d2,d3,d4, etc.)