Vulnerability (Symptoms) and Weakness (Side Effect)

mercredi 25 mars 2015

Hey all,



So I'm working on a 4th Edition Vampire the Masquerade conversion (as we all do from time to time), and while tackling the thorny "staking" problem came up with what I thought was a rather elegant solution, which can be extended to constructing endless other nondamaging vulnerabilities. I thought I'd share.




Quote:








Vulnerability

p. B161

Not all vulnerabilities amount to attacks being more lethal. Myths are full of creatures that are weakened, incapacitated or confused by certain weapons.



Vulnerability (Symptom)

Variable

Rather than taking additional damage from a particular form of attack, you suffer some form of affliction or other inconvenience. The effects occur when you take a certain amount of damage, and subside when you are healed back above that threshold.

The base value of this disadvantage is -5 points for a Rare attack, -10 for an Occasional attack, -15 for a Common attack and -20 for a Very Common attack. Use the categories under Limited Defenses (p. B46) to assess rarity. Modify the base value for the severity of the effect and the damage threshold at which it occurs, using the Symptom attack enhancement (p. B109).


Example: Vampires from Nosferatu-6 are rendered unconscious when wooden stakes are driven through their hearts, rather than killed outright. The blow must inflict at least 1/2 HP in damage. This is a Rare attack form, worth a base -5 points. Unconsciousness is usually worth +200% as a Symptom enhancement, doubled to +400% due to the damage threshold. In total, this disadvantage is worth -25 points.


The GM has final say on the rarity of an attack form. As with Vulnerability, you cannot have Vulnerability (Symptom) to anything against which you have a specific defense. Unlike Vulnerability, this disadvantage doesn’t limit Supernatural Durability (p. B89); it is possible for a specific attack to weaken you without killing you.



Under the Hood: This is based on the Vulnerability disadvantage, assuming that a x2 damage multiplier is equivalent to a +100% attack enhancement, a x3 multiplier to a +200% enhancement, etc. The equivalance isn't perfect, due to armour etc., but it's a good rule of thumb.



Similar logic applies to Weaknesses, using Side Effect rather than Symptom (as you can't use the damage threshold):




Quote:








Weakness

p. B161

As with Vulnerabilities, Weaknesses aren't always damaging. Some creatures are rendered unconscious or otherwise afflicted when in the presence of their bane.


Weakness (Side Effect)

Variable

Rather than taking damage from a particular substance or circumstances, you suffer some form of affliction or other inconvenience. The effects occur when you are exposed to the item or circumstances, and wear off over time: stunning wears off normally, while other effects last (20 - HT) minutes, minimum 1 minute. If Incapacitation is combined with other effects, the other effects last for another (20 - HT) minutes after the Incapacitation wears off.

The base value of this disadvantage is -1 points for a Rare item or condition, -2 for an Occasional item, -4 for a Common item and -6 for a Very Common item. Use the categories under Weakness (p. B161) to assess rarity. Modify the base value for the severity of the effect, using the Side Effect attack enhancement (p. B109).


Example: Pwca become nauseated in the presence of Christian religious symbols or objects. These are Common objects, worth a base -4 points. Nausea is worth +80% as a Side Effect enhancement. In total, this disadvantage is worth -7 points.


The GM has final say on the rarity of an item or circumstances.



Under the Hood: This is reverse-engineered from Weakness and Nocturnal (p. B146). "Daytime" is clearly Very Common, tripling the value of a harmful Weakness (putting the base value at 1/3 of [-20], or [-7], more or less). As a Side Effect, Unconscious is worth +250%, putting the base value at -2 (for an Occasional item) before enhancement and tripling.



What do people think? Is my working sound?

Vulnerability (Symptoms) and Weakness (Side Effect)

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