Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2017 8:59 pm
I may rework some of the ranges for things. I think I need to standardize them a bit. Seems...idiosyncratic right now.
This will need an example, eventually, but the basic idea is that the total amount of damage you can take doesn't change, but prosthetic limbs get blown off first and can be repaired easier than waiting for your meat bits to heal up...provided you have the means to do so. Still lots to do with this chapter, I really need to expand my notes.Augmentations are cybernetic or biological implants within the user’s body, ranging from simple prosthetics to implanted wandtech. In the Federation, there is a slight stigma against obvious augmentations, but this is quite the opposite among Space Pirates and the Union-Republika, where augmentations are common and often ostentatious. Augmentations come with an additional cost: taking them converts some of the character’s health circles into hit boxes (⊙→⊡). When damaged, hit boxes are marked off first, before health circles; unlike health circles, hit boxes do not heal on their own, but must be repaired (see Damage & Repair of Inanimate Objects).
Thoughts?Kits
The skills of Engineering, Forensics, Medicine, and Survival typically demand specialized tools to be used effectively in the field. Attempting to use one of these skills without the corresponding Kit gives a -2 dice modifier to all Tests and Contests involving that skill. The Space Ranger Corps carefully organizes a number of standard devices and imperishable tools to be used in the field (scalpels, universal socket wrenches, survival knife, compass, etc.), in addition to a small supply of vital prepackaged materials—medicines and bandages for Medicine Kits; chemical reagents, disposable gloves, and evidence bags for Forensic Kits; batteries, solder, nuts, screws, and common electrical components for Engineering Kits; food pills, water purification tablets, matches, and similar gear for Survival Kits.
Every Kit begins an adventure fully stocked, with five (5) dice worth of consumable materials. A player character may expend these dice on appropriate Skill Tests and Contests throughout the adventure (i.e. Forensic Kits provide dice on Forensic Tests, Medicine Kits for Medicine Tests, etc.) The player may spend as many or as few of these dice as they wish, spread them out over multiple Tests or use them all on a single Test, etc. These count as a regular part of the dice pool as far as exchanging dice for an automatic hit.
When the dice for a Kit are expended, the Kit still retains all non-perishable tools, and provides the normal benefit (i.e. no -2 dice modifier for not having a Kit.) Kits may be re-stocked with consumable materials between adventures, or during an adventure if the player character has the opportunity to replenish the consumables from stores.
Normally, the exact type and quantity of consumable goods is not tracked individually (and will probably vary from place to place), however if a player ever wishes to pick a specific consumable item from their Kit for another purposes (say, removing bandages from a Medicine Kit to start a fire, or a survival knife from a Survival Kit as a weapon), they may spend one die from the kit per such use. Kits never contain wands, augmentations, or exotic equipment.
Equipment rules are pretty strict, so we're not looking at a huge number of augmentations, but a representative sample of some stuff that's cool to have. Still need to work out the costs and mechanics. Augmentations of the same type (i.e. prosthetic limbs) take up the same equipment slot, to help keep things reasonable.From simple prosthetics to more exotic implants, augmentations are tools designed to extend the range and capabilities of humanity, an expression of homo sapiens mastery over nature turned inward. While some individuals are still uncomfortable with the implications of augmentations and ask the question of what it means to be human, others are excited at the possibility of surpassing the age-old limitations of the human form.
Augmentations come with an additional cost: taking them converts some of the character’s health circles into hit boxes (⊙→⊡). When damaged, hit boxes are marked off first, before health circles; unlike health circles, hit boxes do not heal on their own, but must be repaired (see Damage & Repair of Inanimate Objects). The number of boxes converted in this way is called the conversion cost, and is represented in brackets after the name of the implant.
Example
Ranger Xiao McCarter selects artificial eyes, which has a conversion cost of ⊡. When this augmentation is taken, McRanger convers one of her health circles to hit boxes. So ⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙ becomes ⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊡.
No matter how many augmentations a character has, their final health circle (⊙) does not convert; this represents that part of them, no matter if it is little more than a lump of brain tissue, which remains biologically human. Specific hit boxes do not correspond to specific augmentations; while they suffer damage, assume that the rugged implants remain operable no matter how many hit boxes are marked off, unless specifically targeted by an effect designed to destroy them (i.e. a holding a prosthetic limb in a puddle of molten lava, firing a beam directly at an artificial eye, etc.)
I was assuming they'd all be adolescents in super-technology ultralight spacesuits - majority female (they're lighter, after all) but a few would be emotionally stunted, effeminate boys.virgil wrote:With mass being expensive as a justification for restricting the carried equipment (a good idea), I'm now imagining all Space Rangers being built like horse jockeys.
Prosthetic Limbs (⊡ per limb)
Prosthetic arms are functionally equivalent to the natural limbs humans are born with, and come in many shapes and sizes, from the rugged industrial models with grip-claws preferred by Belters to synthskin-covered replacements almost identical to natural limbs. Since the circuits are connected directly to the user’s nervous system, sensors within the limb can transmit the full range of human sensitivity—touch, pressure, temperature, position, even pain. Of course, replacing a limb is more than the limb itself: the limb has to be anchored to the character’s skeleton, interfaced with their nervous system, blood vessels and other systems moved or re-routed around it, artificial muscles woven into supporting groups so that the character doesn’t tear their own arm or leg off every time they move. Because of all this reinforcement, for each prosthetic limb, the character gains an extra hit box (⊡). This can bring a character’s combination of health circles and hit boxes higher than eight.
Example
Ranger Romeo Juliet Foxtrot loses his arm after a love affair gone wrong (never doubletime a Blemphroim!) and requests an artificial arm from supply—his first implant. After paying the conversion cost (⊙→⊡), his eight health circles (⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙) becomes seven health circles and a hit box (⊡⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙) and then he gains another hit box for the artificial arm (⊡⊡⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙⊙), for a combined total of nine health circles and hit boxes. If Ranger Foxtrot ever chooses to remove the artificial arm, he would lose both hit boxes and regain a single health circle.
For every artificial limb, the conversion cost and CLP cost must be paid, but all artificial limbs occupy the same equipment slot.
Implanted Kits
Characters that have both a Kit and an artificial limb may convert the Kit into an Implanted Kit at no cost. Instead of being stored in a carryable container like a normal Kit, the tools and materials of the Kit are internalized into the functions of the limb: tools pop out of fingers and toes, compartments open to reveal storage spaces for compact consumables, etc. While the Kit and the artificial limb both still occupy different slots, it is much more difficult for characters to be separated from an artificial limb.
Extra Limbs
Characters are not restricted to the number of limbs that humanity was born with. Many humans, especially Belters and Space Pirates, have opted for adding an extra arm or two, or even a prehensile tail; such augmentations are rarer on Earth, as many are afraid of being mistaken for Mutants, but not unheard of. The hard limit on adding extra limbs is the conversion cost: characters cannot convert their final health circle. This sets the de facto maximum of artificial limbs a character has at seven. Characters do not receive any bonuses for having additional limbs beyond the standard complement.