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'''BENEFIT:''' Your character has an iconic | '''BENEFIT:''' Your character has an iconic possession of some kind—Sparrow‘s armored jacket, Jack Tarot‘s Webley revolver, and the She-Devils‘ jetpacks are all examples. This benefit lets you pick from two of the options in the sidebar. If that‘s not enough to properly represent your personal hardware, you can take this stunt (and gain its benefit) multiple times. In addition, your hardware includes any non-mechanical abilities that seem reasonable. For example, a two-way wristwatch radio gives you the ability to communicate over long distances, just as a jetpack gives you the ability to fly—no numbers or rolling required, unless doing so puts you at risk or in danger. See Let‘s Do Some Science for more detail on hardware. | ||
'''EXAMPLES:''' | '''EXAMPLES:''' |
Latest revision as of 02:19, 20 June 2015
Temporary location. --Wizardoest (Talk) 13:26, 9 June 2014 (EDT)
Stunts
About Stunts
What Stunts Are
Stunts are special traits that bend the normal rules for a character. They can change the way a skill works, enhance a character‘s effectiveness in conflicts, or, in the case of mega-stunts, open up superhuman abilities not available to the average Action Scientist.
What Stunts Do
Each stunt confers a single benefit. This benefit reflects some special, privileged way a character uses a skill that is unique to whoever has that stunt. It might be due to special or elite training, exceptional talents, genetic alteration, innate coolness, or myriad other reasons. Some people just get more out of their skills than others do.
Building Stunts
In Atomic Robo, players are encouraged to create or pick stunts during play as needed, but there‘s nothing wrong with deciding on some or all of them before play begins. It‘s up to you. While there‘s no definitive list of stunts—the possibilities being limitless, it would be folly to try to enumerate them all—there‘s absolutely a definitive list of what stunts can potentially do. When in doubt, look to these examples as guidance. In addition, the standard mode descriptions starting on page 82 and the pre-packaged weird modes starting on page 86 include a number of sample stunts. A stunt only functions when the player wants it to. If for some reason you want to sidestep the advantage a stunt gives you, by all means do so.
Add A Bonus
Gain a bonus in a narrow circumstance
BENEFIT: Gain a situational +2 bonus to one application of a skill. If you phrase this as “+2 to [action] with [skill] when [situation occurs],” you pretty much can‘t go wrong.
EXAMPLES:
- Friends in High Places. +2 to over.come with Rapport when socializing at a fancy gathering, such as a ritzy corporate or government function.
- I‘ll Take You All On. +2 defend with Combat when outnumbered.
- Checkmate. +2 to attack with Provoke when your target has one or more consequences.
Alternately, for a stunt with a little more breadth, you can split up that +2 bonus to one application into +1 bonus to two applications. Those applications can both be for the same skill, or you can assign them to two separate skills strongly connected by a common theme.
EXAMPLES:
- Expert Marksman. +1 to attack or create an advantage with Combat when using a firearm.
- Martial Artist. +1 to create an advantage with Combat or Athletics when fighting unarmed.
- Majestic 12 Scientist. +1 to overcome with Electrical Engineering or Physics when dealing with Tesla-tech.
Add A New Action to A Skill
Use a skill in an unusual way.
BENEFIT: Use a skill to do something it normally can‘t by adding a new game action to the skill in certain situations. This new action can be one that‘s already covered by another skill—effectively letting you use one skill in place of another for the specified circumstance—or one that‘s just not available to any skill.
EXAMPLES:
- Backstab. Use Stealth instead of Combat to attack when the target isn‘t aware of you.
- We Are All Star Stuff. Use Astro.physics instead of Rapport to persuade (overcome) when talking about science.
- No Time to Bleed. Use Will to defend against physical attacks if you‘ve taken a consequence.
- Let‘s Take It Outside. Use Physique to defend against intimidation.
Add A Rules Exception to A Skill
Bend the rules in your favor
BENEFIT: Make a single exception, in a narrow circumstance, for a single skill in a way that doesn‘t precisely fit any existing action. This is admittedly a pretty wibbly-wobbly rule of thumb, but some stunts simply can‘t be classified neatly. For more dramatic effects, it‘s a good idea to balance this benefit by requiring the character spend a fate point, take a consequence, or sacrifice their next action. Otherwise, you may find that instead of making the character cooler, the stunt just makes the game less fun. And that‘s the opposite of what we‘re going for.
EXAMPLES:
- Riposte. When you use Combat to defend in melee and succeed with style, sacrifice your next action to immediately inflict an attack on your opponent at the shift value of your defense. For example, if you get four shifts on your defense, you‘d deal a 4-shift hit to the attacker. You can‘t do this again until you have another “next action” to spend (after your skipped turn goes by).
- I‘ll Be Back. Increase the difficulty of any Provoke-based opposition you create by +2.
- Master of Disguise. When you‘re in a situation where you‘re able to slip away unnoticed, you have the option to temporarily drop out of the game altogether. If you do, spend a fate point to reappear disguised as a faceless NPC already in the scene (a security guard, a lab-coated scientist, a DELPHI goon, etc.).
- Mind Over Matter. Once per scene, you may check a mental stress box to absorb physical harm.
Have A Signature Aspect
Get a free invoke once per issue
BENEFIT: One of your character‘s aspects is so important to your character, so integral, that, once per issue, you can invoke it for free. The flip side of this is that when the GM compels that aspect, she must offer you two fate points instead of one. However, should you want to refuse the compel, you have to match the GM‘s offer, one-for-one. That means you‘d have to spend two fate points to refuse the initial compel. Mark the aspect with an asterisk, or write “Signature” in parentheses next to it, as a reminder that it works a bit differently.
EXAMPLES:
- Signature Aspect. I Am the Atomic Robot.
- Signature Aspect. Britain‘s Most Dangerous Commando.
- Signature Aspect. Behold, the Power of Science!
Personal Hardware
Own an important possession
BENEFIT: Your character has an iconic possession of some kind—Sparrow‘s armored jacket, Jack Tarot‘s Webley revolver, and the She-Devils‘ jetpacks are all examples. This benefit lets you pick from two of the options in the sidebar. If that‘s not enough to properly represent your personal hardware, you can take this stunt (and gain its benefit) multiple times. In addition, your hardware includes any non-mechanical abilities that seem reasonable. For example, a two-way wristwatch radio gives you the ability to communicate over long distances, just as a jetpack gives you the ability to fly—no numbers or rolling required, unless doing so puts you at risk or in danger. See Let‘s Do Some Science for more detail on hardware.
EXAMPLES:
- Armored Jacket. Armor:2
- Knuckledusters. +1 to Combat to attack when unarmed, Weapon:2
- Two-Way Wristwatch Radio. +2 to Stealth to defend against detection when using it surreptitiously
- Jetpack. (2 stunts) +2 to Vehicles to create an advantage when airborne, +1 to Stealth to defend when avoiding notice by radar, +1 to Combat to attack when airborne
PERSONAL HARDWARE OPTIONS
Pick two:
- +1 to one situational application of one skill
- +2 shifts (or Weapon:2) on a success
- Armor:1
- Add a new action to a skill
As an employee of Tesladyne, you‘re entitled to make use of its resources. That includes borrowing hardware when you need it! See Tesladyne Industries (page 218) for details.