Charm Stunts (Action)
Heroic Action Role-Play |
- Main article: Action
Charm stunts cover a wide variety of social situation and action uses of the skill.
Acting
Limit Break
You can disguise yourself as somebody else and play out an assumed role with an opposed Charm roll. Make a roll on the initial encounter and a further roll at important junctures, which generally works out to once per scene. You cannot impersonate a specific person, and need cosmetics and bulky clothes to change your apparent race or gender.
Charm Defense
Trigger Action (Defense)
When a Charm stunt is made against you, you can defend. This adds +3 to the Charm skill used as the difficulty for the current shot. In a situation where shots are not counted, defending means you are not fully participating - you play defensive rather than engaging in the situation - which means you can't initiate actions or make stunts of your own.
Cunning Stratagem
Limit Break or Basic Action
You make a Distraction or Trick stunt that affects all enemies present. Roll separately for each. In certain cases, you can do this as a basic action, when you have a good enough situation in the GMs opinion. This is often the result of a planned set-up.
Distraction
Basic Action
You can baffle others with tricky words and misleading demeanor. Make an opposed Charm roll; on a success, your target loses 3 shots or you can move past or by them or claim some minor boon from them. Typical uses include distracting a doorman or police officer, conning someone out of some change, or stealing an unsuspecting kiss. It can also be used to get a respite in a fight. If your Outcome matches the target's Mind, you cause him major consternation; he suffers a Setback.
Good Impression
Basic Action
You try to make a good initial impression on someone with whom you can communicate. You can only attempt a single Good Impression check on a creature in each scene. If you succeed on an opposed Charm check, you have a short conversation as time allows—just enough to allow a Limit Break. The person becomes an acquaintance and will recognize you if you meet again. If you have an Outcome matching the target's Mind, you become at least temporary friends, and the target will happily spend time with you when convenient. This works to distract guards, focusing their attention on you instead of on what they should be doing.
Frisk
Varies
Make a quick examination of someone, looking for hidden weapons, contraband, and so on. This is an opposed roll compared to the target's Charm, Create, or Impress skill. Depending on what you are looking for and how you do it, there are several modifiers. In order to even try to hide an item like this, the character must be carrying enough clothes.
Circumstance | Modifier |
You are using a detection device of the same sophistication that the item sought. | +3 |
You are using a detection device of higher sophistication that the item sought. | +5 |
You know exactly what you are looking for. | +3 |
Person carries the object inside his body (swallowed, surgically implanted). | -5 |
Type of search | Modifier |
No Action Passive search; you are not actively searching, but the concealed object would attract your notice if you did search (not an action) | -5 |
Trigger Action Visual observation only. | -3 |
Basic Action Pat-down | +0 |
Limit Break Body cavity search | +5 |
In general, you only get one chance at frisking. But if you can change your modifiers so you get better odds, you can try again.
Sometimes, the GM will give you hints even on a failed roll, especially if the plot demands it; you generally get a bad feeling about a the situation even if you failed to find exactly what you looked for as long as you did not fail by a margin greater than your Mind. This realization might not come at once, and you might not be certain who your suspect is, but it gives you incentive to look more closely. By the same token, the GM might delay the result of a successful roll to heighten tension and move the plot along.
When a player tries to smuggle something past a guard, the GM should generally let the player roll their Charm, Create, or Impress skill against the guard's modified Recon; it is much more interesting to have the players be the active party.
Various stunts can be used to distract a guard or fool someone into revealing what they carry, these generally modify the Recon check further. A Setback on such a stunt makes either avoidance or discovery automatic.
Now and then the GM will have to fudge these rolls; generally to allow either a hero or villain to pass inspection but still cause suspicion - this is often the best setup for an exiting action scene.
Gambling
Basic Action
When gambling against another character, make opposed Charm rolls to see who gains the advantage at each stage. Success earns Advantage. If you get an Outcome matching your opponent's Mind, you win. As with any stunt, style gives a bonus. Stakes are raised raised before each roll; refusing to raise and roll means you forfeit the game at the current stakes. Rigged games give the cheater a bonus of +3 or more, but if the target would ordinarily have won, he becomes suspicious. Challenge to Gamble You can make others accept a bet for a trivial stake by succeeding on an opposed Charm roll, with higher outcomes indicating bigger wagers. An outcome matching the target's Mind allows stakes the target really cannot afford to lose, the equivalent of a Setback. This is an all-or-nothing proposal, only one attempt allowed.
Gather Information
Limit Break
You hang out with people, perhaps buy a few drinks, and get in on the local gossip. This gives you the local scuttlebutt and rumors, and possibly some real information as well. When gathering information about someone, make an opposed Charm check against them to learn their whereabouts and general information. On an Outcome matching the target's Mind you catch wind of some secret or unusual information. If the roll fails, you still learn general information, but not his current whereabouts, and friends of the mark may inform him of your nosing around. Note that you can use the Contacts Element of any skill to do this, not just Charm, as long as the information sought are known among the contacts given by your skill.
Gauge the Moment
Limit Break
You have been given a simple order, possibly under duress, such as to march along, be silent, or remain in the background. You can gauge a moment when you can break this order without causing a stir or creating conflict. Make a Charm check against Impress. On a success, you find an opportunity and excuse to break the order, such as a stop for bodily needs, inserting a worthily comment in a conversation, or step up to be helpful.
Good Cop Routine
Finisher
Make an opposed Charm roll against a prisoner or someone who is otherwise at your mercy or dependent on you. If you succeed, you gain their confidence and they see how you are trying to work out the best for them in their current situation; they would not lie to you or play tricks on you, but they still maintain their old loyalties and might not spill the beans to you either. Combines well with Bad Cop Routine.
Innuendo
Basic Action
This is the ability to convey different messages to different listeners by alluding to knowledge only some of them have. It is generally used when you know you are being overheard, but still wish to tell your allies something without the listener realizing what it is. This is useful both in polite conversation and when talking over an open line. Make an opposed Charm roll against any listeners you want to hide your true meaning from. If you fail you have a choice, either the unintended recipients understand the message or your intended listener does not. If you fail by a margin matching your own Mind, both things happen.
Palm Object
Basic Action
You can swipe a small object without attracting attention. This is usually used to steal, but can be used for other purposes, such as to to plant evidence or for parlor tricks. Make an opposed Charm roll against your mark. On a success you can swipe or plant a small object that is not attended, secured, or attached and the theft will not be immediately noticed. If you fail and score a negative Outcome matching your Reflexes the attempt is noticed. To swipe an object that is larger than your palm, is attached or worn in a pocket, or that is in clear sight you must score a positive outcome matching the observer's Reflexes.
Perform
Inherent
A character in Action is normally proficient in social activities such as dancing, singing, and playing instruments with reasonable skill. If it becomes important what areas of performance a character is particularly skilled at, choose one kind of performance for each point of skill above 10 (minimum one). Examples include instruments by kind (keyboard, string, percussion, wind, etc), dance, singing, acting, recitation, comedy, stage magic, and more. Stunts can be based on performance categories, but other schticks might be required for adventure use.
Scrutinize
Basic Action
You look over a person, trying to see if he is disguised, concealing an object on his person, or otherwise is hiding something. Make an opposed Charm roll to notice such discrepancies. On a success, you notice something is off. On a margin matching the target's Reflexes you notice what the problem is.
Seduction
Trigger Action (Combo)
When you score a Setback with a Charm stunt, you can attempt to establish to sway the target's loyalties. This becomes the Setback result, the target suffers no other effect. To do this you must point out some interest or loyalty the target has and say you share this interest. A common interest to use is sexual attraction, but seduction can also involve common ground of some sort, such as a common enemy, interest, or loyalty. Make an opposed Charm check. On a success, you seduce the target if you actually do share the stated interest. On an Outcome matching the target's Mind, you score a Setback and seduce the target as long as he has the stated interest, even if you are only pretending. Once someone has been seduced, they will willingly follow and help you out. They seek to avoid conflict with their old allies, and if push comes to shove you cannot guarantee how they will react; they will try to avoid seeing you harmed, but they might make you a captive to save you later or even to have you at their mercy, or they might decide to throw in their lot with you and abandon their former loyalties. Someone who you have seduced expects company, favored treatment, and possibly sexual favors from you; if you refuse them when the occasion present itself or if they discover you've been unfaithful your power over them is broken and they might become vindictive or even downright hostile.
Sense Motive
Limit Break
Observe someone in a social context and make an opposed Charm roll to learn his immediate goals and motivations, seeing trough surface motives into another person's deeper motivations and personality. You know what kind of person this is; gaining insight into his motivations, methods, and habits. This is not an exact science, and if the target is projecting a social façade, that counts as actively resisting your attempt. You generally only get once chance to attempt this in a scene or even session, unless the situation dramatically changes.
Social Support
Trigger Action (Defense)
When one or more of your friends are the target of an ability where Charm is the difficulty, you can substitute your own Charm for that of your friends for the current shot. Normally, you need to be within Mind meters of them to do this, but if you have some means of communicating and are aware of the situation, you can use this at a longer range.
Taunt
Basic Action
In an action scene, you can taunt an enemy, giving you an opening. Make an opposed Charm check. On a success, you gain an Advantage against the named creature or group of unnamed creatures you taunted. On a margin equal to their Mind they instead suffer a Setback. Such a setback is likely to be abut provoking the target to act impulsive or stupid.
Tete-a-Tete
Limit break
You have a one-on-one interaction encounter with another character present at the scene. Only you and the other know this happened. This is strictly a social encounter, there is something that prevents this from escalating into combat or that makes attacks impossible. In the middle of a fight this might be a pause enforced by the environment, an impasse, or a mexican standoff. This interlude happens immediately and is quite short; you can each make an interaction check against the other and have a meaningful exchange. You can use a Charm Limit Break during a tete-a-tete, they can do a Basic Action. It happens outside of the normal sequence of rounds. Short as it is, it can still be used to have a meaningful relationship development, make points clear, or otherwise be used to establish common ground or revitalize a rivalry.
Trick
Basic Action
You gain an advantage against an opponent by quick and deceptive actions or words, causing him to stumble or otherwise make a fool of himself. This is a useful set-up both in and outside of combat. The roll will be heavily modified depending on how well you describe your stunt and use available props. Make an opposed Charm roll against your target. If you succeed, gain an Advantage. It you score an Outcome matching the target's Mind, you instead inflict a Setback; the target suffers some direct penalty, as appropriate to the situation and how you described your maneuver. He might mistake you for an ally, strike past you at a friendly target, run off after some imaginary danger, or otherwise temporarily make a fool of himself.