#1
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If you know, you know (rules and moves)
Table of contents for this thread: More topics may be added. If I need to add one, please tell me! A good chunk of this was taken from Roekah's Urban Shadows game.
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On indefinite hiatus from the site. Last edited by Wynamoinen; May 10th, 2023 at 05:25 PM. |
#2
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Faction
Every archetype belongs to a Faction: Mortal, Night, Power, and Wild. These are loose agglomerations of types within the city. A faction is not a unified whole, but it IS a group with common experience, and with ties that bind them together. There are a few key features about factions: 1) There are special Faction moves that you can make. These mostly involve information gathering. They are a way of fleshing out our city. We want a fuller city! You should do faction moves! These always roll with +Faction of the target.
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On indefinite hiatus from the site. Last edited by Wynamoinen; May 10th, 2023 at 05:29 PM. |
#3
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Debt
Debt is the central economy of Urban Shadows. Notice that there is basically no money anywhere in the rulebook. You get what you want in this game by either taking actions, or by incurring (or recalling) debt. 1) There are particular Debt Moves. There will be times where I'll let you take control of an NPC, for the purpose of storytelling. But if there is something important or difficult to do, the main way you get NPCs to do what you want them to do is through Debt. If you're asking an NPC to do something that puts them at any risk, a Debt move will almost certainly be required. Those moves are:
2) Debt also creates a network of obligation and connection. Debt isn't necessarily a bad thing. It is personal contact. A person with a lot of debt is a person who knows a lot of people, and who has probably gotten a lot done! Debt is a tool for getting what you want, and it's also a way of driving the story forward. We'll definitely connect the PCs through debts as the game begins.
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On indefinite hiatus from the site. Last edited by Wynamoinen; May 10th, 2023 at 05:36 PM. |
#4
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Advancement
Advancement means making your character smarter, faster, stronger. Who doesn't like leveling up? But in Urban Shadows, you don't level up by murdering people and stealing their property. You level up by doing what the game wants you to do. The game wants you to interact with the city in all of its diverse manifestations. You advance by "marking Faction" with each of the four factions. Once you do that, you take an advancement and clear your marks. Rinse and repeat. You've got a few options to mark faction: 1) make a faction move connected to a given faction. Succeed or fail in that move, mark faction.Your playbook tells you what you can gain when you take an advancement. Raise an ability, get more moves, etc. And once (and if) you advance five times, a new menu of advancements opens up.
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#5
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Corruption
The city is dark, and you are part of that darkness. Every step you take can lead you down a path that leads you to losing yourself forever. The city will claim you, and you will become one of the horrific shadows lurking in the darkest parts of the city. When you accumulate corruption, you lose a piece of your humanity, but you gain in power. Is it worth it? Only you can judge. Your corruption track has 5 spaces. When it fills, you take a corruption advance, as described on your playbook. You can take no more than 5 corruption advances. At that point, you lose control of your character forever. There are many ways to gain corruption. 1) Whenever you take your corruption move, you gain a point of corruption. Every playbook has its own corruption move. Pay attention to this! It's the essential struggle of your archetype. You won't necessarily say "I'm taking my corruptoin move". But you may do something that triggers your corruption move. I'll try to look out for that, and I ask you to do the same.Your playbook tells you what your corruption advances are. Notice that they are pretty powerful! To some extent, you're rewarded for accumulating corruption. It's part of the game, and part of the tough choices you should face. But you're taking the tiger by the tail, so think about the costs and the benefits. Think about the story that you want to tell.
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#6
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Harm
Urban Shadows is a deadly game! It isn't a game where fighting your way out of every situation is an option. Your harm track has five boxes. The first box you can shake off as faint harm. The next two boxes are grievous, and you'll need multiple days of recovery to get rid of it. The last two boxes are critical. That type of harm will put you out of commission for multiple weeks, and it will kill you if it's not treated by a professional. Take damage beyond that fifth box, and you're just dead (yes, even if you're undead already). For context, a shotgun or sword deliver three boxes of harm. Absent protection, you can survive one hit from those. A handgun does 2-harm; you'll be lucky to surive two shots from those. Bats and fists and brass knuckles do 1-harm; you can probably exchange a few blows back and forth before your life is in serious jeopardy. Armor is available to some archetypes. It reduces harm by its value (1-armor reduces a 3-harm shotgun blast down to a 2-harm shot) Stun damage doesn't fill up your damage track. It will have some negative consequence, or it might require a keep your cool roll to stay upright. Healing, in game, primarily takes time. Faint harm literally just takes time. Grievous harm will go away faster if you get help, but as long as you don't strain yourself, you'll get over it eventually. Criticlal harm requires professional help. In a world like this, professionals might be doctors, or they might be supernatural. But without skilled help, critical harm will get worst and it will kill you. Faction moves might help you find the kind of help you need! And no matter what kind of help you find, lots of time will be involved before the harm goes away fully. Scars are the one way that every single character can avoid harm. When harm is dealt, you can simply choose to take none of that harm, and instead take a scar. Scars permanently reduce the ability score of your choosing by one point. Mechanically, that will reduce the effectiveness of some of your moves. You are also encouraged to role play its consequences (as shattered, crushed, fractured or broken - see page 153 of the rulebook).
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#7
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Moves
These are the basic mechanics of the game. They are thematic actions of the system. You ONLY roll dice (2d6, plus the related ability, plus any bonuses that you are taking forward/ongoing) when you a move. There are 4 major types of moves for a PC:
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