Not applicable.
The present invention relates to the field of Role Playing Games, more particularly an improved method and array of game pieces. There is a long and noble history of war games throughout military history in which fictitious scenarios of conflict are played out utilizing tactical rules for conflict resolution. From these sprang Role Playing Games (RPGs) in the late twentieth century. The archetype and still industry standard is Dungeons & Dragons, created by Gary Gygax (copyright 1979). Myriad RPGs ensued, filling many genres, each with various systems for conflict resolution. Because of their open-ended nature (in contrast to board games or card games), RPGs are very dependent on the use and availability of a large amount of information, traditionally in the form of instruction and database texts or volumes, used in conjunction with dice as a means of chance. Because RPGs attempt to anticipate any possible circumstances and actions gamers may take, the amount of reference material to manage fictitious worlds, storylines, and characters becomes unwieldy. Game play is slowed down by continuous need of referencing data, and furthermore, conflict resolution is distilled down to simplistic chart-based mechanisms that provide little tactical control and dry numerical outcomes instead of qualitative and colorful consequences. Furthermore, the more exhaustive an RPG resource book is, the more studying the referee and gamers must undertake before a game can be played, having the unfortunate tendency of making RPGs unappealing to many potential players.
In the 1990's, a paradigm shift occurred in fantasy gaming. Many players of RPGs opted instead for Collectable Card Games (CCGs), such as Magic: The Gathering by Garfield (U.S. Pat. No. 5,662,332). There was an explosion of CCG variants in the 1990's. These CCGs incorporated fantasy imagery, numerical and qualitative mechanics for conflict resolution, and a means of describing the effects of skills as well as technological and magical powers. In the form of a card game, the game pieces were largely standardized and self-explanatory, minimizing the need for reference books. Furthermore, once a few core game concepts were understood, gamers could utilize a vast array of cards to add extensive variation to their gaming content and style. The ease of learning and the rich tactical interaction of collectable components drew many new players to the genre of fantasy games. The shortcoming of CCGs, however, is a kind of game that is inherently limited to the card-play mechanics with a “last-man-standing” type victory. CCGs also lack the creative narrative created in the enactment of characters in an RPG. Many CCG players have lost interest in such games after the novelty of the imagery and mechanics wore off, as the games did not contain the potential for unlimited adventures and conflict scenarios that RPGs offered.
There have also been attempts at combining the open-endedness of RPGs with the playability of CCGs. An example of this is SAGA's Dragonlance card-based RPG (copyrighted, but not patented), which did not achieve much success largely because it simply substituted cards and the deck-drawing randomness of CCGs for the texts and dice randomization classically used in RPGs. Furthermore, the cards of these CCG-mechanic-based RPG's have often been referential, requiring comparisons to resource books. The result has been games with poor tactical control, limited flexibility, and an alternate form of randomization. There are no widely played games of this RPG-CCG hybrid type.
Many games, including RPGs, CCGs, and board games, use familiar devices—specifically, cards, slide-rules, and dice. While many patents exist regarding card games, few concomitantly use dice, none include cards which may be inserted into slide-rule game devices. An example of a RPG using cards and dice is by Mero (U.S. Pat. No. 5,954,332), however, dice are used to assign values to the cards, and card interactions represent creatures position and potency, not character abilities. Fantasy Baseball by Crowder (U.S. Pat. No. 5,145,173) uses traditional baseball trading cards in conjunction with a standard 52-card deck of playing cards and dice. However, the cards represent only players of a baseball team, the dice do not determine potency of action nor multiple simultaneous outcomes, and the cards are not directly interactive with other game components. Further, while there are cards games and teaching tools which employ word-card combinations (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,564,710; 4,419,080; 4,171,816), none employ the alignment of color-coded perimeters to obviate the need for grammar comprehension in the assembly of sentences, and none are directed at combining words to represent magical effects in a role-playing game. Likewise, there are many examples of application-specific slide-rules (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,014,438; 4,611,113; 4,241,867; 3,986,002). However, none represent the theoretical function of tools and weapons in a role-playing game, and none claim receiving ports within the sliding component itself for optional modular cards. Furthermore, RPGs and CCGs classically have attrition of life that is bimodal: alive or dead. As points of life are lost in most RPGs and CCGs, imaginary beings do not a lose potency or ability. In no game is a slide-rule used to track life while simultaneously correlating it point-by-point to the abilities or prowess of a player's character. Lastly, dice are employed in many games as the means for generating randomness, suspense, and outcome. Among RPGs, many employ two ten-sided dice read in sequence to generate a percentile, or number between one and one hundred. However, no games to date employ the simultaneous use of a percentile roll and an independent use of the constituent digits (e.g., the one's place), effectively making one percentile roll generate a number between one and one hundred and a second independent number between one and ten.
From this becomes apparent the shortcomings of RPGs, CCGs, and prior attempts to combine the two. A need therefore still exists for a method and system which address the shortcomings of these kinds of games. In view of the prior art, there is a need to develop a system, method, and component set which reduces or eliminates the need of reference materials during play, makes learning the game easy and quick, incorporates graphic imagery, provides tactical and creative control to permit strategic game piece deployment, yet remains flexible and open-ended to maintain gamers interest in a creative storyline. It is also apparent that there are novel ways in which to deploy familiar devices—such as cards, slide-rules, and dice—to facilitate this need. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide such a system, method, and component set that fulfills these needs.
Provided herein is a novel method of game play and constituent game components. The game, which may hereafter be referred to as StoryForge, is a Role-Playing Game (RPG) with physical game pieces and rules for their use, where gamers assume the roles of imaginary characters in a fictitious storyline. StoryForge places specific emphasis on character composition, physical conflict resolution, magical powers, and the performance of tools and technology. One objective of StoryForge is to provide role-playing organization that is simple, and physical game pieces that incorporate strategy, chance, and imagery—while simultaneously increasing the playability of otherwise complex game piece interactions. StoryForge is designed in a modular way, and any module (e.g., systems of combat, magic, or immortality) could be used independently to support the role-playing objectives of gamers. Gamers play the role of imaginary characters, which are described by demographic information as well as numerical representations of attributes, skills, and abilities—higher numbers denoting greater prowess or ability. Unlike other games with game pieces, such as card games or board games that are not open-ended, in StoryForge, player characters interact in open-ended and imaginative ways under the direction of a referee, or under an agreed-upon system for negotiating ambiguous situations. StoryForge is distinguished from other RPGs by rule content, as well as a diversity of physical gaming cards and devices that interface with the novel rules. The majority of RPGs do not use, or at least do not require, physical game pieces. In StoryForge, some gaming components are represented in a static card format, containing information on their uses and effects. These cards become game pieces (and not merely reference materials) when they interact physically or systematically with other cards and components in the game. For instance, casting magic involves aligning arrows and colors on the edges of magic-word cards to write complete magic sentences, which become spells, and combat style cards may be inserted into slide rule type weapons. These more complex, interactive gaming devices—called Artifacts—have variable counters that act as an input-output calculators or data-restriction filters. Artifacts represent weapons, tools, or technologies and function as complex linear slide rules with rotary disk counters, where a gamer inputs values representing ability, chance, or circumstance on the counters and slides, and the Artifact reveals its effects or potential effects. Furthermore, the characters and their abilities are described with cards and counters. Slide rules for Physical, Mental, and Spiritual life points are descriptive of a character's race and reflect degrees of individual prowess or weakness, point-by-point. Other game pieces include counters that track changing game parameters—such as the Opportunity Counter for points spent on actions, and the Psyche Counter for points spent on magical powers.
Objects of the invention which demonstrate novelty and improvement over the prior art include: a rapidly learned RPG; a RPG with tactile and tactical game components, inviting use and strategy; a RPG with flexibility in the degree of gaming complexity, allowing advanced players control over many details, yet permitting learners to play a more simple version simultaneously; efficiency of dice rolling wherein a single dice roll generates multiple independent outcomes; a combat system with interactive slide-rule weapons enhanced with modular components that enable characters to have colorful, customizable combat effects atop the basic numerical damage; a magic system where powers are word-based, instead of list-based, permitting many permutations of a few unitary word-effects; dynamic attrition of a character's life or Artifact's durability where progressive losses culminate in reduction of capability; a RPG which permits gamers to function with the same mechanics over vast character sizes and power differentials; a game which is at once comprehensive and modular; a RPG which can support any genre of role-playing (e.g., fantasy, science-fiction, historical); gaming mechanics which can be utilized intensely for tactical realism and fun, yet can also recede into the background of a more narrative game; a game that serves to educate gamers in language, strategy, and humanities.
In its preferred embodiment, the RPG consists of a text volume of gaming guidelines, playing cards that represent aspects of fictional characters and their abilities, slide-rules that represent the life points and numerical traits of characters, and handheld devices representing tools, weapons, and technologies comprised of multiple slide-rules and rotary disks. Required for use would be a set of standard RPG polyhedron dice. The physical game components, specifically the cards and Artifacts, are preferably represented on paper, wax-impregnated paper, or laminated paper, however, representation on plastic or digital media is also feasible.
Although StoryForge is described above in a standard format comprised of cards, counters, and interactive devices deployed on a flat playing surface, game components may take other forms and different media—such as board games, electronic games, video games, computer games, simulators, and interactive networks. Gaming components may be obtained from retail outlets, Internet download sites, trading with other enthusiasts, and winning components at tournaments.
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The Present invention, which may hereafter be referred to as StoryForge (SF), is a system of role-playing, enabling participants to enact the part of an imaginary being in a fantasy world. SF is modular and modifiable, allowing gamers to incorporate or adapt only the desired components. Gamers take one of two main roles: the Players or the Fates. Most gamers will be a Player, running one or more Player Characters (PCs) in a storyline guided by the Fates. Typically one gamer plays the Fates, and would be considered the Referee. The Fates administer the Non-Player Characters (NPCs)—all those imaginary beings not run by Players. SF is a support tool to allow a creative, colorful, and interactive narrative to be woven by several gainers. The primary objective is for gamers to take part in an adventure, and create a wonderful tale in the process. However, the objective of the game may be changed to something more closely approximating zero-sum games, where gamers simply have a duel to the death. The tale to be told can be a saga that encourages days of play, or a single vignette, that may entertain gamers for an hour. The objective and scope can be whatever the gamers so choose.
SF is a departure from traditions in RPGs. SF mechanics are well thought out, motivated by principles and realism, not arbitrary numbers and tables. The same mechanics apply to many instances, instead of having many tables and references. Game components usually explain their own function—decreasing dependence on manuals. Combat consequences are firm, creating a realistic disincentive to engage in reckless combat, in contrast to other RPGs. Casting magic is creative and word-based, allowing players to write the spells they need, instead of pre-selecting them from lists as in other RPGs. Players are unlimited in playable races, size, and degree of immortality. There are not prohibitions or separate mechanics for “playable” and “non-playable” beings, as in most RPGs which restrict players to mortal humanoid beings. Additionally, SF incorporates tangible Artifacts that are fun to handle; images that provoke the imagination; and literary, mythological, and historic references for personal enrichment.
Requirements to play include two or more gamers to enact imaginary characters, a somewhat premeditated scenario or storyline in which the characters interact, a standard set of polyhedron dice (4, 6, 8, 10, 12, and 20 sided), the Guide (or rulebook) which explains the SF system, and some combination of SF Components, which will be detailed throughout this description.
A Character, in the broadest sense, is the fictitious person that a Player controls. Practically, it is the total set of gaming components collected together that are run by a Player. The Character Card (
Each Skill is assigned a SOOTT (pronounced “suit”, standing for Scale Of One To Ten). This is a very intuitive means of running Skills that does not require extensive tables of Experience Points versus Character Level, as is the case in most RPGs. Players and the Fates are encouraged to use these numbers to invent likelihood values on the spot for any given task that presents itself This process is described in the Fates section later. The Fates should periodically review Players' skills and adjust the SOOTT based on experience, training, education, disuse, etc. Ongoing experience may simply maintain a Skill, and not advance it. Non-use of a Skill may cause atrophy and a decrease in SOOTT. Here is a rough guide to SOOTT:
The Races in SF are each described on a Race Card, which can be kept with the Character Card (
Each race has a set of three Attribute Sliders (
The Race Card should correspond to the same-race Attribute Sliders (
The three Life Attributes—Corpus, Mentus, and Spiritus—represent Physical, Mental, and Spiritual aspects of the Character in a race-specific manner. Each Life Attribute has four specific Traits and one special aspect associated with it. Attribute Sliders (
Each race will have a potential maximum value for each Attribute, and as a standard, Humans have 100 potential Life Points of each. However, each individual Character will have a Base value—the value at which an individual begins and to which they recover when at full health (e.g., Corpus of 95 for a human Olympic wrestler). For humans the Traits are also 100 at maximum, and descend in a linear fashion relative to Life Points. Other races may have substantially different Attribute and Trait values, and these may not decrease in a linear manner. A Giant, for instance, may not ever be more agile than a very agile human, but as a Giant loses Corpus life points, his agility may remain more intact than a Human's.
The Attribute Slider (
Some kinds of beings may not have all three Attributes—a golem or android may only have Corpus and/or Mentus; a ghost or spirit may have only Mentus and/or Spiritus; an elemental creature or mystic tree may have only a Corpus and Spiritus. Furthermore, Gamers can invent new races simply by mismatching Attribute Sliders (
At the bottom of each Attribute Slider (
Corpus represents the physical aspects of a Character. Corpus Life Points for most races are lost by physical harm, such as damage from weapons, disease, starvation; and are recovered with time healing, medicines, and rehabilitation. Certain races may differ (e.g., a Vampire may lose Corpus to sunlight and only heal with the consumption of blood). Specifics are noted at the bottom of the Attribute Slider (
Mentus represents the mental aspects of a Character. Mentus Life Points for most races are lost by wakefulness, extreme mental exertion, or certain kinds of injuries to the central nervous system; and are generally recovered with sleep. Certain races may differ (e.g., a photosynthetic plant-being may lose Mentus in the dark, and recover with sunlight). Specifics are noted at the bottom of the Attribute Slider (
Spiritus represents the spiritual aspects of a Character. Spiritus Life Points for most races are lost by casting magic and profound emotional stresses; and are generally recovered with dedicated prayer or meditation. Specifics are noted at the bottom of the Attribute Slider (
An Ability Card describes just that—an ability of a character. Each character may have one or more of these cards that describe special abilities a character possesses. Each card will describe its exact use and mechanics. In general, these are always available to a character and need not be activated (unless the card indicates otherwise). There are two broad categories:
Abilities are inherent to a Being, either because of special anatomy, or due to mystical or supernatural prowess. They are distinguished from Skills, which are generally acquired or learned. Some functions may be considered either—for instance a Ranger would have the learned Skill to “Track” subjects, while a bloodhound would have the innate Ability to “Track” due to an excellent sense of smell. Likewise a bird has the ability to fly because of wings, or superman because of supernatural forces.
A Focus Card describes an aspect of character that is very active. A Character may have many Focus Cards, but may only have one Focus in play (active) at any given time. When a Character puts a Focus in play, it usually modifies game mechanics for that Character—such as Opportunity, SOOTT, Difficulty Rolls, Artifact performance, etc. There are three kinds of Focus Cards:
Physical Posture: Corpus Trait difficulty to put into play; describes effects of a physical stance (e.g., footwork);
Frame of Mind: Mentus Trait difficulty to put into play; describes effects of concentration (e.g., patience);
Emotional State: Spiritus Trait difficulty to put into play; describes effects of prominent emotions (e.g., rage).
Each Character may make one attempt to put any Focus Card into play during their Prep Phase by making a Difficulty Roll and paying the Costs (Opp, Opp Max, Life Points, or whatever is specified on the card). At any time, the Player may discard the Focus. Alternately, a Focus may be discarded because another Character's actions or cards may demand it. Lastly, circumstance or the Fates may determine that certain events or activities interfere with a Focus, and the Player may have to discard a Focus.
Mythologically, the Fates were a trinity of divinities to the ancient Greeks. By their names: Clotho spun the web of life; Lachesis measured its length; and Atropos cut it off. In StoryForge we refer to The Fates together, as the set of forces that control Characters' destinies. StoryForging can be considered an interaction between three factors, no one of which is in total control of a storyline:
Dice are used to generate randomness in SF. The SF system uses a standard set of polyhedron dice familiar to all RPG gamers. Specifically, SF requires 4-, 6-, 8-, 12-, 20-, and two 10-sided dice. The standard notation for polyhedron dice in RPGs is #d#, where the first # indicates how many dice, and the second # indicates what kind (e.g., 2d6 means two six-sided dice). Constants may be added, such as 20+2d6 (meaning the sum of 20 plus the value of two two six-sided dice. Most commonly, SF uses random numbers 1–10 and 1–100. When rolling 1–100, two distinguishable 10-sided dice are rolled, where a Player has determined beforehand which dice will be read first (e.g., a “3” and a “7” would be read as 37). This is called a percentile roll. The convention with 10-sided dice is that “0” is actually 10 when one is when one is rolled, and “00” is 100 when a percentile is rolled.
An “Attempt Roll” is a general term applied to percentile dice rolls whenever a Character is Attempting a task. More specifically, the main kind of Attempt Roll in SF is the “Difficulty Roll.” Many tasks in gaming that Players may wish to attempt can be expressed in terms of Difficulty. Difficulty is described in respect to some trait from one of the attributes of a character. A Player may add their Character's Trait value to their Difficulty Roll of 1–100 in an attempt to meet the number assigned to the Difficulty. For reference, an average human trait is 50, so a Difficulty of 50 should be nearly automatic for a typical human. An average percentile roll is 50. So an average human with an average roll should accomplish something with a Difficulty of 100 about half of the time. The best human trait is 100 and the best percentile roll is also 100. So the most adept human in the best instance might accomplish a task with a Difficulty of 200. This would, of course, not take into account bonuses or penalties from skills or circumstances of the storyline. When a Character has a Skill that is applicable to a task that is attempted, the Fates are encouraged to assign a bonus based on the Skill SOOTT. As an example, scaling a rock cliff might be described as having an agility difficulty of 120. A character with an agility of 80 would have to make a percentile roll of 40 or more to successfully scale the cliff, however the character happens to have a climbing skill of SOOTT 2, for which the fates assign a bonus of +20. So this character would only have to roll 20 or better on a percentile roll.
When playing craps in Las Vegas, rolling two “ones” with six-sided dice is called “Snake-Eyes.” In StoryForge, rolling any double in a percentile (e.g., 11, 22, 33 . . . ) results in a predetermined outcome. Specifically, rolling double evens is called “Argus Eyes.” Argus was a hundred-eyed guardian in Greek Mythology. Rolling Argus Eyes results in automatically getting +100 to the roll. Rolling double odds is called “Gorgon Eyes.” Gorgons were devilish creatures in mythology. Rolling Gorgon Eyes results in automatically failing the attempted action. These predetermined outcomes permit increased likelihood of sporadic success and failure, especially when difficulty rolls are being made and character traits are especially high or low. These predetermined events give the most desperate act a chance of success, and make the simplest of tasks able to be botched.
SF uses the “last die” (or ones place) in Difficulty Rolls to determine certain secondary outcomes independent of the total roll. This speeds play up by making one roll apply to several things. More importantly, it separates the likelihood of succeeding the Attempt Roll and the benefit of the last die value. For example, when defending with a sword and armor, the Difficulty Roll will determine how well the defense with the sword is, but the last die will determine how well the armor protects the character. A Roll of 98 is a good percentile roll and last die value, so the weapon defense and the armor would both work well; a 91 is a good percentile but a poor last die, so the weapon defense would be good, but the armor would be unlikely to help; a 09 is a poor percentile but a good last die, so the weapon defense would likely fail, but the armor would work well; and a 01 is a poor percentile and last die, where both the weapon and armor defense are ineffective. Note that in Gorgon Eyes, the last die may still apply, so that while an active attempt at a defense with a sword may fail outright, the passive protection from armor can still apply. So while 99 and 11 are both Gorgon Eyes, the former is still usually better than the latter.
StoryForging may often flow without strict attention to time. For instance, if a group is traveling by ship across the seas, the Storyline might be described loosely in terms of days. However, during conflict resolution—when Characters are fighting, spellcasting, or choosing interactive actions—it is useful to break time into distinct units and keep track of Opp. SF uses the following terminology:
When several Characters engage in conflict, Initiative determines who goes first, second, and so forth. Initiative is determined by using the Mentus (acuity) score, starting from the highest, ending with the lowest. Ending Conflict can occur in several ways, such as:
During each Player's Turn, there are four Phases of Play: Maintenance Phase, Prep Phase, Non-Physical Action Phase, Physical Action Phase. But at any time, during any Player's turn, there is a set of actions available considered to be in Free Phase. The Phases of Play are outlined in detail with a list of the possible considerations within each phase. Some of the steps and gaming components will only be understood after reading subsequent sections of this description. The Phases of Play are:
Artifacts are interactive devices that allow Gamers to decide how weapons, tools, and technological devices perform. Not all objects or tools are Artifacts. In SF, only things that require tactical allocation of a character's resources are represented as Artifacts. A rope-ladder, for instance, is not an Artifact (
Weapon Artifacts (
Each Weapon Artifact (
A Character attacks with a Weapon Artifact (
A Character can defend anyone's attack at any time with a Weapon Artifact (
As Characters take damage in combat, their Corpus Attribute is reduced. This, in turn, reduced the agility Trait. This, in turn, makes Combat Difficulty Rolls harder and harder. Additionally, power is diminished, which may decrease the variable damage dealt by Weapon and Body Artifacts. Players have the choice at the beginning of each turn to adjust their Weapon Artifacts (FIG. 1)—more SOOTT could be applied to Offense or Defense to make Difficulty Rolls more obtainable. So one's fighting strategy may change as one is injured. One might even change to a weapon that is easier to use.
Style Cards (
Body Artifacts provide Players with the information needed to attack and defend with the their bodies. These are essentially like Weapon Artifacts (
Armor Artifacts (
Shield Artifacts (
Artifacts have Durability Counters (
In SF, spellcasters have a vocabulary of magical words, phrases, and sentences called Locutions, represented by Locution Cards (
Each Locution Card indicates several things:
The specific Spellcaster's magic vocabulary (set of Locution Cards) is their Lexicon Instead of selecting from a set of prefabricated Spells, Locution Cards can be combined on the spot in many permutations to form Sentences designed for specific needs (
The Spiritus Slider (
Psyche is a measure of a spellcaster's magical prowess. It is equal to a character's Immortality SOOTT plus Magic SOOTT. The Psyche Counter is stored in the side pocket of the Spiritus Attribute Sheath. It is a simple device with several disk counters that spellcasting characters use to keep track of their magical limitations. The three aspects (each represented with a disk) that Psyche points may be spent on are:
This Psyche Counter can be used to apportion a spellcaster's abilities on those things that are most needed, but it is always a trade-off. For a difficult spell, Psyche may need to be allocated to the Casting Bonus, but this limits the Range and Cost Buffer. A Spell that needs to be cast a long way off might not leave much Psyche for a Casting Bonus or the Cost Buffer. Conversely an easy Spell that can be cast close at hand could leave the spellcaster with a large Cost Buffer.
Casting a spell begins during a spellcaster's Prep Phase, when the Psyche Points are spent on the Psyche Counter. During the Non-Physical Action Phase, a Character may assert one Locution Card into their Magic Cache—the place magic exists before it resolves into a Spell and takes effect A spellcaster must successfully make the Difficulty Roll indicated on the card to place it in the Magic Cache, where it is on stand-by. Failure to make the Difficulty Roll causes the loss of the Character's turn (including the Physical Action Phase). At any time (i.e., Free Phase), a spellcaster may choose to resolve any successfully asserted Locutions that comprise a complete spell by making a Resolution Roll A Resolution Roll is a Spiritus (presence) Difficulty Roll made at the moment a spellcaster wishes the Locutions to become a Spell and take effect. Failure to meet this Resolution Difficulty Roll causes the Locution Cards that were being attempted to be returned to the Lexicon. Similarly, when Spells are quit, cannot be maintained, or if a spell target leaves the caster's range, the spell is broken, and the Locution Cards return to the Character's Lexicon. As Locutions are asserted and spells maintained, the spellcaster may have to pay for the effects with life points, Opp points, or both.
A complete Spell example follows. A spellcaster with a Presence of 90, Magnetism of 90, Abstraction of 80, Intuition of 80, Magic SOOTT of 7, Immortality of 3, and Psyche 10 (7 SOOTT plus 3 Immortality) wishes t princess with a Will of 120. The spellcaster has distributed his 10 points of Psyche on his Psyche Counter as follows:
5 Psyche on the Casting Bonus disk reveals a bonus of +50 for his Difficulty Roll
0 Psyche on the Spell Range disk reveals that he must be in contact with the spell target
5 Psyche on the Cost Buffer disk reveals a 15 life point reservoir of free points
Three Locution Cards will be required:
For the Locution Cards “Ego” and “Sentius,” the difficulties are less than the spellcaster's Traits, so he need only not roll Gorgon Eyes to get these two cards into play. To meet the Magnetism Difficulty of 200 for “Corphant” with a Magnetism of 90 and a Casting Bonus of +50, the spellcaster would need to roll a 60 or better. Based on a Cost Buffer of 15, if he succeeded, he would only pay 3 Spiritus (18 total cost minus 15 buffer) for Asserting Corphant, sin the Maintenance and Assertion Costs for the other Locutions are each less than 15. His Opp Max would be at a total of −9 while this spell was in effect.
As can be appreciated by the preceding detailed game description the present invention provides a role playing game that uniquely employs familiar devices—namely cards, slide rules, and dice—to create a gaming experience that is open-ended, strategic, tactile, and modular. It is anticipated that further development of the present invention by the inventors or an assignee will be made including new cards and gaming devices that fall within the scope of the present invention. Furthermore, changes and modifications of the game described herein may be made that do not change the spirit of the present invention.
This Utility Patent relates to prior submissions, namely materials associated with Provisional Patent No. 60/297,820 filed on Jun. 14, 2001, as well as Disclosure Document Number 475082 filed on Jun. 2, 2000. The names of the inventors in all instances are: Matthew Niedner, Bart Niedner, and Kelly Cope. The title of the invention in prior references is as above.
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