|
It's December 31, 1999. The Nokia 3110 can send up to 160 characters in a single text. Britney Spears is on every radio station. Days before, Boy George narrowly survived a 62 pound disco ball falling on him during rehearsal. The Dreamcast has been out two months. Bruce Willis was dead the whole movie. All the wars are a world away, and the US Government has just spent $134billion preparing for the Y2K bug. - Bobby's Y2K Bugout Party was meant to be a joke, a light hearted new year's eve bash with a few old friends at his place a half our out of Rapid City. He didn't really believe anything was going to happen. He wasn't like some of the other nutbar survivalist types that lived out near the Black Hills, hoarding canned food, ammunition and iodine tablets. Old Bobby had mellowed these days, a lot. From Gulf War hardass to Pennington Country sheriff's deputy, a bad incident a few years back had turned him gentle. A death heavy on his conscience, and a back ache he said was only helped by medicinal marijuana, he'd gone half hippy after that, living up in the South Dakota hills on a quiet farm, breeding alpacas for their fur and tending a few greenhouses. It was a small party. Bobby's ex-wife Marla had come up from Kentucky. They'd met at Fort Campbell when they were both in the army, and they still got along. She'd brought her grown up daughter Sally Rose, from her marriage before that. There was Sota, his farmhand, a Sioux man who'd grown up on the reservation. And you, his old friends. Maybe you knew him from his army days, or his outlaw youth, or maybe you only ever knew the new Bobby. Anyhow, you were a world away from crowded Times Square where people stood for hours to guard their spot, slyly pissing in a bottle hid in their coat so they wouldn't miss the ball dropping. It was peaceful as the grave out in those hills. You remember it was just a couple minutes to midnight, and out in Bobby's yard, miles away from the glaring lights of Rapid City, the sky looked packed with stars. It was a mild night. The snow had held off for the past few days. And the campfire was getting low now but a few thick logs of ponderosa pine helped to stave off the Dakota winter winds. "Well god drat. Look at that, a shooting star..." Sota said, tracing his pointer finger across the night sky. "Two," Bobby observed as he puffed on a small joint, spotting a second trail of light. "Aw heck. Three actually." "Holy poo poo there's more like 10." Marla's daughter Sally stood up out of her camp chair. It was the most animated she'd been this whole trip, besides complaining about how much warmer the weather was back in Kentucky. "Or 20. There's fucken 20 of them. Is that normal?" "Nah that... actually that ain't normal. They're not breaking up..." Bobby murmured, watching as the lights in the sky slowed down and carved a lazy arc downwards towards the earth. Some of them looked real close as they disappeared behind the treeline. "That one can't've been more 'n a mile outta Fairburn," Marla said, her smoker's voice kept real low like the stars might overhear. "Ten! Nine! Eight!" The cheesy Garth Brooks song on the radio was interrupted by the announcer as the count down started. "Five, four, three, two-" Before the countdown could hit one, the electrical transformer mounted on the corner of the farmhouse gave out a loud crack and spat out a shower of sparks. Bobby gave a Gulf War Syndrome-kinda wince. Over in their stables, the alpacas bleated disapproval. The white sparks fell to the ground and petered out, and then the only light for miles around was the red glowing logs of the camp fire. Bobby reached into the top pocket of his flannel shirt and pulled out a keyring. "Sota, gimme a hand a minute gettin the generator runnin," he said, grunting with a tinge of back pain as he hefted himself out of the low chair. "Got a couple cans of gas in the barn." The burly farmhand looked reluctantly into the forty or so yards of dark between the campfire and the rickety old barn. "It'll only take a minute," Bobby said, leading the way into the inky black. "We'll be right back." - Hi welcome to my AFMBE play by post. Make characters with 20 points in Attributes, 5 in qualities (and up to 10 points from drawbacks) and 30 skill points. You're a cut above norms, but not quite survivors yet. Grab some reasonable gear for a weekend getaway, tell us a little bit about your character, and post a pic. It's my first time running this system, and it will need some patches over its janks for pbp (like for the initiative system, I'll be using the 1d10+dex system most of the time instead of the declaration system, so as to not slow things down) and that fear system will probably be getting a rework to include fewer "you lose all your actions" options, but any questions/thoughts about rules or character stuff, let me know. Also, here's a sheet template with all those 1990s calculations to figure out secondary stats already included code:
|
# ? Sep 29, 2017 14:21 |
|
|
# ? Apr 29, 2024 07:28 |
|
I'll be making something for this, possibly a construction worker.
Piell fucked around with this message at 13:01 on Oct 1, 2017 |
# ? Oct 1, 2017 03:10 |
|
Rudy Anderson Part I. What do other people have to say about him? "Rudy's a pretty simple guy to describe. He's not American, you can tell from the accent -- Eastern Canadian, from one of those islands or whatever. Nice guy, obviously, though he's presumably never fired a gun in his life. He's apparently some bigshot union leader north of the border, knows all the movers and shakers, gets poo poo done for his people. Gotta' respect that. Helicopter pilot, too, if you'd believe it. Don't know if he served or not, but he's got the look of a guy who has seen some poo poo. Whatever it is, he seems to be dealing with it well enough. Not one of those PTSD-types, or whatever. He can be quiet when he's focused ...or listening ...or drinking, but he's got some good fuckin' stories if you get him talking." -- some rear end in a top hat Part II. The Early Years ("profession: paramedic") Rudy put himself through school working nights as a paramedic in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He spent a year riding in the back of the ambulance before he graduated to driving the bus. Eventually the bus became a medical chopper, but it was more or less the same deal. Working in EMS, you see some poo poo. You either get used to it, or you burn out. Rudy was the former, for better or worse. Night shift was predictable, if nothing else. Sure, you got the occasional gang-related shooting or bar fight that spiraled out of hand, but that was the exception rather than the norm -- at least in Canada. In truth, most of his work related to car accidents, drownings, heart attacks, and youthful misadventure. You can't sugarcoat the job, though. Dismembered limbs, headless corpses, the aftermath of a rampaging moose attack? Seeing that sort of thing on a regular basis will do serious damage to your mental health if you aren't careful. On the bright side, driving an ambulance for a living forces you to develop quick reflexes and the ability to make snap decisions -- after all, lives are literally on the line every day. pre:[2/5] Quality: Fast reaction time (2-point mental quality) [3/5] Quality: Nerves of steel (3-point mental quality) [9/30] Skills: First Aid (1), Notice (5), Questioning (1), Driving (1), Piloting (1) Rudy eventually got fed up with his job. It was hard enough dealing with dead bodies and bodily fluids every day of the week, but once you add in year after year of cutbacks on government spending, rising benefit costs, perpetual staffing shortages, a lack of skilled labor, and a growing tension in the relationship between paramedics, three levels of government, the hospitals you service, and the public at large, something's got to give. In this case, it was Rudy. One day, about six years ago, he gave his last gently caress. Long story short, Rudy's perfectly comfortable being an rear end in a top hat to people. Deciding he'd rather lose his job than continue working at one that made him want to kill himself, he angled for a position as a union representative. He's been giving people hell ever since, fighting to reduce the stigma of mental health issues, increase benefits, improve efficiency in 'the system', offer competitive wages, and generally make life less lovely for the people still doing his old job. To everyone's surprise (including his own), he's actually pretty good at this, and by some miracle he hasn't been fired for his constant stream of belligerence generally directed towards those in positions of power. There's a certain kind of freedom you develop when you start doing a job without caring whether you're able to keep it. You start telling people how it is, and acting based on what you feel is right, rather than what makes political or economic sense in the more typical, selfish sort of way. Rudy's actually found it rather calming. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTafZRecy2k pre:[8/30] Skills: Bureaucracy (1), Haggling (1), Intimidation (1), Smooth talking (5) You normally wouldn't accuse a rural Nova Scotian of being the most politically savvy person on the planet, but Rudy has his moments. After fighting tooth and nail for improved mental health treatment options for his union members for the better part of a decade, and finally scoring a win, Rudy decided to practice what he preaches. Part of it was just leadership propaganda -- you can't reduce the stigma of mental illness if you're a leader who never acknowledges his own need to heal, after all. Part of it was that he'd just had enough of all the bullshit, and wanted some time to himself. Frankly, an extended stress leave fit the bill pretty nicely. All that 'end of the world' poo poo in the news didn't help, if he was being honest, though he wouldn't point to that as a real motivation. He wasn't an expert, but he knew enough about electronics and computers to know media hype and flat out bullshit when he heard it. As a result, Rudy's been on a combination of vacation and stress leave for seven months now. Frankly, he didn't plan it out particularly well, and he's been a ...little bit... indulgent with his travels. Which is to say, his bank account is running a little low, and a part of him hopes this Y2K thing does fry all the financial records so that he doesn't have to pay his bills when next month's credit card statement comes due. pre:[6/10] Drawback: Resources (poor) Rudy mostly keeps to himself, but he's known to a few of his neighbors as a bit of a jack of all trades. He got in good with Bobby about a month back, helped him rig up his new satellite dish. Guess that's why he got invited to the end-of-the-world party? Guy's a bit of a nerd, if we're being honest. Knows a bunch of stuff about computers and electronics, and knows how to find out what he doesn't know. Nice guy to have around in a pinch, I guess. pre:[5/30] Skills: Craft (1), Computers (1), Electronics (1), Mechanic (1), Research/Investigation (1) That's what people in the area can piece together about his past, anyway. Fact is, Rudy's been in town for a few months, and he's been renting a secluded cabin on the edge of town. He tells people that he 'likes the quiet' and that this has been a 'good vacation', and that his stress leave has 'really helped him put things into perspective'. Is it that simple? Maybe. Is there more to it? Maybe. pre:[1/10] Drawback: Covetous (fame and renown) [1/10] Drawback: Covetous (money and wealth) [2/10] Drawback: Secret [7/30] Skills: Humanities (1), Instruction (1), Science (5) [1/30] Other: Specialization in chemistry (1) [$ 75] Backpack: A simple, waterproof, multi-compartment sack attached on a metal alloy frame. Depending on size, they can hold up between 15 and 70 pounds (25 to 100 kilograms) of supplies and other miscellaneous gear. [$ 50] Sleeping Bag: A good quality sleeping bag is made of composite and polymer, and folds down to a handy packet size. Modern sleeping bags can protect against both heat and cold. [$150] Flashlight: A large, waterproof, industrial strength flashlight with a range of roughly 50 yards (meters). [$ 20] Multitool: This common, multi-purpose tool has pliers, saw, knife, etc. It may be used as a small knife. [$100] First Aid Kit: The small kit is used to administer first aid, including bandages, antibiotics, and burn salves. Using First Aid without a kit incurs a -2 penalty. The kit contains enough supplies for six uses. [$105] Cash pre:Summary: [ 5/ 5] Qualities: Fast reaction time (2-point mental quality) Nerves of steel (3-point mental quality) [10/10] Drawbacks: Resources -- poor (6-point social drawback) Covetous -- fame and renown (1-point mental drawback) Covetous -- money and wealth (1-point mental drawback) Secret (2-point social drawback) [30/30] Skills: [ 4/30] +1 (paramedic): First Aid / Questioning / Driving / Piloting [ 5/30] +5 (paramedic): Notice [ 3/30] +1 (union man): Bureaucracy / Haggling / Intimidation [ 5/30] +5 (union man): Smooth talking [ 5/30] +1 (hobbies): Craft / Computers / Electronics / Mechanic / Research and Investigation [ 2/30] +1 (history): Humanities / Instruction [ 5/30] +5 (history): Science [ 1/30] +7 (history): Science (chemistry) Inventory: [$ 75] Backpack [$ 50] Sleeping Bag [$150] Flashlight [$ 20] Multitool [$100] First Aid Kit [$105] Cash Waador fucked around with this message at 06:48 on Oct 8, 2017 |
# ? Oct 2, 2017 06:57 |
|
Piell posted:I'll be making something for this, possibly a construction worker. Yey Waador: Looks like it'll fit in well. I think I've set up a discord properly? https://discord.gg/Q73unrt Or just post here (cause frankly, this thread could use a few bumps ) Anyone else want to make a zombie fightin person/zombo food? children overboard fucked around with this message at 13:46 on Oct 5, 2017 |
# ? Oct 2, 2017 09:42 |
|
children overboard posted:Or just post here (cause frankly, this thread could use a few bumps ) 1. Buy basic skill of Guns (handguns) and Humanities (law) 2. Buy specialty of Guns (handguns) [Glock 19] and Humanities (law) [corporate law]? Or do we want a less granular system with fewer skills where some of those get collapsed and the original sub-types become specialties? Essentially where the steps would instead be: 1. Buy basic skill of Guns and Humanities. 2. Buy specialty of Guns (handguns) and Humanities (law). It looks like the base game has 65 skills before sub-types are taken into account, let alone specialties, so collapsing some of those into one bucket might not be the worst idea. The book seems to suggest this might happen when it says things like "In some games, the Zombie Master may just lump them all into one category, depending on how big a role such skills would play in the course of a Story." Probably not a big deal either way, but figured I'd ask before someone applied with 15 skill points spent on five different kinds of guns when they could've gotten by with 5 points in Guns in general, or 2 points in guns and 3 specialties. A few good candidates for this collapse seems to be: > Computers + Computer Hacking + Computer Programming -- I can see how these are separate skills in reality but not sure it makes sense that you could be +1 at computers and +8 at hacking? Or zero points in computers and ten in hacking if it strikes you as a good idea. > All of the (type) skills. Craft (type), Dancing (type), Driving (type), Engineer (type), Fine Arts (type), Guns (type), Hand weapon (type), Humanities (type), Lock picking (type), Myth and legend (type), Play instrument (type), Riding (type), Science (type), Sport (type), Survival (type), Throwing (type), Writing (type), and so on. I can see individual ones making more sense than others as separate skills (i.e. a structural engineer versus a mechanical engineer, or a jet fighter pilot versus a space shuttle pilot), but for a bunch of these it feels like base competency in things like driving would probably extend, more or less, across a broader range of vehicles than just 'car' or 'motorcycle', such that those are really just specialties you might choose to have. I don't know, it might not really matter I suppose, it's more that the skill list is large enough already such that there already isn't that much room or incentive to grab specialties, whereas something like a skill point spent on Guns (handgun) or Survival (cold weather) still gets you a base competency worth having and a reasonable perk for the thing you plan to use without wasting a bunch of skill points on eight different flavors of the same skill, when knowledge should more or less translate from one field to another to some degree. Thoughts?
|
# ? Oct 3, 2017 17:26 |
|
I'd say leave Guns and Hand Weapon as skills that have Types (both those have a provision to use other types at -2, which is actually probably a good houserule to apply across all skills with types). But jeez, yeah, roll them skills like Humanities and Computers in together. Any other people thinking of making a character?? I wanna play zombos
|
# ? Oct 4, 2017 15:15 |
|
I was considering but I've never played this before. I'm super slow at work though January so a PBP would work.... Do you want a novice? I have some exeperience with Warhammer RPGs. (was part of the scrunt game)
|
# ? Oct 4, 2017 16:50 |
|
New is welcome! The system's pretty straightforward and the character creation isn't too opaque (and if you decide you wanna respec something later once you know the rules better that's fine of course ). And if you remember 1999 then you're already familiar with the setting!
|
# ? Oct 4, 2017 17:45 |
|
Waroduce posted:I was considering but I've never played this before. I'm super slow at work though January so a PBP would work.... The system actually seems really simple (and if it makes you feel better, I haven't played it before either). How things seem to work is, for basically everything except dealing damage, you roll 1d10 + Attribute Bonus + Skill Bonus +/- Circumstance Modifier (as assigned by the DM). If you roll 9 or above you succeed, if you roll much higher you get additional degrees of success but good is still good. Once you get over the hurdle of character generation and picking attributes and skills and such it seems like it'll run pretty smoothly. Waador fucked around with this message at 22:29 on Oct 4, 2017 |
# ? Oct 4, 2017 18:22 |
|
Dave comes from a long line of rednecks. He also has a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, but he doesn't usually mention that to the tourists that his "genuine hand-crafted by hill folk" wooden sculptures are sold to. If they prefer to imagine him as an dumb lumberjack, well, he'll play the part long enough to get their money out of them, and it's not like it's doing anyone any harm. Dave makes a great friend and a terrible enemy, though he hasn't had to fight in years - few people are dumb enough to go after someone closer to seven feet than six, after all. pre:Name: Dave Lawson Str: 5 Dex: 5 Con: 5 Int: 3 Per: 3 Wil: 2 Life points: 54 Endurance points: 41 Speed: 20 Essence: 23 Qualities: [11] Bought Intelligence to 3, from 1 Bought Willpower to 2, from 1 Resistance (Fatigue) 1 Nerves of Steel Drawbacks: [7] Honorable 1 Low Resources 1 Low Attractiveness 1 Insomina Skills: Brawling 1 Craft 5 Dodge 5 Guns (Shotguns) 1 Hand Weapon (Axe) 5 Notice 4 Repair 5 Stealth 4 Survival 1 Gear: Camping gear Multitool Wood Axe Hatchet (as Tomahawk - D6*Strength damage) Shotgun with one box of buckshot Old Pickup Piell fucked around with this message at 00:50 on Oct 11, 2017 |
# ? Oct 5, 2017 00:38 |
|
Annemarie De Lang Annemarie De Lang owns the ranch next door, about 8 miles up the road. She keeps to herself mostly, like many of the people around these parts. After all, tending to a herd of cattle keeps her busy, although a few hands do come by the property regularly to help out. Ms. De Lang moved in about 7 years ago, and she's been rather tight lipped about her past. The rumor is she came in from the west coast, something about a bad divorce, abusive husband, substance abuse. Who really knows though? These days, she supports herself wrangling cows, and that was enough for most folks here. Although, she never did say where she got the money for that herd. CourValant fucked around with this message at 04:40 on Oct 15, 2017 |
# ? Oct 5, 2017 01:13 |
|
God, I haven't played AFMBE in like ten years. How long do we have to get an app together? Mick Mick doesn't quite fit in with all the other folks at the party. He's closer to Sally's age than Bobby's, he grew up in Austin, listens to Eminem, and the only reason he even owns a gun is because somebody finally sat him down and made him watch a real Bond movie. So what's he doing out in the middle of South Dakota? The short version involves a girl and some bad decisions. The long version is just that, but with a lot of drinking and cursing in between. These days, he's got a different sort of niche in the community. To not put too fine a point on it, he's Bobby's dealer. Turns out you can learn something useful out in the city after all, and Mick's used it to make himself into a clever little entrepreneur. Course, there's always folks who're trying to stick their noses in and get him busted, but when you're on a first-name basis with all the local cops... well, the ones who don't like one kind of green can still be convinced with the other. Aren't really many problems that can't be solved by some combination of smoking somebody out and buying somebody off. Life's real simple when you're willing to look at it that way. Real simple. quote:Str: 2 Dex: 4 Con: 3 girl dick energy fucked around with this message at 08:57 on Oct 12, 2017 |
# ? Oct 5, 2017 08:47 |
|
Link to the discord chat that won't expire CourValant If you join the discord chat I can help you make a character tonight or if I'm not too busy at work Edit: Also a link to an Unisystem character generator that includes AFMBE Piell fucked around with this message at 13:05 on Oct 5, 2017 |
# ? Oct 5, 2017 12:53 |
|
^^ Thanks Piell! Courvalant, the system's pretty easy to pick up. The game didn't get a quickstart book, but if you dig up a copy or pdf of the book it shouldn't take too long to nut out the rules (you could skip over the interchapter fiction except it's ACTUALLY good in this book!). Hostile V also has this good Fatal & Friends write up on the system as a bit of a primer: https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3758962&userid=201085&perpage=40&pagenumber=11#post465925284 Anyway character concept sounds good! Piell posted:Name: Dave Lawson That character looks like a good fit and those assumptions about mushing skills together sound sensible and good. PMush Perfect posted:Mick Perfect! I hadn't thought of a hard deadline to get sheets done, since a couple people are new to this. I'd like to start Sunday if that gives our two new-to-AFMBE people time to read the book and stitch together a character (and remember if you balls it up and regret making a character with 6 ranks in Dancing and Beautician and wanna respec after we start playing I am cool with that).
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 13:45 |
|
Yeah, rereading the book, I'll probably be making the party face with a minor in pistols.
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 17:11 |
|
I'm rollign a former soldier possibly with PTSD who will be the groups gun nut after a discussion in discord
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 17:37 |
|
Piell posted:Link to the discord chat that won't expire children overboard posted:^^ Thanks Piell! Thanks! Let me do some reading and throw some numbers together, then I can get on discord and you folks can walk me through the rest. My biggest question right now is putting skills together; I need a description listing of what each skill does, what those 'drawbacks' are, and how to select a bunch of skills that makes sense for this character (also, not quite sure what skill 'groups' are, someone mentioned firearms groups or something?)
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 19:25 |
|
CourValant posted:Thanks! I have a handy pdf i can link you in discord....
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 19:34 |
|
Waroduce posted:I have a handy pdf i can link you in discord.... Cool, let me get on the Discord when I get home tonight, really appreciate everyone's support!
|
# ? Oct 5, 2017 19:58 |
|
Sargent Major Mike"Red" Vinning He was startled by the knock on his door. No one visited his cabin on the edge of town. There was not a person alive who knew where to find him, apart from Bob, who he went to basic with. Invited him to a camping party but social poo poo like that wasn't really his thing. He didn’t want to make any friends, and the only reason he and Bobby got along was because they went through basic together at a real young age. He didn't want anyone else to know where he lived, especially the Army. It had to be the Army, no one else would refer to him as Sargent Major, and whoever was out there was pounding on his door, “Sergeant Major, open the door”. Sergeant Major was not really a Sergeant Major. He had been a Buck Sergeant. People had called him Sergeant Major because that had been his rank before they busted him down to buck sergeant and kicked him out of the Army. The reason for his demotion was officially recorded as “conduct unbecoming to a senior NCO”. The real reason was never written down. A number of ranking officers had wanted to throw him into jail, but the CIA told them that the resulting investigation or his disappearance would be embarrassing for everyone, a hit to morale and not in the interest of the Army. Sergeant Major agreed to accept the demotion quietly. It was a formality that cut his pay check, but it hadn’t really mattered. Right after he got out on a “specially arranged early retirement”, he had walked off the plane in what he termed his fancy uniform, the ones with all the patches and medals. He wore them because he was still technically enlisted until landing stateside, and regulations required while a passenger on civilian transport that “all unit and award insignia will be properly displayed for morale purposes”. Sergeant Major referred to the patches and wings, all the arrows, daggers and stars, as trash because his friends had all had them and they were not interested in impressing anyone. Sergeant Major was uncomfortable wearing them, because they attracted attention, and he had spent a long time learning to not attract attention. He burned his uniform the second he was off base and bought a one-way bus ticket to nowhere. On the outside, everything seemed right. He was ok for a little, but he shook and cried. He hadn’t had an entire night’s sleep since he left the Army…he woke up sweating, and the slightest noise would rouse him. There were times he cried himself to sleep. He had to be by himself, no one else understood –no one. He stayed on that bus as far as it would take him and began hitchhiking on any car or rig that would take him. He worked for drug dealers, contracted with shipping companies, provided security to private interests and snuck on board civilian transports; getting stoned and drunk, trying to forget, trying to get lost. He had to dull the pain; he had nothing in common with the average person. When he finally settled down it was in a cabin on the outside of some little po-dunk town. He ran into Bobby in a bar, miracle of miracles, small world and all that bullshit...Bobby was kind enough to direct him to an abandoned cabin on the outside of town. Spent some time fixing it up and kept to himself. Some kids had given him trouble, but no one messed with him after the first time they saw his knife work. He always carried in his hip pocket a flat, lock blade knife. The first three inches of the blade could shave the hair off the back of his hand and lift a powder of dry skin. The last two inches were dull, so he could pop the blade open with his thumb. He’d learn that from a Navy guy somewhere…some shithole post off the coast of Africa… yeah, right before that debacle in Mogadishu…it was Mogadishu…. guy had called it an African boxing glove. He picked up a job bouncing at a local bar after that, and was content to live his life out in a drunken stupor. Didn’t pay as well, but he wasn’t after the money. When the Army came to his door, he froze up, and he never froze. He walked point for two decades unknown in the nastiest warzones these United States had ever seen. He never froze, but all those Army people outside the cabin did was bring back bad thoughts, thoughts he had tried so hard to forget. He looked about 35, he wasn’t sure how far he was from his birthdate after spending so much time guessing at the date from the bottle he drank. He didn’t give a drat and it didn’t really matter did it? He was young when he joined the Army, real young. He had been traveling with the Army from base to base all his life. He lied and went through training when he was fifteen,and being a dumbass snot nosed kid.... looked up to Bobby and joined an infantry company shortly after. He tired quickly of the order and yes sir, no sir, and volunteered for a special assignment and left Bobby behind.... than he volunteered for a special unit, and then he kept on not dying, and kept on volunteering. He was out now, forgotten, or so he thought, the record of his time served said it was a reconnaissance unit and nothing else, attached to normal infantry. It didn’t appear in any of the official books. His personal file had a list of medals pages long, but no after-action reports, no locations, and no dates. The guys he’d gone to war with were nowhere but his memory, long dead, sacrifices unremembered by an uncaring populace and impersonal Army. Forgotten by all, alive only in his memory. Kano charged a well concealed heavy bolter emplacement Sargent Major failed to spot, one of only two times he’d walked his element into trouble in long years walking point. Training accident, they said, his wife and kids didn’t get a loving thing because well….they weren’t officially deployed and weren’t officially supposed to be where they were. Felix died for that loving green, babyass butterball Lieutenant, a good soldier sent to death by stupid orders from on high. Can’t trust anyone. He let the man in and stood across from him as he started talking about something in the sky the government was tracking.... He decided he had been out and didn’t want to get back in while this sorry son of a bitch was talking and excused himself to the restroom. He didn’t know what he gently caress was going on but he was getting out of dodge while the getting was good….too bad this jackass was in the cabin….he walked down the hall and grabbed his go-bag as he passed a cabinet and went into the bathroom. Shame he’d only be able to take his bag and what he had on him….shame about leaving all the equipment and weapons he’d smuggled back into the states over the years. Still, he’d done more with less than what was on him….poo poo with a lock pick, first aid kit, pistol, knife and a box or two of ammo, a man could always acquire anything else he needed. Locking the door, he opened a window and hopped right out. Grabbing the rifle off the back porch, he started running for the tree line and decided not to stop for a while, figured he'd drop in on Bobby's party and hide out in the woods for a bit. Lucky he ran into Bobby at the liquor store a few days ago. Can’t trust anyone, don't want any part of this poo poo. He found the campsite party and sat in the trees until he spotted Bobby and walked on down to re-introduce himself. code:
Waroduce fucked around with this message at 18:52 on Oct 10, 2017 |
# ? Oct 5, 2017 21:28 |
|
Ok, well, this misfit band is actually coming together! Progress check: Waador: Rudy Anderson, former Paramedic: needs a few final skills + gear Piell: Dave Lawson, redneck axeman: Done Courvalant: Annemarie De Lang, rancher with a rumour-ridden past: Done Pmush Perfect: Mick, Weed Dealer: Done (I think we can roll Craft into one skill though, same with Farming) waroduce: Sergeant Major, ex-army recluse: Done Also a running tally of the house rules we've bodged together over in the discord chat: -Delete the punitive buy in when acquiring new skills (just buy them at their normal price). -I'm really into rolling together similar skills where it makes sense. Leave Firearms and Hand Weapons as things that have separate types (remembering you can use others in that class at -2), but gosh darn the difference between being good at Humanities (History) and Humanities (Anthropology) is just not gonna be a huge deal and frankly if you spend skill points on Humanities you can just be a bit of a know-it-all And having three separate computer skills is a bit too granular for what I'm going for. -Regarding Fear: I mentioned in the chat I'm not fond of effects that leave the characters stunned for 1dx turns or whatever (especially in PbP). My idea is instead of those "poo your pants and lose 1d4 turns" outcomes I'll be subbing in more contextual effects that still leave you to take an action, but with a hitch somehow related to being a-scared, hopefully leading to interesting-if-detrimental situations. For instance if a spooky boogie man causes a character to fail a fear check that in the base game would be "stunned for a turn," I'd rather switch that out for something like "take your action, but your fear causes some kind of complication along with it". Like instead of a careful shot, you dump a whole mag and chew through way too much ammo. Or while swinging a baseball bat at a leprechaun that spooked you, you really swing for the fences and accidentally break the fish tank full of rabies-infected piranhas behind him too. It's a bit of a kludge, but I guess just trust me to make it not-bullshit Also it was asked in chat if zombies are known about in-universe: Anyone with a relevant skill or background would have an idea about the concept of vodoun zombies/superstition about walking corpses from colonial times/old eastern european legends about the undead, but this isn't a world where Romero-type movies exist.
|
# ? Oct 6, 2017 09:08 |
|
And I could fit in another character if anyone who hasn't posted yet is keen and can whip something up ahead of Sunday
|
# ? Oct 6, 2017 09:17 |
|
children overboard posted:My idea is instead of those "poo your pants and lose 1d4 turns" outcomes I'll be subbing in more contextual effects that still leave you to take an action, but with a hitch . . . My response to any and all problems is /roll seduction Looking forward to starting the game! Just FYI, you'll have to walk me through the first couple of rolls, because while I generally skimmed the book, I don't have time to study everything, so I'll be learning while playing. Might make it more interesting, since it sounds like our characters will be learning about zombies for the first time as well.
|
# ? Oct 6, 2017 18:55 |
|
Throwing my hat in the ring real quick before I hit the hay. Used the Uniforge program linked in the Discord. Concept is a former petty crook, someone Bobby's had to haul in often enough they're on a first name basis. Now Bobby keeps an eye on him to make sure he stays on the straight and narrow. Marty's a natural at his new occupation - Marty's taking the opportunity to celebrate parole. quote:Marty Kowalski
|
# ? Oct 7, 2017 04:32 |
|
Concept looks good! Ok so just waiting on a couple little changes to things (also Waroduce your dude has no name, that might be a bit jarring, got a name for him?) and for Waador to finish off Rudy's sheet, and then I'm aiming to put up the main thread for Sunday if we're all sorted by then.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2017 16:14 |
|
|
# ? Apr 29, 2024 07:28 |
|
Thread is UP https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3836948 Make any last minute changes then go post what you do!
|
# ? Oct 9, 2017 10:13 |