Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Black Spear 0-031
Black Spear 0-031
2
INTRODUCTION ...................................................6
DIFFERENT PATHS FOR DIFFERENT PARTIES .............7
ON TOLERANCE ................................................7
CHAPTER 1: THE WORLD OF BLACK SPEAR .................9
THE MARCHLANDS .............................................9
THE SATYRS .................................................. 12
TROLLS AND TROLLKIN ..................................... 13
ELVES AND DWARVES ....................................... 14
THE FAR NORTH ............................................. 15
THE NORTHERN KINGDOM ................................. 16
THE SOUTHERN EMPIRE .................................... 17
THE WESTERN TYRANT ..................................... 18
THE EASTERN NOMADS ..................................... 19
THE SPACES IN BETWEEN .................................. 21
CHAPTER 2: HOW TO PLAY ................................... 22
THE GAME MASTER AND THE PLAYER.................... 22
SKILL ROLLS .................................................. 23
CHAPTER 3: CHARACTER CREATION ........................ 30
CHARACTER OVERVIEW..................................... 31
CHARACTERISTICS ........................................... 34
DERIVED ATTRIBUTES ....................................... 37
Melee Modifier (MM) ........................................ 37
Ranged Modifier (RM) ....................................... 37
SKILLS ......................................................... 39
Skill Assignment ............................................. 49
Skill Advancement .......................................... 49
CHARACTER BACKGROUND ................................ 50
3
BOONS AND DRAWBACKS................................. 133
AETHER........................................................ 57
CHAPTER 4: COMBAT .......................................... 60
THE ROUND AND TURNS.................................... 61
METHODS FOR USING INITIATIVE ......................... 62
ACTION POINTS .............................................. 62
CONDITIONS IN COMBAT ................................... 62
COMBAT ACTIONS ........................................... 63
INJURIES ...................................................... 68
HEALING....................................................... 74
CHAPTER 5: ITEMS ............................................. 75
BARTER ........................................................ 75
WEAPONS ..................................................... 78
ARMOR......................................................... 84
GEAR AND SUNDRIES ........................................ 86
MOUNTS, LIVESTOCK, AND BEASTS OF BURDEN ....... 89
CHAPTER 6: RITUAL AND SORCERY ......................... 91
Magic Format................................................. 91
Learning Magic ............................................... 92
Concentration................................................ 92
Critical Successes ........................................... 92
PETTY SPELLS ................................................ 93
RITUAL ........................................................ 95
SORCERY .................................................... 102
CHAPTER 7: LIVING, TRAVEL, EXPLORATION, AND
HAZARDS....................................................... 107
FOOD AND LODGING ...................................... 107
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THE ESTATE ................................................ 109
CRAFTING OVERVIEW ..................................... 110
OVERLAND TRAVEL ....................................... 111
CHAPTER 8: MISCELANNEOUS AND SPOT-RULES ....... 114
CHAPTER 9: ENEMY AND CREATURE COMPENDIUM .... 115
CHAPTER 10: DIPLOMACY AND FACTIONS ............... 130
REPTUTATION .............................................. 130
FACTION TURNS AND ASSETS ........................... 132
CHAPTER 11: SOLO PLAY GUIDE .......................... 132
CHAPTER 12: CONVERSION RULES ........................ 132
Asset Attributes ........................................... 132
5
INTRODUCTION
This game exists as an effort to combine the best of what
modern role-playing game systems have to offer with the
freedom, simplicity, and snappiness of what has come to
be known as OSR. It is a project of vanity and self-service.
Most games have something valuable to offer. Few have
everything I personally want out of a game, which then
requires the hacking and splicing of pieces of other systems
into my games. At its core, this project is an effort to
provide a platform designed at its roots for said splicing
and drafted already to include many of the common
materials I find myself needing. Goals in writing this have
been to make it cheaply available, create rapid and deadly
combat and challenges, provide important downtime goals
and activities for player-characters, and set the stage for a
particular kind of community-centric story-telling, suitable
for one-shot or short campaigns with a given set of
characters, long campaigns, or a series of connected
campaigns united by consistent world-building tailored
from the start to suit your interpretation. Whether it
achieves any of this remains to be seen. You have in your
hands or on your screen a playtest version, still very much
in development and open to criticism and contribution. I
hope you enjoy it.
ON TOLERANCE
It should come as no shock that the time period and
cultures the core book of Black Spear is based upon were
lacking in terms of tolerance of diversity, non-normative
sex and gender roles, and human rights generally. While
we should do our best to recognize that the people of
those eras were products of a very different time in
history, that does not mean we should be confronted with
such things while playing. Be kind, respectful, and mindful
in playing this or any game. Black Spear endeavors to take
on an “as it should have been” approach to the application
of modern thought to an ancient time where possible in
relation to individuals’ immutable attributes and to the use
of inclusive language when feasible.
7
CHAPTER 1: THE WORLD OF BLACK
SPEAR
8
Black Spear is designed to take place in a world still largely
within what would be known as the bronze-age in our own
history, with the beginnings of the so-called iron-age just
taking place in certain, distant pockets of society. An age
defined its people’s relatively recent ability to mold
bronze to suit our needs and yet inability or at least lack of
expertise in molding iron to do the same. An age still
dominated by roaming bands of families and pastoral
farming communities where clan and tribe defined the
individual, and confederations and kingdom were few,
short-lived, and limited in scale. The world of Black Spear
as inhabited by humans is young, unmapped, and
mysterious, with secrets still waiting to be discovered near
and far from home.
THE MARCHLANDS
Some might call the Marchlands a feral wilderness.
Barbarian territory, unexplored, untamed, uncivilized, and
inhabited by outlaws, exiles, and savages. Such people
might be correct, in some ways, but the vast Marchlands
are far from empty or lacking in history or culture.
9
The people of the Marchlands live in roaming bands or
pastoral clan communities, ranging from a few dozen to a
thousand or so in population, though rarely do they sustain
anything larger. These communities are governed by
chiefs or councils of respected (or feared) members of the
community. Sometimes one clan will come to dominate
others and form an often short-lived kingdom, or several
clans will come together to form a confederation for a
time to address some common concern, but the tribal clan
persists as the dominant level or organization for
Marchlanders, and serves as an important part of
individuals’ identities.
Historically, the people that are now Marchlanders came
from all directions, settling in waves from the surrounding
regions, sometimes from far beyond what is now regarded
as the known world: refugees from the frigid wastes of the
far north, exiles from a once-young empire to the south,
pioneers from the lands beyond the eastern nomad ranges,
and most recently those fleeing the newfound tyranny in
the west. Despite their varied origins, however, the
Marchlanders have come to have a distinct and identifiable
culture of their own, which serves as a unifying force
among the many communities. Where many Marchlander
communities feud and ordinarily refuse to cooperate within
this culture, the Marchlanders tend to favor their own over
outsiders, and can typically set aside their grievances to
address any such threats or issues.
Law in the Marchlands is rarely written, instead based on
ancient oral rules simply understood by members of
communities or based on how similar issues were resolved
long ago, with dedicated lawspeakers whose jobs are to
articulate and interpret the law, with the final decision
resting in the hands of the chief, council, or sometimes
community itself. While individual communities can vary
in their law, a codification of a typical interpretation of
the basics of law can be found in Appendix A.
10
Marchlander society is divided by profession and class,
though such divisions are rarely treated as anything
immutable. Thralldom is practiced by some, whereupon
person’s are deprived of legal status and put to work
against their will for the good of the community, but such
status is never hereditary among decent folk. Others,
though, reject thralldom entirely and judge other
communities harshly based on how they treat their thralls.
Lacking any sophisticated system of currency, wealth
generally is defined by the size of one’s herd of cattle,
sheep, and horses; farmers with substantial flocks are
regarded as carls, those with less as cottars, and those
with the most as thanes- the closest thing to nobility
Marchlander communities have. Others, such as
craftsmen, have wealth in the goods they produce and
trade to others for animals and other goods. Others still
are employed by communities full-time as warriors; while
all are freedmen are expected to participate in community
defense as part of the Fyrd, such thane-warriors take on a
special status and need not farm or craft to generate their
wealth or justify their place in the community. A few are
permitted to spend their days hunting and scavenging from
the unfarmed portions of a community’s territory. A select
few are given special roles in the community as
lawspeakers, ritualmasters, or medicinefolk.
Marchlander’s worship a variety of gods, with a vague,
somewhat malleable pantheon that is regarded with
different priorities in every community, sometimes with
different names, mythologies, and local spirits or sub-
deities, but almost always recognizable to other
Marchlanders who simply accept the differences as one
would a foreigner’s accent.
11
THE SATYRS
In the world of Black Spear, seething corruption lingers
around the edges of society and in the hidden and far flung
corners of the world. From this corruption and chaos
abominations are born, twisting humanity and the natural
world into grotesque, destructive forms. The most
common form of these abominations are the Satyrs.
Perfect goat-person
hybrids make up the most
common Satyrs in the dark
places where humans dare
not dwell, but such
creatures venture into
inhabited regions with the
intent of spreading their
corruption there.
Such Satyrs will expose
wild and domesticated
animals to their corruption in inhabited lands, causing
them to give birth first to deformed and deranged
offspring, then later to more and more humanoid and
intelligent monstrosities, whose sole goal is the destruction
12
of human society and worship of their dark gods. Such
infested animals and their offspring must be culled quickly,
lest a horde of Satyrs suddenly appear from within a
community.
The forces of chaos are an appealing power, however,
offering many gifts to those that pursue them for their own
gain or offer their aid to Satyrs, their dark gods, or their
cults. Such people may themselves become distorted into
Satyrs one day, and indeed that may be the very result
some of them hope to achieve.
13
sacrifices to their crude gods, and to eliminate trollkin
from their ranks.
While most trolls are violent and savage, they are far from
mindless or even evil, fully capable of intelligent thought,
meaningful relationship with even humans, and the
occasional short-lived conquest of multiple territories
when a visionary attains chiefdom. However, special Dark
Troll clans are entirely obedient to the dark gods of
corruption, seeking wholesale slaughter rather than mere
raids, and even throwing themselves into the ranks of Satyr
hordes when they appear. Such trolls are a persistent
threat to civilization itself, but fortunately find themselves
at odds with their own less-vile cousins.
14
and wake up a safe distance away, protected from afar by
their hosts while they recover from the revelry.
15
THE NORTHERN KINGDOM
The people of the north are cousins to the folk of the
Marchlands, with similar histories, cultures, and outlooks,
while worshipping more or less the same pantheon of gods.
Indeed, it is said that the first wave of settlers who might
be considered modern Marchlanders came from the lands
that now make up the Northern Kingdom.
What divides the Marchlands and the North is a unique
hardship the northern communities have faced for
generations: routine incursions from the forces of chaos
and corruption from the dark lands in the Far North. While
chaos finds a home in all places, facing the regular hordes
of corrupted humans and Satyrs has taken its toll on the
people of the north over generations, creating conditions
conducive for the rise of a savior: the current King of the
region. A man who has taken on a mythical persona of his
own, he managed in his youth to unite the majority of
communities in the north (by force or otherwise) into a
coalition with the express purpose of fending off the forces
of chaos- for better or worse. The result has been the
creation of a robust but young Kingdom dominating the
region and organizing its resources such that fending off
threats of chaos much more readily. Of course, the forging
of this Kingdom came with all the problems that come
maintaining cohesion between many people whose
priorities are often at odds with one another.
Still, the majority of folk in the north would likely give
their begrudging approval of the Kingdom so far. The
future of this union is far from certain, and many doubt it
will survive the death of its founder, but for now it serves
its purpose as a shield to corruption, and its creation has
changed the landscape of communities in the Marchlands;
folk just south in the Marchlands now wonder if the
prospect of a unified Kingdom in that region would provide
the same benefits, especially as they find themselves now
16
sandwiched between several larger polities that might one
day seek to assimilate them.
17
there is always talk about what might happen if they came
back in the supposed numbers they could muster, wearing
their fine armor and carrying their weapons which smiths
elsewhere struggle to imitate.
The Empire has a pantheon all its own, held above all
others though with many analogues to those of the
Marchlands, with their past and current Emperors atop the
divine hierarchy. They have their own coinage, their own
written laws, and technological and organizational
advancements well beyond that of anywhere else in the
known world, all knowledge which they zealously protect
from spreading beyond their territories by ousting anyone
from their borders who is not protected as a citizen or
otherwise granted some permitted status.
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influence beyond the lands immediately surrounding their
chosen town of residence. Indeed, the West would be
hard-pressed to conquer the north or Marchlands in the
best of conditions, or to fend off the Empire for long
should its gaze ever fall upon the West. Still, other than
tales of corruption and chaos, the Tyrants of old are the
most popular subjects of horror stories and young
children’s nightmares. Stories though they be, many folk
know the truth in the horror of finding oneself prisoner of
an agent of the Tyrant.
19
large, roaming communities, each governed by a sort of
warrior-chief.
With a culture and religion entirely their own, alien to
much of the neighboring regions, they have few friends
beyond their ranges, and only a fortunate, trusted few
have the ability to trade with them without their caravan
being looted and burned. Indeed, the Eastern Nomads
have little issue venturing sometimes quite deep into
neighboring regions to pillage before heading back to their
homeland. Once a horde takes to mind encroaching on
others’ territories, only much spilled blood or much
tributary loot will send them back before they are ready.
Fortunately, the horse-folk nomads are largely
uninterested in expansion or conquest, satisfying
themselves on pillage and personal glory; though there are
stories of a terrifying high chief that is nominally in charge
of the entire plains these people call home, there is little
evidence such a person, if they exist at all, has substantial
power over the hordes beyond his or her own.
There are further rumors of a land beyond the plains, even
farther to the east, where ancient kingdoms still stand,
where silver and honey are abundant, and where humanity
took its first breaths.
20
THE SPACES IN BETWEEN
The prior descriptions of regions
are intentionally left
relatively brief, vague, and
lacking in definite detail. They
are intended to represent
conceptually some of the most
prominent regions and identities
a Marchlander might be familiar
with, and to provide some
degree of stage-setting for the
rest of this book. They are not
meant to be exhaustive of the
communities, polities, and
cultures that surround the
Marchlands- there may be as much or as little space in
between these described regions as is required to make
your world come to life.
21
CHAPTER 2: HOW TO PLAY
This section outlines the basic rules and system of play.
Detailed sections regarding the specifics of Skills, Combat,
and character statistics are found elsewhere in this book.
22
Spear as you build it together). Black Spear does not take
an adversarial stance to the Game Master/Player
relationship- the objective is to tell a compelling story in a
mysterious, ancient world- but there are aspects of the
game that give off an appearance of competitive
gameplay. Good Game Mastery often involves presenting
players with challenges, sometimes dire, unpredictable
challenges. Good Game Mastery also involves players
confronting the consequences of their actions. A character
that ventures into the unknown should expect to face
danger, and it is the Game Master’s job to present that
danger fairly, convincingly, and potentially aggressively. A
character that leans to heavily on the boons of fate should
expect the Game Master to repay that karmically with
misfortune. A party that acts irresponsibly in the world
should expect those they slight or neglect to react in kind.
This is all our way of suggesting to Game Masters to be fair
in their planning and rulings, but to use the tools available
to create a convincing world that reacts appropriately the
actions of the player party and the story you all want to
tell, and our way of suggesting to players to participate
earnestly and with thought.
Most of all, have fun.
SKILL ROLLS
The main mechanic in Black Spear is the Skill Roll. All
skills have a starting value based on the sum of two
Characteristics or a single Characteristic multiplied, then
further modified by a character’s background,
experiences, and later training. When a character
attempts something which requires the use of a Skill or
Attribute and has a chance to fail, they roll a d100- do not
bother with a Skill Roll on something so trivial that there is
no meaningful chance of an outcome other than success.
Otherwise, there are several Skill Roll Challenge Levels to
be applied in a given circumstance dictating what value a
23
Character need roll the d100 under, based on how difficult
a given task or situation would be for someone of average
competency in a given Skill:
Trifling: A simple or routine task or challenge that even
someone unskilled or unexperienced could reasonably
complete. A character must roll under quadruple (4X)
their Skill value in order to succeed.
Easy: A task or challenge of relative ease to those with
basic skill or experience. A character must roll under
double (2X) their Skill value in order to succeed.
Normal: A task or challenge of typical difficulty to those
with basic skill or experience. A character must roll under
their Skill value in order to succeed.
Strenuous: A task or challenge of heightened difficult for
those with basic skill or experience. A character must roll
under one-half(1/2X) their Skill value in order to succeed.
Extreme: A task of extreme difficulty for those of basic
skill or experiences. A character must roll under one-
fourth (1/4X) in order to succeed.
Rolling above any of these values in a given Skill Roll
means whatever was attempted failed. The difficulty to a
given task or challenge should be determined by the Game
Master, taking into consideration a number of factors, such
as the task being performed or challenge faced, the
conditions the character is under at the time they roll, and
any other factors which might make it more or less
difficult to successfully accomplish what is being
attempted. A character under time pressure will likely
have a harder time than one with all the time they need,
and a character in an environment not conducive to what
is being attempted will have a more difficult time than one
under ideal conditions.
24
The consequences of failure will vary. If the Skill Roll
takes place in reaction to a time-sensitive event, repeating
it may not be possible and the consequences of failure will
immediately play out. Other times, repetition may be
possible, perhaps many times, when the only consequence
is some lost time, such as when searching for something, or
lost resources, such as when crafting. Ultimately, it is up t
to the Game Master to decide what happens upon success
and failure and whether a roll can be reattempted.
The Skill list contained in Chapter _____ is intended to be
comprehensive to the circumstances a Black Spear
character might encounter. It is, of course, entirely
possible that you will come upon a situation where no skill
is overtly applicable. In such a situation, turn to the most
applicable character Attribute, and perform the roll based
on that.
25
period, and other challenges might just have notably
positive results.
A Critical Failure means whatever task or challenge was
failed to spectacular misfortune. Certain Combat Moves
will tell you what possible outcomes of a Critical Failure
are, and there are other situations which might provide
instructions on the sort of consequences follow Critical
Failure. As with Critical Successes, Game Master discretion
controls. Weapons or tools might break, an otherwise
harmless failure might result in injury, or much time,
energy, or resources might be wasted as a result of a
Critical Failure.
Try to dissuade Players from attempting impossible Skill
Rolls. If an impossible task is attempted, let the Player
roll anyway, primarily to see if the roll Critically Fails and
some consequence follows.
26
A Strenuous success beats a Normal success;
A Normal success beats an Easy success;
An Easy success beats a Trifling success;
A Trifling success beats a failure;
A failure beats a Critical Failure;
On a roll of equal success or failure, the lesser roll
prevails.
27
crafting, investigating, or negotiating, may take minutes to
hours to days or longer. Game Masters and players should
consider the context of the Skill Roll when determining
how long it takes to be completed, for better or worse. If
a Skill Roll takes significant time, be sure to note and
potentially play out what everyone else is doing in the
interim.
A NOTE ON SKILLS
The consilience of knowledge, and the vastness of human
experience: While the listed skills are curated so as to be
broadly relevant to circumstances characters are likely to
find themselves in and reflect common experiences of
those in the setting, the list is far from comprehensive. If
a character has a skill not adequately covered by one of
the listed skills or as a subset of a given listed skill, discuss
it with your group and add it to the list as appropriate.
Similarly, it is worth noting here that skills as defined in a
game such as this are arbitrary divisions of what is in truth
an indivisible whole of an individual’s learned knowledge,
experiences, and natural aptitudes. There can be and
often is tremendous overlap between the aspects of
existence a pair of skills might cover. One deeply familiar
with history might have picked up some interesting
lawspeak knowledge along the way. An expert in survival
might have learned significant lore regarding plants and
animals. Their skill values might not always reflect that.
While a Game Master should endeavor to select the most
applicable skill for a given circumstance, players should be
comfortable proposing alternative skills to test, perhaps at
a harder difficulty or perhaps not. Negotiate, considering
the character’s personal history and basis for their
proposed skill, the challenge being presented, concluding
on something fair without grinding the game to a halt. It
might be helpful for players to keep in mind where and
how their character learned the skills they did, to better
28
define the likely boundaries of any overlap between
skills.
29
CHAPTER 3: CHARACTER CREATION
30
After familiarizing yourself with the rules and other
materials in this book, the first step for a player is the
creation of a character.
CHARACTER OVERVIEW
Every Character is comprised of certain game statistics
that describe the character and what he is capable of.
These statistics are as follows:
Health Track
The Health Track represents a character’s physical
condition. It has 5 steps before becoming potentially
fatal, and upon surpassing failing on the 6th, a character
perishes. The steps are as follows:
Healthy: An unharmed and healthy character.
Lightly Wounded: A character with minor cuts, bruises, or
other injuries.
31
Moderately Wounded: A character with substantial injuries
or wounds.
Seriously Wounded: A character with wounds ad injuries of
concern that threaten their life.
Grievously Wounded: A character with dire injuries and
wounds, clinging to consciousness.
Fatally Wounded: A fatally wounded character loses
consciousness and is unable to act on their own. They
must also pass a Resilience Skill roll every turn until
successfully treated and stabilized with the Medicine Skill-
upon failure to pass the Resilience Skill roll, they perish.
Any successful attack automatically kills a character with
on this level.
Fatigue Track
The Fatigue Track represents a character’s mental state
and physical exhaustion. It has 5 steps, and upon
surpassing the 5th a character loses consciousness.
Rested: A character of peak energy, without any fatigue.
Active: A character that has spent energy but not in need
of rest.
Weary: A character in need of rest.
Exhausted: A character that can barely keep themselves
moving or awake.
Delirious: A character beyond exhaustion, unable to think
or properly move. A delirious character may only move
and react to attacks, and cannot initiate a Skill roll on
their own. They must also pass a Resilience Skill roll every
turn until they rest, or else lose consciousness entirely.
Characteristics
Seven Characteristics define an Adventurer: Strength,
Constitution, Size, Intelligence, Willpower, Dexterity and
32
Charisma. These are indicators physical and mental
capacity that define how strong, resilient, large, clever,
quick and charismatic the character is. From these seven
Characteristics all other game statistics flow.
Derived Attributes
Derived from the seven Characteristics, Derived Attributes
are secondary statistics that provide modifiers for certain
actions or determine particular capabilities. Each is
described in more detail later in this book.
Skills
Skills are particular talents, abilities, capabilities and
professional skills that are shaped by an Adventurer’s
history, the profession, and experiences. All skills have
starting values derived from a combination, or multiple, of
the seven Characteristics.
Traits
Some characters may have special traits, that modify other
aspects of their being, whether attributes, skills, or
granting entirely different abilities altogether. Some may
be positive, others harmful. Some may be earned in
triumph or after great effort, others forced upon a
character after disaster. This book provides a list of
sample traits, but this list is not exhaustive- feel free to
create your own to suit your needs.
33
Rituals, Incantations, Weapons, Equipment, etc.
In addition to these game statistics every Adventurer has
additional information relating to what magic they know (if
any), weapons they are experienced in using, equipment
they carry and other pertinent information about the
Adventurer in the here and now. These elements are
introduced at the appropriate points in the Adventurer
Creation process and later in this book.
CHARACTERISTICS
Every Player Character, creature, monster and Non-Player
Character in Black Spear is defined by the same seven
Characteristics. These are the building blocks for every
other aspect of a Player Character, describing their
physical, mental and spiritual status. The higher the
figure, the better. Low scores in Characteristics tend to
mean weakness or ill-health – although much depends on
the particulars of that character. An average, healthy
adult human would have an approximate score of 55 for
each Characteristic. A score of 90 would be near the edge
of what is humanly possible without being uniquely
exceptional or superhuman. A score of 30 reflects the
lowest percentiles of performance among healthy humans,
and lower may reflect serious debility.
34
Size (SIZ): Size represents the average of a character’s
mass. Healthy adult humans have a minimum size of 30. If
SIZ is reduced to zero it results in death.
Determining Characteristics
Random: The Brutal Method
35
If you and your party are willing to throw yourselves to the
uncaring randomness of birth, life, and nature, use this
method to randomly generate your Characteristics. For
each Attribute, roll 3d6, rounding up to 6 as a minimum for
humans. That result is your score for the given attribute.
Once you have rolled for each Characteristic, you may
reroll the result for one but must accept the result.
Whatever the final outcome, those are your Attributes.
Obviously, this system has the potential lead to notably
disparities between the total Attribute scores of one
character compared to another. Such is life. Such
outcomes need not ruin the fun, however, and can indeed
open a game to more inspired role-play and guide play
decisions to interesting results.
36
ordinary human- lower would be indicative of a severely
maladapted individual and higher would reflect an
essentially super-human capacity.
DERIVED ATTRIBUTES
Every character has a number of qualities derived from
their Characteristics and other factors.
Melee Modifier (MM)
The Damage Modifier applies whenever the character uses
a melee or thrown weapon, or when a weapon quality
otherwise requires the use of (MM). It is calculated by
adding the character’s Strength and Size together and
dividing by 4, rounding down, since bigger, stronger,
characters deal out more damage than smaller, weaker
characters.
37
Fatigue Threshold (FT)
A character’s Fatigue Threshold represents their capacity
to endure physical or mental strain, exhaustion, or other
drain without suffering a decline in performance. This
value comes into play, among other occasions, when a
character is pushed into mentally or physically strenuous
activity for longer than can be sustained, deprived of sleep
or oxygen, starved, drugged, poisoned, terrified, or placed
under severe stress; in such circumstances, a character
might be dealt a certain amount of fatigue damage. if a
character takes fatigue damage equal to or greater than
their FT, they move 1 step down their Fatigue track, and
down an additional step for every 10 damage higher than
their FT. A character’s base FT is calculated by adding
their Willpower and Constitution and dividing the total by
4.
Movement Speed
A character’s Movement Speed represents how rapidly they
can move, both over a short and long period of time. The
Movement Speed score determines how far, measured in
meters, a character can move during a Move Action in a
given turn. Movement Speed is calculated by dividing
Dexterity by 3 and adding 5 to the result, rounded down to
the nearest whole number.
38
Large, heavy, or cumbersome items, however, should be
assigned an Encumbrance (and many are in Chapter ____ of
this book).
Encumbrance Limit is calculated by adding STR and CON
and dividing by 2.
Carrying items in excess of ENC results in a -10% penalty to
any Skill rolls attempted while overloaded, and forces a
normal Resilience Skill roll every hour one is overloaded or
else the character falls one level on their Fatigue Track
Initiative (INI)
Initiative represents a character’s response speed to
sudden events and changing circumstances. Whenever
combat begins, all characters will roll a d100 and add the
result to their Initiative score, with the highest final score
moving first in the turn order. In the case of a surprise
attack, only those with a final score lower than the
initiating attacker are actually surprised, with the rest
able to timely react to prepare a dodge or parry.
SKILLS
Skills are particular talents, abilities, capabilities and
professional skills that are shaped by an Adventurer’s
history, the profession, and experiences. All skills have
starting values derived from a combination, or multiple, of
the seven Attributes, rounded down to the nearest whole
number.
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will not know all Lore but Lore (Mathematics) would know
about that subject, but perhaps not others.
The chart that follows outlines the core skill list, as well as
the base values of character skill scores based only on their
Attributes, before considering background or profession.
It also details certain common subtopics of certain Skills.
When at this stage of character creation, if a Skill has
common subtopics, pick only one subtopic to express the
character’s area of expertise- other subtopics can be
selected later in character creation or developed
throughout the character’s life.
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SKILLS LIST
BASE BASE
SKILL SKILL
VALUE VALUE
Animal
STR+WIL Lore Variable
Handling
Athletics STR+CON Martial Melee DEX
Martial
Chaos 0 DEX
Ranged
Commerce CHA+INT Medicine 0
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Animal Handling
This skill covers a character’s abilities to handle, control,
and train animals, be they wild animals, livestock, or
beasts of burden.
Athletics
This broad skill covers a range of athletic activities useful
to adventuring characters, including acrobatics, climbing,
jumping.
Chaos
This skill covers a character’s understanding of the
inherent chaos that besieges the living world. More than
mere knowledge of the presence and effects of chaos, it
suggests a deeper connection to the dark, corruptive
forces that linger on the edges of the universe. A powerful
and dangerous Skill to possess.
Commerce
This skill is primarily used when characters trade, barter or
otherwise negotiate over the sale of goods. In such
transactions successful Opposed Test using the Trade of
the buyer versus the Trade of the seller are needed for the
buyer to get the best deal. If the buyer wins they gets a
discount, -10% for a success, -25% for a critical. If the
seller wins to the price that they can sell the item for
increases by +10% for a success and +25% for a critical. If
the opponent fumbles their roll double the increase or
decrease.
The Trade skill also enables the character to determine the
value placed on something by others; estimating its market
value. Particularly common or obscure objects might give a
bonus or penalty to the skill test. Success will allow a
character to guess the average monetary value of the
object, normally guessing accurately to within 10% of its
actual value.
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It also describes a character’s general knowledge of the
commercial environment, customs, the flow of goods, and
their ability to navigate within the marketplace generally.
Craft
The Craft skill is actually several separate skills grouped
under a single heading. It measures the characters’ ability
to make and repair items. The following list is by no means
exhaustive:
Armorer, baker, basket weaver, blacksmith, bowyer,
brewer, butcher, candle maker, carpenter, cartographer,
cobbler, cooper, Fletcher, joiner, leatherworker, mason,
painter, potter, sculptor, smith, tailor, weapon smith,
weaver.
Characters might begin with a certain Craft Skill based on
their background or profession. They will begin with only
those Craft Skills, and all others must be improved
independently.
Culture
Each Culture skill is used to provide information about the
common world view of that group of people (or creatures).
This includes history, politics, weather cycles, geography,
superstitions, mythology, taboos, social values, and so on.
Culture (Own) is the world view of the people that the
character is born into. All other foreign or alien cultures
are their own Culture skill. Characters start with a skill
rating in their own culture, but must specifically obtain a
rating in other cultures.
Deception
Deception covers the arts of disguise, concealing
information or at hand items from others, and flatly lying.
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Dodge
The Dodge skill is used to avoid incoming objects that are
swung, thrown, or shot at the character. The Dodge skill is
normally used when a character attempts to dodge an
incoming blow in combat or a physical hazard that can be
avoided.
Drive
If a character is driving a wagon, chariot or similar vehicle
at not more than walking pace across flat terrain, a Driving
skill test will never be required. Skill tests are required
when a character wants to do something out of the
ordinary with a vehicle – such as traverse treacherous
terrain, jump obstacles and so on.
Engineering
This skill is used to design, build, activate, repair,
sabotage or disassemble large mechanisms or constructs
such as siege machines, vehicles, buildings, mine-shafts,
sailing ships and so forth.
Entertainment
A successful test with this skill will result in the audience
or partner being pleased by the character’s performance.
This skill covers acting, composing poetry, dancing,
singing,, readings and playing an instrument, depending on
the character’s particular talents and training.
Farming
This skill describes one’s ability to work and knowledge of
working the soil for purposes of producing crops- an
indispensable task on the minds of most people of this
time. When, how, and where to plant, capacity to address
issues that arise and deal with pests, and ability to actually
carry out the necessary work.
First Aid
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This skill entails simple first-aid for common injuries,
wounds, and maladies, suitable for household or fields use.
It does not include more complex medicine, which requires
a more detailed knowledge of the human body and
complex techniques which are largely distinct from First
Aid. The use of this Skill to actually treat someone will
typically require a healing kit or another resource such as
bandages.
Language
Each Language Skill represents a character’s capacity to
speak and understand a language. Every character with a
Language skill of 50% or more is fluent in that language,
and is presumed capable of speaking, understanding, and
even reading and writing reasonably well.
Characters have a Skill rating in their own language by
default. Other languages have their own Skill rating that
must be improved independently.
Lawspeak
This skill describes a character’s knowledge of the laws of
the land, written and unwritten, explicit and implicit,
simple and nuanced by history and circumstance. Useful
for arguing for justice when wronged (or avoiding
consequences when wronging someone), resolving
arguments about what is permissible, and generally
obeying the rules of a given society.
Leadership
This skill describes a character’s talent at leading others
through their words and actions. While not necessary for
leading others in good times, Leadership is useful for
keeping discordant groups unified, resolving intragroup
disputes, and keeping others organized in high stress or low
morale situations.
Lockpicking
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This skill relates not just to picking locks, but also to
assembling or disassembling a device or trap with simple
mechanisms.
Lore
The Lore skill is actually an umbrella term for several
different skills, each of which must be improved
separately.
Each Lore skill defines an area of knowledge for the
character and skill tests are made whenever a player wants
to see if his character knows something about the subject
at hand.
The range of possible subtopics of Lore is only limited by a
player’s imagination. A list of potential study areas of Lore
is listed here:
Art, astronomy, gambling, geography, heraldry, nature,
animals, philosophy, poisons, history, etc.
Martial Melee
This skill deals with the art of hitting things and defending
yourself with melee weapons, particularly those designed
for martial and military use.
Martial Ranged
This skill covers the use of thrown or missile weapons,
particularly those designed for martial or military use.
Medicine
The Medicine Skill describes a character’s advanced
knowledge of the finer points of human physiology, as well
as their capacity to treat serious wound and illnesses and
perform surgery or other complex operations on a body,
however crude the medicine of the times may be.
Pathfinding
Those with high Pathfinding Skills can more readily
navigate the wilderness, the high seas, and are generally
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better suited for finding the best route to traverse in a
given situation, either for themselves, a small party, or a
large group of individuals. Just as important, this skill
allows characters to foresee, detect, and avoid threats
over long journeys. A critical skill for those travelling long
distances.
Perception
The Perception skill is used to represent the five senses of
the character when detecting objects or other characters.
For example, a common use of the Perception skill is as a
straight skill test to detect hidden objects in a room, or as
an opposed test to detect a hidden character.
Persuade
The persuade skill is used to represent a character’s ability
to use their words and personality to convince others to
take their side, believe their stances, and generally be
sympathetic toward their requests.
Resilience
This is a measure of how physically tough a character is.
The higher a character’s Resilience, the more likely he is
to handle adverse physical or physiological conditions, such
as, surviving starvation or dehydration, overcoming the
effects of poison or disease, or resisting the effects of
magic. Resilience cannot be improved under normal
circumstances.
Ride
This skill deals with a character’s ability to ride animals
with the help of a saddle and stirrups. While a minimum
amount of skill and training is enough
Ritual
The Ritual Skill describes a character’s capacity to properly
engage in the various rituals they may know to commune
with or make requests of gods, spirits, or other
supernatural forces in order to obtain some sort of magical
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benefit or result. Ritual may often be described as divine
magic, but need not always be so. The primary distinction
between Ritual and Sorcery is the ceremonial nature and
slower pace of most Ritual magic, which requires
adherence to form as well as force of will to perform
properly.
Shipcraft
This covers small water-borne craft propelled manually by
oars or paddles, commonly known as boats, and larger
craft powered by sail or rows of oars.
Simple Melee
This skill deals with the art of hitting things and defending
yourself with melee weapons, particularly those of
household and common use.
Simple Ranged
This skill covers the use of thrown or missile weapons,
particularly those of household and common use.
Sleight of Hand
Sorcery
This skill covers not only the successful casting of Sorcery
spells, which the caster knows, but also the ability to
manipulate the effects, range and duration of those spells.
This skill also allows the use magic items with stored spells
(commonly called Matrices) and scrolls with Sorcery spells
written on them. It can also be used to represent the
character’s knowledge of Sorcery and its works.
Stealth
A character with a high Stealth Skill more easily blends
into the shadows or a crowd, and can move their bodies
with sufficient agility and silence as to avoid detection
more frequently.
Survival
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Survival entails a character’s knowledge of surviving
beyond established settlements, without the support of a
specialized community: the right plants to consume, where
to find prey, special uses for wilderness resources, and
general ability to endure the hardships of a savage
environment.
Each character should select a biome of specialty for their
Survival Skill upon character creation, such as desert,
tundra, grassland, forest, jungle, and so on. Their Survival
knowledge places an emphasis on their selected region and
may or may not be applicable in another. Other biome
specializations must be improved independently.
Unarmed
This skill covers the use of attacks with one’s fists, feet,
and body generally, whether it be in boxing, wrestling, or
brawling, or with other natural weapons for the inhuman.
Warfare
The Warfare skill describes a character’s knowledge of the
finer points of warfare beyond single combat: tactics,
logistics, military doctrine, grand strategy, non-
engineering aspects of fortifications, and so on.
Skill Assignment
A character’s starting skills are determined by a
combination of their Background, by way of their culture
and profession, and by choices made by the character
during their life. A starting character should start with any
bonuses applied by their cultural background and
profession, as well as 150 points assigned at will by the
player. At the start, no Skill may be higher than 80.
Skill Advancement
Skills in Black Spear are not improved via leveling up or any
similar mechanisms. Skills are improved primarily through
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extended training and dedicated “on the job” use of the
skills, as it were. This will mostly take place in the
downtime of player characters, between their adventures.
In order for a character to improve a skill, they must
dedicate substantial time on a day to day basis to practice,
training, or professional use of a skill for one (1) month,
which may be cumulative if broken up by periods of
activity other than such practice, training, or professional
use. Similarly, a month of persistent adventuring or other
activity might justifiably be deemed substantial enough to
meet this requirement. While training during downtime,
characters will need to support themselves; if using a skill
professionally, they might generate wealth in that way for
the duration of their downtime training. Otherwise, they
will need to burn wealth to feed themselves and obtain the
necessary resources to train or practice, whatever they
may be for the skill at hand. Characters can always use a
professional skill to support themselves during such
downtime, but can only dedicate sufficient time to
increase either that professional skill or another skill, bot
both.
Upon dedicating sufficient time to a skill, a character may
roll against the selected skill. Upon rolling over the
character’s skill score, they may increase that skill by 1d6.
This roll automatically succeeds on a skill with a score of
zero (0). Upon rolling over on a critical roll, they may
increase that skill by 2d6. Skills may be increased over a
score of 100 in this way.
CHARACTER BACKGROUND
An important part of who anyone’s identity is their history.
There are many parts of our histories over which we have
little control or choice, as they are the results of being
born at random into a life we did not choose.
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The following should be chosen at random, based dice rolls
from the provided tables, unless doing so is unacceptable
to players or does not mesh with the story your group
wishes to tell. None of the options that follow are
necessarily indicative of who your character is or their
current place in the world in the present, but they do tell
a story of their past and may shape certain parts of their
identity.
CULTURAL BACKGROUND
This core rulebook assumes most characters have some
connection to the Marchlands or your game’s equivalent,
and indeed that most are Marchlanders, born and raised,
with a connection to some sort of community there. This
need not necessarily be the case, and indeed some who
have come to reside in the Marchlands were not born there
within one of the communities.
Die
Background Skill Bonuses Roll
(1d6)
Animal Handling +10, Farming +10,
Marchlander 1-2
Language (Foreign) +10
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Other Backgrounds: Cultural backgrounds were created
with the intent of reflecting certain skill aptitudes one is
likely to have simply by virtue of growing up consistently
exposed to ideas, knowledge, and experiences more
closely related to them than elsewhere, while also
generating a small amount of detail about a given
character’s history. To this end, a total of 30 Skill Points
are assigned through such backgrounds.
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Die
Class Bonuses Roll
(1d6)
53
however they can. Such people are typically cautiously
welcomed but are also looked down upon for their lack of
a home.
Cottar: Poor craftsmen or farmers with small flocks of
primarily sheep and goats, who often serve as tenants on
wealthier farmer’s pastures. The only real distinction
between Cottars and Carls is their relative wealth (and so
relative respect)
Carl: Wealthy craftsmen or farmers with substantial flocks,
including cattle and horses. They control the majority of a
community’s economic productivity.
Thane: Thanes are among the most wealthy and respected
members of a community. A modest degree of wealth
might be sufficient for one to be considered a thane,
assuming they are respected enough to warrant the title-
warriors employed in defense of a community are often
deemed thanes despite lacking substantial herds of their
own.
PROFESSION
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Marchland society is simple
and not highly specialized;
most people fill a variety
of rolls within their
household and community,
with broad groupings based
on their primary
contributions. Most are
farmers of some sort,
followed by craftsmen
working on that which
farmers can not be
expected to adequately
create and hunters who
extract resources from the wilderness. Fewer are warriors
paid through the community to serve full time in defense
of a town or village, as opposed to the obligatory service of
all free community members through the Fyrd. Fewer still
take on more specialized roles as clergy to the various
gods, lawspeakers who handle disputes and other
administrative matters, healers who labor to treat grievous
maladies, and merchants and traders. A very few,
sometimes one per village or the occasional hermit, study
the dangerous arts of sorcery in service of the community.
In more developed, specialized societies like those which
can be found in the south, west, and far east, many more
professions might exist. To accommodate for a profession
not adequately embraced by those detailed below, simply
allocate 45 Skill Points to skills that one would require and
develop to perform the role of that profession.
55
Profession Bonuses
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AGING
Unfortunately, nothing can last forever and all great things
must end. Characters will age as time passes, and
eventually they will die.
For purposes of this game, healthy human characters can
persist without concern for the passage of time until they
are 40 years of age. Once they reach the age of 40, once
per year they must face an aging test.
An aging test is carried out by first multiplying CON by 5
(CON*5). Then, a d100 is rolled against that value. Upon
rolling above, the character has failed, and will feel the
ravages of time upon their body.
Failure at age 40 onward means a player must reduce their
character’s STR, CON, or DEX by 1.
Failure at age 50 onward means a player must reduce their
character’s CON by 1 and their STR, CON, DEX, or INT by
an additional 1.
Failure at age 70 onward means a player must reduce their
character’s CON by 1 and their STR, CON, DEX, or INT by
an additional 2.
Failure at age 90 onward means a player must reduce their
character’s CON by 2 and their STR, CON, DEX, or INT by
an additional 4.
AETHER
The Aether moves around everyone and everything, but it
moves around some more than others. It manifests around
people, places, and things as a form of Magic distinct from
Ritual or Sorcery. Aether is latent energy stored within or
around someone or something, able to be called upon at
will for a variety of subtle purposes. It may be granted to
individuals by divine beings, spirits, mortal magical beings,
or by chance alone; Aether is granted following certain
prescribed actions, or at Game Master discretion, keeping
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in mind that it is meant to be a potent, rare force not
often available to the common folk. A Player Character’s
starting Aether is defined by their Willpower divided by 10.
Ordinarily, a character can have between -10 and 10 M.
Burning Aether
Aether can be burned at a player’s discretion in situations
where success is important or death or other irreversible
harm is imminent. Aether can be burned in several ways.
Negative Aether
Characters can choose to burn Aether even when they have
0 or less, down to -10. However, the cost in Aether to do
so is doubled from whatever it normally is. They might
also lose Aether through a variety of means, such as
offending the gods (especially those they proclaim to
worship), being cursed by spirits, or by failing in certain
Ritual or Sorcery acts.
If a character has negative magic, the Game Master can
choose to grant that character Aether, up to 0, in
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exchange for applying various benefits to enemies or
challenges the character faces.
If a Game Master controlled character endures health or
fatigue damage that would move them down either
respective track, the Game Master can grant Magic to the
inflicting character a rate of 1 Magic per track level to
nullify said damage entirely.
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CHAPTER 4: COMBAT
60
The world of Black Spear is harsh and dangerous. Most
people can expect to experience conflict at some point in
their lives, whether from outsider raiders, inter-community
conflict, or dangers of the wilds and corrupt lands of the
world. Whenever circumstances devolve into conflict, the
Combat rules apply.
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METHODS FOR USING INITIATIVE
Black Spear is written with the intent of using the Once per
Combat method for using Initiative for determining turn
order in combat. This is not the only method, and perhaps
not even the best. Consider the following options as
alternatives if you find it suites your play-table’s style
better. Rolling once per session will avoid repetitive
Initiative rolls and streamline the transition to combat
from non-combat, but rolling more frequently will result in
more dynamic and surprising combat.
Once per Combat: Roll for determining move order in a
turn once per combat, permitting changes in order to last
only through the duration of that battle. Once there is a
distinct end to combat or a long lull in any fighting, reset
Initiative and roll again once combat begins anew.
Once per Session: Roll for determining move order once at
the start of a session and retain the order and any changes
that result for the duration of the session.
Once per Round: Roll to determine move order in a given
turn at the end of every turn until combat ends. Any
effect that provides for a character to move up or down in
move order will be applied after the new Initiative roll for
the coming turn.
ACTION POINTS
Every character has 3 Action Points (AP) at the start of
every turn.
CONDITIONS IN COMBAT
Blinded: A blinded character cannot see, and must
Defenseless: A full bound, unconscious, or otherwise
paralyzed character is defenseless, and cannot protect
themselves in any way. Any Melee attack and any
successful Ranged attack can automatically injure a
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defenseless character to the level on the damage track of
their choosing, including immediately killing them.
Intimidated: A character thoroughly rattled by their foe
makes their attacks at one difficulty level higher than
normal.
Mounted: A mounted warrior has a +25% bonus to his
damage rolls on attacks against adjacent opponents on
foot; a character on foot defending against a mounted
attacker suffers a –25% penalty to his Parry and Dodge Skill
rolls. These modifiers do not apply if the target on foot is
as tall as the mounted character is while mounted.
A mounted character uses his mount’s Movement score
when moving rather than his own.
The rider of a mount unused to combat must make a Riding
Skill test at the start of each Combat Round.
Failing this test will cause the mount to automatically
attempt to move away from Melee engagements and
danger at every opportunity for the remainder of the
Combat Round.
Prone: A prone character becomes harder to hit with
Ranged attacks and easier to hit by Melee attacks by one
difficulty level. A prone character must use 1AP to get
back on their feet.
COMBAT ACTIONS
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same cost of AP as the skill Roll. An assisting character
must announce they intend to assist before the Skill Roll is
completed.
Attack (1AP): A character may only make one attack in
this manner per turn. Attacks can only be made if within
the weapon’s range. For an attack to succeed, a character
must succeed in a Skill Roll of the weapon skill (Martial
Melee, Martial Ranged, Simple Melee, Simple Ranged,
Unarmed).
Attacks are normally done at a Normal Challenge Rating,
but other rules or Game Master determination may cause
them to be done at other Challenge Ratings.
Cover: A character that is more than 50% obstructed by
obstacles should require a Strenuous success to hit with a
ranged attack, and a character 75% obstructed or more
should require an Extreme success. When firing into a
crowd, the Games Master will determine how much cover
the defender has from the ranged attack. The ranged
attack is then resolved as normal for a target behind cover.
If attack fails to hit the defender and succeeds against the
unmodified attack skill, the firer has hit one of the
individuals adjacent to the target. The accidental target
may dodge against this attack as normal.
A successful attack deals 1d10 Exploding Die+MM or 1d10
Exploding Die+RM, as the case may be. A critically
successful attack automatically explodes the 1d10.
Attack of Opportunity (0AP): A character may be given
the option to engage in a free melee attack in some
situations. A character may only do this once per turn.
For Melee weapons with a range greater than 1 meter, an
enemy moving within their range provokes such an attack.
Cast (Variable): A character may cast any petty spell,
sorcery spell, or ritual they know and have the means and
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resources to cast. Instantly cast spells cost 1AP. Other
spells may take several rounds to complete in the midst of
combat, based on their casting time.
Charge (2AP): If a character can move a minimum of five
meters towards his opponent, then they can make a
charge. They may move a distance up to twice their
Movement Rate. This must be in a straight line. When the
move is complete, a melee attack may be made against an
enemy within melee range. If the attack is successful, the
character gains a bonus of an additional Exploding Die in
damage calculation. A character cannot dodge or parry in a
round in which they charge. Characters may not charge
uphill and gain the damage bonus.
Choke (1AP): An attacking grappler may force a grappled
target must succeed in a Resilience Skill Roll or suffer
1d10+MM in Fatigue Damage.
Disengage (2AP): A character which is engaged in combat
with an enemy can disengage without provoking an Attack
of Opportunity.
Dodge (1AP): When an attacker successfully hits, the
defender may choose to Dodge as their reaction, provided
the attack can be dodged and the defender has sufficient
AP, in order to avoid damage. The defender rolls against
their Dodge skill.
If the defender succeeds then they have successfully
avoided the attack.
If dodging against a Critical Hit, then if the defender
succeeds in their Dodge they reduce the attacker’s critical
to a normal hit. A character can only dodge or parry one
attack per turn.
Grapple (2AP): A grapple attack is made in the same way
as a normal unarmed or natural weapon attack but must be
declared as such before any dice are rolled.
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Should the attacker hit with his grapple attack, no damage
is initially caused. Instead, the attacker then opposes his
Unarmed Skill to the target’s Unarmed Skill, in a roll
similar to an opposed skill test.
Grapple Fails: The grapple attempt fails and the attack is
considered to have missed.
Grapple Succeeds: The target is Immobilized. Grappling
combatants will remain locked together until one
combatant breaks free or is thrown out of the grapple.
Grappling combatants suffer a penalty to any rolls that do
not target or directly respond to their grapple partner,
making any roll one Challenge Level harder. Grappling
combatants may not use Reactions. Maintaining a grapple
costs the attacker 2AP each turn.
A successful grappling attacker is restricted to the use of
Choke or knocking a standing enemy prone. A target of a
successful grapple is restricted to a single attempt to break
free at a cost of 2AP.
Great Attack (3AP): A character can use their full focus
and power to attempt a Great Attack. A successful Great
Attack cannot be dodged or parried, and automatically
explodes the first 1d10 in damage.
Move (1AP): A character can move a distance up to its
Movement Speed. However, if engaged with an enemy this
provokes an Attack of Opportunity.
Parry (1AP): When an attacker successfully hits, the
defender may choose to Parry with a melee weapon or
shield as his reaction to avoid damage, provided the attack
can be parried and the defender has sufficient AP. The
defender rolls against their relevant Martial Melee, Simple
Melee, or Unarmed Skill. Parry attempts are by default
done at Strenuous difficulty. Unarmed Parry attempts
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against weapons are by default performed at Extreme
difficulty.
A successful Parry blocks all damage. A critically
successful Parry blocks all damage and allows the defender
to attempt a free attack at zero cost, provided they are
within range to do so.
A character can only dodge or parry one attack per turn.
Pummel (1AP): A character can attack without using the
full force of their power.
Reload (Variable): A character can load a spent or
partially spent ranged weapon so that it may be fired
again. The cost of this action varies by weapon. If a
weapon takes more AP to load than a character has
available, this action can continue into other turns until
completed.
Run (3AP): A character may run a distance equal to 3X
their Movement Speed. However, if engaged with an
enemy this provokes an Attack of Opportunity.
Switch Weapons (1AP): A character can draw or otherwise
prepare a weapon for use, putting away or dropping any
other already in hand.
Take Cover (1AP): If cover is present within 1 meter which
might block incoming ranged attacks, a character can take
full advantage of that cover by Taking Cover. A character
that has taken cover gets plus 5 Damage Threshold for the
duration of the turn from all attacks which would be
obscured by the used cover.
Use Item (Variable): A character may use any item at their
disposal. This action will typically cost 1AP, but may at
Game Master discretion cost more depending on what is
being used and how a character is using it.
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Use Skill (Variable): A character may make use of any of
their skills applicable to the situation. The AP cost of this
action will depend on the Skill being used and the desired
action or result, with Game Master discretion controlling.
Wait: A character may reserve all or some of their AP until
after another character ends their turn or waits. After
waiting, they must announce their intent to act
immediately following another character ends their turn or
waits.
INJURIES
When a character sustains significant harm all at once, it is
possible they will incur an Injury, an ongoing and
sometimes permanent effect. A Minor Injury might occur
when a character falls to the Moderately Wounded level on
their Health Track. A Major Injury might occur when a
character falls to the Seriously Wounded level on their
Health Track. A Grievous Injury might occur when a
character falls to the Grievously Wounded level on their
Health Track.
Minor Injuries will recover when the character reaches the
Healthy level of their Health Track or upon successful
application of First Aid.
Major Injuries persist until a character is successfully
treated with Medicine.
Grievous Injuries may be permanent, but still require
treatment with Medicine before a character can improve
their Health Track. A character has one day and one
attempt for Medicine to treat a Grievous Injury through a
Strenuous Medicine Skill Roll before it becomes
permanent.
Minor Injuries
INJURY EFFECT DIE ROLL
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No Injury You avoid all lasting injury 1
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Your cannot catch your breath. You start
Winded your turn with 1 less AP until successfully 8
treated or reaching Healthy.
Major Injuries
INJURY EFFECT DIE ROLL
70
Your body is damaged such that you
Immobilized cannot move your limbs or defend 3
yourself until treated.
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Your lung is damaged. You start your
Punctured
turn with 1 less AP and cannot Run or 8
Lung
Charge.
Grievous
You suffer a Grievous Injury Instead. 10
Injury
Grievous Injuries
DIE
INJURY EFFECT
ROLL
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Your eye is permanently damaged. All
sight-based Skill rolls, including combat,
are one level harder until successfully
Ruined Eye 3
treated. After treatment, only vision-
based Perception Skill Rolls are
permanently one level harder.
Your torso armor is destroyed. Your organs
have been damaged. You lose 2 CON
Internal Injury permanently and must pass a Resilience 4
Skill Roll daily until treated or move 1 level
down the Health Track.
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Beheaded/ Your head is removed or thoroughly
10
Brained destroyed. You have perished.
HEALING
Recovering from harm takes time and rest. First Aid and
Medicine can only be applied to a character once per day
(except for stabilizing Fatally Wounded persons, which can
be applied every turn until they either die or are
stabilized), and a character must have all of their
Moderate of Grievous injuries individually treated before
they can improve their Health Track level. Once treated
for all such injuries, a character may move up their Health
Track one level per week they go unharmed and are
successfully treated by First Aid or Medicine at least once
during that week.
Characters may move up their fatigue track one level for
every day in which they are able to rest for at least 7
hours.
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CHAPTER 5: ITEMS
BARTER
The economy in Black Spear is rudimentary and centers
around the pastoral nature at the core of communities.
Herds are the main measures of a community’s wealth,
followed by legal rights, territory, and dry goods in that
order of priority. Marchlander communities do not have a
sophisticated concept of currency or debt, with commerce
instead emphasizing barter perceived fairness. Prices are
often vague and non-specific, with the value of goods
being measured by their worth relative to a cow (an adult
which has had a calf) or fraction thereof, and only after
much haggling and dickering can such value be accurately
determined with specificity between two parties.
Some regions of the world have developed more
sophisticated economic systems, but merchants from such
places are familiar with the ways of Marchland commerce.
Currency from the Empire finds its way into the hands of
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community members from
time to time, but rarely is
such coinage of much worth
to anyone who does not
trade frequently with
Imperial merchants. More
common is coinage from the
Northern Kingdom,
originally used to denote
debts owed by the King to
those from which he requisitions resources. Such coins
are stamped with the King’s face and animal (or value
thereof) which the King owes the bearer of the coin, and
one can occasionally convince others to trade for them.
Prices detailed in the item and equipment sections of this
book reflect the values which two equally skilled hagglers
in an average, securely situated community might land on
after a reasonable amount of negotiation. This is to say,
they cannot be expected to be the actual prices for which
goods are available, depending on availability, the
circumstances of the community or trader, and the skill
with which the parties haggle. When parties sit down to
haggle, an opposed Commerce Skill Roll takes place,
ultimately with the main thought in both parties’ minds
being “How many of these would I need to trade for a
cow” or “How many cows could I trade for this.”
Consequences of Ownership
The main thing to remember is that with any item of
equipment there are consequences in their use as well as
benefits. The most obvious consequence is encumbrance. A
heavily armoured and equipped character will be slowed,
unable to use skills as effectively and will become fatigued
more easily.
A less obvious effect is that an obviously well equipped
character becomes a target for both minor and major
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theft. From the opportunistic thief who desires the
player’s new sword to the more organised bandit group
who targets the player character parties because they
believe that they have a stash of treasure back at their
base due to all the flashy new equipment they are
wearing.
There might also be social consequences. In civilised towns
and cities, displays of arms and armour by the player
characters may unsettle and upset the locals and bring
about the unwanted attention of the Watch who want to
make sure that the characters are not violent trouble
makers. In some more draconian fantasy lands there may
even be laws and social codes that dictate what arms and
armour a citizen may own and in what situations they may
carry it.
Availability of Goods
The equipment lists serve as
‘game tools’ to allow players
to quickly and easily buy
equipment for their
characters. The range of
goods listed at the quoted
prices is only going to be
available in a large metropolis
with organised markets and
districts given over to shops
and mercantile activity. In
less prosperous cities and
towns there is a smaller range
available, sometimes at
higher costs. In rural areas,
only local produce and a small
amount of locally crafted goods can be bought at a
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reasonable price. There might be oddities to this model
and these can lead to further adventure.
WEAPONS
MELEE WEAPONS
Simple, Weak,
Club/Cudgel .01 1 1
One-handed
Martial, Disarming,
Kopesh .30 1 1
One-handed
Phalanx, One-
Large Shield 1.00 3 -
handed
Martial, Two-
Longspear .50 3 2
handed
Defensive,
Medium Shield .50 2 - Blocking, One-
handed
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Martial, One-
Rhondel .40 1 1 handed,
Devastating
Simple, One-
Shortspear .05 1 1
handed
RANGED WEAPONS
Weapon Ranges
The Range value represents the effective range of these
weapons in meters. The first value represents ordinary
range, where one rolls against their relevant skill to
determine a hit. The second range represents long range,
where one should roll against their relevant skill at a
difficulty at least one level harder than ordinary. Many of
these weapons have longer possible ranges at which they
can theoretically be effective, especially when used
against large targets or groups, but not when seeking to
strike a particular target.
Mounted Ranged Combat
Ranged weapons can be used from horseback or chariots
but the chance of success cannot exceed the Attacker’s
skill with either Ride or Drive, as appropriate.
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WEAPON VALUE ENC RELOAD RANGE QUALITIES
Simple,
Blowgun .10 1 1AP 20/40 Weak,
Ineffective
Throwing Simple,
.05 1 - 20/40
Club Weak
Martial,
Crossbow 4.00 2 3AP 30/60 Fast,
Piercing
Simple Simple,
.25 1 1AP 30/60
Bow Weak
Nomad Martial,
.45 1 1AP 30/60
Bow Fast
Composite Martial,
.75 2 2AP 40/80
Bow Fast,
Simple,
Sling .10 1 1AP 50/100
Weak
Thrown Simple,
- - - 5/10
Weapon Weak
Simple,
Atlatl .10 1 2AP 35/70
Devastating
Martial,
Dart .01 - - 20/40
Piercing
Martial,
Kestros .35 1 2AP 40/80
Piercing
Simple,
Rock - - - 10/20 Ineffective,
Weak
Martial,
Bola .10 1 - 20/40
Entangling
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RANGED WEAPON AMMUNITION
AMMUNITION ENC VALUE
Arrows (30) 1 .05
Blowgun darts (30) 1 .05
Crossbow bolts (15) 1 .20
Sling bullets (10) 1 .01
Darts (10) 1 .10
Atlatl Dart (3) 1 .05
WEAPON QUALITIES
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Disarming: On a successful parry, a character using this
weapon may disarm their melee attacker. On a critically
successful parry, they may destroy the melee attacker’s
One-handed weapon.
Entangling: Upon a successful hit with this weapon, the
target becomes entangled unless they can succeed at an
Athletics Skill roll. An entangled target falls prone and is
immobile and unable to attack or defend themselves, and
remains entangled until they can succeed in an Athletics
Skill roll.
Ineffective: A weapon with this quality does not ordinarily
inflict exploding damage on a successful hit.
Martial: A weapon with this quality uses the Martial Melee
or Martial Ranged skill to attack.
Masterwork: Weapons or armor crafted by a master in the
art. For Weapons, the chance to hit is increased by +10
with this quality. For armor, when in use, the ENC value
for such items is halved, rounding down. Weapons or
armor of this quality cost double to purchase.
Meteoric: Weapons or armor crafted to incorporate iron
from the stars, imbuing them with magical properties.
Weapons or armor of this quality cost quadruple to
purchase.
One-handed: A weapon held in only one hand, leaving the
other free to hold something else.
Parrying: A weapon with this quality provides a 10-point
bonus to attempts to parry a Melee attack.
Piercing: A successful hit by a weapon with this quality
ignored 5 of its target’s DT.
Phalanx: A shield of this quality provides a 20-point bonus
to attempts to parry an attack and can be used with a
longspear.
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Quick: Attempts to dodge or parry a weapon with this
quality suffer a 10-point penalty to their Dodge or Parry
rolls.
Simple: A weapon with this quality uses the Simple Melee
or Simple Ranged skill to attack.
Slow: Attempts to dodge or parry a weapon with this
quality gain a 10-point bonus to their Dodge or Parry rolls.
Silvered: Weapons or armor crafted to incorporate silver.
Silvered weapons automatically explode their damage die
on a successful hit against a Monstrosity. Silvered armor
negates half damage taken from a Monstrosity’s Natural
Weaponry. Weapons or armor of this quality cost double to
purchase.
Shoddy: Weapons or armor which were poorly made, and
liable to break. For weapons, a critically failed Parry or an
attack which is critically successfully parried will destroy
the weapon. For armor, a critical blow on the armor will
destroy it. Such items sell for half of what they otherwise
would have.
Splitting: A weapon with this quality can elect to destroy
shields in exchange for reducing an attack’s damage by 10.
Two-handed: A weapon with this quality requires both
hands to use properly. On a successful hit, an attacker
using a two-handed weapon may, before rolling damage,
add an additional 1d10 exploding damage die at the cost of
1AP.
Weak: A weapon with this quality can typically only inflict
Minor Injuries.
Unarmed: A weapon with this quality uses the Unarmed
skill to determine success or failure to hit.
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ARMOR
Armor takes a variety of forms depending on the culture,
maker, and wearer. What exactly a particular piece of
armor of looks like, is called, or even what it is made of
precisely can be determined on a case by case basis but
should follow the basic archetypes below.
Chain armor, typically made from bronze, represents the
peak of what most armorers in the known world are
capable of producing. Plate armor is, as of yet, only able
to be made by advanced armorers in the South, though
there are rumors of western craftsmen beginning to
reverse engineer their techniques to create their own.
Individual pieces of armor can be equipped in five (5)
places across a human character: the torso, head, and
each limb (right arm, right leg, left arm, left leg), and
each pice contributes toward a character’s DT.
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Characters of SIZ 15 or higher will double the cost and ENC
for armor made for them.
ARMOR QUALITIES
85
GEAR AND SUNDRIES
ITEM ENC COST
Traveler’s Pack - 0.20
Clothes, Plain - 0.01
Clothes, Fine - 0.5
Clothes, Noble - 10
Fish, Barrel - 0.75
Salt, Barrel - 2
Oil, Barrel - 1.5
Rope, 5 meters 1 0.10
Common Hide - 0.01
Ritual Reagents, 10 pouch 0.05
Exotic Hide - 2.5
Linen, Bolt - 0.20
Cold-Weather Gear 1 3
Fruit, Barrel - 0.15
Silk, Bolt - 2
Wool, Bolt - 0.05
Vegetables, Barrel - 0.25
Lumber, 50 Meters - 0.40
Leather, Bolt - 0.30
Copper Ingots, Barrel - 0.50
Gold Ingots, Barrel 50
Silver Ingots, Barrel 30
Bedroll 1 0.01
Iron Ingots, Barrel - 3
Tin Ingots, Barrel - 1.50
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Bronze Ingots, Barrel - 3
Parchment, 10 Pages - 0.10
Fishing Gear 1 0.02
Coffee Beans, Jar - 0.20
Cacao Beans, Jar - 0.70
Cheese Wheel - 0.01
Grains, Barrel - 0.01
Tea, Jar - 0.50
Honey, Jar - 0.10
Sugar, Jar - 0.20
Rations, 1 Day - 0.004
Mead, Pint - 0.01
Ale, Pint - 0.005
Wine, Bottle - 0.01
Dyes, Barrel - 0.60
Medical Kit 1 1
Amber, Jar - 1
Glass Bottle - 0.001
Candle - 0.005
Chain, 2 meters 1 0.10
Climbing kit 1 0.02
Craft tools 1 0.50
Nails, 100 - 0.01
First aid kit 1 0.25
Grappling hook 1 0.05
Ladder, 3 meters 4 0.05
Lantern 1 0.10
Lock picks - 0.003
Musical instrument 1 0.25
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Wooden Spade 1 0.01
Torch - 0.02
Waterskin - 0.01
Writing kit 1 1
Antivenom - 0.25
Poison, Weak - 0.10
Poison, Strong - 1
Manacles 1 .025
Tent 2 .50
Riding Gear 2 4
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Climbing Kit: The necessary pitons and tools to engage in
climbing sheer surfaces.
Cold Weather Gear: Clothing necessary for facing bitter
cold and freezing winds.
First Aid Kit: A kit for treating minor wounds, with
sufficient supplies for approximately 5 uses before needing
to be restocked.
Fishing Gear: Pole, line, and hooks necessary for active
fishing.
Medical Kit: Tools and supplies for treating serious injuries
and maladies, sufficient for approximately 5 uses before
restocking.
Grappling Hook: Rope and a hook used for scaling walls or
other surfaces it can hook into.
Torch: Wood soaked with flammable substances which can
illuminate a two meter radius that will last for one hour
lit. Can be used as a Cudgel.
Waterskin: Leather capable of holding two days of water
for one person.
Writing Kit: Tools and supplies necessary for writing on
papyrus, paper, or other flat surfaces.
Bull 2 -
One-Beast Cart 2 50
Cat .01 -
Chariot 25 -
Mule .5 25
Cow 1 -
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Calf .75 -
Heifer 1.2 -
Dog, hunting .5 2
Chicken .001 -
Duck .005 -
Goat .05 -
Hawk 5 -
Horse, draft 25 40
Horse, riding 50 20
Horse, combat
100 25
trained
Pig .05 -
Sheep .1 -
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CHAPTER 6: RITUAL AND SORCERY
Magic in Black Spear comes from the Aether, an unseen
and omnipresent force from which all life draws power.
The gods, beings of chaos, sorcerers, and all other living
things tap into this power to varying extents in order to
survive. The Aether itself is sometimes personified as a
vast, all powerful, indifferent being from which the
universe sprang. The capacity of a mortal spellcaster to
perform magical feats depends on their ability to either
tap into the Aether or obtain assistance from greater
entities who can tap into such power.
Such abilities are divided into three subcategories: Petty
Magic, Ritual Magic, and Sorcery.
Magic Format
Difficulty: The relative difficulty of a spell to cast under
normal conditions; attempts to cast will be a Trifling,
Easy, Normal, Strenuous, or Extreme Skill Roll. Some
spells or rituals might be Variable, meaning that they
ordinarily require a Normal Skill Roll, but their effects, the
specific ones denoted in parenthesis, can be doubled or
tripled with a Strenuous or Extreme Skill Roll respectively.
Casting Time: How long it takes to fully cast a spell or
ritual. Casting may be instantaneous. A spell or ritual
interrupted before completion has no effect, and must be
restarted.
Reagents: Items necessary to be expended or used in a
spell or ritual. Some may require nothing, others specific
items, and others still a non-specific value of goods or
items. If a spell or ritual requires “Ritual Reagents,” it
requires a special and relatively non-specific mix of herbs,
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minerals, and other common materials that can be
reasonably foraged for, and which are expended on use.
Duration: How long the effects of a spell last before
dissipating.
Effect: The effects of a spell, in damage, bonuses, or
otherwise.
Critical Failure Effect: The consequences of a critical
failure when trying to cast a spell or ritual.
Learning Magic
Learning a spell or ritual requires one to have access to
either an instructive text or a teacher willing to teach
them. Such texts or teachers are rarely going to be
available for less than 5 cows worth of goods, plus or minus
20% for each difficulty level of casting the spell above or
below normal. Learning a spell requires a full week of
training, and a successful Skill roll in the relevant skill
required to cast the spell or ritual. Failure means another
week must be spent training (and additional fees paid to a
teacher).
Concentration
Many spells and rituals will require Concentration in order
to maintain their effects. Concentration requires the
majority of a character’s focus, such that they cannot
perform any other complex action or suffer any physical
damage without breaking Concentration; anything more
than small movements or a few steps at a time will break
Concentration.
Critical Successes
On a critical success when casting a spell or ritual, the
Game Master should utilize their discretion to determine
an additional effect. For a damage dealing spell, the
damage should be maximized, or if it has Exploding
damage the first die should explode automatically. For a
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spell whose primary effect is in how long it lasts, its
duration should be doubled, or the number of uses
doubled.
PETTY SPELLS
Petty spells are those require neither divine grants of
power nor tremendous force of will or training, but draw
from a combination of latent Aether and one’s own energy.
Petty Spells tend to be modest in effect, sometimes
amounting to little more than tricks.
A Petty Spell may use either the Ritual or Sorcery Skill
when rolling for success; both the divinely tuned and
studied sorcerer is capable of learning such spells to equal
effect.
Detect Magic: The Aether ebbs and flows, and those with
the knowhow can sense that which effects this movement.
Difficulty: Normal
Casting Time: Instant.
Reagents: None
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Effect: Gives the location of the nearest magic item,
magical creature or active spell within 10 meters and
unobstructed by a solid barrier.
Critical Failure Effect: The Aether saps the caster and
moves them one step down the Fatigue Track.
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Critical Failure Effect: Deals 1d10 exploding damage the
user.
RITUAL
Ritual magic is that of the divine, carried out by appeals to
either gods, deities, or other forces for aid of some sort
rather than one’s own ability to tap into the Aether or
other sources of power. Ritual is defined by such appeals
and by a typically extended process for utilizing such
magic, often requiring prolonged ceremony or material
sacrifices. One’s ability to successfully perform Ritual
Magic revolves around their capacity to adequately
memorize such rites, carry out the ceremonies to form,
and generally attract sufficient attention from the being
they are beseeching to grant them whatever favor
requested. Without gods or some other being of power to
call on, Ritual Magic has no effect.
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region, culture to culture, and even community to
community, but a learned, unbiased scholar would be able
to identify common themes in the identities of these
supposedly different gods; whether, for example, the gods
of the Marchlands are the same as the gods of the Empire
to the south is a matter of staunch debate (and one likely
to get you in a fight). Regardless, of whether they are
different aspects the same beings, wholly independent
beings filling the same natural roles, or something else
entirely, the various pantheons, though the names and
rites and stories may differ, fill the same niches, generally.
Common Gods
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is a poor one to offend, but fortunately few dare to offend
it sufficiently to draw its ire.
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Effect: The caster can immediately heal all wounds and
illnesses of a target, restoring them to the maximum levels
of both their Health and Fatigue tracks. Does not remedy
permanent injuries.
Critical Failure Effect: The target suffers a Moderate
Wound.
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whom they know pray to preserve the histories of their
family and to aid in the progression of their skills.
Beast Call: The call of the wild is potent, but the call of
the god of the hunt is more so.
Difficulty: Normal
Casting Time: 10 Minutes
Reagents: 3 Ritual Powder, a handmade whistle
Effect: A desired wild, natural animal present in the area
is summoned to the caster, toward whom it is friendly (but
not obedient). Attacking a beast summoned in this way
will lead to the wrath of the Hunting God.
Critical Failure Effect: The summoned animal becomes
crazed from the call and uncontrollably attacks the caster
until soothed or an hour passes.
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is provided, and that the Satyrs of corruption not taint her
beloved bovine children. The Cow Goddess is easily the
most celebrated of the common gods.
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Petty Deities
Local Spirits: Almost everywhere is inhabited by resident
spirits in this age, whether they be few and quiet or many
and detectably active. Their origins are various and
disparate, their desires unknowable, but most are
ordinarily indifferent to mortals within their domains.
Still, a small gift and a humble request can be enough to
rouse their interest and favor, in exchange for protection.
Gods of Corruption
Satyr God: The dark and twisted god of the Satyr’s, itself
often appearing as a monstrous goat-person abomination.
A god of violence, abuse, and unrestrained hedonism, it
promises its followers all that they can pillage, and all the
destruction they desire. In return, they seek out beings to
corrupt and sacrifice to sate the God’s own endless lust
and sadism.
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Pestilence God: A god of extremes, of excesses and
shortages. Where disease comes and goes, the God of
Pestilence endeavors to introduce plague. Where rain falls
and dries, the God of Pestilence seems to cause flood,
drought, and famine. Where pests exist as the natural way
of things, the God of Pestilence creates swarms of locusts,
rats, and mosquitos- and creates them with a jolly smile.
Ever drawn to disorder and chaos, much energy is spent by
communities to make themselves appear boring to this
God, to keep his gaze elsewhere. Long ago, the Satyr God
gave to the God of Pestilence a special lineage of
corrupted rat-man hybrids, which now make up his primary
servants.
SORCERY
Sorcery is magic beyond the petty spells of tricksters and
priests. Sorcerers are either studied or innately skilled in
the ways of tapping into the Aether itself to release
destructive or manipulative power to effect the world
around them. Sorcery is a powerful, useful thing, but it is
also unpredictable, hard to control, and not well-trusted
by the commons, who tend to begrudgingly tolerate
practitioners at best.
Sorcery tends to be more readily usable, not requiring the
extensive ceremony of Rituals. Its effects also tend to be
more direct, with immediate and overt effects on targets.
Further, when Sorcery goes wrong and its users fail to
control it, the results can be disastrous indeed.
Spell Compendium
Avoidance: With some preparation, a competent sorcerer
can distort the space around themselves such that they
can sometimes slip away from blows against them.
Difficulty: Normal
Casting Time: 5 Minutes
Reagents: None
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Effect: This spell lies dormant until the recipient is
attacked. The caster, so long as they are conscious, can
then elect to Dodge an incoming attack, even if they have
no remaining AP or have already attempted a Dodge. This
can only be done once per casting, and casting does not
stack. Must be recast after 24 hours.
Critical Failure Effect: The caster accidentally distorts the
space within them, rending them. They suffer 1d10
Exploding Die in damage.
Drain: Leeches suck the blood of their prey, but you sap
their very souls.
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Difficulty: Strenuous
Casting Time: Instant
Reagents: None
Effect: The caster may target a single foe, which must pass
a Resilience skill roll or take 1d10 Exploding Fatigue
damage. If a target falls a level on the Fatigue Track, the
caster may go up one level on their Fatigue Track.
Critical Failure Effect: The caster instead takes 1d10
Exploding Fatigue Damage
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Effect: The caster creates a veil of fire that surrounds a
weapon’s blade, point, or bludgeoning parts, giving it the
Immolate quality for 1 hour.
Critical Failure Effect: The veil of fire is uncontrollable,
and surrounds the whole weapon, making it impossible to
wield until 1 hour passes or the flame is completely
extinguished. May destroy the weapon.
Rune: With the right marks, the right thoughts, and the
right power, one can affix the very Aether to the
inanimate.
Difficulty: Normal
Casting Time: 1 hour
Reagents: 5 Ritual Powder, an item of not less than .05
Cows in value.
Effect: The caster inscribes a rune of another known
Sorcery or Petty Spell onto an item, casting that spell and
storing the effect. The bearer of said item can then
activate said effect as though they were the caster. The
item is then destroyed.
Critical Failure Effect: The Aether destroys the item.
Unlock: Keys and lockpicks are one way in. The Aether is
another.
Difficulty: Variable
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Casting Time: 1 Minute
Reagents: 1 Ritual Powder
Effect: The caster may attempt to pick a lock using their
sorcery skill instead of Sleight of Hand, at one difficulty
level harder than normal for that lock.
Critical Failure Effect: The target lock jams, becoming
unopenable by ordinary means.
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CHAPTER 7: LIVING, TRAVEL,
EXPLORATION, AND HAZARDS
FOOD AND LODGING
Living is, unfortunately, not free, no matter where one
may be. Within most communities, folks are able to ply
whatever their profession to make typical average wages in
the form of whatever goods or goodwill others are willing
to pay them, or simply by exchanging their crafts for other
goods. At the minimum, characters should almost always
be able to offer their services or labor a sufficient amount
in a given day to earn some warm meals and a sheltered
bed for a Meager lifestyle in whatever community they
might be staying in. Otherwise, they are given the option
of working for profit, training, or a variety of other
downtime activities in between outings into the greater
world.
The following are the approximate daily and weekly costs
of living certain lifestyles in a community; others should
judge characters based on how they live
LIFESTYLE EXPENSES
Daily/Weekly
Lifestyle Description
Cost (Cows)
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The finest of foods, spacious, luxurious
housing, and luxury aplenty, this is the
Fine 0.5/3.5
lifestyle typical of wealthy carls and
thanes.
A lifestyle of excessive food,
extravagant housing, and much luxury
Extravagant 1/7 and frivolous expenditure. A lifestyle
common only to the wealthiest or most
foolish of Marchlanders.
WAGES
Daily/Weekly Daily/Weekly
Profession Profession
Wages (Cows) Wages (Cows)
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THE ESTATE
The true division between the wealthy and the common
folk are their holdings, be it in cultivated land or in
livestock. In the Marchlands, at least, the limiting factor
in agricultural is typically not land and territory; the
pastures are aplenty, and if more or needed there is
wilderness ready to be cleared. Rather, the limit is what
can be managed and protected by the manpower available,
and how well a community can fend off the dangers of the
wilds and terrors of the night. Herds and flocks are grazed
either on granted private fields or among other herds and
flocks across the communal pastures. Only permanent
structures and cropland requires payment to the
community for continued use of what would otherwise be a
public resource- overall cutting into the bottom line of
such industry.
One who owns the rights to farm a field or who owns
livestock can expect them to produce wealth as described
below, be it through meat, offspring, eggs, milk, wool, or
other extracted resources. These values factor in the costs
of labor in maintaining these resources. For convenience,
taking into consideration that some resources only produce
at certain times of the year, the values are weekly
averages of a yearly production cycle.
ASSET PRODUCTIVITY
Weekly
Asset Productivity Notes
(Cows)
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Must be steadily herded and defended in
order to be productive. Each beast has a
Cow 0.015 20% chance each year of reproducing
successfully if a bull is present. Produces
milk.
CRAFTING OVERVIEW
Crafting across the various arts and trades will, naturally,
have differing requirements as far as tools, facilities,
materials, time, and output. For simplicity, assume the
following standards apply in most situations:
A single character with 50 points in the used Craft skill
can, if successful, craft approximately 0.1 Cows worth of
goods in full day’s work under ideal conditions. Add or
subtract 1% for every point above or below 50 for that
skill.
110
The materials needed for crafting an item can, in a place
without an abnormal shortage or surplus of such materials,
acquire the materials they require to craft the item for
approximately half the finished item’s value, subject to
negotiations with suppliers.
A character must have the needed tools and materials to
craft an item. They must also have the needed facilities to
work, and sufficient time and focus to work.
Successfully crafting an item requires passing a Skill roll of
the relevant Craft skill. The consequences of failure may
mean the destruction of the materials or having to start
over, depending on the item and materials in question.
OVERLAND TRAVEL
The following tables apply for whenever a party or group is
travelling overland for an extended period. They assume
sufficient time for rest each day, and reasonably able-
bodied party members fit for safely travelling.
TRAVEL MODIFIERS
111
Double- Add 25% to the distance covered in a day, but force a
time Resilience skill roll one level harder.
HIRELINGS
It is not always prudent to go it alone. Sometimes an
adventurer or party might require assistance from others,
who can be hired on a per day basis, either up front or
promised later. Almost every community will have people
available for hire, whether they are professionals who
routinely do such work, or young novices eager for extra
pay, adventure, and experience. Hirelings are not
mindless beings willing to slavishly obey commands or
throw away their lives; they are rational beings with a
sense of self-preservation and will refuse to perform tasks
they see as needlessly risky without sufficient reward.
A player character can successfully hire and manage as
many characters as they can willingly convince to join
them long term. The skill necessary for determining that
ability is the Leadership skill, starting with a Routine roll
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for the first hireling and becoming one level harder with
each hireling thereafter, capping at Extreme. Failure
means the local hirelings cannot be convinced to tag along
at normal rates (though perhaps the promise of extra pay
could make an additional skill roll easier.
The rates at which hirelings must be paid are based on
their approximate Risk Factor, as defined in Chapter 9, and
assume a character with a Leadership or Commerce skill of
50. Increase or decrease the price by 1% for every skill
point above or below 50. Failure to pay one’s hirelings
according to the promised terms is a sure way to ensure a
hireling abandons their employer- or worse, mutinies or
seeks a future vengeance.
The base rates of pay for hirelings are as follows:
113
CHAPTER 8: MISCELANNEOUS AND SPOT-
RULES
114
CHAPTER 9: ENEMY AND CREATURE
COMPENDIUM
The following represents a simple, abridged “bestiary” of
certain archetypes of hostile people, monsters, and horrors
one is reasonably likely to encounter should they venture
too far from home.
RISK FACTOR
Enemies in this chapter are assigned Risk Factors, with
approximate the danger they pose to player characters.
The goal with the assignment of Risk Factors is the balance
enemies as follows:
Basic: Novice, unskilled, and poorly equipped characters
should be capable of handling such enemies reasonably
without unnecessary risk. Roughly 20 points over base are
distributed among the primary combat skills.
Advanced: More experienced and better equipped
characters may be necessary to handle such enemies
without unnecessary risk. Roughly 75 points over base are
distributed among the primary combat skills, and they
have an additional 5 Attribute points.
Elite: Veteran and well-equipped characters should be
necessary to safely encounter such enemies. Roughly 150
points over base are distributed among the primary combat
skills, and they have an additional 10 attribute points.
Low: A character of the same experience level should be
capable of handling such an enemy one-on-one or even
outnumbered. Roughly 50 Attribute Points are assigned to
such foes.
Med: Three or more characters of the same experience
level may be necessary to safely handle an enemy of this
115
Risk Factor without unnecessary risk. Roughly 77 Attribute
Points are assigned to such foes.
High: Six or more characters of the same experience level
will be necessary to safely handle an enemy of this Risk
Factor without unnecessary risk, and even then one should
anticipate casualties. Roughly 100 or more Attribute
Points are assigned to such foes.
Hazardous: Facing such enemies can reasonably expect
casualties no matter who is facing them or how many are
present.
116
Hunter
Basic-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 7/17/27 (Hide)
Fatigue Threshold: 5/15/25
Melee Modifier: 5
Ranged Modifier: 7
Speed 7
Warrior
Advanced-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 13/23/33 (Linen)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
Melee Modifier: 5
Ranged Modifier: 6
Speed 9
117
Simple Ranged 22
Unarmed 46
Ritual 29
Sorcery 0
Items: Goods worth 0.5 Cows, War Trophy, First Aid Gear
Warrior Thane
Elite-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 18/28/38 (natural)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
Melee Modifier: 6
Ranged Modifier: 7
Speed 10
Bandit
Basic-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 10/20/30 (Hide)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
Melee Modifier: 6
Ranged Modifier: 7
Speed 10
118
Dodge 14 Weapon 1: Random Weapon
Resilience 26
Martial Melee 15 Weapon 2: Random Weapon
Martial Ranged 15
Simple Melee 30 Spells:
Simple Ranged 35
Unarmed 45
Ritual 24
Sorcery 0
Bandit Chief
Elite-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 18/28/38 (natural)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
Melee Modifier: 6
Ranged Modifier: 7
Speed 10
Shaman
Basic-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 4/14/24 (Clothes)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
119
Melee Modifier: 4
Ranged Modifier: 5
Speed 8
Wandering Sorcerer
Advanced-Med/Normal (11)/Human
Damage Threshold: 5/15/25 (Clothes)
Fatigue Threshold: 6/16/26
Melee Modifier: 5
Ranged Modifier: 6
Speed 9
120
Items: Goods worth 0.1 Cows, Ritual Powder (2d20), Sling
Bullets (1d20), Occult Icon
121
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