Mortal Coil
Mortal Coil
Mortal Coil
Brennan Taylor
writing, layout
Jennifer Rodgers
illustrations
Jonathan Walton
revised layout
Table of contents
foreword
The new edition
notes and Thanks
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aptitudes
What Does an Aptitude Cover?
Why Shouldnt I Pick the Widest Aptitudes Possible?
Starting Aptitudes
Supernatural Aptitudes
Starting Pools
Starting Action Pool
Starting Passion Pool
Starting Power Pool
Starting Magic Pool
Supporting characters
How to Build Supporting Characters
chapter three Summary
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Matching Actions
Actions Outside Conflict
calling on Passions
Opposing a Passion
Passions in Play
Changing Passions Through Conflict
Recovering Spent Passion Tokens
Item Effects
action resolution
Desperate Reactions
Harm
Harm Effects
fatigue
chapter five Summary
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Appendix I: Inspiration
Appendix II: Example Conflicts
Appendix III: Sample Characters
INDEX
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foreword
Its appropriate that Mortal Coil is a game about magic, because there was
something magical going on the first time I played it.
I met Brennan Taylor for the first time at GenCon in 2006. Yes, wed met
online before, but this was our first meeting in person. Similarly, Id read
Mortal Coil, but Id never gotten the chance to try it out. When he suggested that we play a game of it, I jumped at the chance, but when I showed
up at the Embassy Suites to actually play, I got nervous. I was going to sit
down with five people I respected but Id never gamed with before, and
I was desperate to impress them. Would they think I was a good player?
Would I be able to figure out what they thought was fun? Would they ever
want to play with me? But as soon as Brennan pulled out a blank sheet of
paper and asked What sort of game do we want to play? all that stress
disappeared. And thats when the magic started.
contained in this edition. If you are interested in having the additional text
all bound together in a pretty package, as well as seeing two new pieces of
art by the talented Jennifer Rodgers, then pick up this edition. Just know
it is not required to play the first edition of the game.
Brennan Taylor
CHAPTER ONE
The Book
This book is designed to lead you through the process of creating and
playing a game of Mortal Coil, step by step.
This Introduction provides some basic information to help you use
this book.
The second chapter, Theme, instructs you on how to begin to build the
world of magic in which your story will take place.
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The third chapter, Character, shows you how to create the people who
will populate and explore your new world.
The fourth chapter, Magic, describes how you shape the magical events
that surround the characters in your game.
The fifth chapter, Conflict, helps you build the conflicts on which all
stories thrive.
The sixth chapter, Power, provides tools for you to influence the fictional events you imagine.
The seventh chapter, Play, tells you how to interact with Mortal Coil
as a player and gives you tips on how to get the most out of your game.
And the eighth and final chapter, The GM, instructs the Game
Moderator player on this special role in the game.
The Players
Mortal Coil is a game, and therefore has players. Everyone sitting around
the table during a game of Mortal Coil will be a player. Most of the players will have a single character they created, and their task is to portray
this character during the game. One player has a special role, the Game
Moderator or GM. His duties are described in a bit more detail below.
Just because a player has created her character and has the task of portraying
this character at the table does not mean that she has complete control of
the character. Other players are allowed to influence the character during
play, and may use conflicts to make another character feel or act a certain
way. Also, players wishing to add details to the game relating to their own
character will also have to gain the consent of the group (see Threshold of
Credibility, below).
The GM
The Game Moderator, referred to hereafter as the GM, is a player with
a special role. Since each of the other players portrays a single character,
there is a lot of open area that is not covered. The GM takes on the role of
the world at large, including any supporting characters not portrayed by
another player. The GM has a big task, but since the story told in a game
of Mortal Coil is about the players characters, it is not as overwhelming as
it might initially sound.
The GM plays an important part in the groups overall story or situation.
The GMs job is to make sure that the world presents challenges and difficulties for the players characters. Good story emerges from conflict, and
things that are easy are often boring. The GM will ensure that the players
characters struggle to win their achievements by providing adversity, in the
form of villains, rivals, and difficult situations.
The GM will also take the role of rules arbiter when a conflict arises in the
fictional world of the game and the rules are used to determine the outcome. The GM will often present challenges from supporting characters
in these situations, but must also be mindful of her role as a judge during
these scenes. GMs should be impartial and adjudicate the conflicts with an
eye not only toward logic, but also toward drama.
There is more information for the GM in Chapter 8, complete with instructions and advice for this special player.
Throughout the book you will find examples after almost every rule. For consistency, I will use the same two example gaming groups throughout. The two
groups should give you a feel for the different things you can do with the system.
The first group consists of three players: Jason, Krista, and Michelle. Michelle is
the GM for this group.
The second group has five players: Bill, Eric, Michael, Kat, and Russell. Bill is
the GM for this group.
Tokens
All action in the Mortal Coil system involves tokens. Tokens can be poker
chips, go stones, beads, cardboard chits, or any other type of easily visible
object that players can move around on the table during play. You will need
four distinct colors of tokensabout ten of each color for every player in
the game.
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Action Tokens: Use these tokens when your character wishes to perform a task.
Power Tokens: These tokens are wild cards. Use them in place of other
tokens or add them to other types of tokens. They also help permanently improve your character.
Magic Tokens: These tokens activate all magical effects in the game
and can even create new magical facts about the game world.
Using Tokens
There are three different ways to use your characters tokens.
Spending Tokens: Tokens are spent if they are temporarily taken out
of play. Tokens are typically spent to represent fatigue, injury, or to
mark off resources that are refreshed or replenished in between sessions
of play. Spent tokens can be regained when specific conditions are met.
These conditions vary depending on the type of token.
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Tokens
There are four types of tokens used in Mortal Coil: action, passion, power,
and magic.
There are three uses for tokens: committing, spending, and sacrificing.
Committing a token is used to declare actions.
Spending a token temporarily removes it from play.
Sacrificing a token permanently removes it from play.
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CHAPTER TWO
The theme is probably the most important part of creating your own game
of Mortal Coil. It sets a baseline of expectations for the game by describing the setting, the nature of the supernatural, and the feel of magic in
your game. All of the players, including the GM, should discuss what they
want and dont want in their game. If one player is thinking disturbing
supernatural horror and another is thinking of lovelorn teenage wizards in
a magical academy, it is likely at least one of the two will be upset when
play begins and one of these visions is not respected.
Tone
One of the most important things you can establish with your theme is
the tone of the game you are about to play. Tone is the general feel of your
game world, whether it is bleak, gritty, hopeful, transcendent, or surreal. As
you discuss the basic tone, feel free to bring up books and movies that are
similar in feel, and try to list words that evoke the feel you are after. Your
group should settle on a general tone that can be described in large part
with four or five words.
The first group begins to discuss their games theme. Michelle says, Id like
something a bit spooky, a sort of X-Files vibe.
Jason: I like that, but I want to make sure that we can do something about the
scary stuff, so creepy but not depressing.
Krista agrees, adding, Id like to see a realistic tone to balance out the
supernatural.
Michelle writes Creepy but not depressing, realistic, X-Files on the theme
document as the games tone.
The second groups discussion begins with Russell saying, I want a sort of lowdown tone, maybe a bit bleak.
Eric says, I dont want the game to get too bleak, or I might have some trouble
playing. Im just not into depressing.
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Bill suggests, Lets make the game very supernatural, maybe a fantasy setting.
Russell: Im not so sure about that...
Kat says, Lets keep it grounded in the real world but have some really strong
supernatural elements.
After a bit more discussion, they settle on low-down but magically powerful
for a tone.
Setting
The next step when building the theme document is to decide where the
game will take place, and the time period in which it will be set. It could be
anywhere and anywhen. A Mortal Coil game could be set in Sumeria five
thousand years ago, or in your own hometown this year.
Fantasy or science fiction settings would work as well, but be sure to carefully define the world if using an imaginary one. Determine the basic
premise of the game. Is it historical? A fantasy?
What is the general idea of the game? Like a studio pitch, can you sum up
the concept in a nice, punchy sentence?
The first group turns to setting. Krista: Lets go with the X-Files idea and make
supernatural investigators working for a government agency.
Jason and Michelle both like that idea and decide to set the game in the modern
day with supernatural elements. They decide there is an official agency that
secretly deals with supernatural incidents. Michelle writes government agents
deal with the supernatural on the theme document.
The second group continues their discussion. Bill suggests, How about you all
portray powerful sorcerers or magical practitioners of some sort.
Russell: I dont think I really like that.
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Michael: How about we are all ancient gods, just living like normal people in
the real world, something like American Gods by Neil Gaiman.
The other players like the idea, but it still isnt fitting with Russells idea for the
game. Rather than have a game that Russell doesnt want to play, the group
negotiates. Russell comes around at the suggestion that the main setting be a
seedy bar, and that despite their vast powers, the gods mostly just hang out,
drink, bicker with each other, and all around act like normal people. They
have lost their followers and therefore lost their purpose. This doesnt seem too
depressing to Eric, and he agrees. Russell likes the gritty tone, and that makes
him happy as well. Bill writes old gods slowly going to seed in a dive bar on
the theme document.
The Supernatural
After the overall concept is settled, define some basic parameters regarding
the supernatural. Answer the following questions:
How common is magic?
What general feel should magic have: horrifying, weird and powerful,
commonplace?
What sorts of creatures do or dont exist in this world?
Can players create magical beings of their own design, or should they
stick with those from folklore?
Who knows about magic: a select few, the general population, only
folks with traditions that relate to it?
How is magic learned and taught?
Are some people innately magical, or can anyone access it?
Are there places of magical power?
This is where players can express their own individual desires about how
the game should work, like no vampires, or stay away from Lovecraft.
Mortal Coil can create a great mood when the players are in agreement on
the basic framework. Apart from strong desires, however, avoid describing
specific beings or powers during the theme document discussion. It is good
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The first group discussed the supernatural. Krista: Going back to the X-Files
idea, why not have magic thats out there but most people dont know about it.
Michelle elaborates, Yeah, magic should be powerful but subtle. The supernatural rarely leaves a trace when its gone.
Krista adds, A few people can learn how to use it, but its rare.
Jason agrees with the direction, but adds, I dont want to see any Lovecraftian
monsters or concepts. I just played Call of Cthulhu and would like to get away
from that.
Michelle notes everything down on the theme document under the heading
supernatural.
Having agreed on a theme of old gods, the second group discusses the supernatural. Russell again pushes for a grittier level of magic, but Michael says, I liked
the idea of vast godly power.
Bill agrees, Yeah, the gods should have powers that seem godlike. Their rage
should be awesome to behold.
Michael says, Because they are here, wasting away in a seedy bar, I think their
powers are diminished or dont always work.
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Eric says, Sure, an earthquake that used to shake a city will now only shake a
city block.
Bill: That sounds good. They retain their godly powers, but they are local in
scale.
Russell says, I can live with that.
Bill: Are we sticking with just gods, or do other supernatural beings exist?
Kat: I think other beings exist, like nymphs and satyrs. Those are a big deal
in Greek mythology and the gods are always chasing after them. They should
be around.
Michael says, The gods should be able to transform themselves, like into animals or elements, as well.
Bill: Hold on to that thought, Michael. Thats a fact about magic that should
be established during play. We want to stay away from specific powers at this
point.
Everyone agrees on that, and Bill determines the group is done with this phase.
He notes down the parameters of the supernatural in the theme document.
Low Magic: Each player starts with 5 magic tokens. The GM gets 5
tokens, plus 1 token for each player. This will create a game where
magic is rare and valuable.
High Magic: Each player begins with 20 magic tokens. The GM gets
20 tokens, plus 4 tokens for each player. Magic will be quite common
in this game, and most play will revolve around powerful magic.
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You may also set the magic level somewhere in between these levels if finetuning the level suits your world and theme better.
These levels are also set for a multisession game. If you are playing in a
single-session game, use the following guidelines instead:
Low Magic: Each player starts with 2 magic tokens. The GM gets 2
tokens, plus 1 token for every 2 players.
High Magic: Each player starts with 6 magic tokens. The GM gets 6
tokens, plus 1 token for every 2 players.
The first groups setting is a world with hidden supernatural events investigated
by government agents. They decide it isnt exactly low magic, because they want
a fairly regular diet of the supernatural, but its not high magic either. They
agree on moderate, and since this is a one-shot session, thats all they need to
decide.
The second group is playing a longer game. This is a world of old gods, so the
group decides that theyd like to see magic pretty regularly. Russell still doesnt
want a really high magic game, so they decide on a moderate magic setting. In
a long term game, the group needs to decide where in the moderate range they
fall. Russell pushes for a lower value, and the group decides on 12 magic tokens
for each player. The group agrees this should be enough to do some fun magical
things without tipping the game too far away from what Russell wants.
Situation
You have created a theme and setting at this point, and defined the basics
of magic in your game world. Now, you need to discuss the significance of
these things. What is your games situation? What issues are the characters
going to address through their actions? What questions will they answer
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with their choices? This is what you would discuss if you talked about
theme in a literary context, and since Mortal Coil is about creating a story
with your friends, you should answer similar questions here.
Decide on a central conflict in the game. What is the big question the setting asks? It could be as simple as destruction against survival, but there are
usually deeper levels of meaning to conflicts that exist in a story. Freedom
versus stability, youth versus tradition, nature versus civilization. or even
good versus evil are examples of the type of big conflict the group should
be thinking about at this step.
A good start is to set up some sides to the central conflicts in your game.
It is all right (and, in fact, desirable) to have more than one. These conflicts create inherent tensions within the world that will provide excellent
impetus to your stories. Players may choose a specific side, or may find
themselves torn between multiple sides of a particular conflict, creating
drama as they are forced to choose and compromise, or are driven to evermore extreme acts in service of their principles.
Once you have settled on the situation with your group, go back to the
theme document. Add details or change the ones you have written to reflect the situation your group is interested in.
The first group discusses the situation for their game. One of the situations they
discuss is obvious: human agents versus the supernatural. Thats built into their
premise. Then they talk about other possible tensions, such as secrets versus the
truth, and perhaps higher ups in the government wishing to use the supernatural for their own nefarious purposes. These all sound like good meaty conflicts,
and are written on the theme document.
The second group has to discuss this step a bit longer. Their basic premise of old
gods going to seed seems to lack a bit of conflict. If the group is not careful, they
will end up with a very static situation and the players will be at a loss for what
to do. Realizing this, Bill pushes them to come up with some tension. Some ideas
get thrown around: abandoning godhood versus clinging to your old powers,
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sticking with the traditional ancient rivalries between gods versus evolving new
relationships, and conflicts between different religious traditions. These are all
good and can create some excellent situations in the game, so Bill writes them
down on the theme document.
Villains
Now that you have established the basic facts of your world, and set up
a situation in which your characters will find conflict, you should determine what the opposition is. Who are the characters that will oppose the
players characters? What adversity will they face when you start playing?
Each of the different conflicts should have a face on each side, whether an
individual or an organization. At this stage, a simple list of villains will help
players craft their characters in a way that is tied in to situation.
The second group discusses possible villains. Other ancient gods are the obvious
choices, and various names are batted around: Jupiter, Odin, or Set. The group
decides that they will settle on particular gods as villains once everyone has
created a character and they all know what other gods would be appropriate.
Someone else then suggests that they have some villains that are other types of
creature, like Scandinavian dwarfs. This works for everyone, and they come up
with a svartalf villain named Norin. Lastly, they decide there is a modern priest
of some ancient religion who is trying to get his gods to exert their power and
take over again. These all get written down on the theme document.
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Tone
The general feel of the game world.
Setting
A one-sentence movie studio pitch that describes the game world.
The Supernatural
Basic parameters and restrictions on magic, in keeping with tone
and setting.
Magic tokens are not spent at this phase of the game, so no details
requiring magic token use should be specified yet.
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theme
Setting Magic Level
Choose from three levels of magic: low, moderate, or high.
Low Magic: 5 magic tokens/player, +1/player for the GM.
Moderate Magic: 10-15 magic tokens/player, +2/player for the GM.
High Magic: 20 magic tokens/player, +4/player for the GM.
For a single-session game, use different guidelines for magic level.
Low Magic: 2 magic tokens/player, +1/two players for the GM.
Moderate Magic: 4 magic tokens/player, +1/ two players for the GM.
High Magic: 6 magic tokens/player, +1/ two players for the GM.
Situations
Determine what issues the characters will address through their actions,
and what conflict(s) will be present in the game world at the start of play.
Villains
A basic list of villains to get players started when crafting their characters.
Each of the principles discussed in situation should have a representative,
either a person or an organization.
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CHAPTER THREE
Now it is time to move on to the next question. You have created the
theme; your game world is ready for the protagonists to inhabit it. Who are
these characters? What do they do in this world? Of these characters, who
are you, and how do you fit in?
Each of the players aside from the GM will create a character of their own
and will take on this role in the game. There are several steps you need to
take to build this character. Use the character sheet at the end of this book,
or download one at the web site (www.galileogames.com/mortalcoil). This
sheet has spaces for all of the characteristics you will need to note down
about a character, and it also includes spaces for the tokens you will be
using in the game.
character concept
To start, come up with a quick (preferably one-sentence) description of
who you are, like a frail old man who has been alive for centuries using
magic, the nave art student, or an ancient god of the underworld masquerading as an ineffective stockbroker. This is your character concept.
Note this down on your character sheet in the space provided. This gives
you the initial shape of the character and allows you to fill in the details as
you move through the process of creating a character.
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The two players from the first group come up with character concepts. Jason
creates Karl Eckhardt, a jaded veteran agent. Krista creates Lucy Torres, a green
but hotheaded agent.
In the second group, Eric decides to play Loki, a trickster god running out of
tricks. Michael decides to play Sedna, a goddess of the sea turned trucker. Kat
decides to play Pele, a volcano goddess bitter about the changes to the world.
Russell decides to play Pluto, a god of the underworld scraping by as a shabby
stockbroker.
Well look more closely at Jasons character, Eckhardt, and Kats character, Pele.
Passions
Characters in Mortal Coil are, first and foremost, defined by their passions.
Passions are the things that are most important to the character, that drive
her to act. These are used in play to bring drama to your portrayal of a
character, and they define her motivations and connections to other individuals. Your portrayal of the character in the game should be driven by
these passions, and the GM will also use them to present situations where
your characters desires and beliefs will be challenged.
It is especially important to make sure your characters passions relate both
to the passions of other characters (both those of other players and those
taken by the GM) and to the overall theme of the game. This is absolutely
essential to a good game of Mortal Coil. Passions are the most powerful
tool both you and the GM can use to emotionally tie your character into
the story. You should make sure that at least one of your characters passions (or better, two of them) relate to another player character or to the
main situation of the game (this last must be done with the groups help,
of course).
Passions should be written as a sentence. A passion Fear: Spiders or Love:
Nancy are very bland, very broad, and dont convey much information
to the GM or the other players. Try to make them more specific and more
personal. Instead of Fear: Spiders, make your passion Fear: Spiders hide
in dark places and are just waiting to bite me. Instead of Love: Nancy, try
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Love: Nancy is worth any sacrifice. Now the other players have a much
better idea of what is motivating the character, and the GM has some clues
on how to provide situations that will work with these passions. You can
bet a character with these passions will encounter some dark holes he needs
to stick his arm in, and that Nancy will need just a little blood, darling, and
hed do that for her, wouldnt he?
Types of Passions
There are four types of passions that describe the powerful emotions that
motivate your character. These include the following:
Fear: A fear is something that terrifies your character and motivates her
quite strongly out of aversion. Fear motivates the character to avoid
the object of the fear, or, if that is not possible, to cower or bargain in
attempt to avoid harm (real or perceived). Fears can include phobias,
other individuals, or more abstract things such as loneliness, abandonment, etc.
Sample Fears: I wont ever be alone again; I am terrified of enclosed
spaces; do whatever it takes to keep Mr. Sampson from getting angry.
Hate: A hate motivates your character through his loathing and longing to destroy something or someone. This passion is similar to fear,
but your character is motivated to attack instead of avoid. Your character will do what he can to harm, hinder, or otherwise damage the
object of his hate. This attack need not be overt. The character Iago in
Othello is an excellent example of a character who hates, causing his
enemys downfall by pretending to be a friend. Hate could be directed
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When choosing passions for your character, you are not required to choose
one of each type. You can even choose two or more passions of the same
type if you desire. The four types are provided to guide and inspire you
when writing your characters passions, not to restrict you.
Starting Passions
All characters have five points to spend on their passions. These points
should be distributed among the things your character cares about. It is
rare and really rather unhealthy for an individual to have only one passion.
A characters passions, even if he has five 1-point passions, represent things
he cares about. Because they appear on his passion list, he feels strongly
about them in some way. That is why passion ratings begin at strong at
rank 1. Even a rank 1 passion is important to the character. The rankings
of the passions are listed below:
1: Strong. This passion is your characters calling. This passion motivates her on many levels, and she will go out of her way to make time
for this passion.
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Jason thinks a bit about the situation and Kristas character and takes the following passions:
Duty 1: I have to keep people safe from magical threats.
Fear 2: Lucy will get killed like my last partner.
Hate 2: Those damn bureaucrats always keep us from finishing the job.
As you can see, he has aimed one passion at another player character, and created another motivation, the hate, that will bring him in direct conflict with
the agency and eventually the villain within the agency that was created in the
theme document. His third passion motivates him to do his job. These are good
passions.
Kat creates some passions for Pele:
Love 1: I am secretly crushing on Pluto.
Fear 2: If I get too angry, Ill lose control and destroy everything.
Hate 2: Outsiders come in and ruin everything.
Kat takes a look at these and sees some potential problems. The first love passion
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points at another player character, so that one works. The fear is pretty vague,
and thinking about it, Kat realizes that it will probably push her toward taking
no action instead of taking positive action. That could kill some of her fun, so
she decides to change it. Thinking about the last one, she realizes its a bit vague
as well and will be hard to implement, so she decides to change it too. Her final
list looks like this:
Love 2: I am secretly crushing on Pluto.
Love 1: I like to lose control, the damage I cause is someone elses problem.
Hate 2: Norin always comes in and ruins everything.
She switched the value on the first and second passion because the crush on Pluto
now seems more interesting to her. The second passion is a love of destruction,
which will motivate her character to act and cause all sorts of problems. That
should be fun. And now the last passion points at a named supporting character,
which ties Pele into the situation.
Starting ability
Once passions have been defined, you should have a pretty good feel for
your character already. Next, round out your character by describing the
specific things he can do.
Characters can begin the game at any of four different skill and experience
levels. Most characters are assumed to begin at a relatively unskilled level.
The GM should look at each players character concept and decide whether
that character has experience and ability above the assumed baseline and
modify that characters starting level accordingly. This call is up to the GM,
with input from the players, of course.
The upper two levels of character skill are special, and they represent a
supernatural origin for the character. This makes them subject to the
threshold of credibility (page 8). The GM has the authority to decide at
what level a character starts play, but if another player objects to either
the ancient or ageless categories, they can use their veto at this point. Its
important that everyone be on board with the starting power levels. The
difference between a novice and a veteran is not as significant as the difference between these and the supernatural starting levels.
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The more powerful a character is at the beginning of the game, the more
restricted he will be during play. Lower level characters begin with an advantage in power tokens, and also have greater room for growth. Higher
level characters will end up basically static.
The following rankings determine starting ability:
Novice: The default starting level, for characters with average faculty
and aptitude. The vast majority of the people in the world fall into this
category, as they have not done anything extraordinary in their lives
to this point (anything requiring peak physical and mental abilities or
intensive, long-term training).
Novices begin with 5 points in passions, 10 points in faculties, 7 points
in aptitudes, and 5 power tokens.
Veteran: This indicates characters who have had intensive training and
who consistently have been in situations requiring peak physical and
mental ability; such people include athletes, soldiers, martial artists,
expert debaters, con artists, and the like.
Veterans begin with 5 points in passions, 11 points in faculties, 9
points in aptitudes, and 3 power tokens.
Jason looks at the list. Hes described his character as a veteran agent, and
Eckhardt is not a supernatural being, so he decides to make him a veteran
starting level. Even though he is older, he is in top form because of the many
supernatural threats he regularly faces. Michelle agrees.
Kat looks at the list as well. Pele is a goddess, so she chooses the ageless starting
level. All of the players characters in her game will be starting at this level.
faculties
Faculties describe four areas of ability that all characters possess. Faculties
are rated according to each characters individual ability. They all describe
some mental or physical characteristic of your character. These include the
following:
Force: This measures your characters size, strength, and physical power. Big characters, tough characters, or those who are merely strong
should have a good Force score.
5: Peak. Your character is in top form, and has few, if any, rivals in
this area.
Starting Faculties
Novice characters have 10 points to distribute among their faculties. More
experienced characters have more points to distribute. Veteran characters gain an extra point to distribute among their faculties for a total of
11. Ancient characters start with 13 points, and ageless characters start
with 15.
Jasons character is a veteran. He takes his 11 points and distributes them as follows: Force 1, Grace 2, Will 4, Wits 4. Jason figures Eckhardt is a bit physically
feeble due to age, but his mental abilities are sharper than ever.
Kats character is ageless. She has 15 points to distribute, and she assigns them
to her faculties as follows: Force 5, Grace 3, Will 5, Wits 2. Kat figures that
Pele, as a goddess of volcanos and violence, will have strong physical ability and
powerful force of will. Her easy rage does make her vulnerable to trickery, so she
deemphasizes Wits.
aptitudes
Aptitudes describe your characters vocations and avocations. Aptitudes are
characteristics, skills, and habits that your character has picked up over the
course of her life through training and repetition, or just through natural
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Jason tries out his choices for Eckhardt. Eckhardt is a veteran supernatural
investigator and government agent. He chooses supernatural investigator and
government agent as two aptitudes, along with mentor and cynic. Jason
thinks all of these will work, as they are all nouns. He tries them out. Eckhardt
is a supernatural investigator. That works. The others fit as well.
Kat picks some aptitudes for Pele. She decides that she is a volcano goddess,
and that Pele also knows how to put them away at the bar. Coming up with
an aptitude for that is a little tougher. Drinker? Drunk? Kat doesnt want Pele
to be trashed all the time, so maybe not. How about barfly? Pele is a barfly.
Yeah, that works. Pele is also a brawler, as a goddess of violence, but Kat wants
to spice that up a bit. Pele is a ruthless brawler. Thats also good. She adds
ruthless brawler to the sheet. Pele is also the goddess of the dance, so there
should be something related to that as well. Dance doesnt work, its a verb.
Dancer will do.
As with faculties, characters can have up to 5 points assigned to any aptitude. The number assigned determines your characters general skill in the
aptitude.
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in the Conflict chapter, page 61). During a conflict, the GM will decide if
your aptitude is broader or more specific than your opponents. Because of
this rule, choosing an aptitude is a balancing act between broad applicability and a narrow, powerful focus.
Jasons character, Eckhardt, gets in a physical conflict with a supporting character, Duncan. Both have pulled pistols on one another, and Jason has the
Government Agent aptitude. He argues, and Michelle agrees, that Eckhardt
would have some basic training in firearms as an agent. Duncan, however, has
the Gunman aptitude. Shooting people for money is what he does for a living.
In this case, a one-on-one test of pistols, everyone easily agrees that Gunman is
a more specific aptitude than Government Agent, and so Duncan earns a +2
toward success in the conflict.
Starting Aptitudes
Novice characters normally have up to 7 points to distribute among their
aptitudes, and cannot be anything more than skilled (3 points) in any one
aptitude. Veteran characters gain 9 points to distribute among aptitudes,
and can assign any level to their aptitudes they wish (up to 5). Ancient
characters start with 13 points, and ageless characters start with 15. Ancient
and ageless characters may also assign any level to their aptitude they wish
(up to 5).
Jasons character, Eckhardt, is a veteran, so he starts with 9 points to distribute among his aptitudes. As a veteran, he can assign up to 5 points to
any individual aptitude. He allocates the points as follows: Supernatural
Investigator 4, Government Agent 2, Mentor 1, Cynic 2.
As an ageless character, Kats character Pele has more points to work with.
She has 15 points to distribute among her aptitudes, and she does so as
follows: Volcano Goddess 5, Barfly 2, Ruthless Brawler 4, Dancer 4.
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Supernatural Aptitudes
Characters may end up with some supernatural aptitudes, such as vampire or magician. These are treated just like regular aptitudes, except you
must activate the supernatural ability by spending a magic token the first
time you wish to use it in a session (see the Magic section for complete
details, page 52). Once a supernatural aptitude is activated, you may call
on it again as often as you like in the course of the same session without
needing to spend another magic token.
Kats character, Pele, wishes to use her magic to cause a minor earth tremor.
Up to this point, no one has explicitly stated that volcano goddesses even have
this power. Kat will sacrifice a magic token and create that ability for volcano
goddesses.
Starting Pools
Your character has four pools of tokens, as described in the introduction.
The final detail you need to add to the character is to determine the size of
these pools. Each one has different requirements, described below.
Eckhardt has a 4 in both his Will and his Wits faculties. These are his highest
faculties, so Jason adds 3 and notes that Eckhardt has a starting action pool of 7.
Pele has a 5 in both her Force and her Will faculties. As the highest faculties, she
adds 3 for a result of 8. Kat notes this in her characters action pool.
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Eckhardt has three passions. Jason notes 3 in his characters passion pool.
Pele likewise has three passions. Kat notes 3 in her characters passion pool.
The GM also starts with a pool of power tokens to use for all of the supporting characters. The GMs pool refreshes at the beginning of each session, and the GM is never awarded power tokens during play. The GMs
pool of power tokens is equal to one token for each player in the game
(including the GM herself ), plus one additional token for each ancient or
ageless character in play.
In our first group, there are three players including the GM. Both characters are
mortal, one is a veteran and the other a novice. The GM gets 1 token for each
player, and has a total pool of 3 tokens.
In the second group, there are four players plus the GM for a total of five players.
The GM gets 1 token for each player, for a total of 5 tokens. Bill then notes that
all four player characters are ageless. Thats an additional 1 token each, so his
starting pool for this game is 9.
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Low Magic: Each player starts with 5 magic tokens. The GM gets 5
tokens, plus 1 token for each player.
High Magic: Each player begins with 20 magic tokens. The GM gets
20 tokens, plus 4 tokens for each player.
You may also set the magic level somewhere in between these levels if finetuning the level suits your world and theme better.
If you are playing in a single-session game, use the following guidelines
instead:
Low Magic: Each player starts with 2 magic tokens. The GM gets 2
tokens, plus 1 token for every 2 players.
High Magic: Each player starts with 6 magic tokens. The GM gets 6
tokens, plus 1 token for every 2 players.
In the first game, the group is playing a one-night session. They use the single
session guidelines, and Jason and Krista note down 4 magic tokens. The GM
counts the players, three, including herself. She gets one token for every two
players, so she gets one extra token. She notes down 5 magic tokens.
The second game will be long-running, so they use the regular magic token rules.
Each player begins with a magic pool of 20. There are five players in the game,
including the GM. Bill gets an extra 4 tokens per player, so he has an additional
20 tokens. Bill combines this with his starting 20 tokens and notes that he has
a total pool of 40 magic tokens.
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Supporting characters
The villains you created during the theme phase should feature prominently on the list of player character passions, but that list should never have
been intended to be final and comprehensive. New villains and supporting
characters will crop up during the process of creating your character.
Every character mentioned in one or more of the player characters passions
who is not a player character himself needs to be created as a supporting
character. Also, many additional supporting characters will appear during
the course of play.
Bill notes that Kat has mentioned Norin the dwarf in one of her passions.
This means that Norin needs to be built as a character. While the players are
constructing their characters, Bill quickly puts Norin together in the same way,
except that as a supporting character Norin does not have his own individual
power or magic pools.
Bill builds Norin as an ageless character as follows:
Norin the Svartalf
Force: 4, Grace: 2, Will: 4, Wits: 5. Action Pool: 8.
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The unique needs of the GM sometimes require a bit of flexibility. You may
not always have time to create a supporting character before play starts.
Someone may introduce a supporting character in a scene, or you may
need to introduce one yourself to serve some function in a scene. In this
case, you can simply create the character on the fly, only filling in the passions, faculties, and aptitudes that are immediately relevant to the scene.
Note down whatever values you assign to this character, and if you think
she will appear again, fill her out completely between sessions.
Bill checks that Norin is built to effectively interact with the characters. He gave
Norin a passion of hate for the gods. That alone ought to cause a lot of trouble.
Norin should be a good supporting character.
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Passions
Each characters passions must relate to one or more of the other characters
(player characters and/or supporting characters) as well as the theme.
Four types of passions:
Duty: something the character feels obligated to do.
Fear: something that terrifies the character.
Hate: something the character wants to destroy.
Love: something the character cares deeply about.
All characters have 5 points of passions.
Starting Ability
Four different skill and experience levels:
Novice: 5 passions, 10 faculties, 7 aptitudes, 5 power tokens.
Veteran: 5 passions, 11 faculties, 9 aptitudes, 3 power tokens.
Ancient: 5 passions, 13 faculties, 13 aptitudes, 1 power token.
Ageless: 5 passions, 15 faculties, 15 aptitudes, no power tokens.
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Aptitudes
No more than 5 points in any one aptitude.
May be used in any task that could reasonably be considered routine for a
real-world person described by the aptitude.
The character in a conflict with a more narrowly defined aptitude gains a
+2 advantage for the action.
Starting Pools
Four pools of tokens:
Action Pool: equal to 3 plus highest faculty.
Passion Pool: equal to number of passions (not passion value).
Power Pool: varies by starting ability; novice: 5, veteran: 3,
ancient: 1, ageless: 0.
Magic Pool: varies by game magic level. Low magic: 5, moderate
magic: 10-15, high magic: 20. In a one-session game, low magic:
2, moderate magic: 4, high magic: 6.
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character
GMs Starting Pools
GMs Power Pool starts each session with 1 token for each player (including the GM), plus 1 token for each ancient or ageless player character.
GMs Magic Pool varies by magic level. Low magic: 5 plus 1/player,
moderate magic: 10-15 plus 2/player, high magic: 20 plus 4/player. In a
one-session game, low magic: 2 plus 1/every two players, moderate magic:
4 plus 1/ every two players, high magic: 6 plus 1/ every two players.
Supporting Characters
Every character mentioned in one or more player characters passions needs
to be created as a supporting character.
Supporting characters are constructed in exactly the same way as player
characters, but do not have individual power or magic pools.
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46
CHAPTER FOUR
Mortal Coil is a game in which magical things can happen. In Mortal Coil,
however, the effects of the supernatural are not specifically defined when
play begins. Instead, your fellow players and the GM will define magic
for your game during theme and character creation, and then continue to
define it during play.
Magic Tokens
Magic tokens are the currency used in Mortal Coil to add magical details
to the world. They are either spent or sacrificed to bring magical powers,
events, and items into the game.
Spent magic tokens are moved to the spent area on the character sheet.
These tokens are unavailable for the player to use as long as they remain in
this area. All spent magic tokens return between sessions of play. A session
ends after you stop playing and everyone goes home. The next time you sit
down to play, the spent magic tokens are moved back to the usable stack.
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48
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Sacrificed magic tokens are removed from play altogether. Once sacrificed,
magic tokens do not ever return.
Kat decides to sacrifice a magic
token to create a new magical
fact: Volcano Goddesses can cause
earthquakes. The token is taken
out of play and she now has six
magic tokens:
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Magical Facts
The most powerful effect a magic token can have is to add a new fact about
magic to the game world. Any player, including the GM, may sacrifice a
magic token and add something to the game theme. These added details
are new facts about how magic works in the game. You may sacrifice a
magic token to add something completely new to the game (e.g. Vampires
lurk in the night to prey upon the living.), or they may be sacrificed in a
similar fashion to add further facts about something already on the theme
document (e.g. Vampires can transform into bats.).
As new facts are added, they are written in the theme document. The
theme document will evolve and be refined in this way. As such, it is important to remember that new facts must be consistent with those already
present in the theme document. Facts must follow the tone and setting
details that have been laid out in the theme, and the threshold of credibility
definitely applies.
You cannot directly contradict existing facts by sacrificing a magic token.
However, you can define them more narrowly. For example, another player
creates the fact that angels can inspire debilitating awe in those who view
them. You cannot now contradict this fact, but you can add an additional
fact that narrows or clarifies this existing ability, such as an exemption from
the power for people who have seen demons.
During play, Eckhardt is fleeing from a vampire. All that is known about vampires at this point is that they are undead, and that they kill people to suck their
blood. Eckhardt flees across a tiny stream, and at this time Jason decides to add
a fact to the game world. He sacrifices a magic token and announces, Vampires
cant cross running water. This is added to the theme document next to the
entry on vampires, and the vampire is unable to follow him across the stream.
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Supernatural Aptitudes
Magic tokens must also be spent for you to use a supernatural aptitude
during play. So long as you are invoking an existing fact, you do not sacrifice the token, but merely spend it.
Once a token is spent to activate a particular magical aptitude, that aptitude is now available for the duration of the session. As mentioned above,
a session ends when everyone stops playing and goes home. From the point
you spend the magic token up until the session ends, you may use the
magical effects of your supernatural aptitude as many times as you like
without spending another magic token.
If you wish to use your supernatural aptitude in a way that is not written
on the theme document, you must first add the ability to the theme document by sacrificing a token as described above. Once you have added an
ability to your aptitude, you may then activate your supernatural aptitude
by spending a magic token and use the new ability immediately. If you
have already activated the aptitude with a spent magic token, you may
use the new ability immediately without any further expenditure of magic
tokens.
Kat decides that Pele needs a new power. She has the supernatural aptitude
Volcano Goddess, and Kat wants to give Pele the ability to ignore heat, as would
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befit a goddess who lives in a volcanic caldera. She sacrifices a magic token
to create the new magical fact: Volcano goddesses are unharmed by even the
greatest of heat. She has not yet used a magical power associated with Volcano
Goddess in this session, so she then spends a second magic token to activate the
supernatural aptitude. Then Kat has Pele walk up to a furnace and use her
newly defined ability to thrust her hand inside to recover the key a supporting
character just threw in.
Price
There is only one rule of magic that Mortal Coil specifically mandates for
all games. This is a variation on the law of the conservation of energy: All
magic has a price that must be paid for using it. Whenever a new type of
magic or magical effect is introduced, you must also specify a price characters must pay for its use. This can be almost anything, limited only by your
sensibilities, imagination, and the threshold of credibility.
A price must restrict the use of the power in some way. A poor price is
one so low that there is no inconvenience to using the power. A good
price makes the use of the power something that has significance. In some
games, prices may be only a minor inconvenience to the character or a rare
occurrence that blocks the power. In others, the prices may be quite high,
perhaps so dangerous that powers will be used only rarely. The relative
difficulty of the price will depend on how magic was defined in the theme
document.
The price for any new fact is always determined by a different player than
the one who introduced the fact. If a player introduces a new magical fact,
then the GM sets the price. When the GM introduces a new magical fact,
a player must set the price. As a general rule, when it is the players turn
to set the price, the player group brainstorms together and determines the
price. If the group cannot decide, there are a couple of ways to determine
who has the final say.
A player may buy the right to set the price on a GM-introduced fact by
sacrificing a power token. If another player wishes to set the price instead,
he may sacrifice additional tokens to take that right away, with the right
going to the highest bidder. Players may also buy the right to set the price
away from another player in this way, if they wish. Only the player who
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introduced the fact is barred from bidding to set the price. Whichever
player sacrifices the most power tokens gets to set the price. Only the player
who wins the bid must actually sacrifice his power tokens.
If no one wishes to purchase the right to set the price, the player with the
most magic tokens chooses the price (this will typically be the player who
has added the fewest facts to the theme document). If there is a tie, and
neither player wishes to sacrifice a power token to take the right, flip a coin
or use some other random method.
If any player, even the one who created the fact, has an objection to the
final price, she may invoke the threshold of credibility to veto the price.
Michelle introduces a new power for vampires to the theme document, stating
that as undead beings, vampires are unaffected by aging. Jason suggests that the
price vampires must pay for their unaging status is that they must drink human
blood to sustain themselves. Krista thinks that the price must be highervampires have to kill their victims for the blood to effectively sustain them. Jason
likes this, and the players set that as the price. Michelle writes the new fact and
price in the theme document.
Conflict Trigger: With this option, when the fact comes into play, it
immediately triggers a conflict with preset consequences. The potential
outcomes for the conflict are set when the fact is introduced; whenever
the fact comes into play, the appropriate players resolve the conflict.
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Jason creates an artifact, a magical jewelers loupe that allows a character to see
the true nature of whatever he views through it. Michelle sets the price: Viewing
the true nature of supernatural beings is damaging to a mortals mind. Everyone
agrees that this is a good price, but is somewhat vague. What form does the
damage take? Michelle decides to set a conflict trigger. Whenever a mortal gazes
through the loupe at a supernatural being, he must initiate a conflict of Will.
The consequences will always be the same: If the mortal wins, he will see the
true nature of the being he views through the loupe but will suffer no harm. If
the mortal loses, he will still see the beings true nature, but he will also gain a
1-point passion of either Love or Fear for the being he sees through the loupe.
Bonus or Penalty: With this option, when the fact comes into play, it
will confer a +2 bonus or a 2 penalty (see the Conflict section, page
75) upon one or more characters for purposes of a particular action or
set of actions. It often makes sense for the price to include an opposing
bonus or penalty to counteract the one conferred by the fact.
Kat is playing Pele, the goddess of volcanoes, and she introduces the fact that
volcano goddesses have the power to cause those around them to grow more
contentious and irritable, leading to fights. Everyone agrees that this needs to
be backed up by the rules. Bill proposes that anyone attempting to perform a
non-violent action when this power is in effect must suffer a 2 penalty. Violent
actions are unhindered.
These two options are not the only way a fact can be backed by a rule. A
fact can trigger some other process, such as forcing a character to use a passion token, adding or changing passions on the characters sheet, or causing
an action token to be spent. If the person setting the price feels that a rule
is appropriate, and everyone else agrees, just about any game rule can be
added to a magical fact or price.
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Supernatural Items
If your character has an item with supernatural abilities, you must spend
a magic token to activate the item the first time you wish your character
to use it, just like a power. The item may then be used in play to confer its
magical abilities onto a character, and can be used throughout the same
game session without spending any more magic tokens. Once the session
is ended, the item is no longer considered activated.
Items must have a price that goes along with their magical abilities as well,
but this price usually affects the user rather than the item.
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Low Magic: Sacrificing four power tokens earns you one additional
magic token.
High Magic: You can convert power tokens into magic tokens on a
one-for-one basis.
Kat has sacrificed most of her starting pool of magic tokens. She decides she is
running low on magic tokens. Since this is a moderate-level magic game, she
sacrifices two power tokens to gain one new magic token. Bill, as GM, gains one
additional magic token.
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Supernatural Items
Must be activated with a magic token.
Magic Tokens
A player resource, not a character resource.
All spent magic tokens are regained between sessions of play.
New magic tokens must be bought with power tokens:
Low Magic: 1 magic token costs 4 power tokens.
Moderate Magic: 1 magic token costs 2 or 3 power tokens.
High Magic: 1 magic token costs 1 power token.
The GM gains a new magic token whenever a player purchases one. In a
high magic setting, the GM gains 2 each time a player purchases one.
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60
CHAPTER FIVE
The game rules are meant to serve the story in Mortal Coil. You use your
tokens to affect the outcome of your characters actions in the game, allowing you a considerable degree of control over these actions rather than
relying on the random outcome of dice. You never need to worry about
failure due to bad luck on a critical roll.
Supernatural powers and magic spells just work, they do not rely on
chance. However, you often will not know how many resources you must
expend for your desired result. The drama is preserved because you decide
how hard your character will try to succeed.
As in all stories, the major driving force in a game of Mortal Coil is conflict.
In a conflict, you will apply your characters basic ability with his skill or
knowledge in an effort to overcome some opposing force, such as another
character or characters or some object or situation that blocks your characters way to the desired outcome. In short, a conflict is a situation in which
your character must take a risk in order to achieve a desired outcome.
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In order for your character to act in a conflict, you must commit at least
one action token. A token is committed when you move it out of your
characters pool and place it with one of her four faculties. Committed
tokens are returned to the pool immediately after a conflict round, except
under special circumstances, and may be immediately reused in a subsequent round.
There are many ways to use tokens in conflicts, and these are discussed in
detail later in this section.
What Is a conflict?
A conflict is a particular action or series of actions that requires your characters total attention. A conflict is any instance in which your character is
pitting himself against another character or against the world in general,
attempting any action in which the outcome is in doubt and is also essential to the story.
For the most part, everyday actions (like shopping, walking, mowing the
lawn, etc.) are not conflicts. There is little reason to believe, barring some
exceptional circumstance, that your character will fail to perform the task,
nor is the consequence of failure particularly interesting or relevant. When
tensions rise, when skill and aptitude are required to succeed, when success
is important or even vitalthis is when conflict occurs.
Eckhardt and Lucy arrive in a small Arizona town. They go to a local motel and
check themselves in. Finding the motel and checking in are actions that lack
drama, and there is no conflict.
After the characters visit the diner attached to the motel, they return to their
rooms. A supporting character has broken in and is rooting through Eckhardts
luggage. He pauses, hearing Eckhardt and Lucy approach. How will they react
to finding him there? Will he try to escape or confront them? This is a conflict.
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Setting goals
When initiating a conflict, each player involved must first state the goal his
character is attempting to achieve. This is called setting goals, and it defines
what your character wants out of the conflict. For example, if your character gets in a fight in a bar, your goal may be to get out of the fight without
getting hurt, whereas the GM may state that the supporting characters
goal will be an injury to your character.
The key to setting these goals is to make sure that the result is interesting
whether your character succeeds or fails. Either way, something driving
the story forward should result. The GM should not set the goals of her
supporting characters merely to block your desired outcome, but instead
to ensure that if her supporting character succeeds, the characters actions
have actual consequences within the story.
The scope of your conflict should not be overly specific. Each conflict
will cover a number of individual actions that are aimed at the same goal,
but the goal should not be too narrow. For example, each handhold your
character grips while climbing a sheer cliff is not an appropriate conflict,
instead, your character reaching the top of the cliff in time to stop the
villain from throwing your characters lover over the edge is a more proper
conflict. Similarly, engaging in a drunken argument is an appropriate conflict, but each individual shout, grab, or scuffle within the argument is not.
Some outcomes require certain conditions to be met under the rules. A
goal of killing someone is just fine, but even if you win the conflict you
may not be able to actually kill the other character. A certain threshold of
success is required for that outcome. Keep the mechanical restrictions in
mind when creating your goals.
Eckhardt and Lucy have determined that a witness has vital information
for them. The witness, a bikers girlfriend, doesnt want to talk to them, but
Eckhardt and Lucy have tracked her down to a gas station nearby. A conflict
begins as Eckhardt and Lucy arrive on the scene.
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Jason declares Eckhardts goal in the scene: to get the witness to tell him what she
knows. Lucys goal is the same.
Michelle then states the witness goal: to get Eckhardt to leave her alone without revealing anything. The witness biker boyfriend is also in the scene, and
Michelle sets a goal for him as well: to scare off the government spooks. Hes got
secrets he doesnt want snooping government agents to find out.
Jason and Krista push their characters into conflict with each other. Jasons
goal is to go up to the foremans shed and confront him. Kristas goal is to stop
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Eckhardt from going to the shed. This is a pretty clear example of opposed goals.
If either character is successful in achieving his goal, the other cannot also succeed.
Bills supporting character, Norin, and Kats character, Pele, get into a conflict
with each other. Bills goal is for Norin to humiliate Pele in front of the other
bar patrons. Kats goal is for Pele to give Norin the beating of a lifetime. At first
glance, these goals may seem opposed, but they are actually independent goals.
Norin could receive a savage beating and still humiliate Pele at the same time.
Conflict Rounds
Conflicts are settled using a series of rounds. Within each round, each
character may take up to four actions and attempt to achieve their goals.
When a round has ended, all committed action tokens are returned to the
characters action pools and another round may commence.
Often, conflicts will be resolved in a single round of actions. If this is the
case, return all committed tokens to the action pool and narrate the results
of the conflict. Sometimes, multiple rounds of conflict are required.
To determine if another conflict round is needed, examine each characters
goal at the end of the round. Has the character achieved his goal through
his actions within the round? If not, has another character taken actions
that make it impossible for the character to achieve his goal within the conflict? If the answer to either of these questions is yes for all of the characters
involved in the conflict, then the conflict is over.
If the answer to both questions is no, then another round of conflict is
called for. All committed action tokens are returned to each characters
pool, and everyone begins to plan actions for their character. Continue
with as many conflict rounds as are needed to determine whether every
character can achieve his goal.
Conflicts with multiple players and antagonists are likely to get complicated and will probably require two or more rounds of actions before all of
the characters goals are resolved with either success or failure.
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Using Bill and Kats conflict from the previous example, a round of actions has
gone by. Pele has soundly beaten Norin to the ground, and has defended herself
against his sarcastic remarks by smashing his mouth as he tries to speak. The
actions are resolved, and Kat has clearly achieved her goal. Norin has not yet
achieved his goal. Even though he lies beaten and bloodied on the floor of the
bar, nothing about the results of the conflict prevents him from continuing to
pursue his goal. Bill calls for a second round of conflict.
In this round, Norin is hampered by the massive beating he has just endured,
but he still tries to croak out some insult that will humiliate Pele. Exasperated
by his continuing hectoring, Pele drags him out the back of the bar and slams
the door. Norin lies in the alleyway, now out of earshot of the other patrons. He
can no longer pursue his goal of humiliating Pele, at least not until he heals up
a bit. Bill declares the conflict over.
A conflict has arisen between Pele, Loki, and Norin in the seedy bar where they
all hang out. Lokis goal is to convince Pele to go home with him. Bill decides
that Norins goal is to call in a favor that Loki owes him and get him to embarrass Pele. Peles goal is to get Loki to humiliate Norin instead.
Bill looks at all three goals. Norins goal and Peles goal are directly opposed.
Only one of the characters can succeed. Lokis goal is independent to these other
goals. It is possible for Loki to humiliate either Norin or Pele, fulfilling the other
characters goal, and still get Pele to come home with him. It will be a lot harder
for Loki if he agrees to Norins plan, but it is still possible.
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Basic actions
Actions are a direct comparison of two or more characters abilities. Your
character will be testing one of his faculties and one of his aptitudes against
someone elses faculty and aptitude. Whichever character has the highest
total of faculty and aptitude is successful in the action, with the degree of
success depending on the difference between the two totals (explained in
detail below).
Each action needs to be directed against at least one other character.
Generally, you cannot direct an attack action against multiple characters,
unless you have some power or item that allows you to affect multiple
characters (a blast of flames, an automatic weapon, etc.). You can also take
defensive actions, which can potentially apply to any other character attempting to harm yours. Other types of actions that drive toward your
characters goals are also appropriate, such as grabbing items, running,
climbing, etc. Depending on the actions of the other characters, these may
also end up directed against more than one character.
Action tokens are required to initiate any conflict. Add the action tokens
committed to an action to the faculty and aptitude total to reach the total
for comparison. Players choose their actions and allocate tokens secretly,
then all of the players reveal their choices at the same time. All tokens are
considered to be committed at the same time, and all actions take place at
roughly the same time; there is no initiative or turn ranking in Mortal Coil.
A conflict erupts, and Jason tries to determine the actions Eckhardt should take.
There is a dangerous gunman and a weasely snitch opposing him. The gunmans
goal in the conflict is to warn Eckhardt off, Eckhardts goal is to get one of the
two to tell him who they are working for, and the snitchs goal is to avoid getting
hurt.
Jason decides one of his actions will be to intimidate both of the other characters
with a drawn gun in order to get them to talk. This may not work on the jaded
gunman, but Jason hopes it will take the snitch out of the equation. For a
defensive action, Jason decides Eckhardt will dodge behind a desk to avoid being
shot if it comes to that.
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In the situation in the bar, Eric has to decide what actions Loki will take related
to his goal of convincing Pele to go home with him. Eric thinks Loki would use
his jokes to charm Pele. He also knows that the other characters are going to try
to influence his actions, so Eric decides to use Lokis willpower to brush off their
attempts as a defense.
Choosing Actions
There is a bit of a trick to determining the actions your character should
take in a conflict. Once all of the players involved have declared their goals,
think about how your character would go about trying to achieve his goal.
Some will rely on their mental abilities, others are more physical. You can
play to your characters strengths. If Force is your characters highest faculty,
it makes sense that he will almost always try to use his size and strength to
solve problems.
Its important to remember what the goals of the other characters in the
conflict are. These goals will give you a clue regarding what they may do.
When you choose your actions, pick one that will further your goal, but
also remember to choose another action that will help defend your character against the actions of others, if necessary. You really dont want to get
caught out with no defense if another character is acting against yours.
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The GM also has a role in this part of the conflict if supporting characters
are present. As GM, you control the actions of the supporting characters.
For each supporting character in the conflict, you need to choose actions
secretly just like the players. You must also try to anticipate what the players are going to do and use the supporting characters actions to help them
achieve their goals.
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Erics character Loki will be taking two actions in the conflict. First, he will try
to make jokes to impress Pele. Eric will use Lokis Wits faculty and his Trickster
God aptitude for this action. To defend Loki against the efforts of the other
characters, Eric will use Lokis Will faculty and Stubborn Cuss aptitude. Each
of these tasks uses a separate faculty and is an action to which Eric commits one
or more action tokens:
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When in conflict with another character, action tokens are usually committed to at least one offensive and at least one defensive action. After the reveal, a characters offensive action will be matched with another characters
defensive action. If your character is opposing more than one opponent,
the GM must decide which actions are aimed at which opponent. Often,
each offensive and defensive action is aimed at a single opposing character,
but depending on the described action, more than one opponent may be
affected by an action (firing your pistol will only affect one other character,
but knocking down a burning support beam to collapse the roof could
potentially affect many other characters). This applies whether the conflict
is a debate, a contest of skill, or an all-out brawl. The GM has the final say
on which actions oppose which.
Erics first actionthe jokes using the Wits facultyis aimed at only one other
character, Pele. However, he will use his defensive Will action to defend against
both other characters. Michelle agrees that the Will action will apply to both
opponents.
Extra Effort
If you believe your characters basic faculty and aptitude and a single action
token are not sufficient to succeed in an action, you may commit extra action tokens to apply extra effort to the task. Any extra action tokens spent
are added to your current faculty and aptitude total for the action.
You must decide how many tokens you wish to commit before the action
is revealed. Your character may not retry a failed action in the same conflict
round, but must initiate a new action in the next round. You must also deal
with any consequences arising from the initial failure before you can make
a second attempt.
Any character may add extra effort to any of their own actions, and supporting characters may add extra effort to their own actions as well.
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Eric knows that one token in each action is definitely not going to be enough.
He wants to convince Pele, but he also really doesnt want to be a pawn in the
argument between Norin and Pele. Eric decides to put more effort into resisting
their manipulation, but a little extra into his seduction attempt.
Eric is using Lokis Wits faculty (5) and his characters Trickster God aptitude
(5), plus the action token he has committed to his flirting jokes. This total is 11
already; Eric is pretty sure this will go a long way toward success. Jason decides
his character will use only a little extra effort and he commits one more action
token to the task. He adds the extra action token to his characters faculty plus
aptitude total, increasing it to 12:
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To resist, Loki has his Will faculty (2) and his Stubborn Cuss aptitude (3), plus
the one action token already committed, a total of 6. He adds a lot more effort:
five more tokens. These extra tokens increase the total value to 11:
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Helping
Many times, you will want to assist another player in a conflict. You will
take an action during the conflict round in which the result will help
another character complete his action, such as grabbing someone in a
fight, lifting your friend to help him climb up a fire escape, or standing
threateningly in the background if your friend is attempting to intimidate
someone. The action you take needs to be resolved first, before those of
the character you are helping. If you are successful, you will give the other
character a bonus to his action.
In a conflict, your helping action is almost always opposed. Your helping
action must overcome the opposition in order to be useful to the character
you are attempting to aid. Outside of a conflict, or if your action is unopposed, you must match or beat a difficulty determined by the GM (see
page 77) in order to help the other character.
If you fail, you are no help to the other character. If you succeed, the target
character gains a +2 to his action.
Pele is beating up Norin. Pluto, no friend of Norins, wants to help the goddess
deliver the smackdown. Hes not going to deliver the blows himself; he just wants
to aid Pele. Pluto uses an action to grab and hold Norin to make it easier for
Pele to pound him. Since he is helping Pele, Plutos action is resolved first. He is
successful in a physical contest against Norin, and is now holding him, giving
Pele a +2 on her beat up Norin action.
The Reveal
It is important that no one gains any advantage by knowing what an opponent is going to commit by way of tokens. All players should consider and
commit their tokens as desired in secret before they learn what the other
players have committed. This way, no player gains an unfair advantage over
the others by waiting to commit until he has seen other players actions.
All parties to the conflict should write down their token use or commit
their tokens under cover of their hand or some other sort of screen. When
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everyone is ready, it is time for the reveal, and all players announce how
they have allocated their action tokens.
The reveal is a vitally important part of the conflict rules. Everyone must
pick a faculty and aptitude for each action they are planning to perform,
and decide how many action tokens (described on page 71) and passion
tokens (described on page 78) they will commit before anyone reveals the
total. All of these decisions must be made before the reveal. Only power
tokens (described on page 103) can be used after these totals are revealed,
so it is important to choose a strategy and allocate tokens carefully.
Power tokens are the only type of token that can be added after the reveal.
The use of power tokens is discussed in greater detail in the Power chapter,
page 103.
Bill, Eric, and Kat choose their aptitudes and faculties secretly, and each commit action tokens behind their hands. Eriks choices are to use Wits and Trickster
God plus two action tokens for charming jokes, and to use Will and Stubborn
Cuss plus six action tokens to resist the influences of his opponents. Kat decides
to use her Will plus Ruthless Brawler plus two action tokens to intimidate Loki
into joining her against Norin. For defense, she uses her Wits plus Barfly plus
five action tokens to use her drunken obtuseness to deflect any remarks or verbal
attacks. Bill has Norin use Wits plus Slick Salesman and three action tokens to
schmooze Loki into turning on Pele, and he will use Will plus Mean Little Cuss
and four more action tokens to deflect any incoming attacks with sheer rudeness.
Bill asks if everyone is ready, and when the answer is yes, all three players move
their hands away and declare what abilities from their sheets they are using for
the action.
Matching Actions
Once each player reveals his actions, the GM has a vital role to play. Each
of these actions must be matched against the other actions that the characters have taken in order to determine success or failure. Let logic be
your guide. Most of the time, actions will match against one another in
an obvious way. Sometimes it may not be as obvious which actions oppose
one another, and that is when GM discretion is important.
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It was revealed that Lokis actions were charming jokes directed at Pele and
stubbornness as a defense; Peles actions were to intimidate Loki into turning on
Norin and resisting overtures with feigned (or real) drunkenness; and Norins
actions were to use a hard sell on Loki and to defend himself with brash rudeness. Looking over all the actions, Bill announces that both Peles and Norins
attacks are matched against Lokis defense and Lokis attack is matched against
Peles defense.
Kat is using Ruthless Brawler against Lokis Stubborn Cuss, and Bill rules that
Stubborn Cuss is more applicable in this situation, giving Loki a +2 in this
particular matchup. Likewise, Bill thinks Barfly is more specific than Trickster
God, and gives Pele a +2 to her defense in that matchup. The rest of the aptitudes seem relatively evenly matched.
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You can also have quick opposed contests between two characters outside
of the conflict system. Just add the faculty and aptitude each character
wishes to use, remembering the +2 bonus for narrower aptitudes matched
against broader aptitudes, and whichever character has the higher total is
the winner.
As mentioned above, there is one circumstance under which a character
can use action tokens. If you are falling a bit short of the required difficulty,
you can choose to spend action tokens to reach your goal. These tokens
represent great fatigue or injury from attempting a task beyond your ability. You may spend as many tokens as you like for this purpose, but they
are recovered only after the character can receive rest and healing (see page
95). Action tokens spent outside of conflict cannot be recovered until after
the next conflict in which the character is involved.
Jasons character Eckhardt wants to get into an apartment, but the door is
locked. Jason tells Michelle that Eckhardt will kick in the door, hes in a rush.
This isnt really a conflict, a locked door is just an obstacle not determined resistance. Michelle thinks that if Jason cant kick it in, he will have to take a longer
time trying to pick the lock and the owner might return, so the outcome will be
interesting one way or the other. Its just a cheap apartment door, so Michelle
sets the difficulty at 5, requiring a bit of fitness or skill. Jasons character uses his
Force (1) and his Government Agent aptitude (2) on the grounds that government agents often kick in doors. The total is 3, which is insufficient to break
the door in. Michelle says, Youre an old man, and just not able to produce the
force necessary to knock it. Sal is coming back in an hour; hopefully you can
pick the lock quickly.
calling on Passions
During play, your character can call on one of her passions when performing an action. If the action has a direct and positive relationship to
your characters passion (for example, she is attempting to help a person
she loves, or to hide from something she fears), you may spend a passion
token to gain a bonus on this action equal to the value of the passion
called upon. Thus, if your character has passions valued at 1 and 4 points,
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Norin has the passion Hate 3: Ill bring down all of those hoity-toity gods. Bill
thinks this would be a good passion to call on in the current conflict. Hes trying
to turn two gods against one another, so he can use the passion on his hard sell
toward Loki for a +3 bonus. Before the reveal, Bill moves one of Norins two
passion tokens into the stack for that action:
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If you choose to call on the same passion more than once, you are required
to permanently increase the passions value by one. Your characters passions must always total 5, so you must choose a different passion to reduce
in value whenever one of your passions increases in value. This does not
change the number of tokens available for the current session, but if a passion is reduced to zero in this way, it could change the number of passion
tokens available for the next session. You immediately gain the benefit of
the new higher value for your passion and can apply this higher value to
your current action.
The conflict between Norin and the gods moves into a second round. Bill again
decides to call on Norins passion of hatred for the gods. He uses Norins second
passion token to call on the passion for another action. Norin no longer has any
passion tokens after this, and will not be able to call on his passions for the rest
of the session.
Because this is the second time in the same session Bill has called on this
passion, Norins hate increases to a value of 4. Since all of the passions
must total five, Norins only other passion decreases to a value of 1. Norin
immediately gains the benefit, and may add a bonus of +4 to his action that
calls on the passion.
Opposing a Passion
If your characters action directly opposes one of her passions (she is trying
to face the object of her fear, or betray someone she loves), she must commit an extra action token just to perform the action. The GM can ask that
you do this a number of times per session equal to your characters passion
value (up to four times for a feverish passion, or two times for a profound
passion, etc.).
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Passions in Play
The higher ranked the passion, the more likely it is that some conflict
involving it is going to occur. Characters with a one-point passion will end
up involved in a conflict because of it on occasion, and characters with
five points in a passion are unlikely to take any actions that do not directly
relate to the passion. This may seem strange, since the higher the passion,
the fewer passion tokens a character has. This just means you will be unable
to mechanically invoke the passion. Passions should be used to guide how
you portray your characters feelings throughout the game, even when the
tokens are not used.
Passions are not static. They will rise and fall depending on how they are
used and what is important to the character at the time. In short, passions
are meant to reflect what the character feels right now.
New passions can be added to your character if some event has taken place
during play that you believe will change your characters passions. If you
wish to add a new passion to your character, and the GM and the other
players approve, you must spend a passion token and add the new passion
to your sheet. Since characters may never have more than 5 points in passions at any time, you must reduce one of your characters other passions
when adding a new one, to keep the total at five. This is the only way you
may add a new passion to your character outside of conflict.
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Again, characters may only have five points of passions. Any change that
adds a new 1-point passion, or causes a passion to go up by one point,
requires that the character lower another passion by one point. If the goal
was to lower a passion by one point, the character must raise another passion by one point to compensate, or add a new 1-point passion.
Pele really hates Norin, and she wants her fellow gods to see things her way. She
gets in a conflict with Pluto over the dwarf, and states that her goal is to get
Pluto to hate Norin as well. She achieves her goal with a lengthy jeremiad on
Norins many crimes, and Pluto finds himself hating Norin as well. He adds a
new Hate 1: Im going to get rid of that bastard Norin to his sheet. He reduces
his Love 2: Still in love with Proserpine by one, making it a rank-1 passion.
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Item Effects
Some items will add to your characters ability to succeed in actions. These
bonuses are added to your characters faculty plus aptitude total to determine the success or failure of an action. When using the item, your character will gain a bonus based on how relevant the item is to the conflict in
which it is being used. Like other judgment calls of this nature, the players
and the GM should discuss whether there is any disagreement. The GM
has the final say, but this is subject to the threshold of credibility.
Items that are used for the precise purpose for which they were designed
give your character a +2 bonus to the action using the item. Items that
were not designed for the use to which they are put, but could be used
for the action without any awkward problems, give your character a +1.
These bonuses are determined on a case-by-case basis, according to the best
judgment of the GM and players involved.
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Other circumstances can affect item use. For example, firing a handgun
beyond about 30 feet could be considered to reduce the bonus, and if the
shooter, the target, or both are moving, the bonus could also be reduced.
Jasons character, Eckhardt, draws his gun on the gunman and the snitch in an
effort to intimidate them. The group agrees that this is one of the precise purposes
for which a handgun was designed, so Jason gets to add a +2 to his action.
In a bar brawl, Pele picks up a barstool and bashes it over Norins head. This
is not really what a barstool was designed for, but it will certainly serve this
purpose. Pele gains a +1 in her action.
action resolution
After the reveal, and after actions have been matched against one another
by the GM, its time to determine who is successful. To determine success, you compare your characters combined faculty and aptitude total
plus adjustments from tokens against your opponents total. If your total
is greater, your character succeeds. If your total is less, your character fails.
If both totals are equal, both characters achieve either a costly or a partial
success. The difference between your characters total and your opponents
total determines the degree of success or failure as detailed below.
1 or 2: Near Success. Your character fails this time, but sees how she
could succeed with another attempt. Whether she has the opportunity
and tokens for another attempt is a different issue.
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+1 or +2: Success. Your character succeeds, albeit not in any spectacular fashion. The task is done.
After Bill decides how the actions match up, Erics character, Loki, ends up
defending himself against two other ageless beings, both trying to get him to
turn on the other.
Eric adds up the result of his action: Will (2) plus Stubborn Cuss (3) plus 6
action tokens. His result is 11.
Bill determines the outcome of Norins attack: Wits (5) plus Slick Salesman (4)
plus 3 action tokens. His result is 12.
Comparing the two, Bill sees that Norin has succeeded against Eric. He only got
+1 against Erics total, the result is a simple success. Bill describes how Norin
begins putting the hard sell on Loki, gradually convincing him that he should
be rude to Pele.
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Desperate Reactions
Sometimes, a character will take an action his opponent has not anticipated, and the defending character will have no action set as a defense. This
is exceptionally bad for the defending character. The attacking character
must only overcome the defending characters faculty to succeed, rather
than faculty plus aptitude plus action tokens. This is called passive defense.
There is an option if you really need to defend your character in this situation. You may reallocate your tokens to give your character a defense against
this unexpected assault. If you commit two additional action tokens from
your action pool, you may add one of your characters aptitudes in defense.
If your action pool is empty, you may pull an action token already allocated
to another action. However, you may not commit any additional action
tokens to also add extra effort to your defense.
If you really need those extra action tokens, you can spend one action
token as fatigue to add in your characters aptitude and also commit as
many additional action tokens as needed to your characters defense.
Jasons character, Eckhardt, is confronting a gunman and a snitch. Jason committed to two actions: an intimidation against the gunman, and dodging
behind the desk for defense. The gunman, however, is not making a physical
assault. He doesnt even pull his gun. Instead, he opts to threaten Eckhardt, an
intimidation action. Jason didnt anticipate a social attack, so he has no action
tokens committed to stop the gunman. The gunman uses his Will faculty (2)
and his Cold-Eyed Killer aptitude (4) along with his four committed tokens to
stare the older man down, but Jasons character may only use his Wits faculty to
resist, since he has no reaction allocated and Will is already being used in the
intimidation action. The gunmans total is 10 (Will 2 plus Cold-Eyed Killer
4 plus 4 action token) and Jasons is 4 (Wits 4). This is a really bad result for
Jason. The gunman could break him with this result, a +6, a spectacular success.
To avoid this, Jason decides on a desperate reaction. Jason commits two action
tokens in defense, pulling the last one from his pool and the other from his other
defensive action. His character may now also use his Cynic aptitude to brush off
the intimidation. He adds his Cynic (2) into the mix. His Wits plus Cynic is
still only 6, so he still fails, but this is a less devastating defeat. The gunman has
a complete success (+4) rather than a spectacular success.
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Jason decides this still isnt enough. He takes one of the action tokens from the
defensive action and spends it:
He can now commit extra action tokens to his defense. He pulls all of the tokens
from his physical dodge and puts them in Wits, raising the total number of
action tokens to five. Jasons total for the action is now 11, and he can resist the
gunmans intimidation.
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Harm
Some conflicts will cause mental or physical damage to your character if
she fails. In other conflicts, her goal may be to cause harm to another character. Physical conflict can result in harm to the character, but characters
suffer harm from mental assaults as well, which cause them to be shaken,
demoralized, or suffer a complete breakdown.
The degree of success or failure in the conflict in question should be the
primary guide to the level of harm caused or suffered. The players and the
GM should decide together which possible harm result makes the most
sense based on the current action, keeping in mind the goals set for the
conflict. The GM generally has the final say, subject to the threshold of
credibility.
Abject failure (5 or more) can result in serious wounds, maiming, or
even death for the character harmed.
Complete failure (3 or 4) generally means a light or serious wound,
but could possibly result in maiming if the consequences of failure are
high enough.
Near success or qualified success (0, 1, or 2) generally indicates a
scratch or light wound.
You must consider character death very carefully before choosing that result. As in popular fiction, an important character in Mortal Coil does not
die unless it serves the story. Characters can die to establish whats worth
dying for, to escalate the conflict, or to make a final statement. Both player
characters and supporting characters serve these purposes when they die.
A supporting character will sometimes be killed by a player character, and
in this case, the player is the one shaping the story with this death. When
player characters die, this is generally decided by both the player and the
GM together.
The gunman in the earlier example would have soundly beaten Jasons character
if Jason had not spent action tokens to reallocate. At a -6, the damage would
have resulted in serious mental harm. His character might have been anguished
or even broken (see below).
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Harm Effects
Your character may suffer damage effects multiple times, but only the effect
for the specific level of harm is suffered each time. The effects can be suffered an unlimited number of times. For example, if your character suffers
a light wound result twice, you must spend two action tokens, one for each
light wound.
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Maimed/Broken: Your character must reduce one of his faculties permanently by one because of the injury. Your character must do this
every time he is maimed or mentally broken. This is permanent harm;
points lost in this way are not recoverable unless they are bought back
with power tokens (see page 105).
Pluto has convinced Proserpine to come see him in an attempt to win her back.
He fails terribly while talking to her, losing by 6 points. Proserpine lets loose on
him with her true opinion, that he is a vile, insensitive, worthless loser, and she
stalks off. Russell decides that Proserpines words have broken Plutos spirit. He
reduces his Will faculty by one, permanently.
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Killed: Your character is dead. This result can come about in a nonphysical conflict as well, but in such a case your character will usually
have been driven to suicide. Note that immortal characters cannot be
killed under ordinary circumstances. For these characters, the maximum result is typically maimed.
Pele has finally had it with Norin. His latest prank has cost her a close friend,
and she grips him around the neck to choke the life out of him. She gets a
spectacular success on the action, beating him by 7 points. Kat tells Bill that
Pele really wants to kill him. So, in front of his dwarf cohort and her fellow
gods, she snaps his neck.
fatigue
All sorts of activities, whether mental or physical, cause people to become
tired. Fatigue reflects a combination of factors: mental fatigue, physical
exhaustion, emotional shock, the aftereffects of adrenaline, strain from
overextending oneself, etc.
As noted previously, if you reallocate one or more tokens during a conflict
round, you suffer fatigue, and one reallocated token must be spent. If you
use an action token performing an action outside of conflict, the action
token is also spent.
Also, your character becomes fatigued if you commit all of your characters
available pool of action tokens at once. Committing all of your tokens in
this fashion is called going all in. After the conflict is complete, one of
the action tokens committed is spent; the rest are brought back into the
available pool as normal.
As you might have already realized, you can allocate all but one of your
action tokens in a conflict round with no penalty. Most players will allocate
all but one action token in every conflict round. This is appropriate, and is
good strategic play.
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Action tokens spent due to harm may not be recovered by rest, but must be
regained in the way specified by the particular type of harm.
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Basic Actions
All actions in a round take place at roughly the same time.
Your characters actions should be aimed at achieving your goal.
Actions outside conflict compare faculty plus aptitude against these
difficulties:
3: Routine.
4: Easy.
5: Harder.
6: Difficult.
7: Challenging.
8: Knotty problem.
9: Not for the faint-hearted.
10: Near the limit.
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conflict
Calling on Passions
Players may call on a passion in a conflict by spending a passion token.
Passions give a bonus equal to the passion rank.
Each action can be influenced by only one passion.
If a character goes against a passion, he must spend an extra action token
just to perform the action.
If a passion is used more than once in a session, it must increase in rank by
one point. Another passion must be reduced by one.
To add a new passion, spend a passion token and note a new 1-point
passion on the sheet. Another passion must be reduced by one to add the
new passion.
Passions can be raised or lowered one point or a new 1-point passion can
be added as the goal of a conflict.
Characters recover all passion tokens between sessions.
Item Effects
Items grant a bonus when used for an action:
+2 if used on the specific task for which it was designed.
+1 if used on a task it was not designed for, but that it could still
serve to perform.
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Desperate Reactions
If an action is unopposed, the defender may only use passive defense.
Passive defense is equal to the defending characters faculty alone.
Committing two action tokens allows a character to add an aptitude to
passive defense.
Spending one action token allows a character to use a regular action instead
of passive defense.
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conflict
Fatigue
Going all-in and committing all action tokens causes one of the tokens
to be spent.
Action tokens spent due to fatigue may be recovered by rest.
Harm
Harm can be suffered by the loser of a conflict. Degree of success or failure
determines level of harm:
Abject Failure: serious wounds, maiming, or even death.
Complete Failure: light or serious wounds, possibly maiming.
Near success or qualified success: scratch or light wound. Types of harm
and their effects:
Scratched/Shaken: immediately spend an action token. Additional
scratches after the first do not force the character to spend an additional token.
Lightly Wounded/Demoralized: immediately spend an action
token.
Seriously Wounded/Anguished: immediately spend two action
tokens.
Maimed/Broken: permanently reduce a faculty by one.
Killed: the character is dead.
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CHAPTER SIX
Power tokens are special tokens that can be used to get a little something
extra in various circumstances during game play. They can also be used to
add new details to your character, take brief authorial control of the game
and bring in the elements you desire to a scene, or even raise your magic
token total.
a pool to your actions in a conflict. Even if you have only six action tokens normally, by adding power tokens in conflict you could end up with
eight, ten, or even more equivalent action tokens for the conflict round.
Of course, all power tokens used are sacrificed and have no effect on your
normal action pool.
Unlike standard action tokens, power tokens may be sacrificed for use as
action tokens after an action is revealed in order to change the outcome of a
conflict. When used in this way, the changed outcome should be described
in a way that incorporates chance. The power token represents luck when
used like this, and the result of the action will reflect some lucky break that
your character has had thanks to the expenditure.
Erics character Loki is trying to resist the slick words of Norin, but ends up with
a total of 11 against Norins 12 after the reveal. Eric really doesnt want to lose
this contest, so he decides to sacrifice 2 power tokens to raise his total to 13 and
gain success for the action.
Jason wants his character to use his magical jewelers loupe. He is running low
on magic tokens, so he decides to sacrifice a power token instead of spending a
magic token.
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To Change a Character
Power tokens can be sacrificed to change your characters faculties or aptitudes. These are permanent adjustments to your character and can be made
at any time, subject to the threshold of credibility.
Aptitudes may be permanently raised one point by sacrificing a number of
power tokens equal to the new aptitude level. Aptitudes can be raised to a
maximum score of five. Characters may never have more than 15 points
of aptitudes. If you wish to raise a characters aptitude and the character
already has 15 points of aptitudes, you must lower another aptitude by
one to do so. Raising the aptitude still costs the normal amount of power
tokens. Aptitudes may be improved any number of times, limited only by
the maximum rank, total points, and available power tokens.
Faculties may be permanently raised one point by sacrificing five power
tokens. Faculties can be raised to a maximum score of five. Changes to faculties are restricted depending on the starting power level of the character.
Novices may change each of their four faculties only once. Veterans may
change only three faculties during the course of a game. Ancient characters
may only change one faculty, and ageless characters may not change their
faculties at all. Generally, such a use of a power token should represent
some fundamental change to your character that has occurred in the course
of a scene or several scenes.
The only exception to the rule governing faculty increases is when your
character has suffered maimed or broken harm. In this case, you can spend
five power tokens to restore the affected faculty to its previous level, even if
the rules would normally prevent this.
Jasons character, Eckhardt, has been helping Kristas character, Lucy, during
the course of the session. Jason thinks Eckhardt should be learning more about
training and inspiring another person, so he sacrifices two power tokens to raise
his Mentor aptitude from 1 to 2.
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Erics character Loki is ageless and started with 15 points of aptitudes. After all
the brawling thats been going on at the bar, Eric decides Loki is learning how
to fight. He sacrifices a power token to create a new aptitude, Barroom Brawler
at 1. Since he already had the maximum number of aptitudes, he reduces one
of his other aptitudes, Shape Shifter, from 4 to 3.
Low Magic: Sacrificing four power tokens earns you one additional
magic token.
High Magic: You can convert power tokens into magic tokens on a
one-for-one basis.
The GM gains one or more new magic tokens whenever a player purchases
one. In low-to medium-magic settings, the GM only gets one additional
magic token when a player purchases one. If the players have chosen the
high magic setting, the GM gets two additional magic tokens whenever a
player purchases one.
Krista has sacrificed most of her starting pool of magic tokens. She decides she is
running too low on magic tokens, and sacrifices three power tokens she has saved
to gain a new one. Since this is a moderate-level magic game, the GM gains an
additional magic token as well.
In a scene in a bar, one of Bills supporting characters has opened fire with his
gun. Russell thinks this is going to attract the wrong kind of attention, and
sacrifices a power token, announcing that the gunfire has been reported and the
police are on their way.
Eckhardt is confronting the gunman and the snitch in an office. As the characters banter, Krista decides that Eckhardt will need some backup. She sacrifices a
power token and says, As they talk, Lucy comes down the hall outside. Hearing
the voices, she moves quietly up until she is outside the door and listens.
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To Set Scenes
Normally, the GM sets every scene by describing the time and place and
deciding which characters are present. As a player, you can sacrifice a power
token to take on this role. If you sacrifice one power token, you gain the
privilege to set the next scene. You determine where it takes place and who
is there. The GM then assumes her normal role, and you play through the
scene as usual.
The same rules apply to you as to the GM. You must have the agreement
of the group when you set the scene, because this power is subject to the
threshold of credibility.
After a massive fight in the bar, Bill thinks about what scene to set next. He
doesnt have to make a decision because Eric sacrifices a power token and sets the
next scene: In the dim halls of the dwarfs, Loki appears, walking down toward
the empty throne where Norin used to sit. From the shadowed recesses, the forms
of hundreds of svartalfar emerge, armed and grumbling.
In the old gods game, there are four players plus Bill, the GM. All four players
have ageless characters. Bill starts with one power token for each player including himself, plus one token for each ageless character, giving him a total of 9
power tokens.
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Jason invokes Eckhardts passion for keeping people safe and pulls a mine worker
safely out of a collapsing tunnel. Krista suggests he get a power token for this,
and everyone agrees. He takes a token from the award pool and adds it to
his own.
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Changing a Character
Aptitudes may be raised by one point by sacrificing power tokens equal to
the new aptitude level.
Aptitudes may be raised to a maximum score of five.
Aptitudes may be improved any number of times, but a character may
never have more than 15 points of aptitudes.
Faculties may be raised by one point by sacrificing 5 power tokens.
Faculties may be raised to a maximum score of five.
Changes to faculties depend on starting character level:
Novice: may raise each of the four faculties by one.
Veteran: may raise up to three faculties by one.
Ancient: may raise one faculty by one.
Ageless: may not change faculties.
When a character has suffered maimed or broken harm, the player
may spend power tokens to restore the faculty, regardless of the
above restrictions.
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power
Gaining New Magic Tokens
New magic tokens must be bought with power tokens:
Low Magic: 1 magic token = 4 power tokens.
Moderate Magic: 1 magic token = 2 or 3 power tokens.
High Magic: 1 magic token = 1 power token.
The GM gains a new magic token whenever a player purchases one. In a
high magic setting, the GM gains 2 each time a player purchases one.
Scene Power
A power token can be sacrificed to add a nonmagical fact to the game
world.
A player can bring any character or supporting character into a scene by
sacrificing a power token.
A player can buy the right to set the next scene by sacrificing a power token.
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CHAPTER SEVEN
Youve now read the rules, but now we should discuss how to effectively use
them. There are a lot of tricks that can make your Mortal Coil game better.
This section is aimed at players controlling characters. The GM player gets
her own chapter, which you can find right after this one.
You also have power tokens. These give you a strong influence on the direction of the game. You can use power tokens to set scenes, bring your
character or another character into a scene, or even add details to the game
world. Use these to move play in an interesting direction and to help the
other players do the same.
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Conflicting Passions
Passions can also be used to create great story tension. When two passions
oppose one another it leads to conflicts that test them against one another.
Basing passions on the central conflicts laid out in the theme document
will bring these themes into stark relief during play. Passions might conflict
between two characters, in which case the issue will likely be hashed out
between the two characters by way of arguments or even full-on conflict.
Until one or the other character changes a passion, the tension will remain
and continue to come up and drive story.
Another really interesting way to use passions is to create conflicting passions right on your own sheet. Characters can feel conflicted, and having
two passions that are mutually incompatible means that your character
cant make up his mind. A character might hate his ex for leaving him,
and at the same time still love her. This makes for really interesting choices
during play. While in conflicts you can call on one or the other of the
conflicting passions, indicating which rules the character at the moment.
You can play out this conflict as long as you like, and you may find that
the character begins to resolve the conflict as you go. If you use one of the
passions more often than the other, that passion will begin to gain the upper hand and eventually rise at the expense of the other passion, resolving
the conflict.
Creating Facts
As a player in Mortal Coil, you have the ability to add things to the game
setting through your magic and power tokens. This gives you a lot of power
normally reserved for the GM. You can use this ability to really shape the
game setting and the events in the story. This is restricted by the consent of
the other players, of course, and they all have similar power, but you can
nudge things in the direction you are interested in seeing things go using
these tokens.
When the theme document was created, there were probably things that
inspired you, and when you built your character, you were thinking about
direction the magical setting could go. Your magic tokens are there to allow you to continue the creation process through play. You should use the
magic tokens to add abilities and powers that help your character, but also
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think about how these new facts build on what has been laid down already.
Use your ability to create facts to add detail to the setting that is interesting
to you. Build up the world with your contributions and shape and define
the setting as you play. With everyone at the table doing this, your group
will create a really interesting world and you will probably be surprised at
the result.
Dont forget that you can create any magical fact you want with your tokens. You dont have to restrict yourself to things that your own character
can do. You can sacrifice tokens to change the powers of creatures the GM
introduced. You can add restrictions to the powers of vampires, for example, such as stopping them from entering a house uninvited or crossing
running water. This is a powerful tool, and you should not hesitate to use
it during play.
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Techniques in conflicts
The conflict system is probably the trickiest part of a game of Mortal Coil.
There are ways to make conflicts better. As a player, you can use some of
these ideas to spice up the conflicts and make sure you get what you want
out of the system.
Side Bets
A conflict begins and everyone states their goal. You and the rest of the
players begin to make bids with action tokens to reach their goal. As you
do this, you can take smaller actions that go a bit to the side of your original
goal as well. Perhaps you want to make sure that your characters son gets
out of a situation safely. Most of your effort will be devoted to making sure
that happens, but maybe youd also like to make sure your ex-boyfriend
looks bad in the process. This is a side bet: You are taking an action to pursue a minor goal in addition to the major stated goal. This is an appropriate
use of your resources and can make conflicts very interesting.
Pursuing a secondary goal on the side is fine. Just make sure you dont state
a conflict goal in order to fake the other players out. The goal you set up
at first should be your main priority. Other players can definitely call you
on it if you state a conflict goal and then pursue something else entirely,
ignoring the main goal.
The danger with side bets is they use some of your resources. You risk failing
in your main actions, but there are often several other things your character
might want out of a conflict in addition to her stated goal. Consider what
will make the conflict more dramatic and interesting for the whole group.
If a side bet fills that description, think about throwing one in.
Eckhardt is facing down the gunman and the snitch. Jason wants to keep the
gunman from harming Eckhardt; thats his primary goal. He allocates one
action to intimidate the gunman, and another to dodge behind a table to defend himself should the gunman open fire. Jason also wants to turn the snitch
against his boss, and so he lays down another action to convince the snitch to
switch sides. This last action is a side bet, unrelated to the main goal of saving
Eckhardts skin.
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Kat wants to put the fear of Pele into Norin. When Norin provokes a bar brawl,
Kat states her goal to add Fear: Pele is going to kill me to Norins character
sheet. Bill thinks this is an appropriate goal, and the conflict begins. Pele wins
the conflict, and Bill adds the 1-point Fear to Norins sheet.
Force: Its pretty easy to think of aggressive actions you can use with
Force. Hitting people, grappling them, throwing them, pushing them,
or grabbing things away are all great offensive uses of Force. For defense, consider that Force represents a characters size and physical
toughness, as well as endurance. You can use Force to just take a hit
and shake it off, or tire an enemy out.
Pluto and Jupiter are in a conflict and Bill anticipates a physical assault. He has
Jupiter use his Force to defend, allocating tokens to absorb a hit and not flinch.
Grace: Grace can be used defensively to dodge, outrun, or outmaneuver an opponent. You can also use your balance and agility to move
places another character cant follow. For offensive uses, Grace can be
a way to beat an opponent with speed or accuracy of attack, or to
move so quickly and decisively your opponent doesnt have a chance
to react. Grace can even seduce another character with your physical
movements.
Loki uses his Grace in a conflict with Pele. He knows shes a better fighter, so he
uses a Grace action to sweep her feet out from under her when she goes in for
the attack.
Will: Will has some obvious defense capabilities. Will can be used to
resist persuasion through stubbornness, or fend off mental assaults.
Will can even be used to resist physical assault just by powering
through the pain. For offensive action, Will can be used to intimidate
or dominate another character, or to simply browbeat someone into
giving up. Will sometimes powers magical effects as well.
Eckhardt doesnt have very good physical stats, so Jason decides to use his Will
to defend against the gunmans shot. Eckhardt isnt going to try to get out of the
way, but just power through the pain and damage anyway.
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Wits: Cleverness is a great offense and defense. Wits can be used defensively to outthink an opponent, to anticipate his moves and counter
them, or to turn an opponents argument against him. Using Wits as
an offence allows you to dazzle an opponent with a blizzard of words,
to devise a clever stratagem that your opponent doesnt anticipate, or
just speak so sincerely and effectively you sway someone to your cause.
Loki is a tricky opponent, and decides that he will use his Wits to his advantage
in a fight. His action is to defend himself and retreat, until his opponent is over
a puddle of spilled beer, and then make an assault, forcing Norin to slip.
The gunman has cornered Kristas character Lucy, and he is just going to try to
scare her as an attack. Knowing that the gunman has a lot of ability in this
area, Krista decides to shake things up. She adds a mental defense against the
gunmans intimidation, but also adds an attack action to kick the guy in the
nuts. The gunman had a mental defense in place, but Bill didnt anticipate the
physical assault, leaving him basically defenseless against that action.
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Techniques in Conflicts
Make the occasional side bet in a conflict to make things interesting.
You can change a passion as a conflict goal. This is a powerful effect.
Use each faculty for both attack and defense.
To win conflicts, do the unexpected.
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CHAPTER EIGHT
One player in Mortal Coil has a special role. This player is called the Game
Moderator, or GM. As GM, you have the responsibility to look at the big
picture while playing. Each of the other players will concentrate mostly on
their own characters, but the GM looks at the rest of the world and the
other supporting characters that will take part in the story. The GM is also
the arbitrator between the system and the players, and has a responsibility
for making things run smoothly in the game.
The GM also helps the players set the scene, presents challenges to the
players, and helps them bring the passions and issues of their characters
into play in order to drive the human elements of the story forward. This
is a big responsibility, but the GM is not responsible for doing all of this
alone. The other players should help the GM by making suggestions, initiating conflicts, and making sure that the issues they want to address are
brought to the attention of the other players.
As GM, you truly are a moderator. You have the power to organize what
could be a very chaotic situation by announcing which scenes and characters are the current focuses of play, especially if it seems as if the group
is getting off track. To do this, you must listen to your players. The most
important things to these characters are their passions, which are prominently listed right on the character sheets. The passions generally indicate
where a player is interested in taking his character. Only rarely should you
try to introduce or push anything that doesnt relate in some way to at least
one of the player characters passions.
The players have several ways of signaling what they are interested in
without talking about it outside play. These include passions, the theme
document, and also their use of power tokens. See what sort of scenes players call for with power tokens, and incorporate the characters and details
they introduce with power tokens. This is direct method for players to add
things to a scene, and when they use it, as GM you should run with it.
Jasons character Eckhardt has a passion Duty: I will keep these people safe.
Looking at the passion, its pretty clear to Michelle that Jason is interested in
Eckhardt acting as a hero and saving people from supernatural threats. She
sets a scene out by a campground. Some local campers are being threatened by
a recently awakened vampire, and Eckhardt and Lucy arrive on the scene as a
swarm of rattlesnakes crawl into the camp.
Krista sacrifices a magic token to create a new fact: Magicians can control
supernatural beings. So far, Michelle has introduced a vampire and a colossal
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snake to the game. She knows that Krista is definitely interested in seeing some
magician as the responsible party for this supernatural threat, and she adds a
magician as a supporting character to her roster.
Scene framing
Setting a scene and knowing when to end a scene are perhaps the most
important skills a GM can learn in Mortal Coil. Starting scenes and ending
scenes strongly influences the pace of play. The GM is mostly responsible
for keeping an eye on this process, but all of the players also need to take
an active role in this.
All scenes have one of two purposes. A scene can bring out one or more
conflicts, or a scene can show some key information that is relevant to the
characters and the overall story. Sometimes, it can do both. Set up the
scenes to move action forward, and push the groups collective story. Dont
focus too much on the little detailsget right to the juicy bits. If the scene
starts to drag, either move to resolution or conflict, or else end the scene
and move on to the next one.
Encourage the players to speak up if there is something they want to resolve in a scene before it is closed. Remember, the players are responsible
for moving the action forward as well.
When you are running out of ideas, talk to the players. Have them give
suggestions on a new scene. Many times, players will have something they
want to do, and getting feedback from them can help you get things moving again. Encourage a dialog with the players about scenes and character
intentions. Since Mortal Coil is a character-based story, learning what the
players are interested in next will help you keep things on track.
The scene is a bar, and Russells character, the Roman god Pluto, has just gotten
the better of his rival Jupiter in a tense conflict. Pluto and his friend have managed to get Jupiter so drunk he passes out at the back of the bar. Conflict over,
the players congratulate each other. Bill, the GM, now immediately sets a new
scene to move the action along: OK. The next day, Pluto is in his office, and the
door slams open. Stepping inside is none other than Jupiter, and he looks angry.
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Eckhardt is facing down a massive rattlesnake in a warehouse. The night watchman is gripped within its coils, paralyzed by fear. Eckhardt has the passion
Duty: I have to keep these people safe and Jason begins to think about what
actions he will take to rescue the watchman. Just then, Michelle tells Krista, As
you creep along the catwalk above, you see Eckhardt confronting the snake. A
dark figure is up on the catwalk with you, seeming to control the serpent. At
that moment, he notices you and turns his attention to you. Eckhardt also has
the passion Fear: Lucy will get killed. Jason now has to decide which passion
to pursue. Follow his Duty and rescue the watchman, or follow his Fear and
try to protect Lucy.
adjudicating conflict
An essential task for the GM is helping everyone make sense of conflict.
The blind bidding system used in Mortal Coil can be confusing, and it is
not always obvious what should happen when the bids are revealed. Thats
where you come in. As the GM, one of your most important tasks is guiding the conflict toward resolving goals so that it can end and the scene
can move on. There are a few simple things to keep in mind to make the
conflicts work really well.
you choose actions for the supporting character, and gives the supporting
character an understandable motivation. Announce the supporting characters goals to the group at the beginning of the conflict right along with the
players. This way, players will have a better chance of anticipating the supporting characters actions and attempting to either counter or assist them.
Make sure you note down these goals for your own reference, especially if
you have several supporting characters involved in the scene.
Sometimes you will have a conflict with a villain along with a group of
henchmen or other backup characters for the villain. In this situation, its
probably best for the henchmen not to have goals of their own, or have
the goal help the boss. A bunch of minor-league guys dont all need their
own goal and it can get really confusing if you have a gang of six thugs,
each trying to pursue a separate goal.
In the old gods game, Norin is the main antagonist. He hates the gods, and
thus hates the bar where they meet. Bill decides that Norins overall agenda is to
destroy the bar. He can take actions to do this physically, by having his people
undermine it, and also psychologically, by stirring conflicts between the gods and
getting them to fight.
Some actions, if successful, will mean that other actions cannot take place.
If this is the case, these actions are by necessity opposed to the actions they
block. The reason this is stated separately here is that these consequences
are not always obvious. One character is about to attack another character,
for example, and the second character has a Will action allocated to attempt to stare down the first. These may not seem opposed at first, but if
the second character is successful, the consequence of success will be that
the first character is intimidated and unable to attack. That means these
actions are opposed, and the intimidate action is the defense. Make sure
you think briefly about the consequences of success for each action on the
table and oppose them to the actions they will block.
Pele has two action allocated: to grapple Norin and get him in a headlock, and
to fend off any blows that Norin tries to throw. Norin has two actions as well: to
duck out of Peles reach, and to taunt all of the other gods about their cowardice
and get them to join in the conflict. Bill matches Peles grapple against Norins
duck, an obvious pair-up. Norins other action is aimed outside the conflict
at the other gods present, and since he is trying to get them to participate, this
will affect the ultimate outcome of the conflict. Bill allows the grapple to be
resolved first, since that has no effect on Norins second action, then opposes
Norin against the other gods.
Shaking Things Up
Sometimes players will start to get a bit complacent. Stacking all of your
tokens in a single action can sometimes be a winning strategy, but it rapidly
gets boring. Games are more fun if there isnt a surefire win condition.
One way to combat this as a GM is to be a bit tricky with your supporting
character bids in conflicts. Think about different ways that a supporting
character could reach his goal. Sometimes, you can make a physical combat move in a conflict a player considers mental. Youve got a really good
chance of having your action go up against no defense, which is very bad
for the defender and forces him to switch tokens for a loss. By the same
token, sometimes you can make mental actions in a conflict a player may
consider physical. Do the unexpected, try to keep the players on their toes.
Its always better to have an action going up against no defense. When you
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have even one token for defense you are considerably better off. Make the
players hedge their bets and avoid putting all their tokens in one basket.
Players in a Rut
As we mentioned above, dont let players use the same strategy over and
over. Players will often drive directly toward what their character is good
at, time after time. If they do this, you should present conflicts that can
only be won if they use nonoptimal abilities. If a player has built a scrapper,
take him to court. His fighting ability wont help much if hell just get sent
back to jail for using it. If a player has a trickster, use a strong-willed villain
to take him on with physical force. A combination of mental defense and
excellent physical attack power will keep the player on his toes.
Dont use these techniques to just punish a player, however. The goal of the
game is to be fun and interesting. Move the conflict to an area where the
character isnt the best in order to keep the game dramatic and exciting,
and to make the player think hard about how to win.
Kat almost always tries to use Force to win conflicts, since that is her characters
strongest faculty. Bill uses his supporting character, Sesmu, the owner of the
bard, to start a conflict with Pele. He is angry that she keeps smashing the place
up and he wants to ban her from the bar. Kat now has to think of what other
resources she can use in this conflict, since Force is unlikely to help. If she attacks
or threatens Sesmu with force, it just makes him more likely to throw her out.
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Kat has created the fact that Volcano Goddesses are unaffected by heat. Later,
the dwarfs have crafted a special weapon for use against Pele in revenge for the
death of their king. Bill sacrifices a magic token to create the fact that the dwarfs
can create a magical fire that will burn even volcano goddesses. The players get
to set the price, some instance where the fact will not apply, but this fact is added
to the theme document.
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Eckhardt is confronting the main villain in his game, and in the first round
of conflict has pretty thoroughly dominated him. Michelle is not quite ready to
have the climactic villain fold, so she uses some of her power tokens to bump
up the villains defenses and increase his offense so that Eckhardt is now on the
defensive. This moves the conflict to a second round, which suits Michelles sense
of drama much better.
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Scene Framing
Each scene should bring out one or more conflicts.
A scene can also show key information relevant to the characters or story.
Scenes should set up situations the characters cannot ignore.
Adjudicating Conflict
Set goals for supporting characters. Know their motivation.
Match actions after the reveal. This is one of the GMs most important
duties.
Try to keep things unexpected with supporting character actions. Do
things the player wont anticipate.
If players do the same thing over and over, try to break them of the habit.
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the gm
Using Magic Tokens
Give your supporting characters magical powers.
Change, limit, or modify player-introduced powers.
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appendix I
The inspiration for this game came from many sources. These all have a
common theme of magic existing as a subversive and powerful force for
transformation, which is also a central theme of Mortal Coil.
Appendix I: Inspiration
Novels, Plays & Stories
The Anubis Gates, The Drawing of the Dark, On Stranger Tides,
Earthquake Weather, and Last Call by Tim Powers
Coraline, Stardust, Neverwhere, American Gods, Anansi Boys,
and the Sandman series of graphic novels by Neil Gaiman
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke
The Dark Is Rising series by Susan Cooper
The Hellblazer graphic novels
The Dresden Files novels by Jim Butcher
His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman
The Harry Potter books by J.K. Rowling
The Spiderwick Chronicles by Holly Black
The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle
The Odyssey by Homer
The Metamorphoses by Ovid
Journey to the West by Cheng-En Wu
Hakkenden
Fairy Tales by the Brothers Grimm
Fairy Tales and Stories by Hans Christian Anderson
1001 Nights
The Tempest and A Midsummer Nights Dream
by William Shakespeare
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Inspiration
Movies & Television
The Company of Wolves
Prosperos Books
Jacobs Ladder
Spirited Away, The Cat Returns, and Princess Mononoke
Big Trouble in Little China
Jumanji and Zathura
Unbreakable
Sleepy Hollow
The X-Files
Supernatural
Pushing Daisies
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appendix II
Each of the rules in the book is accompanied by several examples, but they
are not really connected in a full conflict. To go a little further to help you
understand the conflict system, here are seven extended conflict examples.
There are a lot of different ways a conflict can fall out, and this appendix
goes through them from the simplest scenario to the most complex.
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Example conflicts
Jason: Eckhardt is a cynic, so hes pretty sure hes gonna need the gun. Im
using that, plus his will to get Lucy to step aside. Will 4 plus Cynic 2 plus
6 action tokens is 12.
Krista: Lucy is going to appeal to reason and try to talk Eckhardt out of
this. She has a Wits of 3, plus her Bureaucrat of 2, and I put up 5 action
tokens, too. My total is only 10.
Michelle: All right, that means Eckhardt is up by 2: a success. He gets to
keep the gun. Jason, how does this go down?
Jason: Eckhardt says, Get out of my way, Lucy. This guy has refused to
budge, and two people are dead because of it. Hes going to shut the mine
down once and for all. Eckhardt glares into Lucys eyes, his resolve is clear.
Krista: Eckhardt, youre going to get arrested brandishing that thing.
What if he has a gun, too? This can only end badly, you know that.
Jason: With a curt shake of his head, Eckhardt brushes past her. She knows
she cant change his mind.
Krista: Dammit!
Michelle: I think Lucys shaken by this. Spend an action token, Krista.
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Michelle: OK. Whats your goal in the conflict? The mine foreman wants
you to turn around and go back down to the office.
Jason: Im getting into that mine, and I dont have much time. I dont
want him to delay me.
Michelle: Sounds good. These are opposed goals, only one of you can
win. Lets allocate.
Michelle and Jason allocate secretly. Michelle decides the foreman is going to get
rough with this strange character. She allocates 4 action tokens for the foreman
to grab Eckhardt and give him the bums rush, using Force 3 and his aptitude
Redneck 2. Michelle figures Eckhardt might try to fight back, so she puts two
action tokens in Grace 2 to dodge, again using Redneck 2.
Jason knows the foreman probably has the edge in a physical confrontation, so
he decides to mix it up a bit. He doesnt want the foreman to get his hands on
Eckhardt, so he allocates 3 tokens to defense, with Grace 2 and Government
Agent 2. He then allocates another 3 to Will 4 and Government Agent 2, to
show the foreman his gun and intimidate him into letting Eckhardt pass.
Michelle: Ready?
Jason: Ready. Lets reveal.
Michelle: The foreman is going to grab ahold of you, and give you the
bums rush out of here. I dont think you heard me, buddy. This mine is
off-limits! Thats the Force action. The Grace action is to defend against
you fighting back.
Jason: Good thing Im not fighting back, then. My Grace action here is to
resist any physical assault, and the Will action is to show the guy my gun
and get him to back down.
Michelle: Nice! I didnt see that coming. Lets resolve. Your Grace is
definitely opposing the foremans Force. Ive got a total of 9: 4 action tokens plus Force 3 plus Redneck 2. I figure as a redneck, he knows how to
throw down.
Jason: All right, thats fair. Im using my Grace to resist, and I figure Ive
gotten in a few scraps as an agent. So, my total to resist is 7: 3 action
tokens, plus Grace 2 and Government Agent 2.
142
144
Michelle: Cool. Lets start with Lucy, since shes helping and the outcome
of her action will affect your totals, Jason.
Krista: I didnt really have an aptitude that applied, so Im just using
Grace. I put six action tokens in it, though, so that plus Grace 3 equals 9.
Michelle: Youre trying to stop him from grabbing, and since you arent
using an aptitude at all, he definitely gets the +2 bonus for having a more
applicable aptitude. His Force is only 2, and his Dirty Fighter is also 2, and
he had two action tokens in there for a total of 6, plus 2 due to his aptitude
being more appropriate, thats 8. Even with the disadvantage of having no
aptitude you get a success. Eckhardt gets a +2 against Sals grab action.
Krista: Good.
Michelle: OK, Eckhardt. Lets resolve the grab. Sal had a total of 6
against you.
Jason: Eckhardts Grace is 2 and Government Agent is 2 and I put in two
action tokens. Thats 8, with Kristas +2.
Michelle: You beat him by 2, a complete success. Sal sidled forward and
lunged at you, reaching for the envelope. You jerk your hand away, just
as Lucy sticks her foot out to trip him, and he stumbles and misses the
envelope. Seeing where this is going, he turns to flee. This is where we
resolve your grab and his running action.
Jason: My Force is 1, and Government Agent again at 2, plus two action
tokens. Thats 5 for the grab.
Michelle: Sals Grace is 3, and his Coward aptitude is 1, and he put 3
tokens in to run for it. His total is also 7. Hes going to get away.
Jason: Do I still get my Will action?
Michelle: Yep, this is all happening simultaneously. Eckhardt tries to
grab his jacket by the collar, but Sal ducks under the grab and is at the door.
Jason: I put my cop face on and shout, Sal! Who sent you, Sal! If I dont
find out, Im coming for you! My Will is 4, and Government Agent is 2,
along with two more action tokens is a total of 8.
145
146
Kat: Norins getting involved? I dont particularly care about Lokis flirting.
Peles going to try to use Lokis attraction to her advantage, and get a favor
out of him to go after Norin.
Bill: Cool. And Norins goal is to get Loki to humiliate Pele.
Eric allocates Wits and Trickster God plus two action tokens for charming jokes
directed at Pele, and Will and Stubborn Cuss plus six action tokens to resist the
influences of both his opponents.
Kat decides to use her Will plus Ruthless Brawler plus two action tokens to
intimidate Loki into joining her against Norin. For defense, she uses her Wits
plus Barfly plus five action tokens to use her drunken obtuseness to deflect any
remarks or verbal attacks.
Bill has Norin use Wits plus Slick Salesman and three action tokens to schmooze
Loki into turning on Pele, and he will use Will plus Mean Little Cuss and four
more action tokens to deflect any incoming attacks with sheer rudeness.
Bill: Are we all ready?
Kat: Yep.
Eric: Ready.
Bill: OK, lets reveal. Norin is a slick salesman, so hes going to turn his
used-car charm on Loki and sell him on joining forces against Pele. This
other action is his resistance, hes just going to use his ill temper to rebuff
any social attacks.
Eric: Lokis turning on the charm with his Wits action here, hes going to
clown a bit and ingratiate himself with Pele. The Will is to resist both Pele
and Norin.
Kat: Pele is using her Will here to browbeat Loki into going after Norin.
The Wits is to rebuff Lokis flirting with general drunken cluelessness, Ill
leave it up to you to decide if its real or feigned.
Bill: Sounds good. Loki, your defensive action is going against both Pele
and Norin, and your flirting action is going up against Peles defense. Lets
resolve the other twos attempts to sway you first.
147
Eric: Yeah, I think so. Ill smile, more to myself than anything.
Bill: Listen, pal, I can make it worth your while if you do me a little
favor. Ive got a little something, a nice Rheingold ring, see. Pele has been
seriously pissing me off. You make her look bad, and the rings yours.
Eric: Rheingold, huh? Thats pretty nice. He thinks about it, a bit too
long for Norins liking.
Bill: Lemme sweeten the deal, he says. You can commission my boys
for any one item. If you provide the materials, well provide the labor. Peles
just gotta pay, right?
Eric: Youve got a deal. Then I go back out to Pele and try to convince
her to head back to her place.
Kat: OK, Pele saw Norin go in there and shes suspicious. When Loki
comes back out, she seems less receptive to his jokes. Shes gonna let him
take her hand, and then put the squeeze on him. She hisses in his ear,
Norins a little bastard, and I saw he followed you into the can. Youre
gonna help me see that he gets his, right?
Eric: Lokis grinning through teeth gritted in pain, and hell answer,
Yeah, baby, just like you say. Hes trying to cover as she lets go, but the
relief is clear on his face. Hes starting to have some doubts about his deal
with Norin.
Bill: So you and Pele end up leaving together.
Eric: Yep, and some nasty rumors are going to start up tomorrow, definitely started by Loki.
Kat: Man, are you in trouble. Peles going to come looking for you the
next night.
149
Michelle: Ready?
Krista: Yes. I have two actions. For the first, Im going to dodge back
through the door to avoid being shot. The second action is to ambush the
gunman when he tries to follow me through.
Michelle: OK, I have a Will action here for defense against persuasion,
so thats no good against your attack. My other action is to shoot, and
that is definitely directly compared to your dodge action. Lets resolve the
shot first.
Krista: OK. My dodge is using Grace, thats 3, and Government Agent
for 2. I assume training for agents includes situations like this. I also have
one token allocated here, for a total of 6.
Michelle: The gunman has a Grace of 2 and Gunman of 4, plus three
action tokens. Thats a 9, beating you by 3. Youre going to take a serious
wound from that.
Krista: Thats OK, actually. Ill take the hit to get the drop on him. My
other action is my Wits, thats 3, plus Government Agent again, thats 2,
and 4 action tokens. Thats 9.
Michelle: What exactly are you doing as he come through the door?
Krista: Im tripping him and then knocking him on the head with my
pistol butt.
Michelle: Since he had no defense against this, he gets only passive defense. Thats just one of his faculties. Sounds like he can use his toughness
to resist, thats Force. Thats 4. Youve got him beat by 5, so if you want you
can kill or maim him.
Krista: I just want to knock him out.
Michelle: Im not so happy with how this turned out. Im going to do a
desperate reaction so you dont get such a devastating win.
Krista: Damn. It was such a good plan. At least now I wont get shot.
Michelle: He needs to commit two tokens to the defensive action in
order to add in the Gunman aptitude. Ive got one in reserve, so I have
151
to use that one, and since I dont have another held back, I can pull one
out of his other action. That puts his defense at 10: Force 4 plus Gunman
4 plus the 2 action tokens. Your ambush wont work. However, he only
beats you by one in the shooting action, so you only suffer a light wound.
Of course, now neither of you has achieved your goal, so well move on to
another round.
Krista: Not so fast. Im going to sacrifice two power tokens for my ambush action. That puts me up at 11, beating him by one. Not the total
success I was hoping for, but now I can wound him at least.
Michelle: True. And, because of his desperate reaction, hes all in. That
will make him spend two action tokens this round. You have to spend one
because of your light injury.
Krista: And now Ive got a bit of an edge.
Michelle: Yep. We do need another round, still. Although you are both
wounded, neither of you has achieved your goal.
Krista moves an action token into the spent column. She now has five total
tokens, and she decides to go all-in in an effort to end the conflict. She takes one
action to stick her gun in the gunmans back to try to force him to surrender to
her. Shes using her Will for this, plus her Government Agent. She also decides
to use her Wits and Investigator to fast talk the gunman into revealing who
his boss is. She puts two action tokens in the Wits action, and three in the Will
action. Shes not sure the intimidate will be enough, so she decides to call on one
of her passions as well. She puts a passion token on the stack, invoking her Fear
2: Eckhardt will think Im not up to the task.
Michelle knows the gunman wants to end this conflict quick. Its turned out
much harder than he expected, and hes down to an action pool of five now, too.
She writes another Grace plus Gunman action to shoot Lucy, and assigns two
action tokens to that. For defense, she is using Force plus Cold-Eyed Killer to
resist physical harm. She puts two action tokens in that, too.
Michelle: Ready to reveal?
Krista: Ready. My first action is to stick my gun in his back and growl,
Put down your weapon and surrender. The second is to try to trick him
into revealing his boss.
152
Michelle: Nice side bet. OK, again, hes got no defense for your second
action. His defense was Force for resisting physical attacks and youve got
all social stuff going on. His first action is to wheel and pump you full of
lead, though. I think that matches up to your demand for surrender. He
cant shoot you if hes intimidated into giving up.
Krista: Excellent. Thats how I was hoping it would turn out.
Michelle: Lets resolve the opposed action first. Youve got a passion
token there?
Krista: Yeah, my fear of Eckhardts disapproval. Ive got to prove I can
handle this. Thats worth 2, plus my Will of 2, and my Government Agent
2. Ive also got 3 action tokens in here, for a total of 9.
Michelle: OK, the gunman is again using Grace, thats 2, plus Gunman,
thats 4, and hes got two action tokens in here, that comes to 8. Youve
got him beat, with a regular success. Ill say he drops his gun and raises his
arms.
Krista: Yes! As I check him for additional weapons, I casually say, I bet
you thought this would be easier, right? Hes gonna be angry at you. Thats
for my second action to get him to slip something. Investigator 3 plus Wits
3 plus 2 action tokens, thats 8.
Michelle: Thats another passive defense for him. I made some bad bets
this conflict. His Wits is only 1, so you beat him by 7. Hes gonna sing like
a bird, and wont even realize hes doing it. You can trick him into thinking
you know everything already.
Michelle: You come to the end of the tunnel. Standing in the shadows
you see a dusty figure in a long coat and cowboy hat. Around his feet
writhe about 30 rattlesnakes.
Jason: Oh, crap. Weve got to get this guy fast, before he can use those
rattlesnakes on us.
Krista: Yeah, lets get him.
Michelle: All right, his goal is to feed on both of you.
Krista: My goal is to destroy the vampire.
Jason: Me too.
Michelle: OK, lets allocate actions.
Jason decides to try to take care of the snakes, and possibly give the investigators
a weapon against the vampire. He is going to throw down some kerosene and set
it alight between the snakes and Eckhardt and Lucy. For this, hes using Grace
and Supernatural Investigator, and three action tokens. For his second action,
hes going to shout some advice to Lucy to help with her action. Hes using Wits
and Mentor, along with three more action tokens.
Krista wants to take the vampire down, so shes going to tackle him and try to
stake his heart. This will use Force and Government Agent, plus four action
tokens. She also wants to avoid getting hurt, so she is going to dodge any snakes
or vampire bites with Grace plus Government Agent. She commits only one
action token to this.
Michelle knows they are going to be aggressive. She has the vampire control
the snakes and get them to attack the two investigators. This will use Will plus
Vampire, and she puts four action tokens behind it. The vampire will also try
to hold the investigators off with his gun until the snakes take care of them. Hes
using Grace plus Pistolero for that, along with two action tokens.
Michelle: Everyone ready?
Krista: Lets go.
Michelle: The vampire has got a Will action to control the snakes, and
this Grace is to move out of the way and cover you with his gun.
154
Jason: Im helping Lucy with this Wits action, and the Grace is to knock
over one of the kerosene containers and set it alight. Im sacrificing a power
token to say that there are some old kerosene containers down here, left
over from when the miners used kerosene to light their lamps.
Michelle: Sounds fair.
Krista: Im using Force to leap at the vampire and tackle him, so I can
stake him. Im using Grace to avoid damage.
Michelle: Jason, the kerosene is your defense. Both of your defensive actions will go against the vampires rattlesnake attack. The vampires defense
goes against your attack, Krista, and since Jasons trying to help you, well
resolve his action first.
Jason: Im using Wits 4 plus Mentor 2, and Ive got 3 action tokens here.
Thats 9. Whats that up against?
Michelle: The vampire didnt defend against you shouting plans, so just
passive Wits. Thats 3, so you beat him by 6. Lucy gets a +2.
Jason: I shout at Lucy, Knock him into the fire! Then I set the kerosene
off before the snakes can reach us.
Michelle: Lets resolve the fire vs. snakes next. Hes got Will 4 plus
Vampire 4, along with 4 action tokens. Thats 12 on the attacking snakes.
Jason: I had Grace 2, Supernatural Investigator 4, and 3 action tokens.
Thats 9. He beat me by 3.
Michelle: You grab the kerosene and pour it on the floor, then drop your
lighter on it. It goes up with a whoosh, but by the time you got it down,
the snakes had already surrounded you and Lucy. One strikes your leg, you
will take a serious wound from that. Krista, what was your defense?
Krista: I had Grace 3 plus Government Agent 2 and just one action token. Thats 6.
Michelle: Oh my. He beats you by six, thats serious. You are going to be
bitten multiple times. Im gonna rule you maimed.
155
156
wants to defend herself, and will use Grace plus Government Agent to avoid a
physical attack. She puts one action token there.
Michelle knows that the pair of them can probably overpower the vampire, so
she decides to lay out some serious hurt. She goes with Grace and Pistolero to
have the vampire shoot Lucy, and puts four action tokens there. She also uses
Will and Vampire to resist the damage, with one action token, making the
vampire all-in since he is down two tokens.
Michelle: Ready?
Jason: Lets do it.
Michelle: OK, the vampire is trying to plug Lucy. Thats the Grace action. Hes using his Will to power through the pain for defense.
Krista: Lucy is grappling with the vampire, and is going to trick him into
thinking hes got the upper hand, then roll him into the fire. Thats Wits.
Shes using Grace here to avoid the gunshot.
Jason: Eckhardt is thinking quickly, thats Wits, and pouring more kerosene directly on the vampire. Hes using Grace to defend, but it looks like
he doesnt need it.
Michelle: Yeah, the vampire is no longer controlling the snakes, so they
are trying to flee the fire. Looks like the vampires attack goes against Lucys
defense, and both of your attacks go against the vampires defense. Simple!
Lets resolve the vampires assault first. Hes got Grace 3 and Pistolero 4 plus
4 action tokens. Thats 11.
Krista: Dang. Ive got Grace 2 plus Government Agent 2 and one action
token. Thats only 5.
Michelle: Well, he is trying to kill you. Hes got you beat by 6,
thats enough.
Krista: We arent planning on having another session, so Im cool with it.
This is a nice way to go out.
Jason: Oh, man. This is going to mess Eckhardt up. Hes using his passion
Fear of Lucy getting killed.
157
Krista: Aww.
Michelle: Lets resolve Eckhardt, then. The vampires defense is Will 4
plus Vampire 4 plus one token, thats 9.
Jason: Hes tough. Ive got Wits 4, Supernatural Investigator 4, and 4
action tokens. My passion is rank 2, so thats 14.
Michelle: That beats him by 5, thats enough for the kill. Krista, you still
want to resolve?
Krista: Yeah, I want to see if I was able to do anything to him before I
got plugged. I had Wits 4, plus Government Agent 2, and 4 action tokens.
Thats 10.
Michelle: Against his 9, so you do succeed, but its just a light wound.
Lucy is rolling around with the vampire, and she manages to roll him into
the fire but it just singes him through his coat. He pulls out his Peacemaker
and shoves up against Lucys chest. Eckhardt, seeing that, desperately hurls
kerosene down on the vampire. He bursts into flame, but a shot rings out
at the same time and Lucy falls back limp.
Jason: No! I drag her out of the fire and put it out.
Michelle: The vampire continues to incinerate, shrieking and writhing
behind you. Its too late. Lucy is dead.
out the back door and lock them out. He thinks he might get hit, so he uses
Grace and Barroom Brawler to avoid that. He allocates one token to defense,
and six more to the trick.
Bill has to try to anticipate and defend against actions from all four players, so
hes got his work cut out for him. For Norin, he plans on using Wits plus Leader
to direct his dwarfs to the areas of the bar most vulnerable to attack. He plans
to collapse the whole place this way. To defend himself, he is going to use Will
plus Mean Little Cuss to block physical attacks. He allocates three tokens to the
attack on the bar, and four to defending himself.
For the dwarfs, Bill decides they will defend themselves as well, using Will plus
Tough Guys and two action tokens. They will also try to help Norin tear down
the bar, using Craftsman and Force. He puts four action tokens toward this.
Bill: Are we all ready?
All: Ready.
Bill: OK, lets reveal. Lets go over all the actions, Ive got a lot to
coordinate here. Ill start with Kat.
Kat: My Force action here is to leap on Norin, and Im using Will to resist
damage.
Russell: Im next, I guess. This Will action token is to summon up spirits
of the dead to block Pele. Ive got Grace in case Im attacked.
Michael: Im just laying into the dwarfs here with Force. Im using Will
to shrug off their blows.
Eric: Im taking another route. Im using Wits to trick the dwarfs into
leaving the bar by the back door, and then Ill lock them out. Grace is in
case someone attacks me.
Bill: Interesting. This is Norin, here. Hes using Wits to direct his dwarfs
in bar destruction. Hes also using Will for defense. The dwarfs, here, are
using Will for physical defense, and Force to destroy the bar. Since the
dwarfs arent directly attacking any person, I dont have to worry about any
of your defenses. Lets match some actions though.
160
Bill: Russell, your action will block Pele, so thats first. Its going up
against her attack action. If you arent blocked, Kat, your attack will match
to Norins defense. Michael, your attack goes against the dwarf s defense.
Eric, Im actually treating your action as a counter to Norins directions.
The dwarfs can be considered to be helping Norin, so if they can succeed,
he gets a +2 on bar destruction. Lets start with Russell and Kat.
Russell: Well, Ive got a Will of 5, God of the Underworld at 5, and 6
action tokens here. Thats 16. Im spending a magic token to activate God
of the Underworld, and we already established I can summon spirits of
the dead earlier, so long as I am not under the open sky. The bar definitely
counts.
Kat: Im using Force 5, Ruthless Brawler 4, and 5 action tokens on this
one. I think Ruthless Brawler is more specific to this situation than God of
the Underworld, though.
Bill: I agree. Thats +2 for you.
Kat: With the +2, my total is 16.
Bill: Tied! Well, that means you both get a partial success. Im going to say
that means that Pluto cant quite stop you, but the spirits rising up get in
your way in hinder your attack. You still get to make one, though. Norin
just gets a +2 on his defense.
Kat: Sounds fair.
Russell: Sorry, Norin.
Bill: Lets get this smackdown out of the way next. Your Ruthless Brawler
aptitude is more specific than Mean Little Cuss, which is what Norins using to defend, so well keep your total at 16. His Will is 4, Mean Little Cuss
is 3, and he put 4 tokens in there. He also gets that +2 from Plutos help.
That 13. You beat him by 3, a bad result for him. Thats a serious wound.
Kat: Yes!
Bill: Not so fast. This is the final encounter of the night, so I dont think
its over that quickly. Ive got some power tokens left here. Im going to
drop 4 on Norin. That puts him up at 17, so he can avoid your blow.
161
Michael and Eric both decide to sit out the rest of the fight. They both already
got what they wanted.
Russell knows Norin is doomed without his help, so he decides to get Norin out
of here entirely. Hes going to create a new power for the God of the Underworld
to open a crack in the earth and swallow Norin up. He uses his Will plus God
of the Underworld for this, and drops a full seven action tokens in this.
Kat wants to finish Norin. She uses Ruthless Brawler for both actions, and uses
Will for defense and Force to attack. She goes all-in, allocating six to the attack
and two for defense.
Norins dwarf gang is out of the picture, so Bill doesnt make any actions for
them. Norin knows hes in serious trouble, so he goes all-in as well. Hes using
Mean Little Cuss for combat, and hell attack by biting her knee, using Force,
and hell use Will to defend. He puts four tokens in each action.
Bill: Are we ready?
Kat: Yep. Im all-in, using Force to cream this guy, and Will to defend
against attacks.
Michael: Im not taking any actions this round. I got what I wanted.
Eric: Me, too.
Russell: Im creating a new fact. Gods of the Underworld can open cracks
in the earth and swallow people up. Im going to swallow up Norin, so Pele
cant kill him. Thats my only action.
Bill: Cool. The price on this ability is that you dont know where the
person comes back out, nor can you control it.
Russell: Sounds fair.
Bill: OK, last is Norin. Hes going on the offensive, and hes going all-in
too. Hes using Force to bite Pele, and Will to defend. I think Russells action needs to be resolved first, though. If hes successful, Norins out of the
conflict and Pele cant reach him. I think this is going up against Peles hit.
If you can beat that, you get the earth to swallow Norin before her blow
lands. Otherwise, it will happen after.
163
Kat: Pele has a Force of 5, Ruthless Brawler at 4, and 6 tokens. Thats 15.
Russell: Im using Will, 5, plus God of the Underworld, 5, and 7 action
tokens. Thats 16.
Bill: You beat her by 1. Thats barely a success, but its still a success. Pele
draws back her fist for another massive blow, while Norin snarls and leaps
at her. As she swings down, a fissure opens in the earth and Norin gets
drops in, looking very surprised. The crack snaps shut again, just as Peles
massive blow slams into the ground. The whole building shakes.
Kat: Pele stands up, her fist glowing red and and smoking like its on fire.
She turns toward Pluto, rage written all over her face. She starts toward
him, lifting her fist against him this time.
Russell: Uh-oh. Pluto backs up, raising his arms to calm her. Hang on
a minute, Pele.
Bill: That sounds like a new conflict.
164
165
appendix III
Here are all of the characters used in the examples above with all of their
faculties, aptitudes, and passions defined. Some of the supporting characters arent fully fleshed out, because their passions never came up in play
and were thus never defined.
Eckhardt: Jasons character.
Force: 1
Grace: 2
Supernatural Investigator: 4
Will: 4
Mentor: 2
Wits: 4
Cynic: 2
Action Pool: 7
Passion Pool: 3
Government Agent: 2
Grace: 3
Investigator: 3
Will: 2
Bureaucrat: 2
Wits: 3
Fear: Eckhardt will think Im not up
to the task. 2
Action Pool: 6
Passion Pool: 2
Vampire: 4
Grace: 3
Pistolero: 4
Will: 4
Horseman: 2
Wits: 3
Action Pool: 7
166
Sample characters
Gunman: Another one of Michelles supporting characters.
Force: 4
Gunman: 4
Grace: 2
Cold-Eyed Killer: 4
Will: 2
Unspecified Aptitude: 1
Wits: 1
Hate: Cops. 2
Action Pool: 7
Volcano Goddess: 5
Grace: 3
Barfly: 2
Will: 5
Ruthless Brawler: 4
Wits: 2
Dancer: 4
Action Pool: 8
Trickster God: 5
Grace: 4
Stubborn Cuss: 3
Will: 2
Shape Shifter: 3
Wits: 5
Fool: 3
Barroom Brawler: 1
Action Pool: 8
Passion Pool: 3
167
Scam Artist: 5
Grace: 3
Will: 5
Bookie: 3
Wits: 5
Lover: 2
Action Pool: 8
Passion Pool: 2
Truck Driver: 4
Grace: 3
Sea Goddess: 5
Will: 5
Cruel-Hearted Bitch: 4
Wits: 3
Mother: 2
Passion Pool: 3
Leader: 4
Grace: 2
Craftsman: 4
Will: 4
Wits: 5
Slick Salesman: 4
Action Pool: 8
Tough Guys: 4
Grace: 4
Craftsman: 4
Will: 4
Grouch: 2
Wits: 3
Action Pool: 7
168
Index
Terms in this index are listed both conceptually and alphabetically to maximize its usefulness to the reader. If you are looking for a specific term, it
will be listed alphabetically. Eliminate or reverse adjectives, verbs, and
adverbs from terminology when searching. For instance, to find Basic
Actions, you will look under Actions, Basic. For Choosing Actions,
you will look under, Actions, Choosing.
INDEX
If you are unsure of the terminology youre looking for, check under
these major conceptual headings: Abilities, Actions, Aptitudes, Character
Building, Conflict, Facts, Faculties, Goals, GM, Harm, Items, Passions,
Story Building, or Tokens. The concepts for Magic and Power are bound
up with the use of Tokens, and so are covered mostly in the Tokens
category.
Abilities, Starting 30-33
Definition 30-31
Levels 31
and Supernatural Aptitudes see APTITUDES, SUPERNATURAL
see also ITEMS, SUPERNATURAL
Actions 67-78
Basic 67
Definition 67
Defensive 67, 71
Desperate Reactions 87
Choosing 68
and Facts see FACTS, and ACTIONS
Failure 85-86
see also, HARM
GM and see MATCHING IN CONFLICT
and Goals see GOALS
Helping 74
and Item Effects 84
Offensive 67, 71
Opposed 76, 78, 85, 98, 131-132
Outside of Conflict 77, 97
Actions Outside of Conflict Difficulty Table 77
and Passions 77
Pool see TOKENS, ACTION, POOL
169
Matching in Conflict 75-77, 98, 136
see also ACTIONS, OPPOSED
Multiple Opponents 67, 71
Number of actions in conflict 69
Reallocating see DESPERATE REACTIONS
Resolving 85-86, 131-132
See also ACTIONS, MATCHING IN CONFLICT
See also ACTIONS, OPPOSED
Reveal 74-75
Success 67, 85-86
Tokens see TOKENS
Ageless 31, 43
Ancient 31, 43
Aptitudes 33-38
Bonuses 35, 76, 78
Changing 105, 110
Defined 33-34, 35-36
Levels 35
Limits 34, 36, 44
Number of uses 69
Points,
Maximum 105
Starting 31, 34, 36, 43, 44
Specific vs. General 35, 76, 78
Starting Aptitudes 31, 36, 43
Supernatural 37, 52-53
Bonuses 35, 55, 59, 76, 78, 84, 98-99
with Aptitudes 35, 76, 78
with Facts,
Magical 55, 59
Character Building 21, 25, 41-45
Player Characters,
Aptitudes 33-38
Concept 25
Faculties 32-33
Passions 26-30, 115
Pools 38-40
Starting Abilities 30-32
Supporting characters 41-42
and Actions see GOALS
and Action pool 41
and Faculties 42
170
171
Non-Magical 106-107, 122, 135
See also TOKENS, POWER
and Passions 55
as a Penalty 55, 59
and Supernatural Aptitudes 37
and Theme Document 51, 59, 127
Faculties 32-33, 44
and Actions see ACTIONS, BASIC
and Action tokens 62, 69, 98
see also TOKENS, ACTION
Changing 105, 110
and Conflict see CONFLICT, FACULTIES IN
Defined 32, 44
Levels 33
Limits 32, 44
Points,
Maximum 34, 44, 105, 110
Starting 31-33, 43
and Supporting Characters 42
Types 32, 44
Failure 85-86, 100
see also ACTIONS
see also HARM, EFFECTS DESCRIPTIONS
Fatigue 93, 101
All In 93, 101
Fear 27, 43
Force 32, 44, 120
Goals,
Defined 63, 97
Actions, relationship with 63, 68, 97
and Actions of Supporting Characters 130-131, 136
in Conflict see CONFLICT, GOALS IN
Independent 64-65, 97
Opposed 64-65, 97
Setting Goals 63
GM 7, 11
and Actions 69, 71, 75-77, 85, 98
and Aptitudes 36
and Conflict see CONFLICT
and Facts,
Magical 51, 134, 137
Price 53
172
and Goals 63, 130-131, 136
Harm 89, 96
Passions, using 80, 126-127, 129, 136
Scene Setting see SCENES
and Starting Abilities 30
Story Building see STORY BUILDING
Supporting Characters see CHARACTER BUILDING
Threshold of Credibility 8
Tokens see TOKENS
Grace 32, 44, 120
Harm 89-94, 101
Changing a Character 105, 110
Effects Descriptions 90-93, 101
Hate 27-28, 43
High Magic,
Multi-session game 19, 23, 58-59
Single session game 18, 23, 58-59
Items,
Effects 84-85, 99
New 107
Non-Magical 84
Supernatural 56, 59
Love 28, 43
Low Magic,
Multi-session game 19, 23, 58-59
Single session game 18, 23, 58-59
Magic,
Pool see TOKENS, MAGIC, POOL
Tokens see TOKENS, MAGIC
Magic Level 18-19, 23, 40, 44
Moderate Level,
Multi-session game 19, 23, 58-59
Single session game 18, 23, 58-59
Novice 31, 43
Passions 26-30, 43, 78-84, 99, 115
and Actions see ACTIONS, OUTSIDE OF CONFLICT AND PASSIONS
Calling on 78-80, 99
Changing 81-83, 99, 119
As a goal 119, 122
Through conflict 82-83, 99
Character 28-29, 42-43, 42, 115, 122
and Conflict see CONFLICT, PASSIONS IN
173
Conflicting 116
Definition 26-28, 43
and Facts 55
GM and see GM
Levels 28-29, 43
Points 31, 43
Maximum 81, 83
Starting 28-29, 31, 43
Pool see TOKENS, PASSION, POOL
Recovering see TOKENS, PASSION, RECOVERING
Starting 28-29, 42-43
and Story Building see STORY BUILDING, AND PASSIONS
Types 27-28, 43
Penalties 55, 59
Pools,
Action 38, 44
Magic 40, 44
Passion 38, 44
Power 39, 44
Power,
Points 31, 43
Pool see TOKENS, POWER, POOL
Tokens see TOKENS, POWER
Reveal 74-75, 98
Scenes,
Characters, bringing them into 107, 111
GM 128-129, 136
Setting a (Players) 108, 111
Setting (of the game) 15-16, 22
see also THEME DOCUMENT
Side Bets 118, 122
Situation 19-21, 23
Story Building,
GMs Role 7, 126-130, 136
Magic Level 18-19, 40
For multi-session games 19
For single-session games 18
and Passions 116, 126-127, 129
Players 113-115
Theme Document 13-23
Threshold of Credibility 8-9, 11
and Tokens 113-114
174
Tone 14, 22
Scenes 108, 111
Setting 15-16, 22
Situation 19-21, 23
Success 67, 85-86, 100
Supernatural, The 16-18, 22
Supporting Characters 41-42, 45
Theme Document 13-23
Definition 13, 22
and Facts 127
Threshold of Credibility 8-9, 11
Tokens 9-11
Action,
Desperate Reactions 87
Extra (extra effort) 71-73
Pool 38, 44
Use (Committing/Spending/Sacrificing) 10-11, 68-71, 74-75, 77, 97-98
All In 93, 101
Reallocating see DESPERATE REACTIONS
Recovering spent 95-96, 101
Committing 10-11
Definition 9
Passion,
Pool 38, 44
Recovering spent 83, 99
Use (Committing/Sacrificing/Spending) 10-11, 75, 78-81, 99
Power,
Awards/Earning (Players) 109, 111
GMs 39, 45, 108, 111, 135, 137
Pool 39, 44
Players Starting Pool 31, 39, 43
Session Pool 109, 111
Using (Committing/Sacrificing/Spending) 10-11, 103-108, 110-111,
117, 135, 137
Price see TOKENS, MAGIC, PRICE
Magic 10, 18-19, 23, 47-50, 59, 134, 137
Defined 47
Earning (Players) 58-59, 106, 109, 111
GMs 18-19, 23, 40, 45, 51, 58-59, 106, 111, 135, 137
Pool 40, 44
Price 53-54, 59
Defining Abilities, Attributes, & Facts 37, 116-117, 134, 137
175
176