My #DungeonWorld   #baseclass  project continues.

My #DungeonWorld   #baseclass  project continues.

My #DungeonWorld   #baseclass  project continues.

Facelift

When you cut the face off of someone and wear it as a mask you can perfectly assume the guise of that person. Even your voice and clothes change to resemble them. You can keep using the mask whenever you want, but it might get awkward if someone finds the body.

Too dark?

I’m working on a class, loosely based on the Faceless Men from A Song of Ice and Fire.

I’m working on a class, loosely based on the Faceless Men from A Song of Ice and Fire.

I’m working on a class, loosely based on the Faceless Men from A Song of Ice and Fire. During constructing the below move, I kind of came to a realization:

If you wish to make the class good at something, they should succeed on a 7-9 with a bonus for rolling 10+. If you want it to be risky, they should succeed on a 10+ but with strings attached on a 7-9.

I never thought about it this formally before. That’s what makes the druid so damn good at shapeshifting. They always succeed and there’s only strings attached if the character rolls a miss.

The fighter on the other hand is competent at smashing things to bits, but there’s always strings attached. The difference here is that the fighter chooses the cost. Brute force is always risky.

Originally shared by Kasper Brohus Allerslev

Starting move for a #dungeonworld   #baseclass   I’m fiddling with…

A Stranger’s Face

When you focus your mind and envision a desired form choose a humanoid race and a sex and roll+CHA. On a hit your body morphs and changes to sort of match your mental image. You’ll look like an ordinary person of that race and sex, and no one will recognize you for who you were before. On a 10+ choose one:

– Your visage is beautiful or attractive for the race. Gain +1 forward to parley with anyone who would be attracted to your sex.

– You look so normal that unless you actively draw attention to yourself, people will forget they ever saw you once you leave their presence.

– You can maintain a distinctive feature such that people who know you for who you are will recognize you when they see you.