Difference between revisions of "Mano a Mano:Archery"

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(Archery)
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===Archery===  
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===Archery and Marksmanship===  
  
'''Drawing a Bow''' - Before a bow can be aimed or fired, and after it has been loaded (i.e. after the arrow is knocked) it must be drawn. This action requires one hit point or hit points equal to the bow's pull minus the character's size, whichever is greater. These hit points are moved into the other used pool. Your reach must also meet or exceed the bow's minimum reach requirement.
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;Drawing a Bow: A bow must be drawn before it can be aimed or fired. Drawing a bow counts as one action, separate from firing it. Drawing a light bow is a quick action. Drawing a more powerful bow is a powerful action, depending on whether you meet it's strength requirement. A very powerful bow will require a powerful action for anyone, and be impossible for characters with too little strength. Your reach must also meet or exceed the bow's minimum reach requirement. (For example, a dwarf may not be able to fully draw a long bow built for a giant.)
  
'''Releasing the Bow''' - Releasing the bow without firing the arrow is a one hit point action.
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;Keeping a Bow Drawn: The strength and concentration required to keep a bow drawn prevents you from performing any other actions until the bow is fired. (You can perform other actions while holding a crossbow, just like a loaded firearm.)
  
'''Drawing a Bow Half Way''' - If your reach is at least half the bow's reach you can draw it halfway instead of drawing it normally. This requires half as many hit points, or one hit point, whichever is greater. The bow fired this way has one fourth of the normal range and has 2 points less attack power.
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;Releasing the Bow: Releasing the bow without firing the arrow is a quick action.
  
'''Keeping a bow drawn''' - Once a bow is drawn you can keep it drawn for the rest of the round. To keep the bow drawn each following round until it is released or fired, you must use hit points equal to the bow's keep-drawn cost minus your size, or zero hit points if your size is greater. The keep-drawn cost is the same as pull for normal bows. Compound bows have a lower keep-drawn cost. You don't have to use any hit points to keep a crossbow drawn.
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;Drawing and Firing a Bow: A light bow can be drawn and fired as a single powerful action.
  
'''Crossbow Drawing Tools''' - A tool can reduce the hit points needed to pull a crossbow by splitting it into multiple steps. A simple lever can reduce the hit point requirement by 2 points, but requires 2 actions instead of 1. A crank that requires 3 actions instead of 1 reduces the hit point requirement by 3 points. A 4 action crank reduces the requirement by 4; a 6 action crank reduces the requirement by 5; a 8 action crank reduces the requirement by 6; and so on. (Doubling the actions reduces the requirements by 2.) Each action uses one hit point.
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;Drawing a Crossbow: Drawing a crossbow can take several turns depending on the crossbow and the equipment used to draw it.
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;Aiming: Aiming gives you a +2 bonus to hit with your next missile weapon attack.  If you get hit between aiming and the next attack, you lose the bonus.  You may not aim while grappling.
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;Reloading: Replacing a clip of ammunition can be one powerful action or split into two quick actions (unloading and loading). If rounds must be loaded individually, each round requires a separate quick action. Some weapons take one or more turns to reload. (A "Brown Bess" musket can be fired about 3 times per minute with training, suggesting 9 turns to reload and  1 turn to fire.)
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;Drawing a Bow Half Way: If your reach is at least half the bow's reach you can draw it halfway instead of drawing it normally. The strength requirement is 2 points less, but the bow fired this way has one fourth of the normal range and attack power.
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;Crossbow Drawing Tools: A tool can reduce the hit points needed to pull a crossbow by splitting it into multiple steps. A simple lever can replace one powerful action with two quick actions. A crank requires an extra turn for each extra point of strength it gives. For example a crank that takes 5 turns can allow you to draw a crossbow that requires 5 more strength than you have.

Revision as of 10:45, 28 June 2007

Archery and Marksmanship

Drawing a Bow
A bow must be drawn before it can be aimed or fired. Drawing a bow counts as one action, separate from firing it. Drawing a light bow is a quick action. Drawing a more powerful bow is a powerful action, depending on whether you meet it's strength requirement. A very powerful bow will require a powerful action for anyone, and be impossible for characters with too little strength. Your reach must also meet or exceed the bow's minimum reach requirement. (For example, a dwarf may not be able to fully draw a long bow built for a giant.)
Keeping a Bow Drawn
The strength and concentration required to keep a bow drawn prevents you from performing any other actions until the bow is fired. (You can perform other actions while holding a crossbow, just like a loaded firearm.)
Releasing the Bow
Releasing the bow without firing the arrow is a quick action.
Drawing and Firing a Bow
A light bow can be drawn and fired as a single powerful action.
Drawing a Crossbow
Drawing a crossbow can take several turns depending on the crossbow and the equipment used to draw it.
Aiming
Aiming gives you a +2 bonus to hit with your next missile weapon attack. If you get hit between aiming and the next attack, you lose the bonus. You may not aim while grappling.
Reloading
Replacing a clip of ammunition can be one powerful action or split into two quick actions (unloading and loading). If rounds must be loaded individually, each round requires a separate quick action. Some weapons take one or more turns to reload. (A "Brown Bess" musket can be fired about 3 times per minute with training, suggesting 9 turns to reload and 1 turn to fire.)
Drawing a Bow Half Way
If your reach is at least half the bow's reach you can draw it halfway instead of drawing it normally. The strength requirement is 2 points less, but the bow fired this way has one fourth of the normal range and attack power.
Crossbow Drawing Tools
A tool can reduce the hit points needed to pull a crossbow by splitting it into multiple steps. A simple lever can replace one powerful action with two quick actions. A crank requires an extra turn for each extra point of strength it gives. For example a crank that takes 5 turns can allow you to draw a crossbow that requires 5 more strength than you have.