Difference between revisions of "Prestation"

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'''Quote:''' ''“Chaos isn’t a pit. Chaos is a ladder. Many who try to climb it fail, and never get to try again. The fall breaks them. And some are given a chance to climb, but refuse. They cling to the realm, or love, or the gods…illusions. Only the ladder is real. The climb is all there is. But they’ll never know this. Not until it’s too late.”'' - Petyr Baelish (''Littlefinger'') -- '''''Game of Thrones'''''
 
  
 
'''Prestation:''' A duty to do or not do something in fulfillment of an obligation, or the performance of such a duty.<br>
 
'''Prestation:''' A duty to do or not do something in fulfillment of an obligation, or the performance of such a duty.<br>

Latest revision as of 22:50, 19 July 2014

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Prestation: A duty to do or not do something in fulfillment of an obligation, or the performance of such a duty.

Ranking Boons: There are actually five levels of boons, ranging from a boon of trivial significance to that of a life boon. The life boon is given only when one vampire saves the life of another. This debt is very rare, and very potent. Vampires who owe a life boon are often very subservient, if grudgingly so. There is a boon rumored to be greater than that of the life boon. This legendary debt is one owed to a vampire who helps one attain the state of Golconda, a state reputedly more precious than life itself. To the main community of vampires, that boon is as much a myth as Golconda itself.

The ranking of the boon is very subjective, since the sects do not conveniently catalog them on a one to five scale. It remains up to the two vampires trying to make a deal to understand the level of assistance requested and or rendered, and come to some agreement about it all. Generally, a vampire may ask for a boon equivalent to the favor granted. Below is a rough guideline for measuring boons.

Ranking
One (trivial boon) - The provision of common information, the offering of simple advice and or a warranted warning of potential danger or difficulty. - A small boon like this doesn’t mean that the person who did you the favor inconvenienced himself while helping you, just that he helped you. He might trade information and demand a boon.
A trivial boon is paid off with one action, and never requires anything of that character again. It requires that the player use a discipline on the other’s behalf, or that he votes on his behalf, or perhaps that he supplies a piece of information. If a person chooses not to repay the boon when he could do so, he can usually get away with it, but the harpies or Prince might use this as an excuse to destroy his status in such a case.
Two (minor boon) - The provision of advice in a difficult situation, completion of an uncomplicated task, and entering a struggle wherein there is a certain measure of minor risk. - If another person inconveniences himself on your behalf, giving up part of a limited resource, then a minor boon is appropriate.
A minor boon is still generally paid off with one action. While the boon is held, the one who owes should be polite and not insult the other in public, but that doesn’t mean he has to agree with him. Where with a trivial boon one can choose not to repay and only risking status, when someone comes to collect a minor boon, you’d better pay. A minor boon could be paid by allowing someone to use your haven for a long period of time, or by guaranteeing their safety in a domain you already control. A minor boon can be paid off by instructing another in a discipline which is common, like Celerity, Potence, or Fortitude.
Three (significant boon) - The provision of dangerous information, political collusion, siding with another vampire in a violent confrontation. - A major boon is owed when the person sacrificed greatly of his time or resources, and subjected himself to a certain amount of risk.
A boon can be repaid by teaching the other hidden lore or how to perform a clan discipline. (Thaumaturgy, Protean, and Quietus count as a blood boon, unless the person owing the boon is willing to repay his debt in that manner.) At this level you must support any political action the possessor of the boon desires, even against your own clan, but this negates the debt.
Four (major boon) - The provision of life-threatening secrets, direct intervention in a politically complicated situation, taking punishment for another vampire. - A blood boon is only appropriate when the collector of the boon risked his assets or friends for you, or put himself at some direct risk at losing his existence.
A blood boon is a truly terrible debt, which might not ever be repaid. While it is owed, you may never vote against the owner’s interests, you may never speak directly against him, and you must teach him when he requests it. (And if he demands your political support he will get it. If giving such support actually endangers your life in a real way, the debt is now paid.) If he demands dark clan secrets, like Thaumaturgy, teaching him such negates the debt. If you risk your existence to save the owner of the boon, the debt is canceled.


Five (life boon) - One vampire saves the life of another vampire. - A life boon may only be claimed if the claimer of the boon truly laid his very existence on the line. Fighting clearly inferior opponents does not count.
The possessor may demand anything that he likes, anything. This debt is only repaid by saving the life of he who owes the boon. He may demand anything short of that and get it, and you still owe him.


Always Read The Fine Print

One of the interesting things about boons is that if you should kill kindred, and that kindred owed a boon, you now owe that boon in turn. Twisted isn’t it?

Certain enterprising kindred have even taken out such boons, knowing that someone hunting them might elect not to kill them, simply because they don’t want to pick up the boon.

However, this doesn’t matter in the case of a blood hunt, or someone killed by a member of the court expressly doing his or her job. (Like Justicars or Archons.) The boon disappears.

Finally, also remember that this is all enforced by the harpies and the Prince. If both the harpies and the Prince hate you, then you’d best step very carefully when interpreting your boons. On the other hand, if enough people like you, they might not consider something to be worthy of a boon. Popularity is a very good thing.

The other thing to remember is that the worst time to be seen as ignoring your boons is when someone else already has. The more the rules are trod upon, the more likely the Prince is to lash out, possibly invoking the Tradition of Destruction. As his domain is seen to be lawless, his power weakens. (But even the first time might be the last, should the Prince be in a bad mood.)