AUSPEX: Difference between revisions

From The World Is A Vampire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
;[[World of Darkness -- Medieval]]
;[[World of Darkness -- Medieval]]
= <span style="color:#800000;">'''I</span>ntroduction''' =
= <span style="color:#800000;">'''I</span>ntroduction''' =
<Statement>
The most discerning vampires see in the dark, hear whispers on the wind and the crash of rats’ feet stomping a hundred yards away. They feel the tendrils of
fog and know how close warm bodies are. Supernatural
levels of sensitivity and awareness blossom further as the
vampire develops his gifts. Eventually, he can see the
colors of the souls around him, read minds, and pierce
the illusions made by other monsters.
 
For more on using Auspex to pierce Obfuscate and other
mental illusions, see the sidebar '''See the Unseen'''.
 
Sensory details are of the utmost importance when
using Auspex. Storytellers should always add additional
and useful sensory details with increasingly successful rolls.
 
 
=== '''SUDDEN REVELATIONS''' ===
Characters with even one level of Auspex may
occasionally get a sense of an impending threat against
them. While they are otherwise using any level of
Auspex, the Storyteller may choose to roll for a sudden
revelation. In secret, she rolls the character’s Auspex
score. The difficulty varies as Storyteller discretion,
though a robber behind an inn door would probably
be a difficulty 4, while a plot by the Prince’s childe to
destroy the character that could take decades to unravel
would be a difficulty 9. Difficulty can also reflect how
important it is to the story that the character has a
glimpse of what’s coming.
 
Keep in mind though, it is only a brief precognitive
glimpse that may or may not make sense before the event
unfurls. Divination is not a science; express the revelation
in small sensory details or simple gut feelings. “You smell
fire with no source coming from the farm house” or “he
can’t be trusted alone” are excellent examples.
 
=== <span style="color:#800000;">'''SEE THE UNSEEN'''</span> ===
<span style="color:#800000;">A</span>nyone gifted with Auspex can see things that
are hidden from normal sight supernatural-
ly and pierce supernatural illusions. This might
mean Obfuscate, Chimerstry, ghosts, and even the
magical tricks of the fae.
 
• Obfuscate: The Obfuscated target and the
Auspex user compare total levels of their respective disciplines. If the Obfuscate user has higher
levels in Obfuscate than the Auspex user has
levels in Auspex, he remains. If the Auspex user’s
levels in Auspex exceed the Obfuscate user’s levels in Obfuscate, or they are evenly matched, the
Auspex user rolls Perception + Awareness. Her
difficulty is 8. Lower this difficulty by one for every
dot of Auspex she has in excess of her opponent’s
Obfuscate.
 


=== <span style="font-size:large">●</span>'''<TITLE>''' ===
=== <span style="font-size:large">●</span>'''<TITLE>''' ===

Revision as of 17:10, 3 February 2019

World of Darkness -- Medieval

Introduction

The most discerning vampires see in the dark, hear whispers on the wind and the crash of rats’ feet stomping a hundred yards away. They feel the tendrils of fog and know how close warm bodies are. Supernatural levels of sensitivity and awareness blossom further as the vampire develops his gifts. Eventually, he can see the colors of the souls around him, read minds, and pierce the illusions made by other monsters.

For more on using Auspex to pierce Obfuscate and other mental illusions, see the sidebar See the Unseen.

Sensory details are of the utmost importance when using Auspex. Storytellers should always add additional and useful sensory details with increasingly successful rolls.


SUDDEN REVELATIONS

Characters with even one level of Auspex may occasionally get a sense of an impending threat against them. While they are otherwise using any level of Auspex, the Storyteller may choose to roll for a sudden revelation. In secret, she rolls the character’s Auspex score. The difficulty varies as Storyteller discretion, though a robber behind an inn door would probably be a difficulty 4, while a plot by the Prince’s childe to destroy the character that could take decades to unravel would be a difficulty 9. Difficulty can also reflect how important it is to the story that the character has a glimpse of what’s coming.

Keep in mind though, it is only a brief precognitive glimpse that may or may not make sense before the event unfurls. Divination is not a science; express the revelation in small sensory details or simple gut feelings. “You smell fire with no source coming from the farm house” or “he can’t be trusted alone” are excellent examples.

SEE THE UNSEEN

Anyone gifted with Auspex can see things that are hidden from normal sight supernatural- ly and pierce supernatural illusions. This might mean Obfuscate, Chimerstry, ghosts, and even the magical tricks of the fae.

• Obfuscate: The Obfuscated target and the

Auspex user compare total levels of their respective disciplines. If the Obfuscate user has higher levels in Obfuscate than the Auspex user has levels in Auspex, he remains. If the Auspex user’s levels in Auspex exceed the Obfuscate user’s levels in Obfuscate, or they are evenly matched, the Auspex user rolls Perception + Awareness. Her difficulty is 8. Lower this difficulty by one for every dot of Auspex she has in excess of her opponent’s Obfuscate.


<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●● FAR SENSE

The character no longer needs to take to Soul’s Flight to observe distant but familiar places and people. She can project her senses to a place in order to stalk any person she is familiar with. She observes her victim while remaining aware of her own surroundings.

System: The player rolls the character’s Perception + Empathy, difficulty 6, and describes the person she is trying to spy on. If successful, she may observe her victim and his surrounding area for one turn per success. She may use other levels of Auspex where she is spying. She remains aware of her own situation. While this use of Auspex splits her senses, it does not hamper them.

●●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System:


●●●●●●●●●<TITLE>

<Statement>

System: