Difference between revisions of "Skill Proficiency (Proficiency)"
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'''General''' - General Skills are elementary and accessible enough for anyone to learn readily or otherwise as trade skills such as Smithing or Pottery. These are Skills for everyone. | '''General''' - General Skills are elementary and accessible enough for anyone to learn readily or otherwise as trade skills such as Smithing or Pottery. These are Skills for everyone. | ||
| − | '''Mage''' - | + | '''Mage''' - Skills dedicated to scholastic pursuits and the sciences. These are also known as Academic skills. |
| − | '''Priest''' - | + | '''Priest''' - Skills dedicated to the consideration of the world around and of others. These are also known as Thoughtful skills. |
'''Rogue''' - Skills dedicated to subterfuge, cunning and flair. These are also known as Cunning Skills. | '''Rogue''' - Skills dedicated to subterfuge, cunning and flair. These are also known as Cunning Skills. | ||
Revision as of 03:22, 30 March 2018
Contents
Skill Proficiencies
Skill Proficiencies refer to a character's general ability to do things, to know things, to think about things, to observe things. Basically, Skills are the method with which the character can meaningfully interact with the world beyond attacking it, casting spells at it or moving around in it. Skills determine a character's capacity for succeeding and failing at all manner of things.
Skill Classes
Skills Class determines the capacity of a given Class to learn these skills. Each Class Type has Skill Classes it considers Class Skills - characters without Class Levels may also be considered to have Class Skills depending on the character.
Skill Classes are divided up as follows:
General - General Skills are elementary and accessible enough for anyone to learn readily or otherwise as trade skills such as Smithing or Pottery. These are Skills for everyone.
Mage - Skills dedicated to scholastic pursuits and the sciences. These are also known as Academic skills.
Priest - Skills dedicated to the consideration of the world around and of others. These are also known as Thoughtful skills.
Rogue - Skills dedicated to subterfuge, cunning and flair. These are also known as Cunning Skills.
Warrior - Skills dedicated to the needs of soldiering and survival. These are also known as Martial Skills.
Skill Types
Skill Types determine what individual Skills qualify as. As a result, a character may experience modifiers to all Skills of a given type depending on their circumstances - for instance, Visual Skills suffer a penalty when Visibility is poor. Furthermore, a Skill's Type determines how Skill Points gained from Attributes or Class may be spent on it.
The basic Skill types are as follows:
Art - Skills that create something chiefly aesthetic. Some overlap with Craft and Performance.
Craft - Skills that create something chiefly physical. Some overlap with Art.
Mental - Skills based principally on knowledge and conceptual understanding.
Performance - Skills based on performative art. Some overlap with Art.
Physical - Skills based on physical ability or that have been developed by it.
Sense - Skills based on perception and reading the world around a character.
Social - Skills based on understanding and interaction with people.
Sub-Types may exist as well; Sub-Types are not applied generally to the Skill but certain uses of it - these include things like Vision and Hearing for various Sense skills, Construction for several Craft skills and Writing for various Art skills.
Note, whilst a Skill defaults to a given type, it does not necessarily always qualify as it. For example, a character wishes to explain smithing to another character. They could talk about it from knowledge, experience or their general skill in the profession - whilst the first two would swap the usual bonus from Attributes for Intelligence or Wisdom, regardless of how they intended to explain it, the DM may judge this is not a Physical Skill when used as such and qualifies as a Mental or Social skill for the situation, changing what additional modifiers the character might receive.
Skill Points
Skill Points are appropriately enough points that can be spent on Skills or converted into Language Points. They also may be spent on Language Points and Traits. If a character gains Skill Points after creation, they usually may not spend Skill Points on Inherent Traits without DM approval.