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trying to figure out where to put perception

Started by punkbohemian, December 20, 2009, 07:26:35 AM

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punkbohemian

I have skills grouped by attributes, which are: Brawn, Dexterity, Acuity, and Spirit. Due to the metaphysics of the setting, I absolutely have to keep it to these four attributes. The problem is that I'm on the fence with regards to where I would put "perception"-based skills. It's kind of a mix of Dexterity and Acuity. Just to give you an idea of my rationale, this is my current skill list:

---Brawn

Running
Climbing
Swimming
Trekking
Jumping
Wrestling
Fortitude
Lifting

---Dexterity

Brawl
Staves
Axes
Knives
Swords
Clubs
Chains
Acrobatics
Skulk
Legerdemain
Riding

---Acuity

*Conceal
*Archery
*Throwing
Lores (Religion, Government, etc.)
*Craft (Weaponsmith, Bowcraft, Leathering, Armoring)
Tracking/Surveil?
Sailing
Medicine
Profession
Appraise
Tactics

---Spirit

Animal Handling
Perform (type)
Socialize (Haggle, Gather Information, Etiquette)
Diplomacy (Negotiation)
Bluff
Charm
Command
Intimidate
Cleromancy (casting lots - need to be made of various materials)
   -only spellcasters
Spellcraft
   -only spellcasters

This is nowhere near the final draft, just a bunch of stuff from my notes to give me direction with what I want to build. Some skills might get dropped, others elaborated, but you can see what I'm going for. I marked the perception-based skills with a *. There might be a couple others in there, but these are the most notable ones. Frankly, I can see it going either way, so I wanted to get some insight from others. Thanks.

Ken

I think they fit just fine in the Acuiity category. I usually think of ranged combat skills to be more perceptual than dexterity oriented. Though there are probably a number of instances where other characteristics may influence some of these abilities, this list gives you a nice distribution of skills, so I would stick with it.

Hope that helps,

Ken
Ken

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Jasper Flick

So the question is where to place things that rely on hand-eye coordination: at the hand, or at the eye...
There's various possible ways to look at it. What is your goal?

To distribute skills evenly across the attributes?
Shuffle them around and make up a justification.

To link them to the single most appropriate attribute?
Decide which attribute is 'primary' and assign based on that. (Your current approach, which causes trouble so might be abandoned.)

To link them to all appropriate attributes?
Assign a skill to more than one attribute. You could either apply the lowest, the highest, their sum, their average, or another combination, based on what makes the most sense.
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Catelf

Personally i wonder: Why only those four Attributes?

Curious Cat

punkbohemian

QuoteI think they fit just fine in the Acuiity category. I usually think of ranged combat skills to be more perceptual than dexterity oriented.

Yeah, same here. Frankly, I don't think you need to be all that graceful to shoot a bow. On the other hand, who do you think would be a better archer, a talented acrobat, or a brilliant historian? :)

Another weird thing about it is that under Acuity, Throwing and Archery will correspond to a water element. On the other hand, Dexterity is a Wind element, which sounds like a better fit.

It can be rationalized under Dexterity if one proposes that perception is a part of the hand-eye coordination of dexterity (not an absurd claim). My concern is that I'd lose a decent chunk of my Acuity skills, and I cannot think of anything else to put there what wouldn't just be filler. It's a Bronze age ancient world setting (e.g. early Babylon), so there's not much left for smarts-based skills (so, no computer hacking and what not).

QuoteAssign a skill to more than one attribute. You could either apply the lowest, the highest, their sum, their average, or another combination, based on what makes the most sense.

My original plans did something like this, but it got real messy real fast.

QuotePersonally i wonder: Why only those four Attributes?

Well, I'm not going to post the whole creation myth (partly because I've yet to finish writing it), but these attributes correspond to the elements used in the creation of human life. Granted, it doesn't have to be these specific four attributes, but

punkbohemian

that's weird, my post was cut off.

as I was saying...but these four seem to pretty much cover everything.

lumpley

Why are you writing a stats & skills game to begin with? Of all the possible ways to design a game, does this really best serve your design goals?

-Vincent

punkbohemian

In short, yes. That question is a whole other topic, though, and I'd rather not digress.

lumpley

Then it should be easy - put perception-based skills where your design goals demand you put them. If you're really on the fence about how they should work, there's some mismatch between them and your game.

-Vincent

punkbohemian

Quote from: lumpley on December 21, 2009, 01:43:28 AM
Then it should be easy - put perception-based skills where your design goals demand you put them. If you're really on the fence about how they should work, there's some mismatch between them and your game.

I don't see how this addresses the issue. The basic question is about whether one considers perception to be more in the camp of mental capability or coordination and physical grace.

lumpley

Not really! The basic question is: what is perception in your game for? Creatively, socially, in the interface between the players & GM and the game's fiction - what is the function of perception in your game's gameplay?

Once you've answered that, how perception works - including what stat it's related to, if any - will follow naturally.

-Vincent

Vulpinoid

Interesting question on Vincent's part...

Personally, for my game "The Eighth Sea", I put perception as a spiritual skill and simply called it Awareness. It was one of the easiest skills to slot into the scheme.

Magic and psychic powers are instinctive things in the game, and a high degree of perception is often considered to border on clairvoyance. It's a gut reaction, an intuition rather than a specifically trained or practiced feat.

V
A.K.A. Michael Wenman
Vulpinoid Studios The Eighth Sea now available for as a pdf for $1.

Falc

"Perception" is a very broad term, which is part of why it causes trouble, I believe.

There's a difference, IMO, between:

- seeing something (note that I'll be using sight as an example but all senses work the same way)
- noticing something (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_blindness for at least one difference)
- interpreting it correctly (friend or foe?)
- reacting on it correctly

Yet, when you observe human behavior, all of these happen so fast and are so intricately linked that it's very difficult to separate them. So yeah, my answer is that you can put "Perception" anywhere you want. You can ask our opinion, but that's never going to be more than an opinion. *You* need to decide in what place it will do the most good for *your* game, which is where I redirect you to Jasper's questions. I'll also quote your subsequent post a bit:

QuoteAnother weird thing about it is that under Acuity, Throwing and Archery will correspond to a water element. On the other hand, Dexterity is a Wind element, which sounds like a better fit.

Whoa, wait, what? Water element, Wind element? These things obviously matter to the game rules! They will obviously affect the place you give perception. Why did you not speak of these earlier?

QuoteMy original plans did something like this, but it got real messy real fast.

What exactly did you try to do and *why* did you decide it became too messy? Answering this question will reveal part of what you're trying to achieve, which is what you need to know to guide your decisions.

Right now, you're asking us if you should cream or sugar in your coffee, when you haven't decided yet whether you're thirsty or not.

chance.thirteen

Perception is a mental faculty. Sense acuity is a limiter, attention is a limited resource.

Hand-eye coordination and spatial sense is not related to the creative ability to paint, nor to the ability to sense an ambush. You can probably sell me on the photographers who can spot the odd person in a crowd, but not on the hunter who excels at archery also being an excellent judge of character.

Jasper Flick

You mentioned attributes linked to elements.
Is this is matter of linking general attributes to skills, or is this a matter of linking mystical elements to skills?
Is the elemental part a side-effect, or is it a core part of your game?

If the elements are at the root of your system, you can link those to skill directly and don't bother describing attributes as an intermediary step. If you can't find a suitable element for a skill, then you probably need more elements.
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