4
How to buff investigation
(lemmy.dbzer0.com)
submitted
3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)
by
ThisIsAManWhoKnowsHowToGling@lemmy.dbzer0.com
to
c/rpg@ttrpg.network
This is a continuation of my previous post, in spirit. I've been hammering out some rules for a skill-based dungeon-crawling game with five classes, one of which is the Ranger which is meant to be the overland travel specialist. That's a pretty narrow niche, so I've been trying to flesh them out by making them really, really good at mysteries. Here's what I've come up with so far:
- If you are feeling stumped, you can privately ask the DM for help
- If you are exercising judgement on par with the average koala, the DM can warn you before your character does something uncharacteristically idiotic.
- If you are looking for clues, you don't have to roll a skill check to find it as long as you are using an appropriate skill in an appropriate manner.
Basically, Rangers get to operate as if they were using the Gumshoe system, plus the Common Sense feat from GURPS. There's also some more traditional Ranger stuff that I've come up with:
- You can make an effective ghillie suit in under an hour, and can use Naturalism (the primary ranger skill) to hide using it while in your favored terrain.
- You can speak with your favored quarry (a mundane animal; you can pick multiple of these if you are fine with dumping all your levels in getting really good at hunting and taming). They likely have different senses and priorities than you and may be helpful in giving you a different perspective, although most will be very food-motivated and dim-witted.
Not sure what to do other than this. Do any of you have other ways I could make give Rangers little buffs to their ability to play as an Aragorn-Batman hybrid?
What about some social advantages, may be not as powerful as D&D detect lies which kill investigation, but like once a session "detect a lie" or the ability to follow.
I would say have a look at various PBTA moves, may be in monsters of the week (But I don't have the books)