Die Roll Special Attack
20
Clumsiness. Victim suffers one or more of the following: a penalty to hit, a penalty to armor class, inability or reduction in spell
casting, and/or the chance to drop any items he is holding. Actual dexterity score is not necessarily affected. The way in which the attack causes clumsiness could include overloading one of the victim’s emotions (joy, rage, hate, greed, fear); an alchemical reaction (mysterious chemicals in the creature’s spittle); the aftereffects of an electrical shock; or a very weak poison, curse, or disease. The duration could range from only a couple of combat rounds to days in length.
21
Cold Damage (all or none). A blast of cold either hits or misses the target – this can be governed by an all-or-nothing saving
throw, or it might be an attack for which the attacker needs to make a to-hit roll. Cold temperature normally wouldn’t cause much collateral damage to items or equipment unless it is an unusually magical type of cold (perhaps affecting metal more than other substances, for example).
22 Cold Damage (manifestation). The special attack brings into being an abstract shape of pure coldness (serpentine, mist, etc). The manifestation causes cold damage (or makes a separate attack) each round for a set duration. 23 Cold Damage (save for half damage). A blast of cold inflicts hit-point damage, half if the target makes a saving throw or similar avoidance check. Unlike fire, cold damage doesn’t usually risk much collateral damage to items and equipment. Cold damage can
include such things as blasting particles of ice, or visibility-obscuring snow.
24
Cold Damage (unusual collateral damage). Cold temperature normally doesn’t affect items or substances – at least, not in the
traditional “save for half damage” type of attack. Cold attacks causing an unusual type of collateral damage are thus quite memo- rable, because they’re a bit unexpected. A few possibilities include: metal is chilled and causes damage for more than one round; potions or other liquids freeze with some sort of random or unexpected effect; torch fire freezes; leather has a risk of turning brittle and breaking, etc.
25
Command Plants or Animals. The monster can command nearby plants or animals to serve as his allies. If the monster is a
plant-monster, it may have a specific type of slave-plant (possibly a weaker monster-type with different abilities) that it can com- mand or animate. A more powerful monster might be a general plant-lord type, or perhaps it can command any sort of fungus but not other types of plants. Animal-controlling monsters, as with plant-controllers, might be limited to specific types of animals (mammals, reptiles, etc) or might have a particular type of animal they breed, control, or live in symbiosis with. In some cases, animal or plant controllers (especially the ones with a specific type of ally) can turn their victims into that kind of plant or animal.
26
Constitution Loss. The attack drains one or more points of constitution from the victim. The attacker may or may not gain a
benefit from the drain (additional hit points, to-hit bonuses, etc) depending upon whether it seems to fit well with the concept. If the victim reaches a constitution score of 0 as a result of successive attacks, one of several things might happen: the victim might die and become a creature similar to the attacker, or might remain alive as the attacker’s mental slave. Another possibility is that the victim just dies, and a third possibility is that restoring the lost points becomes harder – what might have returned naturally is now a permanent condition requiring spells or divine intervention to reverse. Note that the drain might be temporary or permanent – this is up to you as a matter of how powerful you want the monster to be.
27
Curse (strategic). A “curse” can be almost anything, but what distinguishes it is that it responds to particular spells that remove
… curses. If the party happens to have a “remove curse” spell handy, the special attack’s power can easily be negated, unless this is a super-powered curse of some kind. Strategic curses are long-term curses that don’t necessarily have much immediate effect in a combat, but have repercussions in the game outside the realm of combat. Some of these are purely cosmetic, and would be reflected only in the role-playing environment: a change in skin color, a long nose (perhaps it grows when you tell a lie!), a change in gender – all of these are excellent curses even though they don’t affect the game itself. Other strategic curses are those which restrict decision-making in between combats if they aren’t dealt with. Examples of this type of curse include a “quest to obtain the grail,” or “give half your treasure to the evil cult.”
28
Curse (tactical). A “curse” can be almost anything, but what distinguishes it is that it responds to particular spells that remove
… curses. If the party happens to have a “remove curse” spell handy, the special attack’s power can easily be negated, unless this is a super-powered curse of some kind. A “tactical” curse is one that focuses on the basic die rolls and mechanisms of the game – “strategic” curses focus more on flavor or other aspects of the game outside the combat rules. Tactical curses will generally accomplish one or more of the following: (1) lower an ability score, (2) cause random actions (running, singing, etc), possibly triggered by a low attack roll or with a risk of onset when the character attempts a particular action, (3) cause a specific sort of ac- tion, such as attacking allies or sleeping, when the curse is triggered by a bad die roll or other triggering event, (4) cause a penalty to attack rolls, damage rolls, and/or saving throws, (5) give the character a small chance of sudden death when attempting certain actions like running, attacking, casting a spell, walking into the light, etc, (6) cause a small amount of hit point damage whenever the character undertakes a particular action such as running, etc (see the preceding list), (7) change the character’s location when certain events take place, either by teleportation or by uncontrollable or random movement, (8) cause a chance of paralysis or sleep when the character undertakes a particular action (see the preceding list), cause the character to lose a level or a particular number of experience points (9) remove or restrict spell casting ability, (10) reduce the character’s movement. Other tactical curses can include transformations such as polymorph or other spell-like effects such as a charm.
29
Dangerous Barriers. The monster can create barriers such as walls of thorns, walls of fire, bubbles of temporary levitation, banks
of whirling blades, or whatever. Here are lists of possible types of barriers and possible types of composition. Types: wall, circle, spiral, shrinking circle, cube, moving wall, short fence, cloud, thread, rope. Composition: fire, cold, ice, frost, earth, water, gas, blades, swords, daggers, spears, thorns, magical force, mental force, mental domination, aversion, disease, poison, insanity, sound,
Table 2-79: Special Attack Type Continued
Die Roll Special Attack
31
Death (progressive attribute score loss). If the target fails a saving throw, the result is likely to be death. The victim loses a
point of some particular attribute score (strength, dexterity, constitution, intelligence, wisdom, or charisma) periodically until the score reaches zero and death results. The process can be stopped in different ways depending on the nature of the attack. If it is a curse, it can be removed, if it is a form of poison it can be neutralized, if it is a form of disease it can be cured. If it is none of the above, then there might still be a “folkloric” antidote – an action that negates the attack for no scientific reason. The most obvious example of a folkloric antidote is to kill the attacker before the draining process is complete. Less obvious examples might include stopping to drink lots of water, divesting oneself of all metal objects, etc. Folkloric antidotes might completely stop the draining process or they might just hold it in abeyance.
32
Death (progressive dexterity loss). If the target fails a saving throw, the result is likely to be death. The victim loses a point of
dexterity periodically until dexterity reaches zero and death results. The process can be stopped in different ways depending on the nature of the attack. If it is a curse, it can be removed, if it is a form of poison it can be neutralized, if it is a form of disease it can be cured. If it is none of the above, then there might still be a “folkloric” antidote – an action that negates the attack for no scientific reason. The most obvious example of a folkloric antidote is to kill the attacker before the draining process is complete. Less obvious examples might include stopping to drink lots of water, divesting oneself of all metal objects, etc. Folkloric antidotes might completely stop the draining process or they might just hold it in abeyance.
33
Dehydrate, Desiccate, Suck Fluids. This special attack sucks blood or dehydrates the victim (possibly all the way into powder).
For “standard” bloodsucking, the process starts only with a successful to hit roll and then the attacker causes automatic damage thereafter without rolling to hit. Consider, though, the following ideas: (1) a “ranged” attack of this nature might be pulling bodily fluids out into a mist for the monster to collect later, (2) a failed saving throw might mean that the ongoing damage continues until either the attacker or the defender dies, (3) hit points don’t need to be the “measure” of the damage; it might be the character’s con- stitution score or some other number that’s used for the measurement, (4) the “vampire” might gain strength (probably hit points) from draining a victim’s fluids, (5) if the attack involves a tube or some other physical connection, you might want to consider this as an opportunity to add some interesting tactics to the battle – perhaps the tube has hit points and an armor class to allow the con- nection to be severed quickly, (6) perhaps the fluid is being replaced with something else like eggs or control-fluid.
34
Dexterity Loss. The attack drains one or more points of dexterity from the victim. The attacker may or may not gain a benefit
from the drain (additional hit points, to-hit bonuses, etc) depending upon whether it seems to fit well with the concept. If the vic- tim reaches a dexterity of 0, one of several things might happen: the victim might die and become a creature similar to the attacker (this is common with undead, but a bit weird when dexterity is the attribute score being drained). One explanation for death at 0 dexterity is that the body’s internal systems (circulatory, etc) are no longer working in time with each other.
35
Dimensional (imprisonment). This type of attack imprisons the victim – to some degree – in another dimension or reality. This
can be interpreted a number of different ways. Perhaps suspended animation or catatonia can be caused by some sort of dimen- sional disjunction. Perhaps the imprisonment leaves an incorporeal echo on the material plane – and it might still be able to use spells or mental powers. Perhaps the imprisonment’s only effect is to slow the victim’s movement rate (your feet are mired in one dimension, but the rest of you is still free…).
36
Dimensional (phasing). This type of special attack taps other dimensions of time and space to screw around with the opposition’s
movement. The victim is affected with some type of dimensional movement (whether because of a disease, a poison, a curse, the opening of a synchronicity with the eighth dimension, a coating of dimensional frictionlessness, or whatever). The effect is most likely some sort of randomization of the victim’s movement, although it might also involve moving through solid substances (or even being able to move faster through solids than through air).
37 Disease. The special attack causes a disease. Diseases can be fatal or non-fatal, can be quick-onset or slow-onset, and can cause all kinds of different symptoms while the disease runs its course. Symptoms could include losing the ability to cast spells, a penalty on saving throws or attack rolls, or whatever other interesting conditions you can dream up.
38
Drain Experience (experience points). The special attack causes the victim to lose experience points. Most likely, this is either
an undead creature or a creature that can affect the victim’s memory. A third possibility, related to memory, is a creature with some ability to manipulate time or aging. Brain-creatures, leech-creatures, undead creatures, and dimensional creatures thus tend to be the prime candidates for this sort of power. If you’ve got a good idea that falls outside those prime candidates, though, go for it.
39
Drain Experience (level). The special attack causes the victim to lose one (or possibly two) levels of experience. This is gener-
ally a feature of undead creatures that suck away the victim’s life energy (as opposed to creatures who affect memory, likely suck- ing away a set number of experience points rather than a level). A monster with this sort of level drain should be associated with life (death) force in some way if it is not undead.
Electrical Damage (affects action). The attack causes electrical damage to the target, but there’s also a special effect involved
– if the victim fails some sort of check (morale, saving throw, percentile chance, etc) he takes some action in response to or as a result of the shock. Since electricity affects the brain, all kinds of actions are credible here – it’s a much broader set of possibilities
Table 2-79: Special Attack Type Continued
Die Roll Special Attack
42 Electrical Damage (hit or miss). The attack causes electrical damage, but a successful saving throw means that the target incurs no damage. In other words, the saving throw functions as a to-hit roll and if it is successful the attack missed. Another way of handling this is to require an attack roll for the attack itself (and then don’t allow a saving throw).
43 Electrical Damage (progressive). The victim takes electrical damage, but continues to take damage in later combat rounds until the series of electrical shocks has run its course. Exactly what effect the continuing damage will have is up to you. It would almost certainly prevent spell casting, but might also create penalties on saving throws, attack rolls, and/or movement rate.
44
Electrical Damage (save for half damage). The attack causes electrical damage, reduced by half with a successful saving throw.
In general, lightning or electrical attacks don’t have the same sort of “save or burn” collateral damage as fire attacks – or at least, they’re not generally as severe. Electrical attacks are often made unique by the way the electricity moves around. Consider the possibility of the electricity jumping from one target to another, the possibility of it reflecting off a wall or other surface.
45
Electricity (special). In this case, the electricity involved in the special attack isn’t normal electricity – it’s more of a special ef-
fect for something else. Just as magical fires can do all sorts of things rather than just burn, a strike of magical lightning or a bolt of power can be the “visual candy” for a multitude of different sorts of attacks completely unrelated to real-world electricity. Pos- sible effects include: lowering an ability score, acting randomly, suffering combat penalties, following enemy orders, floating up into the air, losing the ability to act, losing the ability to cast spells, functioning as a lower-level character, running away, suffering saving throw penalties, suffering hallucinations, and suffering from a heightened emotion such as rage or sorrow.
46
Elemental Vortex. The special attack creates (or animates) a whirlwind of air, fire, water, or earth. In each case, the attack causes
damage from a combination of smashing into the target plus the inherent properties of the element being used. Thus, fire would cause additional fire damage, water might drown the victim, air might pick the victim up and move him around, and earth could possibly suffocate the victim but is more likely just going to do more damage with the churning impact. More powerful monsters might create vortices with more interesting results including collateral damage to equipment, moving the target a long way, pulling the target down beneath the water or air, pulling the target into the elemental plane itself, stunning the target for some period of time, causing the target to drop items, etc.
47
Emotion (despondency or sorrow). This special attack induces intense despondency or sorrow in the victim. As is the case with all
special attacks involving emotion, creating the details of the special attack is a two-step process concerning (1) who is affected and (2) what happens when someone is affected. Here are some ideas about who might or might not be vulnerable: (1) anyone under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected but those of higher level are at no risk, (2) anyone under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected and those of higher level are affected if they fail a saving throw, (3) members of certain races or classes may be immune or might be particularly vulnerable, (4) anyone with intelligence less than a certain number might be automatically affected or might be immune, (5) those who are particularly close to the monster (or the locus of the emotion-effect) have a penalty on the sav- ing throw, or, conversely, everyone beyond a certain distance gets a bonus, (6) the effect begins as a very low chance but increases as the combat progresses (a series of saving throws or some other “check” with increasing penalties). As a list of ideas for the effect of despondency, consider the following: (1) immobilized with sorrow, regret, grief, or ennui; (2) all die rolls are made with a penalty, (3) character departs to go and repair his miserable life, (4) character decides to end it all, and rolls an attack against himself, (5) character blames someone else for his miserable condition, and attacks them instead of the monster, (6) character risks dropping dead from melancholy. One interesting idea is that if the character escapes from this effect, he might be granted a bonus to attack the monster, in revenge. Players adore it when a special attack gets turned around into a bonus for them.
48
Emotion (fear). The monster has a horrific appearance, changes into a horrific appearance, mentally induces fear, or has some
other way of causing fear. Fear can be portrayed in a number of different ways, in terms of the attack’s effect, and there are also a number of different ways to determine who is vulnerable to the attack. Here are some ideas about who might or might not be vulnerable: (1) anyone under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected but those of higher level are at no risk, (2) any- one under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected and those of higher level are affected if they fail a saving throw, (3) members of certain races or classes may be immune or might be particularly vulnerable, (4) anyone with intelligence less than a certain number might be automatically affected or might be immune, (5) those who are particularly close to the monster (or the locus of the fear-effect) have a penalty on the saving throw, or, conversely, everyone beyond a certain distance gets a bonus, (6) the fear effect begins as a very low chance but increases as the combat progresses (a series of saving throws or some other “check” with increasing penalties). As a list of ideas for the effect of fear, consider the following: (1) an ability score is vastly reduced until the fear goes away, (2) those affected act randomly according to a table you prepare, (3) those affected suffer combat penalties to hit and/or on damage, (4) those affected follow orders given by the source of fear, (5) those affected are paralyzed with fear, (6) those affected function as a lower-level character, (7) running away (8) chance of death from fear.
49
Emotion (love or happiness). This special attack induces the emotion of love or happiness in the victim – probably directed
toward the monster using the special attack, but possibly as a way of immobilizing the target. As is the case with all special at- tacks involving emotion, creating the details of the special attack is a two-step process concerning (1) who is affected and (2) what happens when someone is affected. Here are some ideas about who might or might not be vulnerable: (1) anyone under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected but those of higher level are at no risk, (2) anyone under a certain number of hit dice is automatically affected and those of higher level are affected if they fail a saving throw, (3) members of certain races or classes may