An inflicted condition is a contra-ability that is tallied as it is inflicted upon a PC/NPC/Monster. When the condition exceeds 1/2 it’s paired attribute a character is disadvantaged (-4 to related action in old-school talk) and when the paired attribute is exceeded a character is helpless.
Suggested Inflicted Conditions
Condition
|
Attribute
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over 1/2
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overwhelmed
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Rictus
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Dexterity
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-4 to actions and move is halved
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Immobilized
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Sickness
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Constitution
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-4 to related saves and healing effects are halved
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overcome, Will die after 3 days. May cause sickness in others nearby.
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Confusion
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Intelligence
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-4 to actions and 50% chance to temporarily forget a spell or command word
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Comatose.
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Madness
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Wisdom
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-4 to related saves and 25% chance to descend into gibbering madness in times of stress
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Raving lunatic incapable of coherent and directed action.
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Withering
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Strength
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-4 to related action (melee attacks and damage). can only carry half as much as normal without begin encumbered,
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Too weak to move under own power.
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Dread
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Charisma
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-4 to related actions, 25% chance to be overcome with horror or ennui in times of stress. -2 to reaction checks/loyalty/morale checks of minions if using 2d6.
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Collapse into a near comatose state. Hirelings and Henchmen will become forlorn and may abandon character.
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Recording an inflicted condition:
As attacks that causes one of these inflicted conditions are suffered the score should be tallied for the condition and as a character recovers the condition is decreased.
How many points are inflicted on an attack?
This is a matter of campaign style and scale. As it is tied to ability score the flexibility and range of score should be considered. If attributes are fixed and or rarely increased the effect of inflicted conditions is going to remain essentially identical across levels of play.
I recommend 3 points of a condition be inflicted where the effect would take place or drain a level normally. Yes ghouls would be less dangerous with their attacks inflicting Rictus and not paralyzing one completely on a single failed save.
If a saving throw is normally allowed against the special attack it will allow defend completely against the inflicted sate on that attack with a successful save.
Recovering from an inflicted state.
Each full day of rest will allow a character to remove 1 pt per level from inflicted states they may suffer from. Magical effects that restore ability damage will equally reduce inflicted states on paired abilities and those that restore levels will restore points lost on an attack.
Additional notes on use of an inflicted state:
•Varying The inflicted State an undead begin causes to meet the origin or use of the undead within the campaign/adventure. Ghouls that cause sickness with their filthy claws and Vampires that cause Dread with their Gaze will have a different feel and use in an adventure.
•The enduring but not indefinite nature of inflicted conditions make them something to be avoided but are not campaign changing following a survived encounter.
•Items can be utilized that allow for the inflicted conditions to be suffered as well. Filth Flasks that inflict sickness could be hurled, Mummies may have weapons enchanted to cause madness on those they strike.
•Necrotic transformation…just when a character is transformed into an undead begin by the results of begin overwhelmed by a condition are up t the DM and should reflect the nature of the monsters so harming characters. Unless the attack states a specific time after begin defeated in monster description I recommend 3 days after being overwhelmed.
So the average person would need to be hit 4-5 times before the 1/2 level is reached?
ReplyDelete4 or 5 times would be 12 or 15 points, more then enough to overwhem an average person, Half would be on 2 or 3 blows going with 3pts of inflicted condition per blow.
DeleteWould the 'drain' point per hit vary by the HD of the undead critter?
ReplyDeleteI suppose there can be different ways to scale that for a campaign. I'd keep a set score per creature relative to the level drained or relative severity of the attack and scaling that to HD may work out here and there. I've been looking at 3pts per level drained in original write-ups but that causes some odd scaling issues when applied to other monsters. Take ghouls for instance: an attack can cause paralysis: if that's each attack there's a high chance in a round people are normally going to be completely paralyzed, if a save only be made if AN attack (not each) the impact of paralysis diminishes but doesn't go away; I favor a per hit in rules where the ghoul gets multiple attacks but this makes them over-whelming compared to many other monsters but the application of inflicting say 3pts of Rictus on each hit keeps them dangerous but not as overwhelming. Were a DM to have that be only once per round regardless of number of wounds 3pts of rictus would not be anywhere near a severe, which may work out ideally but changes the relative danger of the monster significantly if one want s to keep using them as written into the rules and published adventures.
DeleteSo the answer to your question is: do what fits for a campaign.