Maneuvers: Difference between revisions

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A "maneuver" is an action that you can take on your turn. Each turn, you must choose one of the following maneuvers: [[#Aim|Aim]], [[#All-Out Attack|All-Out Attack]], [[#All-Out Defense|All-Out Defense]], [[#Attack|Attack]], [[#Change Posture|Change Posture]], [[#Concentrate|Concentrate]], [[#Do Nothing|Do Nothing]], [[#Evaluate|Evaluate]], [[#Feint|Feint]], [[#Move|Move]], [[#Move and Attack|Move and Attack]], [[#Ready|Ready]], or [[#Wait|Wait]]. Your choice determines ''what you can do'' on your turn, and sets your options for active defense and movement.
A "maneuver" is an action that you can take on your turn. Each turn, you must choose one of the following maneuvers: [[#Aim|Aim]], [[#All-Out Attack|All-Out Attack]], [[#All-Out Defense|All-Out Defense]], [[#Attack|Attack]], [[#Change Posture|Change Posture]], [[#Concentrate|Concentrate]], [[#Do Nothing|Do Nothing]], [[#Evaluate|Evaluate]], [[#Feint|Feint]], [[#Move|Move]], [[#Move and Attack|Move and Attack]], [[#Ready|Ready]], or [[#Wait|Wait]]. Your choice determines ''what you can do'' on your turn, and sets your options for active defense and movement.


Active Defense  
==Active Defense and Maneuvers==
and Maneuvers
The maneuver you choose affects your "active defenses" – your ability to dodge, parry, or block attacks (see [[Defending]]). You only have to select an active defense if you are attacked. Your most recent maneuver governs the active defenses you can use.
The maneuver you choose affects
 
your “active defenses” – your ability to
For the purpose of active defenses, your maneuver is considered to be in effect until you select another maneuver on your next turn. For instance, if you chose [[#All-Out Defense|All-Out Defense]] (which gives a defensive advantage), its benefits would apply if you were attacked after you took your turn, and would persist until it was your turn again and you took a different maneuver.
dodge, parry, or block attacks (see
 
Defending, p. 374). You only have to
If you're attacked before you've had a chance to choose a maneuver – usually at the start of combat – you're considered to be taking a [[#Do Nothing|Do Nothing]] maneuver.
select an active defense if you are
 
attacked. Your most recent maneuver
==Movement and Maneuvers==
governs the active defenses you can
Most maneuvers allow some form of movement. The Move and Move and Attack maneuvers allow you to move quickly, up to a number of yards equal to your full Move score. Other maneuvers, such as All-Out Attack, limit you to a fraction of your full Move.
 
===Step===
Many maneuvers restrict movement to a "step." This is movement up to 1/10 your Move, minimum 1 yard, in any direction, a change of facing (for instance, to turn around), or both. You can perform your step before or after the rest of the maneuver; for instance, you could step and attack or attack and step.
 
===No Movement===
Some maneuvers allow no movement. In particular, you cannot move if you Change Posture or Do Nothing. For more on movement, see [[#Move|Move]] and [[Movement and Combat]].
 
==Free Actions==
"Free actions" are things you  can do during any maneuver. Some examples:
 
===Talk===
You can always talk. If the GM wants to be realistic, he should allow only one sentence of communication per second...but it is usually more fun when you ignore this limitation!
 
===Maintain Spells or Psi===
As long as you remain active, you can maintain a spell or ongoing psi ability, no matter what else you do.
 
===Drop an Item===
You can drop any "ready" item at any time during any maneuver. If you're moving, you may drop it at any point within your reach during your movement.
 
===Crouch===
If standing, you may opt to crouch (to make yourself a smaller target for ranged attacks) at the beginning of your turn. This will usually slow your movement speed (see [[Movement]]), and you cannot crouch and sprint. If you were already crouching, it is a free action to rise from a crouching position at any time.
 
==Do Nothing==
Anyone who is just standing still is assumed to be doing nothing. In particular, when combat begins, anyone who has not yet taken a turn is treated as if he took this maneuver before entering combat.
 
Someone who is conscious but
stunned or surprised  must  take this
maneuver. On each turn of Do Nothing, he may attempt a HT roll to
recover from physical stun or an IQ
roll to recover from mental stun. On a
success, he recovers at the end of his
turn – that is, he Does Nothing this
turn, but may act normally next turn.
 
Movement: None!
 
Active Defense: Any (unless you’re
tied up, etc.). If you are stunned, how-
ever, your active defenses are at -4
until your next turn – even if you
recover.
 
MOVE
 
Move, but take no other action
except those specified under  Free
Actions  (p. 363). You may move any
number of yards up to your full Move
score. Most other maneuvers allow at
least some movement on your turn;
take this maneuver if all you want to
do is move.
 
Players must tell the GM exactly
where their PCs move to so that he
can keep track of the combat. The GM
decides where his NPCs move, and
will inform any players whose PCs are
in a position to witness the movement.
If you are controlling a vehicle or
riding a mount, take a Move maneu-
ver to spend the turn actively control-
ling it. Instead of you  moving, the
vehicle or mount moves on your turn
(carrying you and other occupants).
See [[Mounted Combat]] and
[[Vehicles]] for details.
 
Sprinting:  If you run  forward for
two or more turns in a row, you get
bonus movement on your second and
later moves; see Sprinting (p. 354).
 
Movement: See above.
 
Active Defense: Any.
 
CHANGE
POSTURE
 
This maneuver lets you switch
between any two "postures" (stances
in which you can pose your body).
Valid postures are  standing, sitting,
kneeling, crawling, lying prone  (face
down), and lying face up. Any posture
other than standing slows your move-
ment and penalizes your attack and
defense rolls, but also makes you a
smaller target for ranged attacks.
You cannot stand up directly from
a lying position. If you are lying (prone
or face up), you must take a Change
Posture maneuver to rise to a crawl-
ing, kneeling, or sitting posture first. A
second Change Posture maneuver lets
you stand from any of these postures.
(Going from standing up to lying
down, however, only takes one maneu-
ver – or none at all, if the change was
involuntary!)
 
You can switch between kneeling
and standing (only) as the “step” por-
tion of any maneuver that allows a
step – you don't need Change Posture
for that. This is ''instead'' of using the
step to move. Thus, you could go from
prone to kneeling with a Change
Posture maneuver on one turn, and
then stand up in place on your next
turn by taking a maneuver that allows
a step.
 
Crouching does  not require a
Change Posture maneuver; see  Free
Actions (p. 363).
 
Movement:  None. You remain in
place as you change posture.
 
Active Defense: Any. Postures other
than standing penalize your defense
rolls, but also make you a smaller tar-
get for ranged attacks.
 
AIM
 
This is a full-turn maneuver used
to aim a ranged weapon (or a device
such as a camera or telescope). You
must choose a specific target. You
can’t aim at something that you can’t
see or otherwise detect.
 
Specify the weapon you're aiming
with and your target. If you follow an
Aim maneuver with an Attack or All-
Out Attack with the same weapon
against the same  target, you get a
bonus to hit. Add the weapon's
Accuracy (Acc) to your skill, plus any
bonuses for targeting systems used:
sights, targeting computers, etc.
If you brace a firearm or crossbow,
you get an extra +1 to Acc. A firearm
or crossbow is braced if you can rest it
on a sandbag, low wall, car, etc. A one-
handed firearm (e.g., a pistol) is con-
sidered braced if used two-handed. A
two-handed firearm (e.g., a rifle) is
considered braced if you are prone
and using a bipod.
 
If you Aim for more than one sec-
ond, you receive an additional bonus:
+1 for two seconds of Aim, or +2 for
three or more seconds.
 
Your combined bonus from all tar-
geting systems (scopes, sights, com-
puters, etc.) cannot exceed the
weapon’s base Accuracy. For instance,
if you add a telescopic sight that gives
+4 Acc to a pistol with Acc 2, the
bonus is +2, not +4.
 
Movement: Step.  Exception: You
cannot step if using a braced, two-
handed weapon.
 
Active Defense: Any, but you auto-
matically spoil your aim and lose all
accumulated benefits. If you are
injured while aiming, you must make
a Will roll or lose your aim.
 
EVALUATE
 
This maneuver is the melee combat
equivalent of Aim. It lets you take time
to study an adversary in order to gain
a combat bonus on a subsequent
attack. You must specify one  visible
opponent who is close enough to
attack unarmed or with a ready melee
weapon, or whom you could reach
with a single Move and Attack maneu-
ver. You are sizing him up and looking
for the right moment to strike.
 
An Evaluate maneuver gives you
+1 to skill for the purpose of an Attack,
Feint, All-Out Attack, or Move and
Attack made against that opponent, on
your next turn only. You may take mul-
tiple, consecutive Evaluate maneuvers
before you strike, giving a cumulative
+1 per turn, to a maximum of +3.
 
Movement: Step.
 
Active Defense: Any. This does not
spoil your evaluation.
 
ATTACK
 
Use this maneuver to make an
armed or unarmed attack in melee
combat, or to use a thrown or missile
weapon in ranged combat. To use a
weapon to attack, it must be ready.
If you are using a melee weapon or
unarmed attack, your target must be
within reach. Resolve the attack as
explained under  Melee Attacks
(pp. 369-372). If you took an Evaluate
maneuver (above) last turn, you will
have a bonus to hit. If you took a Feint
(below), your opponent may have a
penalty to defend.
 
If you are using a ranged weapon,
your target must be within the
weapon’s Max range. Resolve the
attack according to  Ranged Attacks
(pp. 372-374). If you took an Aim
maneuver (p. 364) last turn, you will
have a bonus to hit.
 
Movement: Step. You may step and
then attack or attack and then step –
your choice. To move further and still
attack, take All-Out Attack or Move
and Attack.
 
Active Defense: Any.
 
FEINT
 
“Fake” a melee attack. You cannot
Feint someone unless you could have
hit him with a melee attack – that is,
your weapon is ready and your foe is
within reach. This maneuver is not an
attack, though, and does not make
your weapon unready.
 
When you Feint, roll a Quick
Contest of Melee Weapon skills with
your foe; if either of you is unarmed,
you may roll against an unarmed
combat skill instead. Your opponent
may opt to roll against Cloak or Shield
skill, if he is suitably equipped and this
would give him a better roll. If his DX
is better than his combat skills, he
may roll against DX instead.
 
If you fail your roll, your Feint is
unsuccessful. Likewise, if you suc-
ceed, but your foe succeeds by  as
much as  or more than you do, your
Feint fails.
 
If you make your roll, and your foe
fails, subtract your margin of success
from the foe’s active defense if you
attack him with Attack, All-Out
Attack, or Move and Attack on your
next turn. For instance, if your skill is
15 and you roll a 12, your foe defends
against you at -3 next turn.
If you and your foe both succeed,
but you succeed by more, subtract
your margin of victory from the foe’s
defense. For instance, if your skill is 15
and you roll a 10 (success by 5), and
your foe’s skill is 14 and he rolls 12
(success by 2), you win by 3, so he will
defend at -3 if your next maneuver is
to attack him.
 
You cannot Feint if your foe is
unable to observe you! However, if
your foe runs away, turns his back on
you, or loses sight of you in some way
after you successfully Feint, he will
still suffer his defense penalty  if you
attack him on your next turn.  If  you
lose track of the foe, or cannot attack
him next turn, your foe’s defense
penalty vanishes.
 
A Feint is good for one second! But
if you Feint and then make an All-Out
Attack (Double), the feint applies to
both attacks.
 
In all cases, your allies cannot take
advantage of your Feint. The defense
penalty applies only to  your next
attack.
 
Shield Feints: After you have
attacked your foe once by striking
with your shield (see p. 406), you may
also Feint with your shield, rolling
against Shield skill.
 
Movement: Step.
 
Active Defense: Any. However, if you
Feint and then parry with an unbal-
anced weapon, you cannot attack on
your next turn, making your Feint
pointless.
 
ALL-OUT ATTACK
 
Attack any foe with a ready
weapon, making no effort to defend
against enemy attacks. If you are mak-
ing a melee attack, you must specify
one of these four options before you
attack:
 
•Determined: Make a single attack
at +4 to hit!
 
•Double: Make two attacks against
the same foe,  if you have two ready
weapons or one weapon that does not
have to be readied after use. Attacks
with a second weapon held in the off
hand are at the usual -4 (see
Handedness, p. 14) unless you have
Ambidexterity (p. 39).
 
•Feint: Make one Feint (see above)
and then one attack against the same
foe. The Feint applies to  this  attack
instead of one you make on your next
turn.
 
• Strong: Make a single attack, at
normal skill. If you hit, you get +2 to
damage – or +1 damage per die, if that
would be better. This only applies to
melee attacks doing ST-based thrust
or swing damage, not to weapons
such as force swords.
 
If you are making a ranged attack,
you must specify  one  of these two
options before you attack:
 
•Determined: Make a single attack
at +1 to hit.
 
• Suppression Fire: Take the  entire
turn to spray an area with automatic
fire. This is a full-turn maneuver, and
you can only choose this option if your
weapon has RoF 5+. See Suppression
Fire (p. 409).
 
Movement: You may move up to
half your Move, but you can only
move forward.
 
Active Defense: You may make  no
active defenses at all  from the point
you take this maneuver until your next
turn. If someone attacks you after you
make an All-Out attack, all you can do
is hope he misses – you can’t dodge,
parry, or block!
 
MOVE AND
ATTACK
 
Move as described for the Move
maneuver (p. 364), but during or after
your move, make a single, poorly
aimed attack – either unarmed or with
a ready weapon.
 
You attack as described for the
Attack maneuver (above), but at a
penalty. If you are making a ranged
attack, you have a penalty of -2 or the
weapon’s Bulk rating, whichever is
worse  – and if you took an Aim,
you lose all of its bonuses. If you are
making a melee attack other than a
slam (p. 371), you have a flat -4 to
skill, and your adjusted skill cannot
exceed 9.
 
Movement: As described under the
Move maneuver – but since you are
trying to do two things at once, you
are -2 on any rolls the GM requires to
avoid falling, tripping over obstacles,
etc.
 
Active Defense: Dodge or block
only. You cannot parry and you may
not retreat (see Retreat, p. 377).
 
ALL-OUT
DEFENSE
 
This is the maneuver to choose
when you’re beset by foes – especially
foes who like All-Out Attacks! You
must specify one of the following two
options:
 
• Increased Defense: Add +2 to one
active defense of your choice: Dodge,
Parry, or Block. This bonus persists
until your next turn.
 
• Double Defense: Apply two differ-
ent  active defenses against the same
attack. If you fail your defense roll
against an attack, you may try a sec-
ond, different defense against that
attack. For instance, if you fail a block,
you may try a dodge or a parry. If you
try a parry (armed or unarmed) with
one hand and fail, a parry using the
other hand does count as a “different
defense.”
 
Movement: If you choose Increased
Dodge, you may move up to half your
Move. Otherwise, the only movement
you may take is a step.
 
Active Defense: You may choose
any legal active defense, with bonuses
as described above.
 
CONCENTRATE
 
You  concentrate on one primarily
mental task (even it has a minor phys-
ical component, like operating con-
trols, gesturing, or speaking). This
may be casting a magical spell, using a
psi ability, making a Sense roll to spot
an invisible warrior, making a
Leadership roll to give orders, making
an Electronics Operation roll to oper-
ate a sensor, or any similar action,
including most IQ-based skill rolls.
This is a full-turn maneuver.
 
Some activities (e.g., casting spells)
require you to take the Concentrate
maneuver for multiple seconds. If you
are forced to use an active defense,
knocked down, injured, or otherwise
distracted before you finish, you must
make a Will-3 roll. On a failure, you
lose your concentration and must
start over.
 
Movement: Step.
 
Active Defense: Any. However, it
interferes with concentration as noted
above.
 
READY
 
Take a Ready maneuver to pick up
or draw  any item and prepare it for
use; e.g., to pull a sword from its
sheath or a gun from its holster, or to
reload a firearm. In some cases, you
may also need a Ready maneuver to
regain control of an unwieldy weapon
after a swing, or to adjust the reach of
a long weapon – see the Melee Weapon
Table (p. 271).
 
You can use a Ready maneuver to
perform physical actions other than
fighting: opening or closing a door,
picking a lock, digging, lifting, etc.
Continuing activities may require
multiple, consecutive Ready maneu-
vers; see Other Actions in Combat
(p. 382).
 
Finally, a Ready maneuver lets you
switch an advantage “off” or “on” if it
is not always on and does not require
an Attack or Concentrate maneuver to
use.
use.
For the purpose of active defenses,
 
your maneuver is considered to be in
For more information, see
effect until you select another maneu-
Readying Weapons and Other Gear
ver on your next turn. For instance, if
(p. 382) and When Is a Weapon Ready?
you chose All-Out Defense (which
(p. 382).
gives a defensive advantage), its bene-
 
fits would apply if you were attacked
Movement: Step.
after you took your turn, and would
 
persist until it was your turn again and
Active Defense: Any.
you took a different maneuver.
 
If you’re attacked before you’ve had
WAIT
a chance to choose a maneuver – usu-
 
ally at the start of combat – you’re con-
Do nothing unless  a particular
sidered to be taking a Do Nothing
event you specified in advance
maneuver (see p. 364).
occurs before your next turn; e.g., a
Movement
foe moves into range. If that hap-
and Maneuvers
pens, you may transform your Wait
Most maneuvers allow some form
into an Attack, Feint, All-Out Attack
of movement. The Move and Move
(you must specify the option before
and Attack maneuvers allow you to
acting), or Ready maneuver. If you
move quickly, up to a number of yards
are reacting to someone else, this
equal to your full Move score. Other
interrupts  his turn, but he can
maneuvers, such as All-Out Attack,
resume it after you’ve acted.
limit you to a fraction of your full
 
Move.
You must specify exactly what your
Many maneuvers restrict move-
action will be when you take the Wait
ment to a “step.” This is movement up
maneuver, and what will trigger it. For
to 1/10 your Move, minimum 1 yard,
instance, “I’ll make an All-Out Attack
in any direction, a change of facing
(Determined) with my sword on the
(for instance, to turn around), or both.
first orc to move toward me.
You can perform your step before or
 
after the rest of the maneuver; for
You may take a Wait with a ready
instance, you could step and attack or
ranged weapon; this is known as “cov-
attack and step.
ering” a target or area. If so, you must
Some maneuvers allow no move-
specify the zone that you are covering
ment. In particular, you cannot move
with that weapon. There is no penalty
if you Change Posture or Do Nothing.
to cover a one-yard area. For larger
For more on movement, see Move
areas and additional rules, see
(p. 364) and Movement and Combat
Opportunity Fire (p. 390).
(p. 367).
 
Free Actions
You can use the Wait maneuver
“Free actions” are things you
for  any “reflex action” you want to
can do during  any maneuver. Some
plan in advance, provided you speci-
examples:
fy both the response and the action
Talk. You can always talk. If the GM
that will trigger it. This can include
wants to be realistic, he should allow
holding a knife at a hostage’s throat,
only one sentence of communication
or even a noncombat action (e.g., “If
per second . . . but it is usually more
Dora sees any orcs, she will pull this
fun when you ignore this limitation!
rope immediately – otherwise, she
does nothing.”). An action only qual-
ifies as a “reflex” if you could do it in
a single motion. The GM’s decision is
final.
 
Finally, you can use Wait to coor-
dinate actions with slower friends.
Stop Thrust:  If you have a ready
thrusting weapon, you can use a
Wait to brace your weapon to receive
a possible enemy charge. Simply
state, “I brace for a stop thrust.” You
can convert your Wait into an Attack
or All-Out Attack against any one foe
that moves one or more yards
toward you to make a melee attack
(armed or unarmed, including a
slam or a grapple) or evade (see
Evading, p. 368). You strike first if
you have the longer reach. If you hit
and your foe fails to defend, add +1
to thrust damage for every two  full
yards your attacker moved toward
you.
 
Movement: None until your Wait is
triggered. At that point, you may move
as allowed by the maneuver you spec-
ified (Attack, Feint, All-Out Attack, or
Ready).
 
Active Defense: You may defend
normally while you are waiting or
after your Wait is triggered. But if you
defend while taking a Wait, you may
not transform your Wait into an All-
Out Attack; you must convert your
Wait into an Attack instead.
 
[[Category:Combat]]
[[Category:Combat]]
[[Category:Maneuvers]]

Revision as of 07:00, 9 June 2010

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A "maneuver" is an action that you can take on your turn. Each turn, you must choose one of the following maneuvers: Aim, All-Out Attack, All-Out Defense, Attack, Change Posture, Concentrate, Do Nothing, Evaluate, Feint, Move, Move and Attack, Ready, or Wait. Your choice determines what you can do on your turn, and sets your options for active defense and movement.

Active Defense and Maneuvers

The maneuver you choose affects your "active defenses" – your ability to dodge, parry, or block attacks (see Defending). You only have to select an active defense if you are attacked. Your most recent maneuver governs the active defenses you can use.

For the purpose of active defenses, your maneuver is considered to be in effect until you select another maneuver on your next turn. For instance, if you chose All-Out Defense (which gives a defensive advantage), its benefits would apply if you were attacked after you took your turn, and would persist until it was your turn again and you took a different maneuver.

If you're attacked before you've had a chance to choose a maneuver – usually at the start of combat – you're considered to be taking a Do Nothing maneuver.

Movement and Maneuvers

Most maneuvers allow some form of movement. The Move and Move and Attack maneuvers allow you to move quickly, up to a number of yards equal to your full Move score. Other maneuvers, such as All-Out Attack, limit you to a fraction of your full Move.

Step

Many maneuvers restrict movement to a "step." This is movement up to 1/10 your Move, minimum 1 yard, in any direction, a change of facing (for instance, to turn around), or both. You can perform your step before or after the rest of the maneuver; for instance, you could step and attack or attack and step.

No Movement

Some maneuvers allow no movement. In particular, you cannot move if you Change Posture or Do Nothing. For more on movement, see Move and Movement and Combat.

Free Actions

"Free actions" are things you can do during any maneuver. Some examples:

Talk

You can always talk. If the GM wants to be realistic, he should allow only one sentence of communication per second...but it is usually more fun when you ignore this limitation!

Maintain Spells or Psi

As long as you remain active, you can maintain a spell or ongoing psi ability, no matter what else you do.

Drop an Item

You can drop any "ready" item at any time during any maneuver. If you're moving, you may drop it at any point within your reach during your movement.

Crouch

If standing, you may opt to crouch (to make yourself a smaller target for ranged attacks) at the beginning of your turn. This will usually slow your movement speed (see Movement), and you cannot crouch and sprint. If you were already crouching, it is a free action to rise from a crouching position at any time.

Do Nothing

Anyone who is just standing still is assumed to be doing nothing. In particular, when combat begins, anyone who has not yet taken a turn is treated as if he took this maneuver before entering combat.

Someone who is conscious but stunned or surprised must take this maneuver. On each turn of Do Nothing, he may attempt a HT roll to recover from physical stun or an IQ roll to recover from mental stun. On a success, he recovers at the end of his turn – that is, he Does Nothing this turn, but may act normally next turn.

Movement: None!

Active Defense: Any (unless you’re tied up, etc.). If you are stunned, how- ever, your active defenses are at -4 until your next turn – even if you recover.

MOVE

Move, but take no other action except those specified under Free Actions (p. 363). You may move any number of yards up to your full Move score. Most other maneuvers allow at least some movement on your turn; take this maneuver if all you want to do is move.

Players must tell the GM exactly where their PCs move to so that he can keep track of the combat. The GM decides where his NPCs move, and will inform any players whose PCs are in a position to witness the movement. If you are controlling a vehicle or riding a mount, take a Move maneu- ver to spend the turn actively control- ling it. Instead of you moving, the vehicle or mount moves on your turn (carrying you and other occupants). See Mounted Combat and Vehicles for details.

Sprinting: If you run forward for two or more turns in a row, you get bonus movement on your second and later moves; see Sprinting (p. 354).

Movement: See above.

Active Defense: Any.

CHANGE POSTURE

This maneuver lets you switch between any two "postures" (stances in which you can pose your body). Valid postures are standing, sitting, kneeling, crawling, lying prone (face down), and lying face up. Any posture other than standing slows your move- ment and penalizes your attack and defense rolls, but also makes you a smaller target for ranged attacks. You cannot stand up directly from a lying position. If you are lying (prone or face up), you must take a Change Posture maneuver to rise to a crawl- ing, kneeling, or sitting posture first. A second Change Posture maneuver lets you stand from any of these postures. (Going from standing up to lying down, however, only takes one maneu- ver – or none at all, if the change was involuntary!)

You can switch between kneeling and standing (only) as the “step” por- tion of any maneuver that allows a step – you don't need Change Posture for that. This is instead of using the step to move. Thus, you could go from prone to kneeling with a Change Posture maneuver on one turn, and then stand up in place on your next turn by taking a maneuver that allows a step.

Crouching does not require a Change Posture maneuver; see Free Actions (p. 363).

Movement: None. You remain in place as you change posture.

Active Defense: Any. Postures other than standing penalize your defense rolls, but also make you a smaller tar- get for ranged attacks.

AIM

This is a full-turn maneuver used to aim a ranged weapon (or a device such as a camera or telescope). You must choose a specific target. You can’t aim at something that you can’t see or otherwise detect.

Specify the weapon you're aiming with and your target. If you follow an Aim maneuver with an Attack or All- Out Attack with the same weapon against the same target, you get a bonus to hit. Add the weapon's Accuracy (Acc) to your skill, plus any bonuses for targeting systems used: sights, targeting computers, etc. If you brace a firearm or crossbow, you get an extra +1 to Acc. A firearm or crossbow is braced if you can rest it on a sandbag, low wall, car, etc. A one- handed firearm (e.g., a pistol) is con- sidered braced if used two-handed. A two-handed firearm (e.g., a rifle) is considered braced if you are prone and using a bipod.

If you Aim for more than one sec- ond, you receive an additional bonus: +1 for two seconds of Aim, or +2 for three or more seconds.

Your combined bonus from all tar- geting systems (scopes, sights, com- puters, etc.) cannot exceed the weapon’s base Accuracy. For instance, if you add a telescopic sight that gives +4 Acc to a pistol with Acc 2, the bonus is +2, not +4.

Movement: Step. Exception: You cannot step if using a braced, two- handed weapon.

Active Defense: Any, but you auto- matically spoil your aim and lose all accumulated benefits. If you are injured while aiming, you must make a Will roll or lose your aim.

EVALUATE

This maneuver is the melee combat equivalent of Aim. It lets you take time to study an adversary in order to gain a combat bonus on a subsequent attack. You must specify one visible opponent who is close enough to attack unarmed or with a ready melee weapon, or whom you could reach with a single Move and Attack maneu- ver. You are sizing him up and looking for the right moment to strike.

An Evaluate maneuver gives you +1 to skill for the purpose of an Attack, Feint, All-Out Attack, or Move and Attack made against that opponent, on your next turn only. You may take mul- tiple, consecutive Evaluate maneuvers before you strike, giving a cumulative +1 per turn, to a maximum of +3.

Movement: Step.

Active Defense: Any. This does not spoil your evaluation.

ATTACK

Use this maneuver to make an armed or unarmed attack in melee combat, or to use a thrown or missile weapon in ranged combat. To use a weapon to attack, it must be ready. If you are using a melee weapon or unarmed attack, your target must be within reach. Resolve the attack as explained under Melee Attacks (pp. 369-372). If you took an Evaluate maneuver (above) last turn, you will have a bonus to hit. If you took a Feint (below), your opponent may have a penalty to defend.

If you are using a ranged weapon, your target must be within the weapon’s Max range. Resolve the attack according to Ranged Attacks (pp. 372-374). If you took an Aim maneuver (p. 364) last turn, you will have a bonus to hit.

Movement: Step. You may step and then attack or attack and then step – your choice. To move further and still attack, take All-Out Attack or Move and Attack.

Active Defense: Any.

FEINT

“Fake” a melee attack. You cannot Feint someone unless you could have hit him with a melee attack – that is, your weapon is ready and your foe is within reach. This maneuver is not an attack, though, and does not make your weapon unready.

When you Feint, roll a Quick Contest of Melee Weapon skills with your foe; if either of you is unarmed, you may roll against an unarmed combat skill instead. Your opponent may opt to roll against Cloak or Shield skill, if he is suitably equipped and this would give him a better roll. If his DX is better than his combat skills, he may roll against DX instead.

If you fail your roll, your Feint is unsuccessful. Likewise, if you suc- ceed, but your foe succeeds by as much as or more than you do, your Feint fails.

If you make your roll, and your foe fails, subtract your margin of success from the foe’s active defense if you attack him with Attack, All-Out Attack, or Move and Attack on your next turn. For instance, if your skill is 15 and you roll a 12, your foe defends against you at -3 next turn. If you and your foe both succeed, but you succeed by more, subtract your margin of victory from the foe’s defense. For instance, if your skill is 15 and you roll a 10 (success by 5), and your foe’s skill is 14 and he rolls 12 (success by 2), you win by 3, so he will defend at -3 if your next maneuver is to attack him.

You cannot Feint if your foe is unable to observe you! However, if your foe runs away, turns his back on you, or loses sight of you in some way after you successfully Feint, he will still suffer his defense penalty if you attack him on your next turn. If you lose track of the foe, or cannot attack him next turn, your foe’s defense penalty vanishes.

A Feint is good for one second! But if you Feint and then make an All-Out Attack (Double), the feint applies to both attacks.

In all cases, your allies cannot take advantage of your Feint. The defense penalty applies only to your next attack.

Shield Feints: After you have attacked your foe once by striking with your shield (see p. 406), you may also Feint with your shield, rolling against Shield skill.

Movement: Step.

Active Defense: Any. However, if you Feint and then parry with an unbal- anced weapon, you cannot attack on your next turn, making your Feint pointless.

ALL-OUT ATTACK

Attack any foe with a ready weapon, making no effort to defend against enemy attacks. If you are mak- ing a melee attack, you must specify one of these four options before you attack:

•Determined: Make a single attack at +4 to hit!

•Double: Make two attacks against the same foe, if you have two ready weapons or one weapon that does not have to be readied after use. Attacks with a second weapon held in the off hand are at the usual -4 (see Handedness, p. 14) unless you have Ambidexterity (p. 39).

•Feint: Make one Feint (see above) and then one attack against the same foe. The Feint applies to this attack instead of one you make on your next turn.

• Strong: Make a single attack, at normal skill. If you hit, you get +2 to damage – or +1 damage per die, if that would be better. This only applies to melee attacks doing ST-based thrust or swing damage, not to weapons such as force swords.

If you are making a ranged attack, you must specify one of these two options before you attack:

•Determined: Make a single attack at +1 to hit.

• Suppression Fire: Take the entire turn to spray an area with automatic fire. This is a full-turn maneuver, and you can only choose this option if your weapon has RoF 5+. See Suppression Fire (p. 409).

Movement: You may move up to half your Move, but you can only move forward.

Active Defense: You may make no active defenses at all from the point you take this maneuver until your next turn. If someone attacks you after you make an All-Out attack, all you can do is hope he misses – you can’t dodge, parry, or block!

MOVE AND ATTACK

Move as described for the Move maneuver (p. 364), but during or after your move, make a single, poorly aimed attack – either unarmed or with a ready weapon.

You attack as described for the Attack maneuver (above), but at a penalty. If you are making a ranged attack, you have a penalty of -2 or the weapon’s Bulk rating, whichever is worse – and if you took an Aim, you lose all of its bonuses. If you are making a melee attack other than a slam (p. 371), you have a flat -4 to skill, and your adjusted skill cannot exceed 9.

Movement: As described under the Move maneuver – but since you are trying to do two things at once, you are -2 on any rolls the GM requires to avoid falling, tripping over obstacles, etc.

Active Defense: Dodge or block only. You cannot parry and you may not retreat (see Retreat, p. 377).

ALL-OUT DEFENSE

This is the maneuver to choose when you’re beset by foes – especially foes who like All-Out Attacks! You must specify one of the following two options:

• Increased Defense: Add +2 to one active defense of your choice: Dodge, Parry, or Block. This bonus persists until your next turn.

• Double Defense: Apply two differ- ent active defenses against the same attack. If you fail your defense roll against an attack, you may try a sec- ond, different defense against that attack. For instance, if you fail a block, you may try a dodge or a parry. If you try a parry (armed or unarmed) with one hand and fail, a parry using the other hand does count as a “different defense.”

Movement: If you choose Increased Dodge, you may move up to half your Move. Otherwise, the only movement you may take is a step.

Active Defense: You may choose any legal active defense, with bonuses as described above.

CONCENTRATE

You concentrate on one primarily mental task (even it has a minor phys- ical component, like operating con- trols, gesturing, or speaking). This may be casting a magical spell, using a psi ability, making a Sense roll to spot an invisible warrior, making a Leadership roll to give orders, making an Electronics Operation roll to oper- ate a sensor, or any similar action, including most IQ-based skill rolls. This is a full-turn maneuver.

Some activities (e.g., casting spells) require you to take the Concentrate maneuver for multiple seconds. If you are forced to use an active defense, knocked down, injured, or otherwise distracted before you finish, you must make a Will-3 roll. On a failure, you lose your concentration and must start over.

Movement: Step.

Active Defense: Any. However, it interferes with concentration as noted above.

READY

Take a Ready maneuver to pick up or draw any item and prepare it for use; e.g., to pull a sword from its sheath or a gun from its holster, or to reload a firearm. In some cases, you may also need a Ready maneuver to regain control of an unwieldy weapon after a swing, or to adjust the reach of a long weapon – see the Melee Weapon Table (p. 271).

You can use a Ready maneuver to perform physical actions other than fighting: opening or closing a door, picking a lock, digging, lifting, etc. Continuing activities may require multiple, consecutive Ready maneu- vers; see Other Actions in Combat (p. 382).

Finally, a Ready maneuver lets you switch an advantage “off” or “on” if it is not always on and does not require an Attack or Concentrate maneuver to use.

For more information, see Readying Weapons and Other Gear (p. 382) and When Is a Weapon Ready? (p. 382).

Movement: Step.

Active Defense: Any.

WAIT

Do nothing unless a particular event you specified in advance occurs before your next turn; e.g., a foe moves into range. If that hap- pens, you may transform your Wait into an Attack, Feint, All-Out Attack (you must specify the option before acting), or Ready maneuver. If you are reacting to someone else, this interrupts his turn, but he can resume it after you’ve acted.

You must specify exactly what your action will be when you take the Wait maneuver, and what will trigger it. For instance, “I’ll make an All-Out Attack (Determined) with my sword on the first orc to move toward me.”

You may take a Wait with a ready ranged weapon; this is known as “cov- ering” a target or area. If so, you must specify the zone that you are covering with that weapon. There is no penalty to cover a one-yard area. For larger areas and additional rules, see Opportunity Fire (p. 390).

You can use the Wait maneuver for any “reflex action” you want to plan in advance, provided you speci- fy both the response and the action that will trigger it. This can include holding a knife at a hostage’s throat, or even a noncombat action (e.g., “If Dora sees any orcs, she will pull this rope immediately – otherwise, she does nothing.”). An action only qual- ifies as a “reflex” if you could do it in a single motion. The GM’s decision is final.

Finally, you can use Wait to coor- dinate actions with slower friends. Stop Thrust: If you have a ready thrusting weapon, you can use a Wait to brace your weapon to receive a possible enemy charge. Simply state, “I brace for a stop thrust.” You can convert your Wait into an Attack or All-Out Attack against any one foe that moves one or more yards toward you to make a melee attack (armed or unarmed, including a slam or a grapple) or evade (see Evading, p. 368). You strike first if you have the longer reach. If you hit and your foe fails to defend, add +1 to thrust damage for every two full yards your attacker moved toward you.

Movement: None until your Wait is triggered. At that point, you may move as allowed by the maneuver you spec- ified (Attack, Feint, All-Out Attack, or Ready).

Active Defense: You may defend normally while you are waiting or after your Wait is triggered. But if you defend while taking a Wait, you may not transform your Wait into an All- Out Attack; you must convert your Wait into an Attack instead.