Physical Feats
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Below are rules for common physical tasks of importance to adventurers. For tasks not listed here, make DX rolls for matters of precision and HT rolls for feats of endurance. To determine weight moved or work done, use Basic Lift. Movement speed should generally be proportional to Basic Move. Also see basic attributes and secondary characteristics.
Climbing
To climb anything more difficult than a ladder, roll against Climbing skill. This defaults to DX-5. Modifiers to the roll depend on the difficulty of the climb (see below). In all cases, subtract your encumbrance level from your roll as well. Climbing while heavily laden is a dangerous matter!
Make one roll to start the climb and another roll every five minutes. Any failure means you fall (see Falling). If you secured yourself with a rope, you will fall only to the end of the rope unless you rolled a critical failure.
The table below gives skill modifiers and climbing speeds for some common climbs. In most cases, use the speeds in the "Regular" column. The "Combat" column is for climbs inspired by rage or terror, which always cost at least 1 FP – or double the FP cost given in an adventure or assessed by the GM. Climbs in combat require a Move maneuver.
Type of Climb | Modifier | Combat | Regular |
---|---|---|---|
Ladder going up | no roll | 3 rungs/sec | 1 rung/sec |
Ladder going down | no roll | 2 rungs/sec | 1 rung/sec |
Ordinary tree | +5 | 1 ft/sec | 1 ft/3 sec |
Ordinary mountain | 0 | 1 ft/2 sec | 10 ft/min |
Vertical stone wall | -3 | 1 ft/5 sec | 4 ft/min |
Modern building | -3 | 1 ft/10 sec | 2 ft/min |
Rope-up | -2 | 1 ft/sec | 20 ft/min |
Rope-down | |||
(w/o equipment) | -1 | 2 ft/sec | 30 ft/min |
(w/ equipment) | -1 | 12 ft/sec | 12 ft/sec |
Digging
TODO
Hiking
Sustainable cross-country speed on foot depends on ground Move. Start with Basic Move and reduce it for encumbrance (see Encumbrance and Move), injury (see General Injury), and exhaustion (see Lost Fatigue Points), as applicable. The distance in miles you can march in one day, under ideal conditions, equals 10 × Move.
If you have the Enhanced Move (Ground) advantage, you may apply your movement multiple to this distance. For instance, Enhanced Move 1 (Ground) multiplies Move by two, doubling daily marching distance. See Enhanced Move.
A successful roll against Hiking skill increases marching distance by 20%. Roll daily. A group led by someone with Leadership skill at 12+ may make a single roll against the group's average Hiking skill. (Hiking defaults to HT-5 for those who have not studied it.) Success lets the entire group march 20% farther; failure means the whole group must forgo the bonus.
When these rules result in different speeds for different members of a party, the party must either move at the speed of its slowest member or split up. Note that a party that has opted to make a single Hiking roll for the entire group has already chosen not to split up!
Terrain
Once you know your ideal daily mileage, modify it for terrain as follows:
Very Bad: Deep snow, dense forest, jungle, mountains, soft sand, or swamp. ×0.20.
Bad: Broken ground (including streams), forest, or steep hills.×0.50.
Average: Light forest or rolling hills ×1.00.
Good: Hard-packed desert or level plains. ×1.25.
Weather
Weather conditions can further modify distance traveled:
Rain: Rain halves off-road speed in any terrain. See Roads (below) for the effects of rain on roads.
Snow: Ankle-deep snow halves speed in any terrain. Anything deeper divides speed by 4 or more. Exception: Skis allow travelers to treat any depth of snow as Average terrain. Replace Hiking skill with Skiing skill when traveling on skis.
Ice: Cold combined with moisture – due to rain, sleet, snowmelt, etc. – results in ice. A coating of ice halves speed in any terrain. Solid ice, such as a frozen lake or river, is effectively its own terrain type; treat it as Bad terrain. Exception: Treat solid ice as Good terrain for those with skates. Skating skill replaces Hiking skill when traveling on skates.
Roads
In fine weather, most roads count as Average terrain, regardless of the surrounding terrain. The best roads might even count as Good terrain, giving a bonus.
In rain, low-quality roads – unsurfaced dirt or gravel – turn to mud. Treat them as Very Bad terrain. Better roads behave as Average (but never Good) terrain in the rain.
In snow or ice, treat roads as Average terrain, but apply the movement penalties given under Weather unless the road is cleared.
Time Required and Fatigue Cost
These rules assume you spend the entire day preparing for your hike, hiking, or resting, leaving no time for study or other activities. This is true however small your daily mileage – the heavier your load and the worse the traveling conditions, the more slowly you walk and the more frequently you stop to rest.
Should you interrupt your travels for adventuring matters, you will be missing FP when you stop. See Fatigue Costs for details.
Holding Your Breath
TODO
Jumping
TODO
Lifting and Moving Things
TODO
Running
TODO
Swimming
TODO
Throwing
TODO
Extra Effort
TODO