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Shadow Shulker
May 7th, '03, 11:09 PM
Lovecraft rocks. Best in Call of Cthuhlu d20 motherfuckers.

*BLANKITY BLANK BLANK* and smile with pride.

fauxgemini
May 8th, '03, 12:40 AM
Honestly d20 did an average job of carrying the original CoC compaired to the original system. I'm not saying that it doesn't work, but if you sit down and play the original Chaosium version you'd understand why it was so much smoother & interesting. Best Sanity system ever!

Heroman
May 8th, '03, 02:53 AM
Trying to recreate CoC in any system is a pathetic, foolish chore; there is no need for the annoying complexities of d20 or any other system. Face it: your character will die a quick, horrible death no matter what and the simple character creation in the Chaosium system is a perfect fit :)

Heroman
May 8th, '03, 02:55 AM
PS: The first post/this thread will probably/should probably get neutered because of the moronic use of profanity by its poster...

Nolgroth
May 8th, '03, 10:56 AM
Originally posted by Heroman
PS: The first post/this thread will probably/should probably get neutered because of the moronic use of profanity by its poster...

And I'm sure that the poster will be quite upset and unable to deal with the reality of his favorite CoC game system being challenged. He didn't like it when his superheroic game system was challenged either. As if entering the fanbase for a particular game and touting the virtues of another game isn't going to cause a bit of disagreement. Oh yeah, that's the definition of a troll. My bad. I should have remembered.

olshriek
May 22nd, '03, 11:51 PM
ok ignoring the lovely verbage and grammar my question is this isn't call of cthullhu in horror hero I know it ie pulp horror is in the old version and i assume it'll be in a new one too

Nolgroth
May 23rd, '03, 02:07 AM
I would definately say that Call of Cthulhu falls within the Horror genre, and thus Horror HERO. I believe that the kind of pulp horror that CoC represents was described in the Horror HERO supplement for 4th edition and will, in all likelihood, be included in any 5th edition Horror HERO supplement.

Blue
May 25th, '03, 01:15 PM
D20 is to Call of Cthulhu as
a) National Enquirer is to Literature
b) Boy Bands are to Music
c) ShadowShulker is to Intelligent discourse
d) All of the above

Nolgroth
May 26th, '03, 01:45 AM
I would say that choice "C" is the correct answer. Even Boy Bands and National Enquirer have more fundemental value than ShadowSkulker's rantings.

But only just.... :)

Dr Rotwang!
May 28th, '03, 02:26 PM
So! Not having Horror Hero, how DO you do fright/sanity checks, ayway? Presence attacks of at least 6d6 when the Nightgaunts come down from the steeple, their leathery wings churning the air, shrill unintelligible cries rending asunder your very humanity?

How good IS HERO for horror, by the way? It strikes me as a wrong fit. Enlighten me! ROTWANG! COMMANDS!

Lord Liaden
May 28th, '03, 04:07 PM
Two key game-mechanical elements of horror games are relative helplessness of the PCs before the forces that threaten them, and the constant possibility of serious injury and death. These are actually pretty easy to do in HERO terms: keep the total points, defenses and damage capability of the heroes well below those of the menaces (characters should probably not exceed the 75 + 75 of a Standard Hero, and could be considerably lower); use all the lethality-adding optional rules (Hit Locations, Bleeding, Imparing, etc.); and in the case of Lovecraftian or other supernatural horrors, give them abilities that the PCs cannot overcome through force (Mental Powers, Desolid, Invisibility and the like).

As far as the sanity-destroying effects of Lovecraft's horrors go, HERO has provided several alternatives. Horror Hero extended the results of PRE attacks to include long-term effects (including Psychological Limitations) resulting either from very large PRE attacks, or low levels of situational stress such as fear that continue for an lengthy period. Other Hero books gave Lovecraftian monsters an actual mind-warping Power, based on Transform with the result accumulating with each exposure to the creature until the victim finally snaps. In the free Genre-by-Genre document available here on the site, Steve Long proposes an optional figured Sanity Characteristic that can be used like similar stats in other games.

So, your choice is really a matter of taste. :)

Dr Rotwang!
May 28th, '03, 05:05 PM
Originally posted by Lord Liaden
In the free Genre-by-Genre document available here on the site, Steve Long proposes an optional figured Sanity Characteristic that can be used like similar stats in other games.

So, your choice is really a matter of taste. :) Oh, yeh! I totally downloaded that .pdf a'ready. I ought to have looked at it.

Arigato!

CorpCommander
Jun 17th, '03, 12:00 AM
FYI: the sanity system in D20 is the same as the one in the Chaosium system. The took it lock stock and barrel. You have to add new characteristics to your character sheet but there it is. The D20 CoC books is actually well laid out and inspite of how much I have come to dislike D20 it does a reasonable job of it.

I haven't playd CoC seriously since around 1988. Them was the days.

Kevin Scrivner
Jun 18th, '03, 08:46 PM
Don't think of it as losing SAN. Think of it as gaining insight into the true nature of the Cosmos.

austenandrews
Jun 19th, '03, 11:10 PM
My views on Lovecraft in HERO (and horror in general) are expressed in this old thread:

http://www.herogames.com/oldForum/OtherGenres/000055.html

-AA

Galadorn
Jun 20th, '03, 12:16 AM
Originally posted by Kevin Scrivner
Don't think of it as losing SAN. Think of it as gaining insight into the true nature of the Cosmos.

Hahaha.:p