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Sidekick


ghost-angel

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The Upside:

 

HERO Sidekick is a stripped down set of rules for the Hero System. It is not a different set of rules, or an alternate set of rules, this is the Hero System in its most basic form.

 

At a quarter the size of the Hero System Rules Book, Sidekick distills the essence of what the Hero System Toolkit is down to the basic concepts of functions. As the books states in its introduction, Sidekick achieves this by removing alternate methods, extra options and other minor rules.

 

The benefit to this approach is that a person new to Hero can easily get into the game with minimal distractions, without all the alternate methods, optional rules and add ons and other interactions. The down side is, of course, it removes some of the massive flexibility of the system itself, which is one of the main selling points for Hero. However, it is very important to note it does not remove all, or even most, of the Hero System flexibility.

 

If you're not familiar with the Hero System, one of the core tenets of the system is Reasoning From Effect. All the elements in the system are present generically, allowing you to build the effect or concept you envision with a set of tools. Hero is a Generic System for creating exactly the game you want to play, not a complete game ready to play, in any genre you can imagine.

 

Chapter One - Character Creation. This covers what's on your Character Sheet, the Characteristics, Skills, Perks, Talents, and Powers. Everything in Hero is bought with Character Points, allowing you to customize to exactly how you envision your character being. Sidekick suggests two levels to start with, a Heroic Character and a Superheroic Character level.

 

Characteristics are the basic abilities everyone has, Strength, Dexterity, Constitution and so on. Hero has eight Base Characteristics and six Figured Characteristics, the value of the Figured Characteristics is calculated from the values of the Base Characteristics. Skills are another common aspect to games, what the character knows and can do. There are over fifty Skills in the Hero System that cover just about everything you could need to do. Perks are next, small benefits in the form of resources, privileges and the like; things like Money, Contacts or Concealed Weapons Licenses. Talents are innate abilities that your Character posses, while they are extraordinary aspects, like being Double Jointed, they aren't true Superpowers.

 

Powers are next, Powers are the building blocks for the Hero System. From a fantasy warriors sword, a wizards spells, a space captains blaster, a superheroes eye beams and amazing strength, or a street-samurai's cybernetic implants - all of these in Hero are built with Powers. The basic premise is you decide on a Special Effect (what you want to do) and then build it with the Powers provided. To help you there are Modifiers that can be applied to make the Powers stronger, more versatile, weaker, or restricted. The Modifiers are called Advantages and Limitations. Power Frameworks are a method of rewarding Concept with a Point Cost Break in the game, two of the three types of Frameworks are in Sidekick.

 

Finishing of Character Creation are the Character Disadvantages. These, if treated right, are more like Story Hooks that involve the Character, and all their foibles, and personalities, quirks, and background stories directly in the game. This is one of my favorite parts of the system, by bringing the idea of a Person directly into the mechanics of the game rather than leaving it off to the side Hero brings the Character to the front of the game.

 

This is the longest part of the book, and once you're done everything you need to know about what your Character can do is written right on your sheet. If fact, most of the time you won't have to refer back to the rule book to see what your Character does because it's written right out for you. No looking up lists of spells in numerous other books, or finding just where that one weapons abilities were written out. It's all there at your fingertips.

 

Chapter Two - Combat And Adventuring. This is the chapter that is needed to actually sit down and start playing. It covers that most common of RPGs events, combat. From what happens before it, during, and afterwards when you need to heal up. This is where the majority of the Systems dice rolls take place, and where most of the questions may arise. Helpfully the chapter also comes with a Sample Combat that goes through all many of the possibilities that come up.

 

Chapter Three - The Environment. Sometimes things happen outside of combat - drowning, fires, the world around you is a dangerous place. And while this chapter is not nearly as extensive as its counterpart in the main rules, it covers most of the situations an intrepid adventurer may encounter.

 

Chapter Four - Equipment. This chapter includes how to build Vehicles in the Hero System, as well as provides a list of common equipment for fantasy and modern games (swords and guns). Vehicles use the same basic rules as Characters, but have a slightly different Character Sheet with less on it (after all, a Vehicle doesn't have an Intelligence Score).

 

Chapter Five - Example Characters. And nothing helps a gamer better than a few examples to look at. Two superheroes and a Fantasy Wizard (complete with sample spells built with Powers) are provided, which covers possibly the more complex types of characters to build.

 

For the new or inexperienced Hero gamer this is an excellent introduction. By removing a lot of the more complex and esoteric aspects of the system you get a functional set of core rules to work with. It is also important to note that those who want to go further with Hero and upgrade to the Full Rules won't have to worry about relearning what they already know. Everything in Sidekick is part of the Core Rules, the only thing the larger rule book offers are more options, more examples, more Advantages, Limitations and Powers. Once you learn how to play Hero with Sidekick you can play in Hero game.

 

The book walks you through Character Creation, explains the Character Sheet, has a complete Glossary of terms, has a section of Example Power Builds showing how to create things like Cyberware, Psionics, Fantasy Spells and Superpowers.

 

For the experienced player Sidekick offers an opportunity for a few things. First off, using the Sidekick Rules for Convention Games can simplify and reduce a lot of the prep work. But more importantly, using Sidekick combined with the experience of a veteran Hero Gamer you can easily and quickly introduce new players to the versatility of the system without worrying about too many options getting in the way of learning.

 

The Downside:

 

If Sidekick needs more of anything it's example Characters. Characters from several different genres, not just Superhero and Fantasy, would have gone further to show off how versatile the system really is.

 

Of the aspects removed from the main rules, I would have kept the Computer Creation rules in this set of introductory rules.

 

The Otherside:

 

If you're even curious about Hero I can't recommend this version of the rules enough, for the price you get all the rules, and almost all the Skills, Powers and Modifiers of the main rules. All of the common and important aspects are present, mostly the Optional Rules have been removed along with some complex and esoteric Powers. And it still comes with plenty of creation examples in the Side Bars.

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Re: Sidekick

 

I have a love/hate relationship with PDFs. I want to have a book in my hands. But CTRL+F is soooo helpful.

 

And yeah, sidekick is very nice.

 

Yeah, I'm somewhat irked that I don't get a PDF "for free" when I buy the hard copy. On the other hand, I'm pretty sure it's perfectly legal to use a PDF copy if you already own the hard copy (like, say, copying a friend's PDF file).

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Re: Sidekick

 

Yeah' date=' I'm somewhat irked that I don't get a PDF "for free" when I buy the hard copy. On the other hand, I'm pretty sure it's perfectly legal to use a PDF copy if you already own the hard copy (like, say, copying a friend's PDF file).[/quote']No, it isn't actually.

 

The PDF has a separate copyright.

 

You'd notice at the front of the hard-copy of all books it states you don't have permission to make copies, electronic or otherwise.

 

TB

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Re: Sidekick

 

No, it isn't actually.

 

The PDF has a separate copyright.

 

You'd notice at the front of the hard-copy of all books it states you don't have permission to make copies, electronic or otherwise.

 

Given Steve Long is a lawyer, my guess is that the legal niceties are a lot better addressed at Hero than in most small companies...

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Re: Sidekick

 

I think that'd be covered under Fair Use, though. I'm fairly certain I can make an electronic copy, regardless of what it says on the book, for back-up purposes. I'm also fairly certain (although admittedly less so) that I can make an electronic copy for use exclusively by the owner of the hardcopy (me, unless I sell it). I'm almost entirely certain I can't give or sell an electronic copy to someone who doesn't own the book.

 

In any case, even if I'm wrong and you CAN'T legally own an electronic copy of a book you own in hardcopy only without obtaining it from the same source (e.g. buying the PDF separately), I'm sure DOJ (or whoever owns the copyright) can decide to allow you to do so. They might, if you ask nicely!

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Re: Sidekick

 

Actually, even though the content of the two are the same, they are considered seperate products and are paid for and treated accordingly. One does not have any right to a PDF copy of a physical book that you own any more than you have the right to a paperback version of a hardback that you own.

 

Furthermore, you are not allowed to make an electronic copy of a physical book, even for back-up purposes and, if I recall correctly, PDFs do not qualify as 'software' and thus aren't eligible for back-up privileges, either. Consider this: lately, there's been a bunch of noise about whether it was legal to rip a CD for personal use on a portable media player. I think some are claiming that the Fair Use allowance for CDs is meant only for making a duplicate physical CD and not an electronic copy.

 

Finally, I doubt any company that sells both PDF and physical versions of a book is going to allow you to make your own PDFs, even if you ask nicely. As I wrote above, a PDF of a book is an indepedent product which can, and should, be purchased seperately. Sure, it'd be nice if you could buy a physical book and get a PDF for free but it generally doesn't work that way. On the other hand, some companies, like Apress, allow you to buy a PDF versions of their books at a discounted price if you own a physical copy, an offer which I have taken advantage of several times.

 

I'm not a lawyer. I just play one on the Internet.

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Re: Sidekick

 

I'm not a lawyer but I do alot of research into this stuff.

 

If you've bought the hard copy, you own the hard copy. You can make an electronic copy for your OWN use FROM the hard copy (scanning the pages) but it does not entitle you to download a copy someone else made. It's not the copying that's illegal, it's the distribution.

 

If you've bought the PDF copy, you own the PDF copy, and you can make as many electronic copies as you want for your OWN use. You cannot distribute it. You can, however, make a hard copy FROM the PDF copy, by printing it out.

 

However, that said... so long as you have bought _a_ version of the book, and so long as you do not distribute whatever PDF copy you aquire, and so long as you don't go telling people on the forums that you've downloaded a PDF copy to backup your hardcopy, I don't think you have to worry about Steve Long beating down your door.

 

Remember, it's not the act of copying which is illegal, it is the act of redistribution. Fair use only applies to distribution, NOT to aquisition.

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