Christopher Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 This is most a "did I calculate it right" question: Asume a character has 20 STR (10 Free, 10 bought with CP) and may add +15 from Density Increase and another +15 from Absoprtion for a total of 50 STR. Now he want's to make a Armor Piercing (+1/4) Naked Advantage that requires a Skill Roll (-1/2) for the maximum amount of STR (50). My calculation is: 50 STR * 1.25 = 62,5 = 62 Active Points 62 AP / 1.5 = 41 1/3 = 41 Real Cost. 41 Real Cost (what the STR + Advantage and Limitation would cost) - 50 (the STR he already paid for/got for free/get's from varios powers) = -9 So it goes to the minimum cost of 1. So I would write this down as: Naked Armor Piercing Advantage for up to 50 Points of STR (12 AP), Requires a Roll. Real Cost: 1. Endurance Cost: 1. Is that calculation right? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Long Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 Re: Single Power Naked Advantage and STR from Various sources No. Here's what you do: 1. 50 x 1.25 = 62 (rounded down); 62 - 50 = 12 Active Point cost for the naked Advantage. 2. 12 / 1.5 = 8 = Real Cost of the naked Advantage. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
Christopher
This is most a "did I calculate it right" question:
Asume a character has 20 STR (10 Free, 10 bought with CP) and may add +15 from Density Increase and another +15 from Absoprtion for a total of 50 STR.
Now he want's to make a Armor Piercing (+1/4) Naked Advantage that requires a Skill Roll (-1/2) for the maximum amount of STR (50).
My calculation is:
50 STR * 1.25 = 62,5 = 62 Active Points
62 AP / 1.5 = 41 1/3 = 41 Real Cost.
41 Real Cost (what the STR + Advantage and Limitation would cost) - 50 (the STR he already paid for/got for free/get's from varios powers) = -9
So it goes to the minimum cost of 1.
So I would write this down as:
Naked Armor Piercing Advantage for up to 50 Points of STR (12 AP), Requires a Roll. Real Cost: 1. Endurance Cost: 1.
Is that calculation right?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
1 answer to this question
Recommended Posts