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Gideon

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  1. So, I finally played the game with my "god" character. I actually took two of the names suggested. He is Sharos Havensoul The Wanderer, but he operates as a hero under the name of Archon. The other character: Dr. Matheson, I've played before, but its a game we only play about once a month right now. I haven't decided but I'm leaning towards either Neutron or Doctor Density. If people have other ideas I'd love to hear them. And again, Thanks
  2. He isn't quite a "hero that is a pantheon". Think more Firestorm and the Professor and less Legion. His powers increased (all background stuff) because he houses their essences, and he can attempt to commune with them, but most of the time the "essences" remain dormant.
  3. I like some of the suggestions so far, but I still can't decide. If it helps Dr. Matheson also has powers pertaining to torque (the GM has called it "mass shifting"). He has powers like an HA with double knockback, and an area of effect "shockwave" with zero range and requires striking a surface. These powers are in a multipower that also includes his density increase, and all of them are fixed slots (purposeful major character flaw. He uses one of his "special momentum based attacks" his density returns to normal.) The deity character, I had hoped to NOT use a name that referred to his being a "host" to the rest of his pantheon. Its something about the character I had actually hoped to keep secret IG for a while. @Hyper-man: Beta-Ray Bill is one of my favorite Marvel characters. Simply "Gamma-wave Bob" doesn't fit either of these characters, regardless of how much I like it as a name. (no gamma waves, not named bob)
  4. So I'm in two fairly new games, with two different GMs, and I cannot come up with Hero names for either of my characters. I have both of their normal identities down, I know their powers, personalities and even what they look like, but I simply can't come up with Superhero names for them. Please help. Thank you in advance. Character #1: Dr. Bill Matheson helped build a private use spaceship, and was part of its crew. Shortly after activating the ship's hyperdrive, the engines malfunctioned and exploded. The ship was hurtled back to earth, and upon crashing the survivors discovered they had super powers (very much like the Fantastic Four or U-Foes). Bill changed from being a 5'10" tall, 146 pound man with an average/ thin build to a 5'1"tall 300 pound man with an athletic build. He has control over his density and mass (similarly to Vision, but he hasn't learned how to decrease past his "normal"). I want him to have a very golden age or silver age style name, but I have drawn a complete blank. Character #2: This character currently has no name at all. The campaign is taking place in space and is going to be very "cosmic" in scope, and very classic Marvel in style. My character is the last Deity from an alien pantheon that was destroyed in a Ragnarok-like cataclysm hundreds of years ago. Originally he was the demi-god of heroism. He was a mortal who was tasked to go on several odyssey-style quests. Upon completion of the tasks, it was determined that he truly exemplified the qualities of a hero the gods felt their worshippers should strive for and he was granted god-hood. When the cataclysm that destroyed his pantheon (and the world he was worshiped on) came, the leaders devised a plan to save the pantheon. They all transformed into a form of energy and retreated inside the Hero-god (my PC). So he now hosts their consciousness and roams the galaxy helping people. The results are that he has gained significant power and a few minor extra abilities. He also has the ability to (occasionally) ask the other gods for information or advice. As the "hero-god" he is meant to be very similar to Marvel's Thor or Hercules. He is strong, can fly, incredibly tough and has a magic sword that can shoot bolts of raw energy. I want him to either have a really awesome "Deity name" ALA Thor, or a cool "Galactic Superhero name". Again, thank you for the help.
  5. Re: Genre-crossover nightmares 30 Days of Dark Knight
  6. Re: Genre-crossover nightmares how about: Where the Wild Hogs Are Where the "Wild Things" Are Where The Wild Bunch Are and my personal favorite, but also the most obscure of the references: Where the Wild Palms Are
  7. Re: Genre-crossover nightmares if your going for crossovers like that how about: The Shining Time Station... "Heeeeerrrrreeeeeeeesssssss Thomas!!!!!!!!!"
  8. Re: Genre-crossover nightmares True Glee (Vampires in a high-school glee club. How could this not be great.) Stargate Busters (Lets see what happens when Jamie and Adam get recruited by the SGC) Everybody Loves Dexter America's Got Trauma Bucky O'Bright (Space rabbit fighting evil with rainbows and flying unicorns) Little House in Space 1999 (The Ingalls family living in Moon Base Alpha)
  9. Re: Life (Energy) living conduit... Heal+SE? The time chart starts at once a segment, and DRD doesn't say it has a minimum, so I would rule that if you are willing to take the +2, go for it.
  10. Re: Non conductive powder I disagree. Speed represents how many times I can take combat significant actions in a turn. Why would this have any bearing on how fast I recover from being blinded? Personally I find it more balanced that a high speed character is penalized more by flash than a low speed character. The benefit of a high speed is more actions 99% of the time. The benefit of a low speed is actions on phases other don't go, and fewer actions lost to flashes. Wow, what a trade off. If you want a high speed character to recover faster from flashes I say buy it as a power.
  11. Re: Have you ever built the same character more than once?
  12. Re: Life (Energy) living conduit... Heal+SE? Multiple healing does not stack when used in the same 24 hour period unless you take and advantage on your healing called "decreased re-use duration". The advantage is expensive though: +1/4 ever step down the time chart. So once every 6 hours is a +1/4, and once a segment is a +2. The side effect should only work if the power works. So if you can't transfer your energy (IE: its a robot) you can't get drained. But that would be my take on it.
  13. Re: Have you ever built the same character more than once? As far as PCs go, while the answer is yes, it is with the caveat of "not in the same game". In Champions, I have made just over a dozen PCs, and I have made sure that none of them are very similar. I have two bricks for example: Mesa is 7'4" 1,000 lbs. He has no secret ID, and is married with kids. He went to college for cultural anthropology and linguistic studies before gaining his powers. He is basically a really big, white version of Power Man. Titan has traditional growth powers (ala Giant Man and Colossal Boy) allowing him to be anywhere from 5'7" tall weighing 173 lbs to 68' tall weighing in at 177,152 lbs. He got his GED while in jail after being arrested for working as a Viper trooper. After gaining his powers, he turned his back on Viper, changed his name and joined a super hero team. They still don't know his origins. Except for some standards: teamwork, power, resistant defense, leaping, power defense... the characters have almost nothing in common. And I did that very purposefully. But like most others have said, this works when you have a small group of PCs you are talking about. I believe when it comes to characters (especially villains in comic books and super hero RPGs) you can end up with too many. So my comment would be to do a combination of all three. Part of this depends on how you run your game though. If (like some) you run a living world type game where all those characters are supposed to exist together, and all the heroes in all the games you've run all operate on the same earth, then don't nuke. Kill some of them off perhaps, but don't simply nuke them out of existence unless your players have never seen or heard of them, they never did anything you think was significant, and there is someone else very similar you like better. However, if you have a character who has never seen play and is really close to one who has (or your campaigns have no continuity between them) just nuke him. The option I find better most of the time is to simply combine characters. This can be as simple as saying: "well, you see Heroes Inc. never captured Freeze-man so I didn't feel it necessary to announce it to people that Iceberg was the same person when Super-Squad fought against him. None of the PCs were the same, so they never would have known." At this point you can go as simple as Nuking "Freeze-man" and retro-continuity fixing things so that "it was always Iceberg the whole time." You can even take parts of the nuked character and "give" them to the other character. Or if you want you can go the more complicated route and make a new third character that combines what you like from the other two, and once he's finished scrap both of the originals. Characters you don't feel you can do this to (or you really just like too much to nuke this way), make different. It shouldn't be hard. Different skills, minor power differences (elemental fire VS radioactive fire VS super-heated plasma fire). If you get stuck, you can always ask for advice. I'm sure people here will be willing to help.
  14. Re: How Much XP to Award? I can't argue for or against anything already said here. All I can tell you is how the GM I play under usually does stuff. He awards about 1XP per game session of a story arc, + 1 to 3 extra XP depending of how hard a time the group had/ how well they did. The main difference between how my regular GM does it, and how most of the people who have posted seem to do it, is that he awards the XP only after the story arc ends. So this means we will go 2-4 sessions without actually being awarded any XP. Its not that we haven't earned it, its that we haven't gotten it yet. He also generally doesn't allow players to spend XP in the middle of an adventure. The notable exception is to permanently buy your character something you just performed as a power "stunt" (new use of your powers you used came up with on the fly and used the power skill to perform). For individual players he awards "Cool Stuff" points (yes its a silly name) in addition to XP. If a character does something really awesome, makes a really funny/quotable comment figures something really important out/ stumps the GM they get a CSP immediately. 1CSP = 1/3 XP.
  15. Re: How to Build: Team Communicator Over all I do like it. If directional/ non-directional is in the books then go for it. I'm sorry, but I would never put the fuel charge on the radio. If a real world watch battery will work for months, then a high-tech-comic-book-super-hero radio battery should work non-stop for at least 2-3 days. Not that it matters its a -0 anyway. Hero Designer says that affected as radio and hearing is a -1/2, so take that for what its worth. The book says that one aspect of HRRP (such as TV only) is worth -1/2 to -1, so radio only is worth at least -1/2
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