Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Stealth, Surprise, and Encounter Distance

Figuring out surprise and encounter distance is the kind of fiddly RNG that you're expected to do when setting up a scene.  It's tedious, it's in the background, and worst of all, it's unimportant.  Who cares if the encounter starts at 100' or at 75'?  I suspect that most GMs fudge it.

Maybe we can make it less painful.



The old standard is a 2-in-6 chance for surprise.  And then you roll to determine distance.  But can we combine those questions?  Can't we just restate the question as "How close can the other guy approach before I notice them?"

So let's throw away the idea of a surprise roll and start thinking of it as an alertness roll.

Rolling a big number means that you hear them farther away and aren't surprised.  Rolling a small number means you don't hear them until you smack into them.  Each side makes this roll.

Roll a d6.
1-2  Damn close.  (Surprise distance!)
3-6  Still a ways off.

We can use the same result to figure out encounter distance.  I'll assign some numbers.  I'll double the distances for the 3-6 results because those are supposed to be farther away.

1 - 10' and surprise
2 - 20' and surprise
3 - 60'
4 - 80'
5 - 100'
6 - 120'

If it's mutual surprise or mutual alert, use the PC's roll to figure out the encounter distance.  So if the PCs roll a 1 and the orcs roll a 2, they are both surprised to walk around a corner and see each other only 10' away.  If the PCs roll a 6 and the orcs roll a 4, they both hear each other from 120' away, and no one is surprised.

If it's asymmetric, use the more alert party's result to figure the distance.  If the orcs are ambushing the PCs, the PCs' roll dictates how close the orcs are when they launch their ambush.  So if the orcs roll a 5 and the PCs roll a 2, that means that the orcs hear the PCs from 100' away, and will try to launch an attack from 20' away.

That's the idea, anyway.

Advantages: Fewer rolls, doesn't alter classic probabilities, more modular, possibly more intuitive.



Other ways to fancy up this system!

- Modify the encounter ranges for different environments.  x5 for forest and x10 for grassy hills.

- Rogues with soft shoes get Stealthosity, which means that enemies subtract 1 from their Alertness rolls.  This effectively gives them a 3-in-6 chance to surprise.

- If you're stomping around with iron boots and donkeys and bards, you get negative Stealthosity, and only surprise with a 1-in-6 chance.

- Other dudes get Alertnosity, which lets them add 1 to their Alertness rolls.

- If you are sitting quietly, keeping watch, and have a Wis bonus, you get Alertnosity, too.

- If you roll two different-colored d6s at the same time to figure this out, you can use the die that landed closest to you to figure out the environment between the PCs and the orcs.  That is, the environment that the sound is bouncing through.
1 - behind a door
2 - around a corner
3 - from an intersection
4 - from a stairwell
5 - around two corners
6 - behind a wall

- This might simplify monster descriptions, too.  You can just put "Alert" or "Stealthy" under their abilities line.

1 comment:

  1. your reasons given on G+ for posting mechanics are the same as mine.
    ...well, I share them with my players there, too.

    This looks a lot like something I'd use. I think I'll adopt an alertness skill, add situational modifiers and get people to roll under that to have warning. How much you beat it by = degree of warning. People who have no training in guarding/sneaking and who say they are staring off into the darkness get no bonus against someone sneaking up behind them.

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