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Re: grapple proposal
Stressing: adds 2 dice to the stressors pool.
Added rounds: subtracts 1 from the grappled or adds 1 to the grappler either
one, preferably adds 1 to the grapplers pool.
Size: Adjudcated by the GM. I'd suggest common sense be used. Some
things just cannot 'effectively' grapple an opponent. You
may be able to hold on, but you cannot prevent it from acting.
Cases include the pixie vs. the human; human vs. drako; eel vs.
whale. So while the little thing might beable to grab on and
hold on, they aren't going to impeed them. In cases like this
make the grapple 'break' to shake off the little fella. With
each additional little grappler on the big grappled making it
1 die harder.
This one is hard to adjudicate because how many pixies does
it take to bring down a man? Bleh. Again..pure GM adjudication.
Wright
> I'm ok with this bit Joel. What I want to know is a good way to
> adjudicate size differences. For the most part this question
> doesn't apply to many but...
>
> Take a situation where you grapple a Pixie. There should be next to
> no way the pixie breaks free but I'd let your rolls work. But what
> if the Pixie were to grapple you? I mean your talking a 6 inch tall
> creature grabbed your shin and you can't do anything but break free?
> Or say Bob grapples the drako? There is no way to explain why when
> grappled by such a smaller opponent the larger one just cant cast
> using their free hand(s) instead of breaking free.
>
> Greg
>