Call of Cthulhu - Basic Rules and Investigator Creation

Discussion in 'BOARDANIAN ROLEPLAY GROUP' started by Roman_K, Dec 19, 2007.

  1. Roman_K New Member

    This topic will be updated periodically, as I compile more into it. Actual investigator creation will be conducted in an additional thread, which I will open at a later date.
  2. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]Creating an Investigatior:[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]The following is based on the quick-start rule guide to playing Call of Cthulhu, as published by Chaosium:[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]To play Call of Cthulhu you need to create a character. Characters in the game are called "investigators" as they primarily spend their play time investigating the horrors of the Cthulhu Mythos (Keeper’s Note – Name for the expanded horror universe created by H.P. Lovecraft). Creating your character is simple, and outlined below. It will be helpful for you to have a [/FONT][FONT=&quot]piece of scratch paper handy, or ideally a Call of Cthulhu character sheet.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]The Primary Attributes[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]To begin, a Call of Cthulhu character has seven primary attributes. Each of these attributes is [/FONT][FONT=&quot]described below.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Strength (STR)[/FONT][FONT=&quot] - measures the raw physical power your investigator can bring to bear. It influences [/FONT][FONT=&quot]the amount of damage he can deliver with a punch or kick, as well as his grip, or ability to lift heavy [/FONT][FONT=&quot]items. Roll 4 six sided dice, drop the lowest, and add the remaining dice together to determine the value for STR.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Constitution (CON)[/FONT][FONT=&quot] - is a measure of the hardiness of your investigator. It influences the amount of [/FONT][FONT=&quot]damage you can take before going unconscious or dying as well as how resistant you are to diseases [/FONT][FONT=&quot]and poison. Roll 4 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, and add the remaining dice together to determine the value for CON.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Dexterity (DEX) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is a measure of your investigator's agility and speed. Roll 4 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, and add the remaining dice together to determine the value for DEX.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Size (SIZ) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is a measure of your investigator's physical mass. It influences how much damage you can take, as well as how much you can deliver. Also, as a measure of your Investigator's weight, it influences the ability of horrible monsters to pick him up and toss him around the room. Roll 3 six sided dice, drop the lowest, add the remaining dice together and add 6 to that total to determine the value for SIZ.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Intelligence (INT) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is a rough guide to your investigator's cunning and ability to make leaps of [/FONT][FONT=&quot]logic and intuition. Roll 3 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, add the remaining dice together and add 6 to that total to determine the value for INT.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Power (POW) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is a combination of personal magnetism, spirit, and mental stability. It influences your character's ability to cast magical spells, as well as his resistance to the sanity-blasting horrors [/FONT][FONT=&quot]of the Cthulhu Mythos. Roll 4 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, and add the remaining dice together to determine the value for POW.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Appearance (APP)[/FONT][FONT=&quot] - measures the charm and physical appeal of your character. Roll 4 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, and add the remaining dice together to determine the value for APP.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Education (EDU) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is a measure of the knowledge which your investigator has accumulated through [/FONT][FONT=&quot]formal education, or the venerated "School of Hard Knocks." Roll 4 six-sided dice, drop the lowest, add the remaining together and add 3 to the total to determine the value for EDU.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Before play begins, you may swap around any attributes which use the same dice to determine their value. In other words, you could swap any of the values for Strength, Constitution, Dexterity, Appearance or Power with each other. You could only swap Size and Intelligence with each other. Education remains static.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]You can also move 3 points from any one attribute to another, repeating the procedure twice. Be advised though that you cannot raise the attributes beyond their natural maximum, so that Education can’t be raised beyond 21, and the other attributes can’t be raised over 18. [/FONT][FONT=&quot]You may roll three sets in total, in the character creation thread.[/FONT]


    [FONT=&quot]The Secondary Attributes[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]There are a number of attributes which are determined after you have figured the attributes above. [/FONT][FONT=&quot]These are Idea, Knowledge, Luck, Damage Bonus, Magic Points, Hit Points, and Sanity.[/FONT]


    [FONT=&quot]Idea[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is simply your INT score multiplied by 5. This score is used as a percentile roll to give your [/FONT][FONT=&quot]investigator information, or to make leaps of deduction in certain situations. Percentile rolls will [/FONT][FONT=&quot]be explained further down.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Knowledge[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is your EDU score multiplied by 5. This score is used as a percentile roll to show how [/FONT][FONT=&quot]your investigator's education and training gives insight certain situations.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Luck[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is your POW score multiplied by 5. This score is used as a percentile roll to give your character gleans of insight in certain situations. The Luck roll is often used to give your character a last chance in a crisis situation, or to cause bad things to happen to the only investigator in the group to fail the roll.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Damage Bonus[/FONT][FONT=&quot] is how much extra damage your investigator does with a successful close-combat [/FONT][FONT=&quot]attack. Add your STR and SIZ and consult the Damage Bonus Table to find your damage bonus.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot][IMG][/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Magic Points[/FONT][FONT=&quot] are equal to your POW. MPs fluctuate up and down as you cast spells or activate [/FONT][FONT=&quot]arcane alien devices. If your investigator's MPs ever fall below 0, he goes unconscious until he can [/FONT][FONT=&quot]recover them.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Hit Points[/FONT][FONT=&quot] are figured by adding SIZ and CON together, then dividing the total by two and rounding u[/FONT][FONT=&quot]p. As your investigator takes damage from combat or other events, your HPs will drop. If you drop to only 2 HPs, your investigator goes unconscious. If he hits -2 or lower, he is dead. [/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Sanity[/FONT][FONT=&quot] (SAN) begins at a level equal to your POW score multiplied by 5. Circle the value that corresponds to this number on the character sheet. This score is used as a percentile roll that presents your investigator's ability to remain stoic in the face of horrors. As you face the horrors of the Cthulhu Mythos your SAN score fluctuates. It can raise above it's starting level, but can never be higher than 99 minus the value of your Cthulhu Mythos skill.[/FONT]
  3. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]Occupation and Skills[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]At this point, you should have an idea of what your investigator does for a living. This choice of occupation will influence the selection of skills for your character. To begin with, choose an occupation. Anything you think would be interesting to play is valid, but you should confirm this [/FONT][FONT=&quot]with your keeper (Keeper’s Note – That would be me). The occupations are only limited by your imagination.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Once you have select the occupation, you should look at the list of skills on you character sheet. Choose 8 skills which are appropriate for your character's chosen occupation. These are your "Occupation Skills." You now have to assign percentile points to the skills on the character sheet. Before you do so, please note that no skill can start play with a rating higher than 75. Additionally no character can add points to the Cthulhu Mythos skill during character creation. It is assumed that all beginning characters are ignorant of the threat of the Mythos. You multiply your EDU score by 20 to get the number of points to spread amongst your Occupation Skills. Add any number of these points to the eight skills you chose. Each skill on the character sheet also has a number in parenthesis next to it. This is the "Base Chance" that every investigator has with that skill. Any points you add to a skill stack with its Base Chance. For example, if you add 15 points to the "Conceal" skill (Base Chance of 15) you would have "Conceal: 30". After selecting the Occupation Skills, select your Hobby Skills. These are skills that your character has acquired over the course of his life. To determine how many points you have to spend on them, multiply your INT score by 10. Divide those points amongst any skills on the sheet you would like (again, you can't put points into Cthulhu Mythos). Note that you may wish to save a few skill points to buy combat skills such as "Gun," "Sword," etc.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Keeper’s Note – As stated above, you may choose any occupation, as long as it seems reasonable for the 1920’s. Furthermore, you may discuss variant or specialist professions with me, depending on the background of your envisioned character. Many variants are available from earlier edition books, and can be easily tailored to suit the 6th Edition rules. These variants may also come with penalties and bonuses to the attributes, special contacts, or other game-affecting quality specific to that profession variant. The best information is available in the Investigator’s Companion to the 1920’s, published by Chaosium in 1993-4, on which the players will receive further information by way of PM or email.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]In the section below you have sample occupations from the Call of Cthulhu source-book. Do not take these as strict guides for this character occupation, merely as examples of how an occupation can help define a character.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Sample Occupations - Description:[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Antiquarian – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]he revels in the timeless excellence of design and execution, and in the power of ancient lore, the most Lovecraft-like occupation. The antiquarian rarely deals in what he loves. More often, an independent income allows him to sharpen and define his pleasure in things old and obscure. He ahs an appreciative eye and a swift mind, and frequently finds mordant or contemptuous humor in the foolishness of the ignorant, the pompous, and the greedy – or are those perceptions clues to his own mental instability?[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Artist[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – he is self-absorbed with his own visions, but is blessed with a talent that lets him express himself. Often he also has a crafty entrepreneurial streak, and is usually a painter or a sculptor. Talented or not, the artist’s ego must be hardy and strong to surmount initial obstacles and keep him working if success arrives.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Author – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]as distinct from the journalist, the author uses words to define and explore the conditions of human life, and especially the range of human emotions. It is said that an author does not so much write as rewrite; his labors are solitary and his rewards solipsistic: only a relative handful make much money. The work habits of authors vary widely. Typically an author withdraws during periods of intense creation. The author who is constantly expansive and sociable is written-out, or perhaps had no talent to start with.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Dilettante[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – The dilettante has so much money that specialists are needed to take care of it. He or she is well educated, though not systematically educated or necessarily accomplished in anything. Money frees the dilettante to be eccentric and outspoken. He or she has had plenty of time to learn how to be charming and sophisticated; what else has been done with that time betrays the dilettante’s true character. Lacking financial compulsion, his or her family relations are sometimes very odd.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Doctor of Medicine – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]perhaps a general practitioner, a surgeon or other specialist, a psychiatrist, or an independent medical researcher. Apart from personal goals, three aims – helping patients, gaining money and prestige, and promoting a more rational and wiser society – are common to the occupation. Doctors tend to be self-sufficient sorts for whom families become adjuncts to respectability.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Drifter – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]as opposed to someone who is poverty-stricken, the drifter’s wandering life is chosen, perhaps compensating for social, philosophical, sexual, or economic lacks. The drifter takes jobs, sometimes for months, but he is disposed to solve problems with the answer of mobility and isolation, not comfort or intimacy. The life of the road might seem especially American, but the same sort of life is chosen wherever travel itself is not systematically dangerous.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Entertainer – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]this occupation might include dancer, singer, juggler, athlete, musician, or anyone else who earns a living in front of an audience. These people love to be seen, love to show what they do best, and love the consequent applause. These proclivities can be observed in children as young as age three or four, but the talent that reaps success may lie fallow for years. Show-business families make excellent incubators.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Journalist – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Uses words to report and comment upon topics and incidents of the day, writing as many words in a day as an author may in a week. Journalists work for newspapers, magazines, and radio and television news services. The best report, but keep themselves independent of the corruption and self-serving they witness. That reality overwhelms the worst, who eventually forfeit any sensibility except for the power of their words.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Missionary – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]has accepted the call to spread the word of God. May be independent of all except his or her vision, or may be backed by some organization to do just that – and in that case has demonstrated some ability to perform such duties. The clear-sighted missionary is able to focus on the humanity of the converts and does not confuse alien customs with human souls, so that questions of dress, behavior, or diet do not become paramount. Where morality leaves off and religion begins is by no means clear. This occupation requires settled emotions and a sense of humor. The successful missionary remains personally humble and exalts God. Christian and Islamic proselytizers are encountered worldwide, as well as Buddhist and Hindu teachers.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Parapsychologist – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Prestigious universities grant no degrees for parapsychology. Standards in the field are based entirely upon personal reputation, and so the most acceptable representatives tend to hold degrees in related areas – physics, psychology, or medicine. Who chooses this study is unusually sympathetic to the notion of invisible mystical powers, and in validating that belief to the satisfaction of physical scientists. This would represent an unusual cohabitation of faith and doubt – the parapsychologist may have difficulty separating the conflicting desires. A person uninterested in observation, experiment, and proof is not a scientist, though he or she may be an occultist.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Police Detective[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – though present day detectives may attend police science classes, take a degree, and undergo special training and endless civil service exams, police detectives of every era are grounded in their experiences as junior officers and ordinary patrolmen. Police routine and discipline becomes vital to self-identification as well as an ongoing source of frustration as the detective is tempted by extralegal shortcuts to successful arrests. The police detective may be a manager who coordinates staff in some important investigation, but rarely has the luxury of concentrating on a single case. In the United States, his responsibilities at any one time may number in the dozens or hundreds of open cases. The detective’s crucial function is to marshal enough evidence to allow an arrest, in turn leading to a successful criminal prosecution. Detectives everywhere sort truth from lies by evidence and reconstruction. The offices of detective and prosecutor are everywhere separate, so that the evidence may be weighed independently before trial.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Private Eye[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – in most places the private investigator is licensed by the police and must be privately bonded as well, guarantees of minimal honesty. Proven malfeasance costs him his license and puts him out of business. The private eye usually acts in non-police situations: he gathers information and evidence for private clients in impending civil cases, tracks down fleeing spouses or business partners, or acts as an agent for private defense attorneys in criminal cases. In detective classics, the private eye is hired to handle some ordinary civil or private matter (such as a cheating spouse), and then is drawn into the investigation of a murder or series of murders as the case unfolds. Like any professional, the private eye separates his personal feelings from the job at hand, and cheerfully works for the guilty and innocent alike, as long as his fee is paid. The private investigator is usually shown to have been a member of a police force in the past, using those connections to his advantage in the present. Usually he is not prosperous and never has known much money, but his private code and keen awareness purify his manners. Depending on state or local law, police experience may not be necessary.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Professor – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]for the most part the occupation indicates a Ph.D. That rank can earn tenure at universities around the world. He is qualified to teach and to perform competent research, and has discernible academic reputation in his area of expertise. He may be an absolute idiot in other fields, of course, and such contradictory investigators are fun to play. Unless they are of independent means, and have taken leave of their universities, professor-investigators tend to be tethered close to home by their ongoing responsibilities to school and students. Indiana Jones was lucky to have a department head who would allow extended absences – your investigator may not have such an understanding boss.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Sample Occupations – Game Details:[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Keeper’s Note – Those occupations that were central to Lovecraft’s stories are asterisked.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Antiquarian – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Art, Bargain, Craft, History, Library Use, Other Language, Spot Hidden, and any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Artist[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – Art, Craft, Fast Talk, History, Photography, Psychology, Spot Hidden, any other one skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Athlete – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Climb, Dodge, Jump, Martial Arts, Ride, Swim, Throw, any other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Author – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]History, Library Use, Occult, Other Language, Own Language, Persuade, Psychology, and any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Clergyman[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – Accounting, History, Library Use, Listen, Other Language, Persuade, Psychology, and any other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Criminal – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bargain, Disguise, Fast Talk, Handgun, Locksmith, Sneak, Spot Hidden, and other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Dilettante – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Art, Craft, Credit Rating, Other Language, Ride, Shotgun, any two other skills as personal or era specialties.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Doctor of Medicine – Biology, Credit Rating, First Aid, Latin, Medicine, Pharmacy, Psychoanalysis, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Drifter – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bargain, Fast Talk, Hide, Listen, Natural History, Psychology, Sneak, and one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Engineer – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Chemistry, Electrical Repair, Geology, Library Use, Mechanical Repair, Operate Heavy Machine, Physics, any other skill as personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Entertainer – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Art, Credit Rating, Disguise, Dodge, Fast Talk, Listen, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Farmer/Forester – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Craft, Electrical Repair, First Aid, Mechanical Repair, Natural History, Operate Heavy Machine, Track, any other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Journalist – Fast Talk, History, Library Use, Own Language, Persuade, Photography, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Lawyer – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bargain, Credit Rating, Fast Talk, Law, Library Use, Persuade, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Military Officer – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Accounting, Bargain, Credit Rating, Law, Navigate, Persuade, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Missionary – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Art, Bargain, Craft, First Aid, Mechanical Repair, Medicine, Natural History, Persuade, any one other skill as a personal or era speciality.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Musician – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Art, Bargain, Craft, Fast Talk, Listen, Persuade, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Parapsychologist – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Anthropology, History, Library Use, Occult, Other Language, Photography, Psychology, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Pilot – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Astronomy, Electrical Repair, Mechanical Repair, Navigate, Operate Heavy Machine, Physics, Pilot, any one other skill as a personal or era speciality.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Police Detective – Bargain, Fast Talk, Law, Listen, Persuade, Psychology, Spot Hidden, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Policeman – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Dodge, Fast Talk, First Aid, Grapple, Law, Psychology, and any two of the following as a personal specialty: Bargain, Drive Automobile, Martial Arts, Ride, or Spot Hidden.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Private Investigator – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bargain, Fast Talk, Law, Library Use, Locksmith, Photography, Psychology, and any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]*Professor – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bargain, Credit Rating, Library Use, Other Language, Persuade, Psychology, and any two of the following as a personal specialty: Anthropology, Archaeology, Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Electronics, Geology, History, Law, Medicine, Natural History, or Physics.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Soldier – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Dodge, First Aid, Hide, Listen, Mechanical Repair, Rifle, Sneak, any one other skill as a personal or era specialty.[/FONT]
  4. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]The Skills:[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Accounting (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Grants understanding of accountancy procedures, and reveals the financial functioning of a business or person. Inspecting the books, one might detect cheated employees, siphoned-off funds, payment of bribes or blackmail, and whether or not the financial condition is better or worse than claimed. Looking through old accounts, one could see how money was gained or lost in the past (grain, slave-trading, whiskey-running, etc.) and to whom and for what payment was made.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Anthropology (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Enables the user to identify and understand an individual’s way of life from his behavior. If the skill-user observes another culture from within for a time, or works from accurate records concerning an extinct culture, he or she may make simple predictions about that culture’s ways and morals, even though the evidence may be incomplete. Studying the culture for a month or more, the anthropologist begins to understand how the culture functions and, in combination with Psychology, may predict the actions and beliefs of representatives. Essentially useful only with existing human cultures.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Archaeology (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Allows dating and identification of artifacts from past cultures and the detecting of fakes. Having thoroughly inspected a site, the user might deduce the purposes and way of life of those who left the remains. Anthropology might aid in this. Archaeology may also help identify written forms of extinct human languages.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Art (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Specify song, some musical instrument, painting, cooking, etc. – any non-literary art which a creative person might seriously pursue through life. With a success, the performance or creation is pleasing and the audience is satisfied. Failure indicates that the artist was off-key or inexpressive. Lovecraft’s artists invoke the traditional muses, but the keeper might allow wider definitions of “art”. The points where Art ends and Craft begins vary with each keeper.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]The investigator sheet contains blank spaces for different versions of this skill. The player should note the style or medium – opera singer, oil painter, etc.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Astronomy (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user knows or knows how to find out which stars and planets are overhead at a particular day or hour of day or night, when eclipses and meteor showers occur, and the names of important stars, and something of current perceptions about life on other worlds, the existence or the formation of galaxies, and so on. An academic might be able to calculate orbits, or discuss stellar life cycles.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Bargain (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The skill of obtaining something for an agreeable price. The bargainer must state the price at which he or she wishes to purchase the item and, for each 2% difference between the price and the asking price, he or she must subtract 1 percentile from his Bargain skill. The seller will not take a loss, no matter how good the bargaining. The keeper usually determines the bottom-line secretly.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Example: Harvey Walters purchases a shotgun in Germany, to take with him while he investigates the disappearance of his manservant, Kurt, in the old ruins nearby. The elderly shopkeeper asks $100 American for the weapon, and Harvey is on a limited budget. Harvey offers the shopkeeper $70, and his player makes a D100 roll. Harvey has Bargain 20%, but he wants the gun for 30% less than normal, so his chance of success is reduced by 15 percentiles to only 5%. The player rolls 22 – a failure. Harvey then offers 80%, increasing his chances to 10%. The player rolls 02, a success[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]By implication, use this skill in any negotiation which features an exchange value. Combination rolls with Credit Rating, Fast Talk, or Persuade might help in bargaining.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A simple bargain may be struck in a few minutes. A complex contract might take weeks, and Bargain might then work in combination with Law.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Biology (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The science of life, including botany, cytology, ecology, genetics, histology, microbiology, physiology, zoology, and so on. The investigator’s understanding reflects the era of play. With this skill one might develop a vaccine against some hideous Mythos bacterium, or isolate the hallucinogenic properties of some jungle plant.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Chemistry (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A study of the composition of substances, the effects of temperature, energy, and pressure upon them, and how they affect one another. With chemistry, one might create or extract complex chemical compounds, including simple explosives, poisons, gases, and acids, requiring at least a day or so with the proper equipment and chemicals. The user could also analyze an unknown substance, given proper equipment and reagents.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Climb (40%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A climb roll must be attempted every 10 to 30 vertical feet, depending on the difficulty of the climb as the keeper perceives it. Conditions such as firmness of surface, wind, visibility, rain, etc., may be factors.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Conceal (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Allows the visual covering up, secreting, or masking of an object or objects, perhaps with debris, cloth, or other intervening or illusion-promoting materials, perhaps by making a secret panel or false compartment, or perhaps by repainting or otherwise changing an item’s characteristics to escape detection.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]With it, a person might be secreted from sight, but could not be disguised to evade even a cursory inspection. Larger objects of any sort should be increasingly harder to conceal. Things larger than elephants should not be concealed by one person, though they might be a group.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Compare with the Hide skill.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Craft (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A craft is a specialized skill for making and repairing practical things or for creating pleasing effects. It requires manual dexterity or artful application. As an occupation, a craft typically provides more income than laboring, but not as much as a profession.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A multitude of crafts exist, from house painter to lion-tamer to safecracker. Particularize a craft on craft on the investigator sheet, in the same general fashion as for Art: for instance, Craft (Cobbler), Craft (Barber), or Craft (Blow/Vacuum Tube).[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Making or repairing something typically requires equipment and time, to be determined by the keeper if necessary. With a very low result, a craftsman might make exceptionally fine item. With a failing roll, the item might break on its first use, or fail to fit into some larger whole. A successful Craft roll might provide information about an item, such as where or when it might have been made, reveal some point of history or technique concerning it, or who might have made it.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Credit Rating (15%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Narrowly, how prosperous and confident the investigator seems to be. This is the investigator’s chance to panhandle or get a loan from a bank or business, and it is also the chance for the investigator to pass a bad check or to bluff past a demand for credentials.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]In small towns, or in narrow societies such as Edwardian England, everyone knows everyone, and Credit Rating amounts to an index of personal reputation as well as monetary worth. Thus, Credit Rating might ebb and flow because of scandal or personal behavior, while the loss of accumulation of money effected minor change or no change. As appropriate, the keeper may cause a character to make clear such distinctions.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Cthulhu Mythos (00%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]This skill differs from the others in the game. No starting investigator may take points in Cthulhu Mythos either with occupation points or with personal interest points. There is no check box for Cthulhu Mythos on the investigator sheet, because successful use of the skill does not offer an increase in the investigator’s percentiles in the skill.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Instead, points in Cthulhu Mythos are gained by encounters with the Mythos which result in insanity, by optional insane insights into the true nature of the universe, and by reading forbidden books and other Mythos writings. On occasion, witnessing some ceremony or participation in some event might prompt a keeper to award Cthulhu Mythos points as well, but that is up to the keeper.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A few Mythos points may be useful, but investigators do not want many of them, because 99 minus an investigator’s Cthulhu Mythos points represents the maximum Sanity points possible to an investigator. As Mythos points proliferate, they crowd out Sanity points, and leave the investigator vulnerable.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]The Chulhu Mythos skill does have useful applications. Whenever spoor or other evidence of Mythos monsters is found, a successful D100 roll against this skill allows the investigator to identify the entity, deduce something about its behavior, or guess at some property it may possess. A successful Mythos roll also might allow an investigator to remember some fact concerning the Mythos, identify a spell by seeing it cast, remember that a particular spell or kind of information may be in a particular Mythos tome, or achieve some other task.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]No human, even one with 99% Cthulhu Mythos, ever approaches complete knowledge of the Mythos. It is fair to say that not even Great Old Ones do. Their 100% scores represent convenient comparisons against what humans can achieve, not a thorough plumbing of the mysteries of the Mythos Perhaps the Outer Gods know it all, if they bother to thing about such things. But only gods can cope with infinity. The cruel darkness of the Mythos extends forever. Seeming mastery of its puzzles is temporary, local, and illusory..[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Disguise (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user changes posture, costume, and/or voice in order to seem another person or another sort of person. Theatrical makeup may help. Dim lighting definitely helps. Increase the chance for detection if the disguise involves significant differences in sex, age, size, or language. To look like a specific person, as opposed to a particular kind of person, halve the Disguise skill percentage – this sort of illusion is best left maintained by distance.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A successful Spot Hidden or a Psychology roll might lead an observer to suspect someone in disguise. A successful Fast Talk roll by the player of the disguised character lowers the success for either of those skills by 10 percentiles.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Though explaining die results is the province of the keeper, a low and successful D100 result might give the disguised character some ability to issue convincing orders or to pass inspection by intimates. A failed Disguise roll causes onlookers to notice uncharacteristic behavior or expression. A very high failure, from 90 to 00, declares in effect, “This person is suspicious! Investigate immediately!”[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Dodge (DEX x 2%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Allows an investigator instinctively to evade blows, thrown missiles, attacks from ambush, and so forth. A character attempting Dodge in a combat round may also parry, but not attack. Dodge can increase through experience, like other skills. If an attack can be seen, a character can try to dodge it. Against guns, a defender may try to dodge only the first bullet fired at him in a round.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Drive Automobile (20%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Anyone with this skill can drive a car or light truck, make ordinary maneuvers, and cope with ordinary vehicle problems. If the investigator wants to lose a pursuer or trail someone, both participants might attempt Driving rolls until one fails and the other succeeds. Dangerous maneuvers always call for Drive rolls.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Electrical Repair (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Enables the investigator to repair or reconfigure electrical equipment such as auto ignitions, electric motors, fuse boxes, and burglar alarms. To fix an electrical device may require special parts or tools. Jobs in the 1920s may call for this skill and for Mechanical Repair in combination.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Fast Talk (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Causes a target to agree with the user for a short time. Without reflecting, the target signs the paper, allows the trespass, lends the automobile, or whatever else within reason is asked. Given a little more time to think and the benefit of a successful Idea roll, the target comes to his or her senses, and the Fast Talk loses effect.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Example: Count von Samme succeeds with a Fast Talk pitch, and Harvey goes upstairs to find fountain pen with which to sign the Count’s fraudulent contract. As he rummages around, Harvey is absent from the Count long enough to begin to think for himself. The keeper asks him for an Idea roll. It succeeds. Harvey comes to his senses and returns determined not to sign. The Count must renew his pitch some other time, or change tactics and attempt to Persuade Harvey.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]In a few game minutes, Fast Talk may pass off suspect goods as valuable, false facts as reliable, and fine items as not worth bothering about. In contrast, Persuade and Bargain may take hours or days to conclude. Fast Talk is quick to take effect, but it can be used at most on a handful of people. Fast Talk will not work on targets whose minds are made up; use Persuade instead.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]First Aid (30%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The percentage change of awakening an unconscious or stunned comrade, setting a broken limb, treating burn damage, resuscitating a drowning victim, etc. First Aid has no effect on diseases or subtle physical ailments, nor on poisonings unless the keeper allows the roll. Treated with First Aid, an investigator’s healing rate stays at 1D3 points per week. (Moved to a hospital and successfully treated with Medicine, that rate rises to 2D3 per week.)[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Failure in applying First Aid requires that the user wait some reasonable amount of time to try again (something new, presumably, since what was done didn’t work), but another practitioner could mae an attempt in the next round.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]A success with this skill allows the user immediately to heal 1D3 points of a single attack or injury. Thus an investigator suffering multiple gunshot wounds might receive First Aid for each, as long as they were not incurred in the same combat round.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]In the same or the succeeding combat round, an investigator who has just died may be returned to life if the emergency treatment raises hit points to at least +1.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]A success with First Aid immediately awakens any victim of a knocked-out attack and, if the keeper wishes, anyone unconscious for other reasons.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Once a character has had First Aid successfully applied to an injury, further applications either of First Aid or of Medicine have no effect on that injury. A new injury would be treated independently. An application of the skill takes a combat round, or as the keeper determines. See also Medicine.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Fist/Punch (50%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A self-explanatory skill, which might be depicted as a closed fist, a karate chop, a roundhouse punch, a violent slap, etc. One can use Fist/Punch to parry Kick and Head Butt, Martial Arts can add to the skill’s impact, and the knock-out rule applies to it (Keeper’s Note – the knock-out rule refers to attempting to use the blow to knock someone out instead of causing lethal damage. Some lethal damage will still be caused, but a D100 roll must be made to see if the attempt succeeded, pitting the damage that would have been caused against the target’s remaining hit-points on the Resistance Table. How such rolls are made will be explained in the Resistance Table section).[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Geology (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Enables an investigator to tell the approximate age of rock strata, recognize fossil types, distinguish minerals and crystals, locate promising sites for drilling and mining, evaluate soils, and anticipate volcanism, seismic events, avalanches, and other such phenomena. Sherlock Holmes was expert in London-area soils, and could trace a man’s movements by studying the dirt on his boots.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Grapple(25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A grapple is a special personal attack, frequently chosen to subdue an opponent without harming him. This attack may be parried by a countering successful Grapple or other attack by the target, but only in the first round of attack.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If a Grapple attack succeeds in the first round and is not neutralized, then the attacker holds the target and may thereafter exercise one of several options.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Immobilize the target by overcoming the target’s STR with his or her own STR, using the Resistance Table. With a success, the target is held fast indefinitely, until the grappler attempts another action.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Knock down the target. If used, the option automatically succeeds.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Knock out the target in the first or later round, the knock-out rule applies.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Disarm the target. With successful Grapples in consecutive rounds, an investigator could Grapple to prevent a hand-to-hand attack in the first round and then seize the weapon or weapon hand in the second round.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Physically injure the target. The opponent already must be successfully grappled. Then the grappler Must receive a second successful Grapple roll in that round, or a successful Grapple in some later round. Success costs the target 1D6 hit points plus the attacker’s damage bonus. Harm in subsequent rounds requires a new Grapple success in those rounds, and the amount of injury done remains the same.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Strangle the target. Beginning in the round in which the intention is stated, the target begins to asphyxiate as per the Drowning rules (Keeper’s Note – D100 rolls against CON x 10 for the 1st round, CON x 9 for the 2nd etc, it reaches CON x 1. Surprised characters start at CON x 6. Should the roll fail at any time, the character takes 1D6 damage, and continues to take 1D6 damage in every following round while being unable to breathe). [/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]This continues in subsequent rounds. The attacker needs no further Grapple rolls.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If either injury-making Grapple, the victim can escape only by a successful STR match on the Resistance Table. Combine STRs if two people are attacking.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Handgun (20%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Use for all pistol-like firearms when firing discrete shots. The rate-of-fire differences between handguns is partly from recoil and time needed to take new aim on the target, and partly from difference in mechanism between a revolver and a semi-automatic.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Properly loading and firing a black-powder handgun may, at the keeper’s option, require a successful History roll as well.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Head Butt (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The essential barroom brawl skill, Head Butt is applied to the belly of an opponent, or else to his temple, crown, nose, chin, or back of head. This personal attack can be made in cramped surroundings. It is surprisingly quick and of demoralizing intensity. One cannot parry with Head Butt, but Martial Arts can add to its effect. The knock-out rule can be applied to it.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Hide (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]As opposed to Conceal, Hide concerns the individual user’s ability to escape detection in an unprepared position. Use this skill only in a pursuit situation, or when under surveillance or patrol. It lets the user choose objects, bushes, deep shadows, etc., in which to lurk for a while. Some sort of cover must be present. In an area being watched, the user can move while hiding. Figure the chance for successful movement by halving the Hide skill amount.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]History (20%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Enables an investigator to remember the significance of a country, city, region, or person, as pertinent. Lessen the chance if the facts are obscure. A successful History roll might be used to help identify tools, techniques, or ideas familiar to ancestors, but little known today.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Jump (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]With a success, the investigator can leap up vertically and grab to his or her height, safely leap down vertically to his or her height, jump horizontally from a standing start across a gap for a distance equal to the jumper’s own height, or run and then jump horizontally to a distance of twice the jumper’s own height. If falling from a height, a successful Jump prepares for the fall, subtracting 1D6 from the loss to injury.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Kick (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Whether a straight forward kick to the groin or jaw, an elegant karate-style flying kick, or a kick with both legs while lying on a floor, a Kick is powerful enough to do damage wherever it lands. A Kick may parry and Martial Arts may add to its effectiveness, but do not apply the knock-out rule to kick except in rare circumstances.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Law(05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Represents the chance of knowing pertinent law, precedent, legal maneuver, or court procedure. The practice of law as a profession can lead to great rewards and political office, but it requires intense application over many years. A high Credit Rating is crucial to it. No other profession is so easily sullied by the bizarre behavior common to investigators. In the United States, one’s practice of law must be sanctioned by the State Bar of a particular commonwealth or state. In another country, halve the chance for success with this skill, unless the character has spent 30-INT months studying that nation’s law.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Library Use (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]In many ways this is the most important skill in the game. Library Use enables an investigator to find a given book, newspaper, or reference in a library or collection of documents, assuming that the item is there. Each use of this skill marks four hours of continuous search. An investigator rarely gets more than two tries per day.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]This skill can Locate a locked case of rare-book special collection, but Fast Talk, Persuade, Bargain, Credit Rating, a bribe, or special credentials might be needed to get at the books.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Listen (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Measures the ability of an investigator to interpret and understand sound, including overheard conversations, mutters behind a closed door, and whispered words in a café. The keeper may use it to determine the course of an impending encounter: was your investigator awakened by that crackling twig? By extension, a high Listen can indicate general awareness in a character.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Locksmith (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user may repair locks, make keys, or open locks with the aid of skeleton keys, picks, and other tools. Especially difficult locks may lower the chance for success. A locksmith can open car doors, hot-wire autos, jimmy library windows, figure out Chinese puzzle boxes, and penetrate ordinary commercial alarm systems. Sophisticated safes, vaults, and other serious defensive systems are beyond your skill. Keepers might combine Locksmith with DEX or POW rolls to cover a variety of surreptitious situations.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Machine Gun (15%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Use this skill whenever firing bursts from a bipod or tripod mounted weapon. If single shots are fired from a bipod, use the Rifle skill if it is higher.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Martial Arts (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Use in combination with an attack with Fist/Punch, Head Butt, Kick, or Grapple. If the attack roll is equal to or less than the attacker’s Martial Arts percentage, the attack does double damage: thus Fist/Punch would do 2D3 plus normal damage bonus. Martial Arts doubles the damage done if the attack strikes home, but do not double any damage bonus.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]A person with Martial Arts may choose which attack to parry just before the attack, and does not need to make a parry statement at the beginning of the round.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Even with Martial Arts, bullets and other projectiles cannot be parried.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]People develop martial arts to compensate for forcible disarmament: judo, aikijutsu, aikido, capoera, karate, savat, tae kyun or tae kwon do, white crane kung fu, 7 straws praying mantis kung fu, etc. Choose one or invent a new one. In earlier days, these schools were secret and their techniques jealously guarded. Outside their cultures, martial arts are little known.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Mechanical Repair (20%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]This allows the investigator to repair a broken machine, or to create a new one. Basic carpentry and plumbing projects can be performed. Special tools or parts may be required. This skill can open common household locks, but nothing more advanced. See the Locksmith skill. Mechanical Repair is a companion skill to Electrical Repair, and both may be necessary to fix complex devices such as an auto or an aircraft.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Medicine (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user diagnoses and treats accidents, injuries, diseases, poisonings, etc., and makes public health recommendations. If an era has no good treatment for a malady, the effort is limited, uncertain, or inconclusive. Failure in application requires that the user wait some amount of time to try again, but another practitioner could make his or her attempt in the next round.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]In an emergency, the successful user of Medicine can immediately restore 1D3 hit points, once per wound or injury.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]In the same or the succeeding combat round, an investigator who has just died may be returned to life if hit points rise to at least +1.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]An investigator successfully treated with Medicine heals at 2D3 hit points per game week, including the first week.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Including any emergency treatment, the total recovery for the first week of Medicine’s application could be 3D3 hit points.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]A success with Medicine immediately awakens any victim of a knock-out attack and anyone unconscious for other reasons.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]The keeper may rule that a medical condition is not treatable. See also First Aid.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Natural History (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Originally the study of plant and animal life in its environment. By the nineteenth century this study had long separated into many academic disciplines. As a game skill it represents the traditional knowledge and personal observation of farmers, fishermen, inspired amateurs, and hobbyists. It identifies species, habits, and habitats in a general way and is able to guess at what may be important to a particular species. Natural History information may or may not be accurate – this is the region of appreciation, judgment, tradition, and enthusiasm. Use Natural History to judge horseflesh at a country fair, or to decide whether a butterfly collection is excellent or just excellently framed.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Navigate (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Allows the user to find his or her way in storms or clear weather, in day at night. Those of higher skill are familiar with the astronomical tables, charts, instruments, and satellite location gear as they exist in the era of play. One could also use this skill to measure and map an area, whether an island of many square miles or the interior of a single room.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Occult (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user recognizes occult paraphernalia, words, and concepts, and identifies grimoires of magic and occult codes when he sees them. The occultist is familiar with the families of secret knowledge passed down from Egypt and Sumer, from the Medieval and Renaissance West, and perhaps from Asia and Africa as well.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Comprehending certain books may provide percentiles of Occult. This skill does not apply to spells, books, and magic of the Cthulhu Mythos, but occult concepts are often adopted by worshippers of the Great Old Ones.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Operate Heavy Machine (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Required to drive and operate a tank, backhoe, steam shovel, or other large-scale construction machine. Once the skill is sufficiently known, no skill roll is needed except for difficult and dangerous tasks, or bad or dangerous conditions. For very difficult sorts of machines, the keeper may decide to lower an investigator’s nominal skill if the problems encountered are mostly unfamiliar ones: someone used to running a bulldozer, for instance, will not be quickly competent with the steam turbines of a ship’s engine room.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Other Language (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Specify the language. An individual can know any number of languages. The skill represents the user’s chance to understand, speak, read, and write in a language other than his or her own. Ancient or unknown languages comparable to Aklo should not be chosen, but ordinary earthly languages may be. Occasionally the keeper may determine that a number of separate complex points exist in a document or speech, and call for several such language rolls, one for each point. Similarly, the keeper may momentarily reduce the user’s skill in a language if archaic speech or writing in that language is encountered. A single successful Other Language roll normally comprehends an entire book.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If an investigator has several points in a particular Other Language, he or she grasps the gist of normal conversation. A character needs EDU x 5 or better points in a second language to pass for a native speaker. Blank spaces exist for other languages on the investigator sheet.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Own Language (EDU x 05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Specify the language. In infancy and early childhood, most humans use a single language. For most people in the United States, the tongue is some dialect of English. The tongue chosen by the player for the investigator’s Own Language automatically starts at EDU x5: thereafter the investigator understands, speaks, reads, and writes at that percentage or higher.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Normally no skill roll is necessary to use Own Language. If a document is extremely difficult to read, or in an archaic dialect, the keeper may reduce the user’s skill chance in that situation.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Authors typically have high Own Language skills.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Persuade (15%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Use Persuade to convince a target about a particular idea, concept, or belief. (Like Fast Talk, Persuade may be employed without reference to truth.) Unlike Fast Talk, Persuade’s effect lingers indefinitely and insidiously, for years perhaps, until events or another Persuade turn the target’s mind in another direction. The successful application of Persuade might take an hour to several days, depending on what’s being attempted.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Pharmacy (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user recognizes, compounds, and perhaps dispenses a wide variety of drugs and potions, natural and man-made, and understands side effects and contra-indications. He or she has a good practical knowledge of poisons and antidotes, and can use Pharmacy as a first-aid skill in cases of poisoning. The skill grants no ability to diagnose diseases nor the right to prescribe medicines.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Photography (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Covers both still and motion photography. This skill allows one to take clear pictures, develop them properly, and perhaps enhance half-hidden detail. Failures are blurred or do not show what was desired.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Physics (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Grants theoretical understanding of pressure, materials, motion, magnetism, electricity, optics, radioactivity, and related phenomena, and some ability to construct experimental devices and test ideas. The degree of knowledge depends on the era of use. Practical devices such as automobiles are not the province of physicists, but experimental devices may be, perhaps in conjunction with Electronics or Mechanical Repair.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Pilot (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The air/water equivalent of Drive Automobile, this is the maneuver skill for flying or floating craft. An investigator might have several versions of this skill in the spaces on the investigator sheet. Each starts at 01%.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Bad weather, bad visibility, and damage apply to air and water craft.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]A skill user of less than 15% knows just enough to get into trouble. He or she can sail or fly on a calm day with good visibility, but needs Luck rolls for take-offs and landings, dockings, changing sails, judging wind and current, etc. Keepers must require Pilot rolls for storms, navigation by instrument, low visibility, and other difficult situations.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Pilot Aircraft:[/FONT][FONT=&quot] understands and is increasingly competent with a general class of aircraft named below. Upon any landing, even under the best conditions, a Pilot roll must be made. If conditions are good, double the chance of success. If conditions are bad, the pilot lands at his or her normal chance. A failure may represent damage to the craft, which must be repaired before next takeoff. Pilot and passengers may walk away or need Luck rolls to avoid serious injury. A result of 00 is a memorable disaster.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Each class of Aircraft counts as a different skill, and should be listed independently: Pilot Balloon, Pilot Dirigible, Pilot Civil Prop.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Pilot Boat:[/FONT][FONT=&quot] understands the behavior of small motor and sailing craft in wind, storms, and tides, and can read wave and wind action to suggest hidden obstacles and approaching storms. In a wind, novice sailors will find docking a rowboat difficult.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Psychoanalysis (01%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Enables the user to staunch a temporary and indefinite insanity for a day or so. If the condition persists beyond that period, the unfortunate person relapses, and only time heals the insanity. This emergency treatment takes up to an hour to perform, and can be applied just once per person per incident of insanity, no matter how many analysts are available.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Treatment by a psychotherapist can add Sanity points during indefinite insanity.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Psychoanalysis cannot increase a person’s Sanity points beyond POWx5, nor above 99-Cthulhu Mythos.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]The skill refers to the range of emotional therapies, not just to Freudian procedures. Sometimes it was looked on as a fraudulent study during the 1920s. The common term then for an analyst or scholar of emotional disorders was alienist.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Psychology (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A skill common to all humans, it allows the user to study an individual and form an idea of his or her motives and character. In general, the keeper will make the rolls for this skill and keep the results secret, announcing only the information, true or false, that the user gained by employing it. Players should not expect that this skill penetrates skillful deceit unless the person’s confidence somehow has been shaken.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Ride (05%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Intended to apply to saddle horses, donkeys, or mules. A camel might be ridden successfully at a lowered percentage chance. The skill grants knowledge of basic care of the riding animal, riding gear, and how to handle the steed at the gallop or on difficult terrain.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Should a steed unexpectedly rear or stumble, the rider’s chance of remaining mounted equals his or her Ride. If an investigator falls from a mount, either because the animal has collapsed, fallen, or died, or because a Ride roll failed, he or she loses 1D6 hit points in the accident. A successful Jump roll saves 1D6 hit points.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Wielding a weapon effectively while riding takes both a weapon skill and a Ride skill in excess of 50%. The keeper might apply modifiers to reflect a particular situation.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Rifle (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The user can fire any type of rifle, whether lever-action, bolt-action, or semi-automatic. When a shotgun fires a rifled slug, use this skill. Shots per round mostly vary because of the weapon’s action and recoil, and the subsequent time needed to reacquire the target.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]At the keeper’s option, use of a black-powder rifle requires a History roll as well to load and fire it properly.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Shotgun (30%)[/FONT][FONT=&quot] – With this skill any scatter-gun can be fired. Since the load expands in a spreading pattern, the user’s chance to hit does not decrease with range, but the damage done does. At ranges from 10-20 yards, 1D3 close-together targets can be hit with one round, and from 20-50 yards, 1D6 such targets can be hit. The keeper decides whether the targets are close enough for this rule.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Double-barreled shotguns can be sawed off, for purposes of concealment and portability. In the United States, such weapons are illegal by the 1920s.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If firing a rifled slug, use the Rifle skill.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Sneak (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The art of moving quietly, without alerting those who might hear. Used in combination with Hide, the investigator makes a single D100 roll, the result of whichis matched against the investigator’s percentages in both skills. Use this combination when silent movement is necessary. See also Hide.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Spot Hidden (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]This skill allows the user to spot a secret door or compartment, notice a hidden intruder, find an inconspicuous clue, recognize a repainted automobile, become aware of ambushers, notice a bulging pocket, or anything similar. This is an important skill in the game.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Submachine Gun (15%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]When firing any machine pistol or submachine gun, use this skill.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Swim (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]The ability to float and to move through water or other liquid. Only roll Swim in times of crisis or danger when the keeper thinks it appropriate. A failing Swim roll starts the drowning procedure. Someone drowning may receive a Swim roll attempt each round – with a success, he or she reaches the surface and breathes. With a second success, he or she can begin to move through the water. If the second Swim roll fails, drowning begins again.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Throw (25%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]To hit a target with an object, or to hit a target with the right part of the object thrown (such as the blade of a knife or hatchet), use Throw. A palm-sized object of reasonable balance can be hurled three yards for each STR point exceeding the object’s SIZ. An object designed to be thrown can be hurled up to six yards for each STR point in excess of the object’s SIZ, and perhaps bounce on for more. Keepers must choose the multiplier suitable to the baseball, javelin, etc.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If the Throw roll fails, then the object lands at some random distance from the target. Compare the closeness of the die roll result to the highest number which would have indicated success, and choose a distance in yards between target and thrown object that feels comparable.[/FONT]
    • [FONT=&quot]Track (10%) – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]With Track, an investigator can follow a person, vehicle, or animal over soft earth and leaves. Subtract 10% from the chance for success for each day that has passed since the tracks were made. Rain may made tracking impossible. A being cannot be tracked across water, over concrete, or at night except in unusual circumstances.[/FONT]
  5. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]Skill Addenum:[/FONT]



    [FONT=&quot]Melee Weapon - [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Any hand-to-hand weapon can be used in Call of Cthulhu. The possibilities are so numerous and often so strange that it is pointless to write them up as skills. Most hand-to-hand weapons can perform one attack and one parry per combat round. Knives without crossguards cannot parry. Add full damage bonuses to these weapons' attacks except when being thrown: thrown weapons get halved damage bonuses. Five general classes of melee weapons are discussed below. [/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Clubs, Blunt Instruments (varies) - [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Clubs include policeman's nightstick, the criminal's blackjack, handy branches and rocks, and fireplace pokers. These weapons are too dissimilar in size, weight, and material to share in a general skill increase, and so are individual skills, such as Large Club, Small Club, and Blackjack. [/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Things like blackjacks and rocks cannot be used to parry. A thundering big club might do 1D10 damage, but would require a wielder of at least STR 13. Clubs never impale(Keeper's Note - striking a vital area, can only be done with bullets or pointed weapons). The base chance for Small Club or Large Club could be extended to barroom chairs, hall trees, and other small furniture, if the keeper prefers. Clubs and other blunt instruments can be used to make knock-out attacks.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Foils, Rapiers (Varies) - [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Foil and rapier are similar skills, and a skill increase in one increases the rest. Treat most sword-canes as sharpened foils. Foils and rapiers can impale.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Knives (Varies) -[/FONT][FONT=&quot] Bowie knives, butcher knives, hunting knives, dirks, daggers, and kitchen knives have a big enough blade to be significant weapons. An increase in skill with one increases most of the others. Knives can impale.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]-[/FONT][FONT=&quot]Swords, Sabers (Varies) - [/FONT][FONT=&quot]A great variety of such weapons exist, some one-handed and some requiring two hands. A skill increase with one does not increase the rest. Some of these weapons can impale, but others were designed as slashing weapons for cavalry use and parrying, and are relatively blunt-tipped - these latter cannot impale.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If you are interested in adding skill familiarity with a melee weapon, ask your keeper for further information on the specific weapon. On average, the starting skill with most melee weapons is 25%, so don't be afraid of trying out an unfamiliar weapon in a bad situation.[/FONT]
  6. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]Sanity & Insanity:[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Central to the game, sanity will and its loss will be mostly expanded upon during the game proper.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]When investigators encounter a sanity-threatening situation, the keeper may ask for a Sanity roll. The players roll a D100 for each of their characters. A success is a roll equal to or less than the investigator’s current sanity points. A success may result in little to no sanity loss (relative to the situation), while a failure will result in a more serious loss to sanity. For example, finding a mangled human corpse will usually require a Sanity check, failing which will mean losing 1D4+1 current Sanity points. In contrast, only 1 point is lost if the check succeeds.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Within a reasonable interval (the keeper decides) no sanity is lost above the maximum possible for a specific type of horrific event or being. For example, should an investigator lose a total of 5 Sanity points for finding mangled corpses, this event will not affect him further for a duration that may range from days to weeks. Once that period passes though, the horror of them will rise up freshly in any character.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Sanity points can be increased by keeper award, increasing a skill to 90%, defeating unnatural entities, or by psychotherapy. Psychiatric medications may also prove useful, and will may also help avoid the symptoms of insanity (at the cost of possible side-effects).[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Should an investigator lose enough Sanity points, insanity may ensue. General types of insanity are temporary insanity, indefinite insanity, and permanent insanity.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Temporary Insanity – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]If an investigator loses 5 or more Sanity point at the consequence of one Sanity roll, he or she has suffered enough emotional trauma that the keeper must test the character’s Sanity. The keeper asks for an Idea roll. If the Idea roll fails, then the investigator has repressed the memory, a trick that the mind uses to protect itself. Perversely, if the Idea roll succeeds, then the investigator recognizes the full significance of what has been seen or experienced, and goes temporarily insane. The effects of temporary insanity begin immediately.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]When the temporary insanity is over, a mild phobia might remain as a reminder of the experience, but the most likely souvenir will be some degree of post-traumatic stress disorder.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Indefinite Insanity – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]If an investigator loses a fifth (round up fractions) or more of current Sanity points in one game hour, he or she goes indefinitely insane. Indefinite insanity may remove a character from play for some time. The average duration for indefinite insanity is 1D6 game months.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]The symptoms of some indefinite insanities are continuous (amnesia, depression, and obsession, for example). Other indefinite insanities are transient and only manifest themselves at particular moments (multiple personality or dissociative identity disorder, conversion disorder, intermittent explosive personality, etc.). Both sorts of symptoms offer good opportunities for roleplaying.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]For such situations and stresses that investigators come to know, some sort of anxiety disorder can often be the most appropriate.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]For instance, after a life-threatening event, a person persistently re-experiences the trauma in some way, perhaps through images, dreams, flashbacks, or mental associations. There are marked symptoms of increasing anxiety. Dissociative symptoms may also follow.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Permanent Insanity – [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Investigators who reach zero Sanity points go permanently insane. “Permanently” may mean a game year or a lifetime. In real life, an asylum patient stays in an institution an average of four years and some months. In the game, the duration of permanent insanity is entirely at the keeper’s discretion.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]No difference between indefinite insanity and permanent insanity exists, except as prognosis made by an attending psychiatrist and confirmed by a judge. In the real world, all insanity is indefinite insanity, since no one in real life can hope to predict the future as accurately as a Call of Cthulhu keeper.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Many disorders, especially congenital conditions, offer little hope of recovery. Lovecraft concludes more than one story with the intimation that a lifetime of madness for the narrator will follow. Now and then a quiet release might be made from a local asylum. Some thin, unnaturally pallid person, almost unrecognizable after soul-wracking terrors, can walk shyly into downtown Arkham or elsewhere, cast keen eyes about, and attempt to plumb the surrounding darkness, but no player should count on such privilege as a right.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Playing Insanity[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]The threat of insanity in the Call of Cthulhu rules characterizes the Mythos in a way which allows no compromise. Exposed to it, few sane humans freely choose the Mythos, for the Mythos is intrinsically loathsome and foul. The connection of sanity points and Cthulhu Mythos points emphasizes the power of the Mythos, which corrupts and ruins by proximity and association. The sanity rules prove to us our own fragility. All that which we thought so strong becomes delusory and false, while madness sometimes becomes a necessary condition for truth.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]If an investigator has even one point of Sanity remaining, the player has firm control. The aesthetics of how the player chooses to present a nearly-mad investigator represents the essence of roleplaying. As the investigator weakens, evidence of the weakening should become apparent. Thus near-insanity calls for stronger roleplaying, not for less player control.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Such an investigator should speak about his mental condition, so that the others understand the situation, and can act with due regard and sympathy. It is not good roleplaying to murmur “My guy’s Sanity points are low.” Such a statement is dull and makes nothing happen. But a player who can vividly describe his investigator’s anxiety or terror, and relate how that affects the game, deserves applause.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If an investigator has ten or fewer Sanity points, he or she certainly knows the situation is serious. In such straits in real life, most people would pull back from the action and perhaps put themselves in sanitariums. So should investigators.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Investigator insanity characterizes the power of the Mythos by causing the investigator to adopt behavior which is limited in what it can achieve, yet expressive and interesting to roleplay. Even an indefinitely-insane investigator does not always have to be parked in a sanitarium, if a good alternative can be negotiated with the keeper. The choice can be serious, or conceivably eccentric and twisted, or even ridiculous, but it should not upset the tenor of the game.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]As a minor example, suppose that an investigator shows insanity by obsessively insisting on wearing two hats day and night. He argues that were he not to do so, his head would be unprotected if he tipped his hat to a lady while the sky was falling. Since the hats can be seen, keeper characters freely notice and comment or criticize the foible. No restaurant will seat them, since their behavior is so uncouth. That two-hatted madman never left the game – the game widened to accommodate him.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A player may try to act out too many elements of his investigator’s insanity. If that gets in the way of the game, the keeper must quash the interruption. Not to do so would be unfair to the other players.[/FONT]
  7. Roman_K New Member

    [FONT=&quot]Miscellaneous:[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Injury:[/FONT][FONT=&quot] Investigators function normally until reduced to 2 hit points or lower. When they reach 2 or below, the character falls unconscious. If hit points reach 0 or lower, the character dies in the following combat round unless a friend intervenes. Raising the hit points to a positive number in this interval will save the investigator’s life.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]Shock from a fall or electricity may stun an investigator for up to 1D6 combat rounds. Stunned, the investigator may parry or Dodge, but not otherwise act. Being stunned may or may not include losing hit points.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If, from a single wound, an investigator loses hit point equal to half or more of his current hit points, the player must roll the investigator’s CON x5 or less on a D100 or the investigator falls unconscious. When an investigator has 1 or 2 hit points left, he or she automatically falls unconscious, and no longer actively participates in the game. Though living, he or she will not wake until 1 hit point rise to 3 or more. The keeper may privately determine an alternative length of unconsciousness. Time may heal the wound enough that the investigator can stagger away, or he or she may be helped by a successful First Aid or Medicine roll.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Special types of damage, such as fire or acid, or loss of limbs, will likely also incur permanent loss to attributes.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Combat: [/FONT][FONT=&quot]Dexterity determines the order of attack, from highest to lowest. Should two have the same DEX, a D100 is rolled for each. The one with the lowest result goes first.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]If hand-to-hand weapons and firearms are being used in the same general encounter, then aimed and ready firearms shoot once in DEX order before any hand-to-hand fighting takes place. After the first shots are fired, a second DEX cycle is ranked, in which all who make hand-to-hand attacks, performing automatic actions, using some version of characteristic, using a skill, or casting a spell, act.[/FONT]
    [FONT=&quot]A gun rated at three shots or more in a round fires once more, at half the shooter’s DEX, in the last part of the round.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]In other words, firearms can launch two or three times the number of attacks possible to hand-to-hand weapons, and automatic weapons up to thirty times as many. But beware of gunfights: they’re signs that the investigators have made bad choices.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Armor and Cover:[/FONT][FONT=&quot] Humans have worn a variety of body armors. How much and what sort of damage armor stops is for ingenious investigators to explore. Armor is not lost if one attack penetrates it. Armor has a lot of surface area, and bullet holes and knife holes are small. The chance of penetrating armor in the same place twice is too small to consider.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]The 1920s offer scant armored clothing. At most an investigator can expect a heavy leather jacket or coat, or perhaps a WWI helmet through illegal means, though exceptions to that rule exist. Armor grants damage resistance, so that a heavy leather jacket can stop 1 HP of damage for every hit sustained. Smart investigators can also make use of the environment, hiding behind doors or walls to avoid damage. In such a case, the barrier acts like armor for the purposes of damage reduction.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]Magic:[/FONT][FONT=&quot] Whether or not investigators gain much by knowing Mythos magic, they always find Mythos magic inconvenient to apply. When they do use Mythos spells, even for benevolent purposes, they lose Sanity points in consequence. Few Mythos spells are quickly performed. Spells must be approached warily, since often what they do and what they cost is utterly unknown. Mythos magic can be a dangerous trap, for in using it investigators lose Sanity points and add Cthulhu Mythos, more and more becoming like those whom they seek to defeat. Mythos magic bewilders shocks, disorients, and debilitates its human practitioners. With enough exposure, the psychic contradictions involved in using this magic drives humans insane.[/FONT]

    [FONT=&quot]In the game, investigators mostly experience magic from the outside, as the targets of it, or by witnessing the effects of spells cast by someone else. But occasionally, they may gain access to tomes or notes that can teach spells to those who diligently study them. The process may takes weeks or even months, and some Sanity loss is to be expected merely from reading such a book, as well as earning Cthulhu Mythos points.[/FONT]

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