Over in the FaD beta forums while talking about Force Power usage we got a little side tracked on the topic of how some people are afraid to have their "Lightside" characters use the option to flip their pips when manifesting Force Powers, and by extension the players hesitation to flip Destiny Points in general.
This gave me the idea for a set of "rules" that can be applied to any adventure with the intent of getting players and GM a little out of their comfort zone, and encouraging more active use of some of these mechanics, as well as just getting rid of some of the presumptions about how the game is supposed to work and a little sharper focus on how the game actually does work. This isn't something to apply to all games forever, just something to use for three or four sessions from time to time to encourage fuller use of the system.
It's still early draft mode, but here's where I'm starting:
- Every major encounter should see the expenditure of at least 3 destiny points. It may be by either side of the table but the total expenditure must be 3 or more. A Dpoint spent to attempt to directly counteract another Dpoint negates both point expenditures when calculating the total.
- "Light Side" Force using Player Characters must always do what is needed to activate a force power they commit to performing, even if this means calling on the darkside. Conflict should be tracked as normal. "Committing" shall be defined as announcing the power use attempt and rolling the dice. Once the dice have been rolled, you're committed, and must execute to the best of your abilities. If you can't generate enough pips to execute the intended action, you must instead perform an alternate action using the same power and die results. If there are not enough pips to manifest a power and no light side Dpoints are available, the power fails normally. If this occurs more then once in a single session the GM may apply a single automatic despair result to any player made check the round the power failed to activate or the following round. If flipping a pip will cost strain sufficient to exceed the players threshold, the power manifests, but upon completion of the action the player suffers the strain and all the normal effects of having his/her/its strain threshold exceeded.
- If either side finds itself in possession of all the Dpoints, every effort should be made to expend at least one Dpoint at the earliest appropriate opportunity.
I'll be expanding this to work in Obligation/Duty/Conflict as well.
Objective is to have 10 or less "rules" for play, with minimal mechanical adjustments. I'm trying to make rules for the players and GM to follow to get them to use the rules and resources that are there, not to fix something perceived as broken.
In the mean time comments from the peanut gallery are welcome. Any mechanics you see people avoiding out of fear or laziness? Would you even consider trying a game that ran this for a session or three and then reverted back to normal play?
A little excessive background for those that are interested:
The inspiration for this comes from the Dogme 95 rules for film making. These rules were established to try and promote film as art with more emphasis on the story and actors performances and less on special effects and studio pressures. I never really subscribed to it, I actually saw it's rules as more a torture device for pretentious directors to use on the production team. The upside of course being that it made production team better as they learned from dealing with the insanity of the rules (what doesn't kill you makes you stronger).
So MonkeyLizard 2014 is sort of the exact opposite of the original intent. Instead of encouraging reducing what you have to tell your story in the hopes you'll learn to tell it better, it encourages you to use all the resources at your disposal, in the hopes it'll enhance your story.