Hi there, fellow Munchkins
A question as to the functioning of the Delay Action and the Quick-Draw talent.
Delay lets you reserve a Half-Action, to be used at any time of your choosing until the start of your next turn. All well and good. But can you also, when you decide to make use of your reserved Half-action also perform additional Free-Actions at the same time?
I can see both legitimate uses for it, but also potential problems and fodder for rules-lawyers.
Example:
Bob eyes the suspicious-looking dreg warily, expecting trouble. He is ready to draw and fire at any sign of sudden moves. The unknown (but probably Heretic) man goes for his gun....
Bob was ready for it (having used a Delay action) and now wants to draw his own gun, faster than the dreg, and put a bullet in his head. A classic western scene, where our hero is so fast that he still wins the day, even though he waits for his opponent to make the first move.
Acceptable?
Now what if the situation was slightly changed:
Greg the Dreg does not like the look of this Bob fella, and certainly not the way he keeps staring at him. He expects trouble. After waiting for Bob to make a move for a while (a few turns of mutual delays) Greg decides to finish it. He draws and fires. Greg is fast. In fact, both Greg and Bob has Quick-Draw, and for sake of argument, identical Agility and Initiative scores.
However, Bob still gets to "interrupt" Greg, and make his Delayed action first. Even though Greg is just as fast and able.
It does not make sense to me that the last to act of these to equally skilled men gets to shoot first, but the way I read Delay to work, the advantage goes to the one who "reacts", as he in fact gets to act on his previous turn.
Am I reading the rules wrong? Are the rules "wrong"?