58 minutes ago, whafrog said:To second the pirate's point, you are not obligated to make every item in the equipment list available, or even findable. But I get around a lot of that because I don't really ever give my players time to "go shopping" (nor do they really have the money). It's a story, not a treasure hunt, and I pretty much said that from Session Zero. If they get equipment or mods, it's because it's found...because I put it there. People coming from D&D and video games think they're in a never-ending arms race against ever nastier bosses. But when you think about Star Wars, that's not really how the stories happen. Basically, they're always running from Star Destroyers and Stormtroopers, and it doesn't get much worse. The only character who goes through something like a standard boss arc is Luke, and in the end he decides not to fight and lets his dad fix everything.
I really hate the Star Wars/Amazon set up of just roll dice and purchase stuff based on skill rolls. I would've rather they left the whole check on rarity out completely and the only roll would be over prices. I've always required my guys to RP out locating contacts who can provide gear, and not just have some generic Bob's Guns and Liquor outlet on every friggin planet.
1 hour ago, whafrog said:You're not alone here. I've been GMing since the original D&D box set, and this game made me completely revise how I run games (for the better, I think). Perhaps run a beginner game first, there's a lot of value in both the product and the sessions spent learning the system.
I remember chits in the D&D box set.....Warhammer was a RPG first....etc
Quotec. The Early 1970s: Polyhedrals Meet RPGs
Meanwhile in an Educational Store Somewhere in the Midwest...
So the story goes that in the earliest days of TSR, one of the founders found these odd-shaped dice in a store specializing in teaching tools (many of the patents held on polyhedral dice are actually educational in nature), and D&D was adapted to use all these odd dice. This makes a ton of sense. Look at Chainmail . It generically refers to "die" and "dice." When it does reference more than one type of die, it's in color only. Now, take a look at the Men & Magic white box book. Where does it say you can get polyhedral dice? From your gaming shop? Noooooo! From TSR! (Ah, so it's a profit deal .)
FYI, never buy polyhedrals from game vendors, way overpriced. Go to education supply sites, better dice, better prices.