I would like to discuss (again) the exact sequence of events that are triggered when a hero who has access to abilities that modify his Health or Stamina ( Survey , Brute , Iron Ring, etc.) is defeated.
According to my understanding of the rules and uFAQ the following happens in sequence:
1.
The hero
has damage tokens equal to his current health on his card (either by suffering damage or by having his Health reduced)
2. Abilities or effects like
Death Siphon
may be used and are resolved.
3. If
the hero
has still damage tokens equal to his current Health, he is defeated.
4. Effects and abilities that trigger when a hero is defeated may be used (e.g.
Stalwart
,
One Fist
's Heroic feat.) and are resolved.
5. Effects of being defeated trigger simultaneously:
- The hero 's turn ends.
- The hero suffers damage and fatigue up to his current Health and Stamina, respectively. Any abilities modifying Health and Stamina are still active.
- The hero replaces his hero figure by hero token.
- The hero discards any condition cards
- The OL gains an OL card or a threat token
6.
The hero
is considered to be knocked out
7. Effects of being knocked out trigger:
- The hero may not use abilities or benefit from passive abilities unless explicitly allowed.
- Any abilities that modify Health and Stamina are thus inactivated. Fatigue tokens suffered after step 5 remain on the Hero sheet (even tokens in excess of the current Stamina). Damage tokens in excess of the current Health are discarded.
Do you agree with this point of view? The only problem that I see is with steps 6 and 7; the rules are a little bit vague when it comes to heroes being defeated vs. being knocked out.; e.g. One Fist 's Heroic feat and Stalwart state that the hero is knocked out at the end. However, it would not make much sense if effects of being defeated (step 5) would be skipped. On the other hand, there seems to be a fine line distinguishing being defeated from being knocked out and associated effects. They are not the same.
EDIT:
Another possibility to solve this would be to differentiate between the process of becoming knocked-out and the state of being knocked-out.