———— > Probably an amount that puts a small but noticeable dent int the PCs’ coffers. Things like this should generally not be a fixed value, but instead vary with the specific group. ————— > Depends on the approach used. The money is needed just to get him to talk; how it’s used would be the skill for the test. Gathering information from people should ideally be more than “buying” it with no actual social interaction as that makes for a more interesting encounter. ———— > See #121 above; maybe a little more pricey though. ———— > Depends on how big the GM wants this to look, but a dozen or so should be a good starting number. ———— > The former. ———— > " Give me the blood of the scion of Haarlock, let it flow to fill this chalice ” So say 6-8 oz. Less than standard a blood donation amount, so perhaps the donor (if all from one person) gains 1 level of Fatigue. If from more than one, they are all ok. ———— > Whatever the GM wants to be there. Could be empty, could have some items that act as clues that the PCs missed earlier, could be some cool devices from other books the GM wants to introduce into the campaign. ———— > Either way would be fine really. ———— > The latter. ———— > As many as needed to allow them to have a meaningful impact in their scenes. So would vary with power levels of opponents. I’d keep it a pretty small number though; weapons like that lose their specialness if you see them too often. |