Hey friends,
I have a situation that comes up every once in a while in my campaigns where a player uses two maneuvers (by suffering strain) in order to move through range bands and still end up just outside (or a long way outside) where they want to be. So they inevitably ask me if they could make some sort of check to get just a bit further.
In the book the athletics skill can be tested to "run long distances". Is that just used in narrative play or can I have them make the check in order to cover the same amount of ground as a maneuver. And I've thought about this and could make it fairly balanced.
For example, a character could make an average athletics check as their action after making just one maneuver (likely for movement) and if they succeed they get the distance of a maneuver without suffering the strain. If they fail they could suffer the strain anyway and have the embarrassment of losing their action. But that is the less likely scenario. Knowing my players, they will want to suffer two strain to take two movement maneuvers and then want to get a bit further. In theory I could let them make an athletics check (hard since it is like trying to make a third maneuver thus three dice) and if they succeed they get the distance. If they fail they get another lump of strain based on the threats, terrain, etc. If ever a dispair comes up I'd have them trip and take on the prone status, but I'd have to spend a destiny point to make that possible. The difficulty of the check would reflect the number of movement maneuvers they try to make since athletics is a measure of stamina so using a manuever to ready a weapon or pick something up wouldn't drain stamina and thus not increase the difficulty. In simple terms, the difficulty would be equal to the number of movement they are trying to make. A second move would be average and a third would be hard and that would be the limit.
What do you guys think? Is this a house rule that we could implement fairly and still keep things balanced? Any thoughts on changes or alternatives or just open objections? I want to hear your thoughts (but be nice still, the internet is a scary place to share ideas).
Thanks