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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Get your 3e out of my 4e

I've been playing GURPS since Man-to-Man. Some of my group has, too. And for many of them, most of their formative experience was in the 3e era. So we have a lot of 3e-isms that have survived. These serve mostly to grate on the ears of the GM and confuse new players.



My shield gives me +3 PD.

No, it doesn't. It gives you +3 DB (Defense Bonus). 4e ditched Passive Defense, for a lot of sound reasons. Although it does have some odd effects (a berserker with a large shield isn't any harder to hit, and the shield never gets in the way) it's a generally good change. But my players love the term PD.

I cast off of health.

My players say this one all of the time. "I cast off of HT." They mean, "I cast a spell fueled by my HP" and back in 1e-3e GURPS, HP were derived from (and generally equal to, for human-like PCs) HT. Just once, I want to let them. Sure, you can cast off of HT. Spend 3 HT and make your roll. Your wizard's HT just went from 11 to 8. Have fun with that death check later in the fight.

You can learn the Feint maneuver.

Technique. They're called Techniques, because having two different things called Maneuvers was tough. But many times "maneuver" just comes out.

Does Strong Will add to consciousness rolls?

This hasn't come up recently, but it used to come up a lot. Back in 3e, Will was equal to IQ and the only way to improve it was the Strong Will advantage. That also added to rolls to stay conscious. 4e made Will a derived stat and got rid of Strong Will (and Weak Will) and just lets you mess around with the level of that stat directly. As a side effect, your strength of Will doesn't affect consciousness rolls. I've had people argue those rolls should either be influenced by your Will, or floated to Will instead of HT. That might be interesting, but it would require mucking around with a lot of other things (Hard to Subdue costing, HT costs, why it's a good idea to let you float a roll from a 10 point attribute to a 5 point secondary characteristic). In any case, it's a 3e question.

Make a Will roll to avoid going berserk.

Will rolls for disads have been replaced by Self-Control rolls. So, no making Will rolls for this kind of thing.


An honorable mention goes to, "It was that way back in 3e, but they changed it." Why? Because that's not always true. Sometimes it was never changed at all, and people just remember it wrong. Or they're remembering a house rule (that came up recently with Tip Slash - someone mentioned it was overpowered and we'd house ruled it. Yes, we did . . . but the way we ran it became the official, by the book way to run it.) Or things that aren't true now, and were never true.

None of this stuff really impacts play - it's just old holdover language. But it's interesting to see how

Any 3e isms that have crept into the conversations around your 4th edition GURPS table?

9 comments:

  1. "It was that way back in 3e, but they changed it."

    That one kills me! I gave up on fighting it a long time ago . . . but here's what I actually read or hear when someone throws out that line:

    "When you released Fourth Edition, I figured there would be enough new stuff that I had better read the books. I didn't do that for Third Edition because . . . reasons. But I'm positive that anything I don't remember is a new Fourth Edition rule, because even though I didn't read Third Edition, I knew it like a pro."

    For every correct identification of a Fourth Edition change, I run into about 50 instances of people who think something that has been around since 1986 or 1988 or 1990 is a change.

    As the kids say, "LOL!"

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    1. I expect you get an incredible amount of "anything I don't like is a change for the worse, anything I do like was there since 3e."

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    2. Ugh, it's the same with D&D. People will bitch about some "new school" thing that's been around since '83, while praising the Rules Cyclopedia which contains exactly the element they're complaining about. The number of grognards who don't know their history is astounding

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    3. Hah, true. My favorite there is THAC0. Lots of people think it started in 2e, but there it is in the 1st edition DMG . . .

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  2. This is only slightly related but... Tip Slash is a legit thing if you're using Martial Arts?! That's pretty awesome.

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    1. It's legit. It's about as useful of a move as you'd expect (slashing with the sharp tip of a thrusting weapon), but you can do it.

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  3. My GM gave us a 100 point budget in the fantasy campaign and didn't count Attributes sold down to 8 or 9 against the Disadvantage Limit.

    I was only familiar with 4th edition due to studying the rule book for a couple months, but this was my first time playing anything other than combat tests (like bear vs. 6-pack of wolves). GM and one of the other players were familiar with 3rd edition. System was completely new to the other two players.

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  4. Eh, I tried 4e..bought all the books as they came out for a couple of years and went back to 3. To each his own.

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    1. It's fine you prefer 3e. My main point, though, is "These serve mostly to grate on the ears of the GM and confuse new players."

      I expect 4e-isms dragged back into 3e would probably bother someone who prefers 3e, if they came at the frequency the 3e-isms come into my 4e game.

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