Pages

Saturday, November 7, 2020

Loot Threshold XP and what counts as loot

I use a loot-threshold based system for awarding XP in my Dungeon Fantasy game. Old school gold-for-Xp updated to a system that wouldn't deal well with 1:1 like in the Good Old Days.

But I also like to enforce a rule about "new" loot. That is, newly found loot counts towards the threshold, but previously discovered loot does not. The basic idea is to prevent loot-maximizing.

Example: The party solves an interesting puzzle problem, and finds a secure secret door to a treasury. So they take just enough loot get everyone maximum XP. The next session, they do other things that aren't loot heavy, and stop by the treasury and trigger the clever mechanism and take, again, just enough. Repeat until the treasury is empty.

Instead, I only award loot-based XP for treasure when first found and successfully exploited.

What about edge cases?

What if you give loot to a monster and then, much later, take it back?

Probably not loot. It might be if it's different characters, but don't bet the delve on it.

What if you find monsters to trade with?

First time is probably loot - it's a good encounter and exploitation of it.

Second time? Eh. Probably not.

What if you find something, and then only later come back and take some?

Likely it's loot for XP purposes. Discovery isn't exploitation.

What if it's a huge hoard, and coming back and getting more is a dangerous and risk-filled prospect?

It's probably loot.

To me, no edge case has really been that strong of an edge case. They generally seem like a pretty choice in one direction or the other. So that's how I rule and how I play it. I try to point them out ahead of time, if you're planning a delve around a "loot" source . . . but I won't always point it out during the session. I feel like that unduly influences decisions during the session itself and that's not a positive thing.

If you're running loot-based XP, especially if you're doing so using the rules in DF 21, what do you think? How do you handle this?

2 comments:

  1. At some point, loot for XP does break down. After all, loot is a reward in of itself, regardless of XP given for it. I'd say that once you find it, it counts, just to stop folks from gaming the system. To be fair, I've never heard of folks doing that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, I suppose from some angle it might look like a break down, but I haven't really seen it yet in my game. We've just needed to define what it is, as players - especially new players - come into the game and want to exploit previous sources of loot to "make the loot threshold." Usually this means finding left-behind junk to sell for scrap, recovering money used in bribes to monsters, trading for profit, etc. The approach above - that XP for loot assumes some risk, and initial discovery, not just taking home enough for your threshold - works well enough.

      My group originally thought to "farm" or exploit known loot sources slowly until I made this ruling (I did so right away), and that solved a lot of issues. It also explained how, say, "Rusty's Food Bowl" became loot again, because it took research, negotiation, effort, and discovery to find. It's a grey area which always seems to feel less grey when we have an actual situation to decide on.

      Delete