Bulletproof Blues 3e EN:Skills
Skills allow a character to apply their attributes to solve a specific problem or accomplish a specific task. Skills cost one character point each. Expertise in a skill costs an additional character point. We suggest spending about 10 character points on skills.
Skill Dice
If the character has the needed skill, the player rolls 2d6. If the character has Expertise with the needed skill, re-roll any 1s and 2s until all dice have a 3 or higher.
A character may attempt a task in which they have no skill, if the GM says it is possible. For example, anyone can tell a lie (attempted with a Deception roll), but not everyone can recite an epic poem and keep the audience's attention (attempted with a Performance roll). If a character attempts a task in which they have no skill, the player rolls one die instead of two. For example, if a character is attacked by an enemy with a knife, but the defender does not have the Hand-to-hand Combat skill, the defender rolls 1d6 and adds their Brawn.
Making skill rolls is covered in the Actions chapter.
Typical Skills
Bulletproof Blues divides skills into broad disciplines. This list of skills is not exhaustive, nor is it objective: skills are divided by their usefulness in a game, not by any objective taxonomy. This is why "Culture" is a very broad skill, while "Deception" is relatively specific. A character may have a skill not listed here, subject to GM approval. However, any new skills should be approximately as useful as these skills in order to maintain a sense of fairness with other characters.
Most skills are quite broad. However, just because a character could do everything encompassed by a skill does not mean that they should. For example, a character with the Engineering skill could, in theory, do everything from repairing a television camera to designing a bridge. That doesn't mean it makes sense for them to do so. It's up to you as the player to know what makes sense for your character and what doesn't, and to communicate that information to the GM.
The attribute typically associated with a skill is listed here, but keep in mind that the relevant attribute might change depending on the circumstances. Also note that the same task might be accomplished in more than one way. Climbing a tree might be an exercise in Athletics (Brawn), but it might also be accomplished with the proper application of Survival (Brawn).
Skill | Attribute | Examples |
---|---|---|
Athletics | Agility or Brawn | Climbing, gymnastics, riding, running, scuba, swimming, throwing objects |
Computing | Reason | Artificial intelligence, forensics, forgery, hacking, programming, security systems |
Culture | Reason | Art, fashion, history, music, philosophy, politics, popular media |
Deception | Presence | Bluffing, disguise, lying, sales |
Diplomacy | Presence | Carousing, conversation, etiquette, negotiation, streetwise |
Engineering | Reason | Architecture, cartography, demolitions, electronics, mechanical engineering |
Finesse | Agility | Disabling a trap, lockpicking, pickpocketing, sleight of hand |
Gambling | Reason | Card games, dice games, dominoes, formal combat, races, sporting events |
Hand-to-hand Combat | Brawn | Axes, clubs, knives, spears, swords, unarmed strikes, whips; hand-to-hand powers |
Investigation | Reason | Analyzing evidence, collecting evidence, identifying clues |
Manipulation | Presence | Bribery, interrogation, leadership, persuasion, seduction |
Medicine | Reason | Cybernetics, diagnosis, pharmacology, surgery |
Mental Combat | Presence | Emotion Control, Mind Blast, Mind Control, Mind Hold, Possession, Telepathy |
Naval Combat | Reason | Blockades, boarding, cannons, countermeasures, mines, torpedoes |
Perception | Reason | Eavesdropping, identifying an odor or taste, noticing a tail |
Performance | Presence | Comedy, dancing, music, singing, theatre, writing novels, writing poetry |
Piloting | Agility or Reason | Aircraft, automobiles, drones, heavy machinery, mecha, motorcycles, spacecraft, watercraft; navigation |
Ranged Combat | Agility | Bows, crossbows, pistols, rifles, shotguns, thrown weapons; ranged powers |
Science | Reason | Anthropology, biology, mathematics, nanotechnology, physics, psychology |
Starship Combat | Reason | Cannons, countermeasures, mines, missiles, targeting, torpedoes |
Stealth | Agility | Hiding, shadowing, sneaking |
Survival | Reason | Foraging, hunting, orienteering, tactics, tracking |
Athletics
The Athletics skill covers the entire spectrum of non-combat sports, as well general feats of athleticism such as running, jumping, climbing, swimming, and throwing.
Generally, an athletic competition is simply a matter of who has the highest relevant attribute. In the case where two competitors in a sport have the same attributes, the winner would be decided with a roll, or perhaps a series of rolls. In some sports, the difference between the winner and second place may be as little as one one-hundredth of a second.
Athletics typically requires an Agility or Brawn roll.
Examples: Climbing, gymnastics, riding, running, scuba, swimming, throwing objects
Computing
Computing allows the character to write new programs, take apart old ones, and follow data trails across networks. It also allows a character to create or circumvent computer security programs and protocols. If a character is extremely familiar with the program in question, the GM might decide that the attempt is automatically successful. If the character is attempting to break into a computer system, the GM may assign a difficulty of 6, or perhaps even higher, since these programs are designed to prevent interference.
Failing a Computing roll might mean that an attempt to circumvent a computer security system is simply unsuccessful, or it may mean that the character has set off an alarm or left a "trail" which may be followed back to their location.
Computing typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Artificial intelligence, forensics, forgery, hacking, programming, security systems
Culture
The Culture skill covers the wide range of largely useless information that fills magazines, the World Wide Web, Twitter, and most television networks. It also includes more serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific tidbits of information, such as the name of the fifth President of the United States or the origin of Play-Doh.
Culture typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Art, fashion, history, music, philosophy, politics, popular media
Deception
The Deception skill is used to convince someone of the truth of a given statement or situation, usually with the aim of getting them to act on it. Deception could be used to convert someone to a religion, sell someone a car, or simply win an argument. It is not necessary for the deceiver to actually believe their own statements, but if they do they gain a bonus die -- nothing is as convincing as sincerity. If the person being deceived is predisposed to believe the deceiver, the GM may allow the task to succeed without rolling. If the character is trying to persuade someone to believe a patent absurdity (from the target's point of view), the GM might impose a penalty die, or even declare the attempt an automatic failure for truly outrageous lies.
A failed Deception roll usually means that the subject simply does not believe the lie, but it could mean that the attempt has backfired, firmly convincing the subject of the opposite of what the character was trying to convince them of.
Deception typically requires a Presence roll.
Examples: Bluffing, disguise, lying, sales
Diplomacy
The Diplomacy skill is used to adapt to one's social environment. It enables a character navigate through red tape, know the proper manners for a given environment, or survive an excursion to the dark side of civilization. A Diplomacy roll might be required to circumvent a bureaucratic obstacle, to socialize with a group without offending them, or to get the word to the Mafia that the shipment of guns at midnight is a set-up.
A failed Diplomacy roll could result in the character being snubbed by polite society, or possibly in being maimed by a coarser crowd.
Diplomacy typically requires a Presence roll, and is sometimes opposed.
Examples: Carousing, conversation, etiquette, negotiation, streetwise
Engineering
Engineering is the relevant skill whenever a character attempts to design and build structures, machines, devices, systems, or materials. An Engineering roll might be required to repair a damaged suspension bridge, to hot-wire a car, to modify a hadron collider to be a singularity cannon, or to construct a containment suit for a being made of electromagnetic radiation.
Failing the Engineering roll might indicate that the device simply does not work, or that it will fail catastrophically during use.
Engineering typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Architecture, cartography, demolitions, electronics, mechanical engineering
Finesse
Finesse covers the skills which require a delicate touch and fine control of the hands and fingers. A Finesse roll might be required to slip a note to an ally, to pick someone's pocket, to disable a trap, or to pick the lock on a pair of handcuffs.
Failing a Finesse roll indicates that the deception is easily spotted by the casual observer, or that the lock resists the attempt to pick it.
Finesse typically requires an Agility roll.
Examples: Disabling a trap, lockpicking, pickpocketing, sleight of hand
Gambling
Gambling is the wagering of something of value (or "the stakes") on an event with an uncertain outcome, with the intent of winning more than you risked. Gambling thus requires three elements: the stakes, a risk, and a prize. A character with Gambling knows where to play, when to play, and with whom to play, in order to win more often than they lose.
Gambling typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Card games, dice games, dominoes, formal combat, races, sporting events
Hand-to-hand Combat
The Hand-to-hand Combat skill covers the myriad ways that humans have found to hurt, maim, and kill one another in hand-to-hand combat. Any form of hand-to-hand combat is covered by the Hand-to-hand Combat skill.
Hand-to-hand Combat typically requires a Brawn roll.
Examples: Axes, clubs, knives, spears, swords, unarmed strikes, whips; hand-to-hand powers
Investigation
The Investigation skill covers most of the tasks involved in solving mysteries and researching obscure topics. This includes searching for clues, collecting and analyzing evidence, sifting through police reports and bank records, and so on.
A failed Investigation roll might mean that the character hits a dead end in the investigation, or it might mean that they seize on a red herring and draw the wrong conclusion from the evidence.
Investigation typically requires a Reason roll, or perhaps a series of rolls.
Examples: Analyzing evidence, collecting evidence, identifying clues
Manipulation
The Manipulation skill pertains to eliciting cooperation or information from others by using flirtation, threats of violence, or just verbal trickery. Interrogation usually hinges on convincing the subject that hope is futile and that resistance will only make things worse, while seduction can sometimes be successful even if the target is aware that they are being seduced.
Failure of a Manipulation roll could result in the subject of interrogation convincingly giving false information, or in the target of a seduction finding the would-be seducer repugnant.
Manipulation typically requires a Presence roll, or perhaps a series of rolls.
Examples: Bribery, interrogation, leadership, persuasion, seduction
Medicine
A knowledge of Medicine can be very useful in the violent world of Bulletproof Blues. Any medical procedure, from taking a person's temperature and splinting broken limbs, to performing open-heart telesurgery and administering nanotherapy, is covered by the Medicine skill. Knowledge of Medicine also gives the character familiarity with common drugs and toxins, and a competent knowledge of their effects.
Medicine typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Cybernetics, diagnosis, pharmacology, surgery
Mental Combat
The Mental Combat skill covers mental and psychic combat. Any form of mental combat is covered by the Mental Combat skill.
Mental Combat typically requires a Power Level roll when attacking, and a Presence roll when defending.
Examples: Emotion Control, Mind Blast, Mind Control, Mind Hold, Possession, Telepathy
Naval Combat is warfare in and on the sea, the ocean, or any other battlefield involving a major body of water such as a large lake or wide river.
Naval Combat typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Blockades, boarding, cannons, countermeasures, mines, torpedoes
Perception
The Perception skill pertains to noticing subtle things, identifying sensory input, and generally being aware of one's surroundings. Perception can reflect the keenness of one's senses, one's powers of observation, or both.
Perception typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Eavesdropping, identifying an odor or taste, noticing a tail
Performance
The Performance skill is used to entertain an audience, making them forget their worries for a brief while.
Performance typically requires a Presence roll.
Examples: Comedy, dancing, music, singing, theatre, writing novels, writing poetry
Piloting
The Piloting skill covers the navigation and control of a mechanical contrivance, be it a sports car, a jet fighter, a walking forklift, or a skyscraper-sized kaiju-fighting robot. Piloting also covers controlling tiny mechanisms, like radio-controlled helicopters and missile-launching drones.
A failed Piloting roll could result in being unable to attack because the vehicle is in the wrong position, a temporary loss of control, or even a collision.
Piloting typically requires a Reason roll to chart a course for a craft, and an Agility roll to control it.
Examples: Aircraft, automobiles, drones, heavy machinery, mecha, motorcycles, spacecraft, watercraft; navigation
Ranged Combat
The Ranged Combat skill covers the myriad ways that humans have found to hurt, maim, and kill one another from a distance. Any form of ranged combat is covered by the Ranged Combat skill.
Ranged Combat typically requires an Agility roll.
Examples: Bows, crossbows, pistols, rifles, shotguns, thrown weapons; ranged powers
Science
The Science skill can cover a variety of fields, depending on the character's interests. A character with the Science skill may be conversant with any discipline that's reasonable for their background.
Science typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Anthropology, biology, mathematics, nanotechnology, physics, psychology
Starship Combat
The Starship Combat skill is used to target heavy weaponry on distant targets. As the name implies, this will usually be during a battle in outer space, but any combat where the weapon is controlled from a stationary console is covered by the Starship Combat skill.
Starship Combat typically requires a Reason roll.
Examples: Cannons, countermeasures, mines, missiles, targeting, torpedoes
Stealth
Stealth is the art of sneaking around. A Stealth roll might be required to hide from a monster in an alien spaceship, to sneak up on a sentry, or to shadow a suspect back to the criminal's hideout. Terrain, available cover, camouflage, and background noise will all affect the difficulty of the Stealth roll.
Failing the Stealth roll indicates that the furtive prowler is easily spotted by a casual observer.
Stealth typically requires an Agility roll, and is usually opposed by a Perception (Reason) roll by the person the character is hiding from.
Examples: Hiding, shadowing, sneaking
Survival
The Survival skill pertains to living off the land, coping with adverse environments, and finding one's way based on landmarks, the stars, and dead reckoning. The difficulty is dependent upon the terrain, temperature, and availability of food and shelter, and on how well equipped the character is for the particular area. Survival in a temperate environment with available sources of food and water would require a moderately difficult (DV 3) Survival (Reason) roll. Harsh, hostile environments, such as the Gobi Desert or the Antarctic, would have a higher difficulty, depending on how prepared the character is. Surviving in very mild environments, such as the woods just outside of town, would not require a roll at all.
Failing a Survival roll once might mean that the character has caught a cold, lost the trail of their prey, or eaten a plant that has made them sick. Failing numerous Survival rolls could be lethal.
Survival typically requires a Reason roll, or perhaps a series of rolls.
Examples: Foraging, hunting, orienteering, tactics, tracking