Multi Opponent Combat

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Revision as of 15:59, 14 July 2008 by KRAKII (talk | contribs) (updated to account for GM Coase's post #1752, 26 May 2008)
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Training in Multi Opponent Combat (MOC) gives a character an advantage against multiple opponents, as the name implies. Effectively, training in MOC makes the character less susceptable to Force on Force, a system that lowers a character's stance based on how many enemies are attacking said character at once. Additionally, this skill allows the use of the MSTRIKE verb, and affects how many targets will be attacked with its use, or, if using the focused version, how many times one opponent is attacked.

Type Square Semi Pure
Profession Rogue Warrior Monk Bard Paladin Ranger Cleric Empath Savant Sorcerer Wizard
Max Ranks Per Level 1 2 - 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 1
Training Point Cost 10/3 4/3 - 7/3 5/2 10/4 15/8 15/10 - 15/10 15/10

Force on Force

Main article: Force on Force

Force on Force is a system that lowers a character's defensive stance upon being attacked by multiple opponents. Each opponent lowers the character's stance by 25% until the character is treated to be in a fully offensive stance. Beyond 4 opponents, the defending character's defensive strength is further lowered, making Force on Force a very deadly thing to any character not trained in Multi Opponent Combat. However, a character who is trained in this skill requires more opponents to have the same effect. At 5 ranks, one opponent is ignored when it comes to stance reduction. At 15 ranks, two are ignored, and at 35 ranks, three are ignored. One additional opponent is ignored every 25 ranks thereafter.

Multi-strike

Main article: MSTRIKE (verb)

A character who has 5 ranks in Multi Opponent Combat will attack two targets if unfocused, but a character needs 30 ranks before getting two strikes on a single target, using the focused version of MSTRIKE.

The unfocused version of MSTRIKE will attack a number of opponents equal to what they can ignore from the Force on Force system (see above). The focused version is two strikes at 30 ranks, and an additional strike every 25 ranks thereafter.

Note: a character trained in Two Weapon Combat swings both weapons for every strike.

Multi-strike Roundtime

The roundtime associated with a multi-strike increases as the number of strikes increase. It also depends on the speed of the weapons being used to make such a strike.

Roundtime = Weapon Speed + ((Number of Strikes - 1) * (Weapon Speed / 2)) + 1

If a character is using two weapons, the "weapon speed" is calculated as Primary weapon speed + secondary weapon speed - 2. If the off-hand weapon is slower than the primary hand weapon, a +2 penalty is applied to the roundtime when using two weapons. If the off-hand weapon goes above the off-hand weapon weight limit (the limit depends on the character's strength), an additional +1 penalty is applied to the base speed of the two-weapon attack.

For example, a character using two sais (base roundtime: 2) will see a weapon speed of 2 seconds for the pair of sais. If the character then makes a four-strike multi-strike, the roundtime for the attack will be 2 + (4 - 1) * (2 / 2) + 1 = 6 seconds. If the character has a bonus to roundtime due to having high agility and dexterity scores, this roundtime will be reduced by that much, down to the minimum for the weapon combination they chose (4 seconds, for a pair of sais). A character making the same attack with a pair of katars would instead get (3 + 3 - 2) + (4 - 1) * (3 + 3 - 2)/2 + 1 = 11 seconds.

Summary of Benefits

Per the post by GameMaster Coase on 26 May 2008, the required skill levels for certain benefits have changed, in some cases dramatically. The updated skill requirements are:

MoC Ranks Number of Targets Focused Mstrike FoF Offset
5 2 1 0
10 2 1 1
15 3 1 1
25 3 1 2
30 3 2 2
35 4 2 2
45 4 2 3
55 4 3 3
60 5 3 3
70 5 3 4
80 5 3 4
85 5 3 4
90 5 4 4
95 5 4 5
100 6 4 5
105 6 4 5
110 6 4 5
120 6 4 6
135 6 5 6
145 6 5 7
155 7 5 7
170 7 5 8
190 7 6 8
195 7 6 9
Where number of targets is an unfocused strike, and the focused is how many times you can strike a single foe. The FoF offset is how many creatures you can engage above one before a DS pushdown.

References