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Talisman
Enter a mythic world of dragons and sorcery!
Moderator: ffgjafferFFGMarkGeckoThe Spaniard Topics: 1264 | Posts: 16298
problems with the knight?
Published on 27 December 2008 - 10:26:33
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Just finished playing a few games of talisman and the reaper expansion during the holiday weekend.I must say that the new fate rule and the rule clarification are exellent and worked well ,as did most of the characters except the knight.When I played as the knight I faced of against the assassin,monk, prophetess and the thief.Basicaly my problem was with the ability or inability too attack good characters,the monk and prophetess ran free too do as they wished around me as I could not touch them.The assassin went to the mystic and with a little fate turned good,he then started too slaugter me and I COULD NOT ATTACK HIM BACK BECAUSE HE WAS NOW GOOD.Basicaly only he could attack me when he felt like ,with his assassinate skill.The thief stole my druid staff,not that it mattered too me as I could not use as the knight is always good no matter what,which is not the worse handicap but still one.The thief then proceeded too land on me and steal the rest of my stuff AND I COULD NOT ATTACK HIM TOO GET MY STUFF BACK,because he was now good when he wanted too with the druid staff.In the end it was the monk a naturally good player who did me in as he had gotten powerful since I could not harass him early in the game too prevent him from getting too powerful but he coud attack me as normal.The new knight might as well be called the clown as all the other characters laughed and danced circles around me .....and I could do nothing except maybe cast spells at them once in a while as the knight is not a natural spell user,the one fate did not help either.The kight in 2nd edition and knight templar from 3rd where fun too use,but this clown I mean knight  as cool as he looks and seems is severly broken and I hope can be fixed in the future.

L.T

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Reply #1 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 00:40:14
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Maybe the core alignment rules should be:

Good: cannot encounter Good characters, except at the Crown of Command

Neutral: may choose to encounter characters or space (normal rule)

Evil: must encounter another Character when you land on the same space

 
Reply #2 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 05:25:46

Maybe they could add to the Knight. When attacked by another character, the other character becomes evil.

Wouldn't attacking such a good knight be considered an evil act.

Jimmeray

Reply #3 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 10:22:33
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What you're facing here is the mechanical implementation of Alignment in the game. It has always been Talisman's weakest element serving no real purpos but to limit characters from spaces and cards. That the Knight is limited in action versus other players is a severe imbalance for that character... obviously. The Assassin becoming Good was nothing more than manipulating a hole in the rules (a giant gapping one) that is exclusive to the Knight.  For that matter, being Evil shouldn't necessarily allow a character free reign to assault other Evil characters... that's an old cliche.

If you want to house rule it, consider a couple of options other than just the old G vs E bipolar swing (especially based on any one action). So, for any character assaulting (or using special abilities on) another of the same alignment (for no good reason outside of personal gain or spitefulness), some possibilities are ...

  • an immediate Alignment shift to Neutral at least... OR...
  • loss of 1 Fate point... OR...
  • Other?

Don't make it something monumental, or you'll probably create problems in other ways.  The way Alignment is built in the game, the Knight will always have an innate flaw.  And penalties related to Alignment shifts expose the problem with Neutrals no matter how you handle it. Neutral isn't really an alignment in Talisman... though it could have been.

NOBLEDEAD.ORG (The Noble Dead Saga)
FANTASTICDIVERSIONS.COM
(Blog for Games Additions)
CONTACT (via F.D. secured web form)

 

Reply #4 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 09:55:11
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I think the when a good player attacks the knight it should become evil ,is a good idea.I was also thinking as holy as they made the knight they might as well called him the paladin instead.Thank you for the ideas.

L.T

Reply #5 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 10:00:07
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I like your ideas also sir.right now the knight is being avoided by my play group after they saw what happened and I hate too see a cool looking character sit out games because of his flaw. 

L.T

Reply #6 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 10:20:53
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Keep in mind that Fate in some ways is linked to some sense of higher powers, gods, whatever have taken interest (or disinterest, for low Fate) in certain characters as potential champions in which side of the old G vs El should take the Crown of Command. When we look at it this way (and certainly it's not the only way), Fate is something the powers of Alignment would use to show approval or disapproval of any character working against the Alignment to which it is "aligned."

Yes, in some ways the knight is akin to a Palladin for gaining benefits by upholding the principles of Good. In that he deserves to be chastised and punished more than others when going against his Alignment. Other Good characters aren't that way... but still.

The point is, with Fate introduced to all characters, its a direct way to house rule Alignment having an equal influence upon all character actions and keeping the Knight as is. If a character tries to interfer with another champion or agent of its own Alignment... the gods/powers do look down/up upon it and frown.

My personal preferrence is obviously Fate if I were to house rule this issue. The gods/powers wouldn't simply toss away one its agents (via Alignment change) until the character proved utterly irredeemable. And there are already a fist full of ways that Alignment gets changed in the game; another one really isn't needed.

NOBLEDEAD.ORG (The Noble Dead Saga)
FANTASTICDIVERSIONS.COM
(Blog for Games Additions)
CONTACT (via F.D. secured web form)

 

Reply #7 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 10:17:18
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Good point sir.I will probably be having another 4 or 5 player game new years eve and will implicate the alignment house rules,as i play the knight again.I'll let everyone know how it went.

L.T

Reply #8 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 10:18:47
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Lancer T said:

Good point sir.I will probably be having another 4 or 5 player game new years eve and will implicate the alignment house rules,as i play the knight again.I'll let everyone know how it went.

Excellent. Would love to hear how it went.

NOBLEDEAD.ORG (The Noble Dead Saga)
FANTASTICDIVERSIONS.COM
(Blog for Games Additions)
CONTACT (via F.D. secured web form)

 

Reply #9 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 16:13:52

JCHendee said:

Yes, in some ways the knight is akin to a Palladin for gaining benefits by upholding the principles of Good. In that he deserves to be chastised and punished more than others when going against his Alignment. Other Good characters aren't that way... but still.

Side note, but if going by RPG standards, Lawful Good Paladins can easily be some of the most uppity, retarded ass-wipes, despite (or because of) their alignment. Many of them make Evil Necromancers look like petty crooks.

A dirty mind is its own reward.

Reply #10 | Published on 28 December 2008 - 18:33:12

I don't have the knight yet, but can't you just wait till you see them change alliances, then go after them? if not then wow, that must suck.

Ziggy was here!!! but tell no one...or the dice gods will turn on you!

Reply #11 | Published on 29 December 2008 - 00:07:14
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Extra Ability for the Knight.

When encountering a good character, the knight may try to persuade them in giving up a magic object, to aid the Knight in his conquest of Evil.  Each roll 1 dice.  If the knight has rolled higher, he convinces the other character that the item indeed is better off with him.  Take any one object. If not, they each go on their way.

 

Without signature

Reply #12 | Published on 29 December 2008 - 02:06:29

grim_reaper_zig said:

I don't have the knight yet, but can't you just wait till you see them change alliances, then go after them? if not then wow, that must suck.

Problem with that plan is of course that they can totally avoid the Village and thus the only thing (at least used to be) that can make them Evil (there is/was nothing that could turn a char Neutral IIRC) is Mephisto (something like that, too lazy to check). And the Village isn't even a sanctuary for you, since they can follow you there and choose to encounter you instead of square.

When we played in the olden days, we sometimes would stack an alignment card for each occasion a char (not Druid of course) got a new one during the game. I think the best we had was 6x "You're Good", mainly because we were visiting the Mystic in the Village and rolling 4.

A dirty mind is its own reward.

Reply #13 | Published on 29 December 2008 - 10:04:46
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Dam said:

Side note, but if going by RPG standards, Lawful Good Paladins can easily be some of the most uppity, retarded ass-wipes, despite (or because of) their alignment. Many of them make Evil Necromancers look like petty crooks.

In such a case, that Palladin should have "fallen" from grace, lost his standing with the higher powers... and the GM wasn't paying attention. Good and Lawful are not the same thing... even in the Talisman environment, which is why the whole Law (or more correctly Order) vs Chaos doesn't work in Talisman - it's not built for ti. A palladin in a corrupt land would break the law (or reinterpret it) for the sake of furthering Good, as evidenced in myth and legend. But tyrrany in the support of Good isn't Good at all... that's a fall from grace automatically, as the palladin in question has stepped outside of one of his two dimensions of required alignment.

I'm reminded of another old character introduced in 2nd edition... the Chaos Warrior. Something that hinted at the 3rd editions coming slant to Warhammer. I played it a few times, putting its powers to forced and full use, as did others. Eventually, the character was abandoned. In those days it wasn't about even reasoning through that it was out of balance with the game... it was that every other character ganged up on it as fast as possible and wiped it off the board. Good, evil, neutral... whatever... all others of any alignment wanted it gone.

NOBLEDEAD.ORG (The Noble Dead Saga)
FANTASTICDIVERSIONS.COM
(Blog for Games Additions)
CONTACT (via F.D. secured web form)

 

Reply #14 | Published on 29 December 2008 - 14:12:31

JCHendee said:

In such a case, that Palladin should have "fallen" from grace, lost his standing with the higher powers... and the GM wasn't paying attention. Good and Lawful are not the same thing... even in the Talisman environment, which is why the whole Law (or more correctly Order) vs Chaos doesn't work in Talisman - it's not built for ti. A palladin in a corrupt land would break the law (or reinterpret it) for the sake of furthering Good, as evidenced in myth and legend. But tyrrany in the support of Good isn't Good at all... that's a fall from grace automatically, as the palladin in question has stepped outside of one of his two dimensions of required alignment.

Why should he have fallen? LG Paladin sees black and white, no grey, and if you somehow hinder him in his quest, even if what you do is for a good purpose as well, Paladin will see you as siding with evil. The classic if you're not with me, you're against me. LG Paladin in a LG realm can still see others as being harmful because they don't do things his way.

Say a Paladin has in his possession a relic, not even a religious relic, but a family heirloom, a magical one. It gets stolen and ends up in the hands of a rightful heir (not the thief), who doesn't know anything about being the heir. Paladin will demand the item's return and if it's not returned, the new possessor will be deemed evil, regardless of whether they knew the item was stolen in the first place, because the Paladin will see them opposing LG purpose, or if they would like to use it to do good.

A dirty mind is its own reward.

Reply #15 | Published on 30 December 2008 - 14:45:31
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Not sure if we can call this a big problem as there are mitigations in the game such as having said good characters have to land on your space to engage you firstly, then secondly have to get a mechanic to change their alignment (village, etc.). Lastly, the character that went to the village to roll on the Mystic.... couldn't a Knight have used a fate point to change it?

All in all, a lot of mitigations would have to be circumvented for the Knight to be in complete disadvantage with his abilities, IMO.

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