Attacking an Object

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Revision as of 15:36, 20 August 2010 by Noirmachina (Talk) (Attacking a Held Object)

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Objects have specific rules pertaining to them and specific resistances.

AC

Objects are fairly easy to hit because they don't usually move. An object’s Armor Class is equal to 10 + its size modifier + its Dexterity modifier. An inanimate object has not only a Dexterity of 0, but also an additional -2 penalty to its AC. If you spend 6 AP the previous round to line up a shot, you get an automatic hit with a melee weapon and a +5 bonus on attack rolls with a ranged weapon.

Immunities

Objects are immune to Sublethal Damage and to Critical Hits. This makes them immune to Overflow Damage as well.

The GM may also rule that many items are immune to damage from certain weapons. The Rapier, as it is so flimsy, is not good for damaging much other than humans.

Vs. Ranged Weapons

Objects take half damage from ranged weapons (unless the weapon is something like a siege engine). The damage is halved before applying hardness.

Vs. Energy

Acid and sonic attacks deal damage to the majority of objects normally. Electricity and fire attacks deal half damage to most objects; divide the damage dealt in half before applying the hardness. Cold attacks deal one-fourth damage to most objects; once again this is before applying the hardness.


Hardness & Hit Points

Hardness

Substance Hardness HP
Paper 0 2/inch of thickness
Cloth 2 2/inch of thickness
Rope 3-4 2/inch of thickness
Glass 3 1/inch of thickness
Ice 1 3/inch of thickness
Leather 8 5/inch of thickness
Wood 6-12 10/inch of thickness
Stone 14 15/inch of thickness
Iron or Steel 15-17 30/inch of thickness

HP

In general, an object remains fully functional until its HP reach zero, at which point it is destroyed. Some types of items, such as Armor, suffer ill effects from great amounts of damage.

So long as a object is not destroyed, it can be repaired with the Craft skill. This will almost always require the same type(s) of craft that were required in the item's creation.

Types of Objects

Attacking a Held Object

A character can target an object that an opponent is carrying in order to deal damage to that object. The defending object's AC is based upon the AC of its wielder. In general, all bonuses except armor bonuses count. In addition, the object will usually have a size modifier.


AC: 12 + Dexterity + BDB + Facing + Size Bonus + Shield Bonus (sometimes) + Miscellaneous Bonus


If a character is Helpless, the AC of the object is merely 10 + Size Bonus.

Attacking a Worn Object

Objects being worn or carried in a manner other than in the hands share the AC of their carrier plus their size modifier, though they do not gain any benefits from armor. In general, dealing more than half of the item's hit points causes it to fall off, though the GM may rule otherwise for very well secured objects. Attacks that miss do not get a chance to target the carrier.

This sort of attack may be made with a ranged weapon but it takes the same penalties for ranged weapons attacking objects as normal.

Blocking a Projectile

You can block projectiles fired at you with a special type of attacking an object. This is much like a shield check - it is also an Instantaneous Action.

Attacking a Shield

An opponent with a shield can be troublesome. However, the destruction of an enemy's shield can be fairly easy. The shield still has immunities like any object (see above).

Whenever an opponent has at least 1 point of shield bonus to AC, and the attacker is wielding a slashing or bludgeoning melee weapon, the attacker may choose to automatically fail his next attack roll and attack the defender's shield instead. This attack automatically hits, as the defender will be trying to block the attacking weapon with his shield shield. The attack does full damage, negated as usual by the shield's hardness.

Before every attack made with this action, the defender can attempt a Negotiate(Sense Motive) check (DC 18 + attacker's Charisma). If the defender makes the check, the attacker's attempt to hit the defending shield fails. Once the defender has become aware of the attacker's use of this action, it will not work for the rest of the encounter and the attacker must attack the shield using the Held Object rules above.

If the shield is destroyed by one of these attacks, it splinters in half and becomes useless, and the defender immediately takes half of the damage dealt in the attack.

  • This action cannot be performed against cloth wraps or cloaks used as shields.