Odd question concerning primary/off hand
Moderators: Immortals, Supreme Beings, Old Ones
- Damian Magecraft
- Knight
- Posts: 3472
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2002 1:01 am
- Comment: Evil GM
Master of Magics
Defender of the Faith - Location: chillicothe, ohio; usa
- Contact:
Odd question concerning primary/off hand
There are no rules covering right/left handedness...
nor are there rules covering using a weapon with a characters "off" hand.
House rules abound on how to cover this.
My question is not how to handle the basic concept; but on a related matter.
How many off hands does a character have if he has more than 2 arms?
Does a Rahu-man have 3 off hands or 2?
what about Jeridu?
Or any other multiple armed creature?
nor are there rules covering using a weapon with a characters "off" hand.
House rules abound on how to cover this.
My question is not how to handle the basic concept; but on a related matter.
How many off hands does a character have if he has more than 2 arms?
Does a Rahu-man have 3 off hands or 2?
what about Jeridu?
Or any other multiple armed creature?
DM is correct by the way. - Ninjabunny
It's a shoddy carpenter who blames his tools. - Killer Cyborg
Every group has one problem player. If you cannot spot the one in your group; look in the mirror.
It is not a good session until at least one player looks you in the eye and says "you sick twisted evil ****"
It's a shoddy carpenter who blames his tools. - Killer Cyborg
Every group has one problem player. If you cannot spot the one in your group; look in the mirror.
It is not a good session until at least one player looks you in the eye and says "you sick twisted evil ****"
- Temporalmage
- Hero
- Posts: 1165
- Joined: Sun Jan 05, 2003 2:01 am
- Location: Rune Dimension
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
I'd say for precision things every creature only has 1 primary hand. The hand they use to do delicate, precision things; or even common everyday things that only need one hand to use. Which hand is used to clean themselves? Blow thier nose? Catch with? Etc. With a Rahu-man it would probably be an upper hand, either left or right. Or they may even favor a particular side, left or right, with most things done by that "side" of the body. Think of all the things you do everyday that gets used with your "primary" hand, and how it would effect you to have
multiple appendages. You'd still have a primary hand that you did almost everything with, but now you'd have more than one arm dangling forgoten at your side.
multiple appendages. You'd still have a primary hand that you did almost everything with, but now you'd have more than one arm dangling forgoten at your side.
http://world8.monstersgame.co.uk/?ac=vid&vid=190003553
And TemporalMage went to the last page, Refusing to follow the trend." Ode to the Teleport Thread by The Fifth Business
And remember, "Book, Page number, and Quote", not, "Proclaim, Posture, and Belittle all those who think otherwise". Dead Boy
And TemporalMage went to the last page, Refusing to follow the trend." Ode to the Teleport Thread by The Fifth Business
And remember, "Book, Page number, and Quote", not, "Proclaim, Posture, and Belittle all those who think otherwise". Dead Boy
- Killer Cyborg
- Priest
- Posts: 28183
- Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2001 2:01 am
- Comment: "Your Eloquence with a sledge hammer is a beautiful thing..." -Zer0 Kay
- Location: In the ocean, punching oncoming waves
- Contact:
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
I could see it work either way.
Just up to the GM, I guess.
Just up to the GM, I guess.
Annual Best Poster of the Year Awards (2012)
"Your Eloquence with a sledge hammer is a beautiful thing..." -Zer0 Kay
"That rifle on the wall of the laborer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there." -George Orwell
Check out my Author Page on Amazon!
"Your Eloquence with a sledge hammer is a beautiful thing..." -Zer0 Kay
"That rifle on the wall of the laborer's cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there." -George Orwell
Check out my Author Page on Amazon!
- dragon_blaze_99
- Hero
- Posts: 902
- Joined: Wed Dec 08, 2004 11:01 am
- Location: Kreelock via Wetaskiwin Alberta,Canada
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
Rahu-man I think would have, but the Jeridu get a special paired fighting as an occ ability so they don't have one at all
The mind is the gateway to the future
Ethics are so annoying. I avoid them on principle
- Damian Magecraft
- Knight
- Posts: 3472
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2002 1:01 am
- Comment: Evil GM
Master of Magics
Defender of the Faith - Location: chillicothe, ohio; usa
- Contact:
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
dragon_blaze_99 wrote:Rahu-man I think would have, but the Jeridu get a special paired fighting as an occ ability so they don't have one at all
Yeah I was leaning in that direction myself.
It was just one of those odd questions that struck me in the odd hours of the day.
DM is correct by the way. - Ninjabunny
It's a shoddy carpenter who blames his tools. - Killer Cyborg
Every group has one problem player. If you cannot spot the one in your group; look in the mirror.
It is not a good session until at least one player looks you in the eye and says "you sick twisted evil ****"
It's a shoddy carpenter who blames his tools. - Killer Cyborg
Every group has one problem player. If you cannot spot the one in your group; look in the mirror.
It is not a good session until at least one player looks you in the eye and says "you sick twisted evil ****"
- drewkitty ~..~
- Monk
- Posts: 17782
- Joined: Sat Sep 30, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Eastvale, calif
- Contact:
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
Damian Magecraft wrote:1)There are no rules covering right/left handedness...
2)nor are there rules covering using a weapon with a characters "off" hand.
House rules abound on how to cover this.
My question is not how to handle the basic concept; but on a related matter.
3)How many off hands does a character have if he has more than 2 arms?
3.1)Does a Rahu-man have 3 off hands or 2?
3.2)what about Jeridu?
3.3)Or any other multiple armed creature?
I will skip ahead to what is covered in the books 1st.
3.2) Jeridu can use their arms equally and full, with full 'paired' weapons for all their arms. This is not a OCC ability, its a racial ability.
Now the ponderings.
1) Their dominant hand is the one they trained with.
2) Their off hand would only get the nat die roll + PP bonuse
3) For each pair of arms they get to chose a dominate arm. To use four arms as the example could be both rights, both lefts, uppers, lowers, or one upper and one lower.
3.1)Looking at the Rahu-men entry in PF:M&A, while it does not explicity say that they get full use of their arms. The artwork and the combat section implies that they do.
3.3) see my anser for #3
May you be blessed with the ability to change course when you are off the mark.
Each question should be give the canon answer 1st, then you can proclaim your house rules.
Reading and writing (literacy) is how people on BBS interact.
Each question should be give the canon answer 1st, then you can proclaim your house rules.
Reading and writing (literacy) is how people on BBS interact.
-
- Dungeon Crawler
- Posts: 351
- Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 4:40 pm
- Location: If there is a bright center to the universe then I am in Uranus
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
You left out the idea of an ambidextrous character, obviously that is an easy figure out on how to use weaponry.
As for rules on r/l handedness. There are no rules for it in real life so I would say this should be a player preference thing. They just say I am this hand and when time comes for the trap to remove one of those hands hope they remember which one their character is.
As for training with an off hand I would allow for the person to have full bonuses with his offhand, if they actually stated that was something they were specifically trainign themselves to do. If not and they just went for normal WP then as stated before nat die +PP bonus (if any). This would be different than the character trainign for WP paired, this is them still using only one weapon. They have trained on how it feels, its weight, and how being on the "wrong" side affects their usage.
As for rules on r/l handedness. There are no rules for it in real life so I would say this should be a player preference thing. They just say I am this hand and when time comes for the trap to remove one of those hands hope they remember which one their character is.
As for training with an off hand I would allow for the person to have full bonuses with his offhand, if they actually stated that was something they were specifically trainign themselves to do. If not and they just went for normal WP then as stated before nat die +PP bonus (if any). This would be different than the character trainign for WP paired, this is them still using only one weapon. They have trained on how it feels, its weight, and how being on the "wrong" side affects their usage.
There is always a 5%chance of anything happening...even a monkey can crawl out of your butt.
Flamethrowers, that's what we need. The army has them, why can't we have them too?
I am the King of Thoughtless Wishing.
I nominate you for Fan Defensive Lineman of the year. - Geronimo 2.0
Flamethrowers, that's what we need. The army has them, why can't we have them too?
I am the King of Thoughtless Wishing.
I nominate you for Fan Defensive Lineman of the year. - Geronimo 2.0
- Dustin Fireblade
- Knight
- Posts: 3966
- Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 8:59 pm
- Location: Ohio
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
Damian Magecraft wrote:nor are there rules covering using a weapon with a characters "off" hand.
I believe they are in RUE, under the WP Paired Weapons skill? It's -6 for the off hand and -2 for the other IIRC.
- Beatmeclever
- Adventurer
- Posts: 560
- Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 3:09 am
- Location: Mile High, USA
Re: Odd question concerning primary/off hand
Modern psychological research shows that the structure of a creature's body dictates its perceptive and conscious abilities. A creature's sense receptors (i.e.; eyes, ears, tongue, sinuses, and skin) enable it to effectively use its body in the world. Said creature would be helpless, however, with just the senses of sight, hearing, taste, smell, or touch (actually four senses -- pressure, warmth, cold, and pain) alone. It could not put food in its mouth, stand up, or reach out to touch something. To know how to move its arms to grasp an object, that creature would first need to know the current position of its arm(s) and hand(s) and then be aware of their changing positions as it moves them. (In humans, just to take one step requires feedback from and instructions to some 200 muscles.)
Humans (and presumably all of the humanoid beings that tend to act so human-like in so many Role Playing Games) come equipped with millions of such position and motion sensors. They are all over our bodies -- in the muscles, tendons, and joints -- and they are continually providing our brains with information. If the wrist is twisted 1 degree, the sensors immediately report it. This sense is called Kinesthesis (kin-ehs-THEE-sehs).
All creatures of this sort, would have learned the lay-out of their body-design during the "sensorimotor" stage of development. During this time the infant experiences the world through its senses and actions (looking, touching, mouthing, etc.).
This would say that as humans have two arms, we can direct our focus between those two arms. By this logic, any creature with four arms would be able to direct its focus between its four arms in a similar manner. Just as you can type without looking at the keyboard, walk in a darkened room, or perform repair work in an enclosed space where you cannot see the space, so could a four-, six-, or eight-armed or more creature.
As for off-hands, about 10% (somewhat more among males, somewhat less among females) of the human population is left-handed. This does not seem to be cultural as ultrasound observations of fetal thumb-sucking reveal that more than 9 in 10 fetuses suck the right hand's thumb. However, this right-hand bias is uniquely human; other primates, for example, are more ambidextrous.
Left-handers are more numerous among people with reading disabilities, allergies, and migraine headaches; but it is also more common among musicians, mathematicians, professional baseball and cricket players, architects, and artists, including such luminaries as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and Picasso.
So, any character can be "off-handed" with which ever hand the player wishes. Also, I would say that if a creature has two arms, it has one "off-hand;" four arms, two "off-hands;" six arms, three, and so on.
Humans (and presumably all of the humanoid beings that tend to act so human-like in so many Role Playing Games) come equipped with millions of such position and motion sensors. They are all over our bodies -- in the muscles, tendons, and joints -- and they are continually providing our brains with information. If the wrist is twisted 1 degree, the sensors immediately report it. This sense is called Kinesthesis (kin-ehs-THEE-sehs).
All creatures of this sort, would have learned the lay-out of their body-design during the "sensorimotor" stage of development. During this time the infant experiences the world through its senses and actions (looking, touching, mouthing, etc.).
This would say that as humans have two arms, we can direct our focus between those two arms. By this logic, any creature with four arms would be able to direct its focus between its four arms in a similar manner. Just as you can type without looking at the keyboard, walk in a darkened room, or perform repair work in an enclosed space where you cannot see the space, so could a four-, six-, or eight-armed or more creature.
As for off-hands, about 10% (somewhat more among males, somewhat less among females) of the human population is left-handed. This does not seem to be cultural as ultrasound observations of fetal thumb-sucking reveal that more than 9 in 10 fetuses suck the right hand's thumb. However, this right-hand bias is uniquely human; other primates, for example, are more ambidextrous.
Left-handers are more numerous among people with reading disabilities, allergies, and migraine headaches; but it is also more common among musicians, mathematicians, professional baseball and cricket players, architects, and artists, including such luminaries as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and Picasso.
So, any character can be "off-handed" with which ever hand the player wishes. Also, I would say that if a creature has two arms, it has one "off-hand;" four arms, two "off-hands;" six arms, three, and so on.
"The impossibility of the world lies in the fact that it has no equivalent anywhere;it cannot be exchanged for anything. The uncertainty of thought lies in the fact that it cannot be exchanged either for truth or for reality. Is it thought which tips the world over into uncertainty, or the other way around? This in itself is part of the uncertainty." - J. Baudrillard