Crossover classes with Dead Reign
Moderators: Immortals, Supreme Beings, Old Ones
Crossover classes with Dead Reign
Does anyone here use classes from other Palladium Books in their Dead Reign games, like Systems Failure, Beyond the Supernatural, etc.?
Bob Herzog from KoDT put it best: HOODY HOO! http://www.facebook.com/manyfacesofdave
- Shawn Merrow
- Palladium Books® Freelance Writer
- Posts: 2493
- Joined: Sat Sep 30, 2000 1:01 am
- Comment: For the glory of Zeon and Zerebus, Sieg Zeon!
2D6 Palladium Forum History Geek Points - Location: Pasco, WA, USA
- Contact:
Re: Crossover classes with Dead Reign
Played a few games using the System Failure O.C.C. and it worked out well.
Re: Crossover classes with Dead Reign
I'd think so. I'd even think on rare occasion Worldly Martial Artists and the Special Training classes in Ninjas & SuperSpies and Heroes Unlimited. A Super Sleuth might come in handy if people are trying to find the source of the infection and hence, a cure.
Bob Herzog from KoDT put it best: HOODY HOO! http://www.facebook.com/manyfacesofdave
- Beatmeclever
- Adventurer
- Posts: 560
- Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 3:09 am
- Location: Mile High, USA
Re: Crossover classes with Dead Reign
I have a Tinker Gizmoteer, a Veteran Grunt, and a Psychic Sensitive in my current DR group. So I think that they can work. It has been my experience that as long as you have established that the zombies CANNOT be treated like living threats, then the players learn to act in less-than-superman ways. They learn that they might be able to kill one or two zeds, but that when the numbers begin to climb, they might have waited too long. They learn not to try to stand ground. They learn to run.
"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