Character Creation

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Playing Swords of infinity begins with creating a character. This character will be the player's proxy in the adventures that take place in the game.

Character Concept

Building a character begins with creating his or her concept. In Swords of Infinity, a character's concept helps to decide what tools and skills he or she will use when solving problems in the game. Some players will enjoy developing an elaborate biography for their character, but generating a simple concept is as easy as answering a couple questions. How will this character do battle, up close, at a distance, with magic, or some other way? What sort of problems is he good at solving, those requiring physical might, cunning, or charm? The answers to these questions help decide which ability scores should get the highest values and how experience points should be spent.

Example:

Ability Scores

A character's ability scores represent their likelihood of successfully using a skill with no specialized training in it. All skills can be tied in to at least one of these abilities and examples for each are listed below. In some cases a skill might relate to multiple abilities, and it is up to the Storyteller to determine which of them is relevant to the situation.

Strength
  • Resisted movement (e.g. running, jumping, climbing, swimming, pushing, pulling etc.)
  • Determining the power of an attack.
Dexterity
  • Hitting things (the ability to direct an attack or parry and successfully connect with it)
  • Complicated movement (e.g. dancing, tumbling, legerdemain, picking a lock, dodging an attack, horseback riding, moving unheard)
Vitality
  • Ignore physical discomfort (e.g. ignore the ill effects of a disease or injury)
  • Perform a physically draining activity (e.g. running for a long time, staying awake after not sleeping for a long time)
  • Determining the power of a special ability.
Intelligence
  • Remember information (e.g. about a certain subject or person).
  • Solve a problem (e.g. mathematical, engineering etc.).
  • Successfully cast a spell.
  • Choose the right words to affect an opponent in social conflict.
Awareness
  • Noticing things beyond surface details (e.g. noticing trouble, seeing hidden details, discerning odd noises, judging a person’s character or intent, detecting whether a supernatural ability is in effect etc.)
  • Wilderness Survival (e.g. foraging, hunting, hiding etc.)
Personality
  • Determining the power of a spell or a phrase in social conflict.
  • Creating art.

Generating Ability Scores

The next step in building a character is generating the numbers that make up her ability scores. Swords of Infinity supports two methods of obtaining these scores, and it is up to the Storyteller to determine which of these methods is the most appropriate for the story they are attempting to tell.

Rolling

Using dice to generate ability scores produces the most dynamic and interesting results and is the preferred method when playing Swords of Infinity. To generate an ability score using this method simply roll a d% and divide the result in half (rounding up). Repeat this process six times and record the results so that they can be assigned.

Storyteller's Note: Depending on how difficult you intend your game to be, it is recommended that a limit be put on how low the sum of a character's ability scores can be. A good general limit is 150, this guarantees an average  score of 25 (a 25% chance of success) in all abilities and it is also the number of points recommended for the point buy method of ability score generation.

Point Buy

Some players want more control over their character's ability scores than the randomness of dice allows. The point buy method involves assigning a predetermined number of points into each of a character's six ability scores. The storyteller can specify this predetermined pool of points based on how difficult she wants her game to be, but the recommended number is 150. This guarantees an average score of 25 in each ability, and gives players the opportunity to give their characters interesting strengths and weaknesses. No more than 50 points should be spent on a single attribute, and this is also the maximum value an ability can receive from the dice rolling method.

Storyteller's Note: If neither of these methods does it for you, try hybridizing the generation of ability scores. Players can roll six times to get their initial pool of points and then spend them using the point buy method.

Assigning Ability Scores

Organic Assignment

Picked Assignment

Skill Specializations

Point Buy

Special Abilities

Archetypes

packages that players buy to get certain specializations that are prompted by race/profession/background/etc

Races

Classes