![]() |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2020
Posts: 2
|
Hi, my group is currently playing shadowrun for the first time and I'm having some questions with regards to the Control Actions spell. I'm used to DnD 5e where spells give very detailed mechanic explanations to how they work, so they lack of detail in this spell leaves me confused.
What I do know: Assuming the spell hits, you are able to force the target to any action you'd like, aslong as you spend the own action yourself. So forcing the target to make an attack takes a major action from yourself. Unlike control thoughts, this spell is obvious to the target being controlled and is almost certain to make them hostile. What I don't know: When does the target take the actions you make them take? On your turn? On their turn? Does the target spend their own actions following your commands? And if you don't order them to do anything, do they act on their own or do they just stand around in a puppet-like state? The spell takes a major action to cast, and to make the target do anything meaningful you'll need an additional action, which you most likely won't have untill your next turn, which leaves the spell seem pretty ineffective.. specially if the target can act normally on their turn. The spell already seems significantly weaker than Control thoughts, so I'm kinda hoping the spell functions better than I suspect it might. |
![]() |
![]() |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 806
|
Quote:
Personally: Since its a sustained spell, I'd assume the target acts on their turns. It's more powerful than Control Thoughts because you aren't influencing an action - you are making them do exactly what you want them to do. Current RPG's: Pathfinder (GM), Pathfinder (Player), Gamma World (GM, Pathfinder homebrew). HeroLab: 3.5 & Pathfinder. HL User Files for PF: Greyhawk Setting, Gamma World (WIP). DM and player of D&D since 1980. Last edited by Dami; January 19th, 2021 at 10:00 PM. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|