That One Cyberpunk Ruleset
May have plenty of cyber, punks may be optional.
Character Stats
Basics: 1d10 dice pools. 4+ = success on easy tasks, 6+ = success on normal tasks, 8+ = success on hard tasks, 10+ = success on legendary tasks. No successes and at least 1 '1' = critical failure.
Serious Version
Characters have four stats: Sneaking, Fighting, Hacking, and Schmoozing. What they do should be relatively self-explanatory. These stats go from 1-10, and are used as dice pools.
Fighting: Fighting covers everything you wanted to know about hurting people and avoiding getting hurt (but were afraid to ask about). From shivs to strike drones, from muskets to military-grade railguns, if it hurts someone it's covered by this skill. Similarly, Fighting also covers physical conditioning to some extent, along with Sneaking.
Hacking: Hacking covers everything intellectual that is relevant to a cyberpunk game. It doesn't cover airy academic treatises, no, but it covers practical engineering and computer science. Modifying or repairing hardware and software, from bicycles and swords to high-end quantum computers, is based off of Hacking.
Sneaking: Sneaking is used for anything which involves being sneaky. Forging IDs, being an invisible ninja, disappearing into the middle of a crowd, creating a valid disguise-all of this is Sneaking. As there are no fat ninjas in fiction ever, Sneaking is the other half of physical conditioning, and ironically being very stealthy makes you harder to kill.
Schmoozing: Schmoozing covers all forms of savory and unsavory personal interaction. Forging rapports, making friends, threatening to shoot someone's dog and burn their house down if they don't tell you what you need, getting someone to lend you money, making someone believe that yes, you actually are Emperor Norton of America, the possibilities are endless.
Character generation is simple: You have 1 stat at a rating of 5, 1 at 4, 1 at 3, and 1 at 2. Past that, you may increase any single stat by 1, up to a maximum of 6.
Not-Serious Version
Characters have four stats: Hotness, Smugness, Fighting, and Concept-dropping.
Character generation is simple: You have 1 stat at a rating of 5, 1 at 4, 1 at 3, and 1 at 2. Past that, you may increase any single stat by 1, up to a maximum of 6. Hotness should never be your lowest stat. Or else.
Other Stats
Hero Points
People don't get hit until their luck runs out. Hero Points, or HP for short, represent a character's luck, will to survive, narrative inertia, and ability to duck. Weapons deal HP damage before they start taking actual physical damage.
As an alternate use, a character can spend 1 HP to reroll any dice result.
Characters may trade starting Hero Points out for additional equipment or cyberware. This doesn't represent any metaphysical wackiness like cybernetics eating your soul, it just means that guys who survive on the mean streets as a street samurai with just rusty 1st gen wired reflexes and a 1980s vintage MP5 are clearly luckier than the guys who do so with top of the line mods.
Starting Hero Point Levels
- 0: Paranoia
- 5: Extras: The Dying
- 10: War Movie Characters
- 15: FPS Protagonists
- 20: Action Movie Heroes
- 25+: JRPG Protagonists (cutscene mandated death or bust, guys!)
Health
If you get hit, things tend to go awfully pear-shaped very quickly. Health is how much punishment you can take physically before dropping dead, and is calculated simply: Add your Fighting and Sneaking, and then double the result. That's your health. Now, this sounds like a lot.
Except basic pistols deal 1d10 and even at max you'll have 20 health. If you are at less than 3/4ths health, you take a -1 penalty to all dice pools. At less than 1/2 health, you take a -2 penalty to all pools. At less than 1/4th health, you take a -3 penalty to all pools. At 0 health or less, you are dying. Dying is bad. Don't die.
Action Points
Characters can take actions in their turns during combat. This uses Action Points. Characters start with a default of 5 action points per turn in general (this can be increased by reflex-improving augmentation). Most actions take 2 action points, with certain basic actions (such as moving a reasonable distance, etc.) taking 1.
Augmentation
Augmentation can grant characters either internal equipment, extra traits, or bonuses to one of the four core stats.
Attribute Augmentation
Attribute augmentation is the most basic augmentation, giving a character a +1 specialty to a single attribute for 1 equipment point. A single augmentation 'package' may actually give multiple bonuses, but this is fluff and has zero bearing on the augmentation cost for chargen.
Examples:
- Ballistic Tracking Software/Weapon Link System: +1 Fight (Ranged Combat)
- Boosted Musculature: +1 Fight (Melee Combat), +1 Fight (Using Big Things) [2pts total]
- Sound Dampener: +1 Sneak (Covert Intrusion)
- Medical Database: +1 Hack (Medicine)
Trait Augmentation
Trait Augmentation covers one of two things right now: Additional health or additional AP. The former can be achieved by replacing and shielding vital organs, having backups, or other fun stuff. The latter can be achieved via nervous system boosts like neurachem or wired reflexes.
It costs 1 equipment point for 1 point of health. Additional AP costs more as you buy more: Each point of additional AP has a cumulative cost of 5 points. I.e. the first point costs 5, the second 10, the third 15, the fourth 20, and so on. Being able to act significantly more than the other guy is a massive advantage and is priced as such.
Gear
Any gear can be bought as an augmentation, which costs nothing if the gear is largely cosmetic or common (implanted shades or an implanted cell phone would cost nothing), or 1 point otherwise beyond whatever the gear costs.