Guided missiles
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- IX_Legion
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Now that I think about it, Arkbrik's idea would be the most fun: now only do you have to avoid the missile, it will come after you and chase you. I don't really see a need for skill unless the target evades quickly or has massive ECM (basically, if the missile might lose its lock). I think I'm using this after all in my battle.
Thanks for the advice, guys.
Thanks for the advice, guys.
This should be in the Rulebook somewhere:
"Any problem on earth can be solved with the careful application of high explosives"
-Valkyrie (the movie)
"Any problem on earth can be solved with the careful application of high explosives"
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Re: Guided missiles
IX_Legion Wrote:
(and, on second thought, unless it's fast and wildly evading or has massive ECM you can probably ignore the second roll-there's not much for a tank to do to avoid a missile).
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Re: Guided missiles
I don't really see much of an advantage to this. Accuracy is pretty unimportant when it comes to explosives, since there's always at least a 2" margin of acceptable error.
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- IVhorseman
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Re: Guided missiles
IX_Legion, a modified version of your first suggestion is actually a great way to determine "missile lock." Back when I first tried to do rules for these in high school, i figured that the best way to do this would to take a turn for lock on, and on the next turn (and all subsequent turns until another target is acquired) the missile would ignore all movement penalties. But that still felt really dumb to me.
Your method allows for the missile not only to be fired on the same turn, but with a slight tweak, actually incorporates the minifig's skill, since there's no reason a hero with a guided missile launcher shouldn't be strictly awesome with it.
So the way I see it, locking missiles should simply allow for a minifig to roll skill before he makes the shot, and then decide whether or not he actually wants to fire. It still takes an action, but doesn't deal damage or cost a rocket. And that's it! If you make the skill roll, you get missile lock and hit. If you're trying to make a precision shot too, you can keep targeting until you make a high enough skill roll (after bonuses for aiming etc. are applied) to land a precision rocket strike through an air vent on the nuclear fallout bunker. Anything with some kind of ECM blocker could simply add points to the UR from such a weapon. I too stay away from CP, so it's up to someone else to determine costs for this weapon-modifier. I suppose this might also work in futuristic settings with homing bullets or something like that (like the flechette rounds mod in Deus Ex 3) that one could blind-fire around a corner.
Your method allows for the missile not only to be fired on the same turn, but with a slight tweak, actually incorporates the minifig's skill, since there's no reason a hero with a guided missile launcher shouldn't be strictly awesome with it.
So the way I see it, locking missiles should simply allow for a minifig to roll skill before he makes the shot, and then decide whether or not he actually wants to fire. It still takes an action, but doesn't deal damage or cost a rocket. And that's it! If you make the skill roll, you get missile lock and hit. If you're trying to make a precision shot too, you can keep targeting until you make a high enough skill roll (after bonuses for aiming etc. are applied) to land a precision rocket strike through an air vent on the nuclear fallout bunker. Anything with some kind of ECM blocker could simply add points to the UR from such a weapon. I too stay away from CP, so it's up to someone else to determine costs for this weapon-modifier. I suppose this might also work in futuristic settings with homing bullets or something like that (like the flechette rounds mod in Deus Ex 3) that one could blind-fire around a corner.
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Re: Guided missiles
Simple and genius!IVhorseman wrote: So the way I see it, locking missiles should simply allow for a minifig to roll skill before he makes the shot, and then decide whether or not he actually wants to fire. It still takes an action, but doesn't deal damage or cost a rocket.
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Re: Guided missiles
That functionality seems rather similar to Streak missiles in Battletech, which is one of the classic ways of handling "smart" missiles that I've encountered in table-top gaming.IVhorseman wrote:So the way I see it, locking missiles should simply allow for a minifig to roll skill before he makes the shot, and then decide whether or not he actually wants to fire. It still takes an action, but doesn't deal damage or cost a rocket. And that's it!
I'd promote combining this with the missile-as-creation plan. What good is a seeking missile if you can't get it to chase you and then have it hit an enemy target 'cause you're just that hot-shot of a pilot?
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