Moving your ship in combat
So ships have momentum while moving through their fluid environment. Unlike on Terra Firma you cannot simply dig in your heels and stop or lean in and speed up let alone turn about quickly. So how do we model different ships being more nimble than others? I've assigned them a maneuverability score and created a sketch of naval combat, and this is how it works.
Naval combat is slower and on a larger scale than cramped combat in a dungeon, so rounds in naval combat are half a minute long instead of 6 seconds. Also, each square on the battle mat is 25ft instead of 5ft.
This brings up the issue of character actions during naval combat rounds. I have decided to allow 1 action per round (since movement is already being taken care of by the ship), things like: row ship, man the helm, fire ballista, shoot bow at enemy, call the wind, or cast a spell. Most of these are self explanatory, but how many shots should an archer get per round? I have settled on three, six when they get high enough level for multiple attack actions per attack. I have a reason*, I promise. The same goes for spell casting, max of three per round.
So naval battles are big and long and characters can do things.
Ships now have a maneuverability score, this describes both how quickly they can change their speed and how easily they can turn around. These range from 1-4 (and can go higher with higher quality ships):
-A score of 1 means on a given round you can increase or decrease your ships speed by one unit (25ft) and a score of 4 means you can increase or decrease your ships speed by four units (100ft).
-When turning a score of 1 means your ship must be going its slowest speed (25ft/round) to turn more than 45 degrees away from your initial bearing and a score of 4 means you must be within four units of your slowest speed (25ft-100ft/round) to turn more than 45 degrees from your initial bearing.
Ramming for Fun and Profit
In order to ram you must be going full speed. That means that ships that are more maneuverable can ram more often. Ramming is, incidentally, one of the best ways to do a lot of damage to enemy ships. Fire is a good option too.
But often it is in the PCs interest to keep the ship intact, in fact ships are modular and mobile pieces of wealth. And so boarding becomes more desirable. Hmm, I have to think about how to insensitive more ramming.
This is the most important thing |
Look at this table and understand who I fixed it. I used a galley as the base ship.
Quality | (old) Damage | Average | (new) Damage | Average |
-1 | 2d6-2 | 5 | 8d6 | 28 |
0 | 2d6 | 7 | 10d6 | 35 |
+1 | 2d6+4 | 11 | 12d6 | 42 |
+2 | 4d6+8 | 22 | 14d6 | 49 |
+3 | 5d6+12 | 29.5 | 16d6 | 56 |
+4 | 6d6+16 | 37 | 18d6 | 63 |
+5 | 7d6+20 | 44.5 | 20d6 | 70 |
Any way, I think this stuff is usable. I'll let you know after the next session.
*The reason is that the "pinnacle" of historic archers, the English longbowmen, shot only around 6-7 arrows a minute at their fastest. So off the bat they are shooting as quickly as a historical benchmark and when they get high enough level they shoot TWICE as fast! (But also I don't want them to be able to just kill the whole crew of enemy ships with one archer...)
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