Serenity: Difference between revisions

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Added section on the system, rewrote description for readability
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[[Image:Firefly.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Gorrammit, Fox.]]
[[Image:Firefly.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Gorrammit, Fox.]]


The ''Serenity [[RPG|Role-Playing Game]]'' is the official setting for the ''Serenity'' (and the more popular ''Firefly'' TV show), published by Margaret Weis Productions. Alternatively, you could just play [[Traveller]].
The ''Serenity [[RPG|Role-Playing Game]]'' is an officially licensed System and Setting set in the 'verse of ''Serenity'' (and the more popular ''Firefly'' TV show). The game is published by Margaret Weis Productions. Alternatively, you could just play [[Traveller]]. Still, the book does give some good setting notes.
 
 
==System==
The core system is the first version of the "Cortex" system, which MWP reused later on a bunch of licensed games, and then brought out as a standalone general purpose system. All core attributes are measure in dice sizes, so a weakling might have a strength of d2, and a strongman might have a strength of d10. Skills are also measured in dice, and actions are checked by rolling your relevant skill + relevant attribute, adding the dice results, and checking against a target number. If this sounds weird to you, well, there's a reason we're not all playing Cortex these days.  


[[category: roleplaying]]
[[category: roleplaying]]

Revision as of 12:34, 2 September 2015

Gorrammit, Fox.

The Serenity Role-Playing Game is an officially licensed System and Setting set in the 'verse of Serenity (and the more popular Firefly TV show). The game is published by Margaret Weis Productions. Alternatively, you could just play Traveller. Still, the book does give some good setting notes.


System

The core system is the first version of the "Cortex" system, which MWP reused later on a bunch of licensed games, and then brought out as a standalone general purpose system. All core attributes are measure in dice sizes, so a weakling might have a strength of d2, and a strongman might have a strength of d10. Skills are also measured in dice, and actions are checked by rolling your relevant skill + relevant attribute, adding the dice results, and checking against a target number. If this sounds weird to you, well, there's a reason we're not all playing Cortex these days.