Spheres of Power: Difference between revisions

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A variant magic system for the Pathfinder Role-Playing Game
 
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[[Image:Spheres_of_Might_Title.jpg|100px|thumb|right]]
[[Image:Spheres_of_Might_Title.jpg|100px|thumb|right]]


Released several years after Spheres of Power, Spheres of Might did to martials what its predecessor did to casters. This has spawned the inevitable comparisons to Path of War, Pathfinder's own [[The Book of Weeaboo Fightan Magic]]. Whereas Path of War goes for boosting damage and the power scale, Spheres of Might focuses more on granting more options to martials both in and out of combat. It is possible to focus on talents which boost or modify existing basic attacks and maneuvers as opposed to the special move accumulation that happens with leveling up in Path of War.
Released several years after Spheres of Power, Spheres of Might did to martials what its predecessor did to casters. This has spawned the inevitable comparisons to Path of War, Pathfinder's own [[The Book of Weeaboo Fightan Magic]]. Whereas Path of War goes for adding tactical variety and supporting non-two handed weapon styles, Spheres of Might focuses more on granting more options to martials both in and out of combat. It is possible to focus on talents which boost or modify existing basic attacks and maneuvers as opposed to the special move accumulation that happens with leveling up in Path of War.


One of the nifty things Spheres of Might does is the concept of Associated Feats. Certain sphere core abilities and talents replicate the effects of existing feats and count as them for the purposes of prerequisites. But since talents require nothing but the base sphere to take (barring Legendary Talents which are akin to Powers' Advanced Talents), you don't have to worry about the burdensome requirements and feat chains which plagued basic Pathfinder martials.
One of the nifty things Spheres of Might does is the concept of Associated Feats. Certain sphere core abilities and talents replicate the effects of existing feats and count as them for the purposes of prerequisites. But since talents require nothing but the base sphere to take (barring Legendary Talents which are akin to Powers' Advanced Talents), you don't have to worry about the burdensome requirements and feat chains which plagued basic Pathfinder martials.


== Champions of the Spheres ==
== Champions of the Spheres ==

Revision as of 04:15, 2 August 2019

Pathfinder is a versatile ruleset with a heaping helping of options, although its magical system remains essentially Vancian. Drop Dead Studios, a third party publisher, created an alternate magic system to replicate a wider variety of fictional spellcasting. People have used the Spheres system to replicate magical characters from a variety of popular fiction, from Avatar the Last Airbender to Naruto.

There are various magical "spheres" of influence themed around concepts such as Alteration, Life, and Nature. Instead of being gated off by class or level, characters can choose what spheres they want and Magical Talents from among said spheres, but certain classes grant bonus talents in themed spheres or faster progression in the amount you gain. Fans say that this givess them greater freedom over the mechanics and flavor of building spellcasters, and is easier to keep track of and without arbitrary restrictions of the standard system like being unable to cast fireball reliably in full plate (although one can create spellcasting traditions which impose restrictions in exchange for more Spell Points). In a nutshell, each sphere has two Core abilities, and Talents which grant you new abilities or lets you modify the core abilities in new ways. Instead of being limited by a per-day format, many spheres have at-will powers, and more powerful talents require the spending of a daily limit of Spell Points. There are also optional rules, such as Advanced Magic which replicates the zanier powers high-level D&D is known for. In addition to new classes, Spheres of Power included new archetypes for uniting the Spheres system with existing Pathfinder classes.

Spheres of Power proved popular in the Pathfinder community. It had an extensive playtest on the Giant in the Playground forums, ran a successful KickStarter for the Spheres of Might (a martial equivalent) and is currently developing an Ultimate Spheres of Power KickStarter consolidating all of the supplementary material released in sourcebooks over the years.


Spheres of Might

Released several years after Spheres of Power, Spheres of Might did to martials what its predecessor did to casters. This has spawned the inevitable comparisons to Path of War, Pathfinder's own The Book of Weeaboo Fightan Magic. Whereas Path of War goes for adding tactical variety and supporting non-two handed weapon styles, Spheres of Might focuses more on granting more options to martials both in and out of combat. It is possible to focus on talents which boost or modify existing basic attacks and maneuvers as opposed to the special move accumulation that happens with leveling up in Path of War.

One of the nifty things Spheres of Might does is the concept of Associated Feats. Certain sphere core abilities and talents replicate the effects of existing feats and count as them for the purposes of prerequisites. But since talents require nothing but the base sphere to take (barring Legendary Talents which are akin to Powers' Advanced Talents), you don't have to worry about the burdensome requirements and feat chains which plagued basic Pathfinder martials.

Champions of the Spheres

Much smaller of a sourcebook than either Power or Might, Champions are the gish book of the spheres system. It introduces three new classes which can draw from both Power and Might, as well as new archetypes, feats, and traditions for incorporating them into previous sourcebooks.

External Links

Spheres of Power Wiki

TV Tropes Summary