Purple Duck Storeroom: Craft Points Redux

Purple Duck Storeroom: Craft Points Redux

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This installment of the Purple Duck Storeroom series clocks in at 13 pages, 1 page front cover, 2 pages of SRD, leaving us with 10 pages of content, so let’s take a look!

 

Well, before we do – many of you will know already that I’m a pretty big fan of Downtime-rules, crafting and the like. But the matter of the fact is that not all campaigns will take to these rules to the same extent; indeed, there are campaigns where time is of the essence or where, within a vast dungeon-complex, establishing a crafting base, keeping it secure, etc., represents a complication that is simply not desired by either group or GM. As a person, I am firmly in the camp of believers that this can be a truly awesome and evocative experience…but I absolutely understand why quite a few groups dislike the notion.

 

It is for said groups that this system was created. To craft an item without spending the normal labor time, a character with an item creation feat can pay 1/10th of its market price in craft points (minimum 1, rounded up). The character also must pay 1/2 the item’s market value in GP and once these are spent, the item is finished the next day. The rationale is that the character had been working on the item for a while and only now has finished it. Anyone helping in the creation of items can contribute craft points – characters with the appropriate craft feat can contribute full craft points, while those that lack the respective feat can only contribute them on a 2 for 1 basis – for every 2 points spend, they pay for 1 craft point.

 

Magic items require a Spellcraft check versus DC 5 + CL; failure of more than 5 on this check results in a cursed item. You may reduce craft point cost by spending more time on an item – for every 100 sp worth of work as per the Craft skill, you decrease the craft point cost by 1.

 

A handy table provides some examples for items made with this system and their respective costs. Beyond these, the pdf provides Craft DCs Redux – quarterstaffs and slings or casting plaster would be very simple DC 5 items, for example, while e.g. alchemical dragons or CR 16+ traps would be extremely intricate at DC 35. The system is very simple and easy to grasp and 2 sample examples help illustrating the use of these DCs.

 

The question obviously remains – how do you get craft points and prevent them being spammed like crazy? Well, a 1st level character has 100 craft points and every subsequent level nets the new level times 100 additional craft points. Creatures of Int 3 or higher also have craft points as though their HD was equal to the level. Creatures too dumb to Craft (less than Int 3) don’t get craft points and familiars, eidolons etc., i.e. all class feature creatures, don’t get craft points. A handy table collects craft points gained by level and total craft points accumulated. And yes, the ardent reader may have noticed that the limitation imposed on craft points means that there is a kind-of-but-not-really crazy prepared flexibility inherent in the rules presented – though whether you perceive that as a bug or feature depends, ultimately, on your own stance.

 

Now obviously, this necessitates a closer look at the item creation feats and indeed – the pdf does take a look at them – including the creation of technological and psionic items, with a handy table providing the number of craft points the respective item creation feats net you. These do include craft feats for the creation of alchemical items and master work items as well as a feat that can be taken multiple times to allow for craft point accumulation; basically, in order to offset a sudden, massive influx of instant masterwork weapons, the system imposes a feat-tax on them, which does make sense, as the instantaneous generation of these items would by every craftsperson would detract from the intended flavor…and it does retain an emphasis on the importance of specialists that would otherwise be lost.

 

Conclusion:

Editing and formatting are top-notch, I noticed no significant glitches. Layout adheres to Purple Duck Games’ 1-column 6” x 9” standard and the pdf has no bookmarks or artworks, but doesn’t necessarily require them at this length.

 

Mark Gedak’s Craft Point Redux rules, to make that abundantly clear, are not made for me or my group; I am firmly in the planning/deliberation-camp; heck, we have a whole private board for planning, downtime activity, etc. and regularly checking it and taking a look what the characters do “in the meanwhile” is a pretty constant source of joy for me. That being said, I know that not all parties have this luxury; there are con games and groups that only rarely meet…or that simply don’t share my love for the nit and grit of planning and simulationalist gameplay.

 

While the craft points introduced here represent an abstraction I won’t use in my own games, I certainly see the significant merit this system can have for groups that want to focus “on the action.” For such groups, this represents an intriguing and very simple system you can introduce without much hassle or fanfare. The book-keeping is minimal (apart from craft point tallies) and the implementation elegant, the explanation of the system didactically feasible.

 

Oh, and this is “Pay what you want.” You can actually get this installment for exactly 0 bucks, check it out and then leave a tip you’d consider appropriate…and it is my staunch belief that for some groups out there, this will be a godsend of a file. For what it is and considering the no-risk nature of this pdf, this is very much worth 5 stars. It may not be for me as a person, but it sure may be just what your group wanted!

 

You can get this nice system for any price you want here on OBS!

 

Endzeitgeist out.

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