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==Animalism==
{{:ShifterHeader}}
''V20 Core, pg 127''


The Beast resides within all creatures, from scuttling cockroaches to scabrous rats up through untamed wolves and even powerful Kindred elders. Animalism allows the vampire to amplify his intensely primordial nature. He can not only communicate with animals, but can also force his will upon them, directing such beasts to do as he commands. As the vampire grows in power, he can even control the Beast within mortals and other supernaturals.<br>
<tabs>
Beasts grow distinctly agitated in the presence of a vampire who lacks this Discipline or the Skill of Animal Ken, often to the point of attacking or running from the vampire. In contrast, vampires possessing Animalism exude a dominant vibe to lower creatures, which attracts them.<br>
<tab name="The Basics">
Animalism is commonly found with vampires of the Gangrel and Nosferatu Clans. Manipulation and Charisma are important for the use of Animalism powers; the stronger the vampire’s personality, the more influence he has over animals.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-feral" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Feral Whispers</div>
<font color=green>'''Note:'''</font> White Wolf game organization isn't the best, and there are occasions where their rules directly contradict each other, sometimes in the same sentence. We've done our best to fix White Wolf's mistakes.
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-feral">


{{reddots|1|4}} <font color=red>'''Feral Whispers'''</font><br>
=The Basics=
''V20 Core, pg 129''
There's a lot of stuff here, huh? Don't be intimidated, combat isn't that rough. The order of operations goes like this:


This power is the basis from which all other Animalism abilities grow. The vampire creates an empathic connection with a beast, thereby allowing him to communicate or issue simple commands. The Kindred locks eyes with the animal, transmitting his desires through sheer force of will. Although it isn’t necessary to actually “speak” in chirps, hisses, or barks, some vampires find that doing so helps strengthen the connection with the animal. Eye contact must be maintained the entire time; if it’s broken, the Kindred must re-establish contact to continue communication.
<font color=green>'''Initiative:'''</font> The ST will usually kick this off with ''+combat/init/start'', and you can look at the list with ''+combat/init''.<br>
<font color=green>'''Declare your action:'''</font> What you plan to do on your turn, what gift(s) you want to use, and if you'll spend Rage<br>
<font color=green>'''Take your action:'''</font> Spend your Rage or Gnosis (remember, you cant spend both in the same turn!), make your attack roll, allow the ST to try to Dodge, roll your damage if applicable, allow the ST to soak damage<br>
<font color=green>'''Regenerate!'''</font> Once per turn you can roll Stamina vs 8 to regain 1 health!


The simpler the creature, the more difficult it becomes to connect with the animal’s Beast. Mammals, predatory birds, and larger reptiles are relatively easy to communicate with. Insects, invertebrates, and most fish are just too simple to connect with.
And that's it, things move on to the next person.


Feral Whispers provides no guarantees that an animal will want to deal with the vampire, nor does it ensure that the animal will pursue any requests the vampire makes of it. Still, it does at least make the creature better disposed toward the Kindred. The manner in which the vampire presents his desires to the animal often depends on the type of creature. A Kindred can often bully smaller beasts into heeding commands, but he’s better off couching orders for large predators as requests.
<div class="mw-customtoggle-codetip" style="cursor:pointer; color:lightgreen">[+/-] Helpful Code Tips</div>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-codetip">
==Helpful code tips:==
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Have a quick peek at yourself:'''</font> ''+mysheet combat'' will show you your current combat stats and your current health. Good for checking how hurt you are or what a form's stat bonus is.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Did you spend something?'''</font> ''+lose willpower, +lose rage, +lose gnosis.'' Remember that you have to declare the spend BEFORE you make your roll, especially in the case if Willpower.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Did you gain something?'''</font> ''+gain willpower, +gain rage, +gain gnosis''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Did you take damage?'''</font> Use ''+hurt/type'' to set damage on yourself. ''+hurt/bashing 1'', ''+hurt/lethal 1'' or ''+hurt/agg 1''. The code is weird, enter your damage 1 point at a time to save yourself some headache.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Did you heal damage?'''</font> ''+heal'' will wash away that damage! Regeneration/healing magic always goes for the worst damage first, so ''+heal/lethal or /bashing 1'' for regeneration, or if someone used Mother's Touch you can ''+heal/agg 1'' to clear up the real nasty wounds.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Soak rolls never have a wound penalty:'''</font> ''+roll/nowound stamina vs <difficulty>'' any time you have to soak damage! Use ''/nowound'' for any roll that shouldn't be affected by your wound penalty.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Don't spam yourself:'''</font> ''+sheet/section me/abilities'' to check if you have Enigmas, or ''+sheet/section me/powers'' to see if you have a gift you want to use next turn. Look at a single section of your sheet to check if you have something, rather than bring up the whole damned thing!<br>
</div>
 
<div class="mw-customtoggle-scenetip" style="cursor:pointer; color:lightgreen">[+/-] Helpful Scene Tips</div>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-scenetip">
'''Helpful scene tips:'''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Discord:'''</font> Coordinating in voice chat is really helpful, but don't feel pressured to do so. Not everyone likes talking out loud or even sharing their contact deets.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Copy down the Init list:'''</font> Once all the NPCs have been added and it's time to get cracking, type ''+combat/init'' to see the list, and copy it somewhere you can keep track of it in a notepad or in your pack's Discord server. You can edit it to take out the dead guys and keep up with whose turn it is much more easily this way.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Keep side chatter to a minimum:'''</font> It's hard not to joke and banter during a scene, but try to keep most of it to pages or +pack chat in another window, Discord, or something else in order to keep the scene from getting confused, side tracked, or hard for the ST to keep organized.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Be cool, man:'''</font> Try to remember that it's a game, you're here to have fun and make an imaginary person look cool. That imaginary person might fail some times, but use that as an opportunity to change your plan or have a funny story for later. Be open to situational rules changes with the ST in order to get some challenge and story out of the scene you're in, or even suggest something of your own if what you want to do is a little bit crazy.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Communicate:'''</font> If you have questions about something in the scene, ask! Same if you aren't sure how some mechanic works, if you need more clarification before your hair brained scheme takes off, or if said scheme is even possible. It's okay to pause the scene and hash something out, especially if you're new to the game or unfamiliar with combat, and if you're unhappy with how something is going, talk about it.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Stay focused!'''</font> If you're part of a +event or plot scene, try and stay focused so that the scene can move quickly. You signed up for this scene, you volunteered, people are waiting on you to pose or to take your turn in combat. Real Life, health, interruptions, those things happen and it's okay, but please be considerate and save your videogame or web comics or whatever until ''after'' the scene!
</div>


If the vampire successfully uses the power, the animal performs the command to the best of its ability and intellect. Only the very brightest creatures understand truly complex directives (orders dealing with conditional situations or requiring abstract logic). Commands that the animal does understand remain deeply implanted, however, and guide its behavior for sometime.
<font color=green>'''Mistakes?'''</font> Did you notice mistakes in this page? Is there information for your breed's combat abilities that aren't on here? '''''Put in a +request for Mr. Gutsy to get off his lazy butt and fix it!''''' Just make sure you note what's missing and where to find it, if you have that information. Thank you!


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> No roll is necessary to talk with an animal, but the character must establish eye contact (see p. 152) first. Issuing commands requires a Manipulation + Animal Ken roll. The difficulty depends on the creature: Predatory mammals (wolves, cats, vampire bats) are difficulty 6, other mammals and predatory birds (rats, owls) are difficulty 7, and other birds and reptiles (pigeons, snakes) are difficulty 8. This difficulty is reduced by one if the character speaks to the animal in its “native tongue,” and can be adjusted further by circumstances and roleplaying skill (we highly recommend that all communication between characters and animals be roleplayed).
</tab>
<tab name="Combat Steps">


The number of successes the player achieves dictates how strongly the character’s command affects the animal. One success is sufficient to have a cat follow an individual and lead the character to the same location, three successes are enough to have a raven spy on a target for weeks, and five successes ensure that a grizzly ferociously guards the entrance to the character’s wilderness haven for some months.
=Combat=
''Sources:'' W20 Core, pg 288-303


The character’s Nature plays a large part in how he approaches these conversations. The character might try intimidating, teasing, cajoling, or rationalizing. The player should understand that he does not simply play his character in these situations, but the Beast Within as well.
==Initiative==


Using this power cannot force an animal to do something against its nature, or to force a creature to risk its life. While the aforementioned grizzly would stand guard to the vampire’s haven and even fight for it, it would not do so against obviously superior numbers or something overwhelmingly supernatural. A predatory bird might be convinced to harry a target, but would definitely not hold ground. A docile dog or skittish cat would have no problem with reporting something it had seen, but it wouldn’t enter combat unless given no other option — though it would likely agree to stand and fight and then flee at the first opportunity, if a harsh Kindred demanded it.
Use '''+help +combat''' for commands to start/view/add/remove from the Initiative list


</div>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Certain gifts such as Spirit of the Frey give bonuses to Initiative, these should be automatically added by the code, or added by the ST of the scene.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Pack initiative (''W20 Core, pg 267'') If shifters are in a pack and bound together by a single totem, and if all players agree, the pack may share a single initiative roll as well, using the Pack Leader's initiative roll.
 
===Declare Actions===
Lowest Initiative declares their action first, moving up to highest Initiative.<br>
Highest Initiative acts first, moving down to lowest.
 
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Rage spends and actions must be declared at the beginning of your turn (Ex: "I'm going to spend 2 Rage to X, then Y, then Z.")<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Rage actions will be handled in order after the first "normal" round of actions. Ex: Normal round, Rage round 1, Rage round 2, etc.
 
===Changing Actions===
''W20 Core, pg 293''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] In drastic circumstances Declared Actions can be changed, adding a +1 difficulty to the new Action.  (If a grenade is tossed at a character's feet, a packmate is in mortal danger, etc.)
 
===Holding Actions===
An action may be held until a place lower in the Initiative, to better coordinate a special maneuver with a packmate, to let someone else get ahead of your character, to foil an opponent's action strategically, etc.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-beck" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Beckoning</div>
==Spending Points==
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-beck">
Whether it's Willpower, Rage, or Gnosis for gift activation, extra turns, etc., wait until your ST tells you to spend the resource ''on your turn'', for the sake of the scene log having your spends close to your OOC questions and rolls.


{{reddots|2|3}} <font color=red>'''Beckoning'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] You can not spend Rage and Gnosis in the same round, except with the Gift: Chaos Mechanics. Spending one means you can not spend the other.<br>
''V20 Core, pg 130''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Willpower for an automatic success on a roll must be declared before the roll is made.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Willpower can not be used for an automatic success on Damage or Soak rolls.


The vampire’s connection to the Beast grows strong enough that he may call out in the voice of a specific type of animal — howling like a wolf, shrilling like a raven, etc. This call mystically summons creatures of the chosen type. Since each type of animal has a different call, Beckoning works for only a single species at a time.
==Using Rage==
''W20 Core, pg 288''<br>
Players can spend up to 1/2 of their Rage pool in a single turn (rounded up) to perform the following feats:


All such animals within earshot are summoned, and some percentage of them will heed the Beckoning if it is successful. While the vampire has no further control over the beasts who answer, the animals who do are favorably disposed toward him and are at least willing to listen to the Kindred’s concerns. (The vampire can then use Feral Whispers on individual animals to command them, which may be at a decreased difficulty at Storyteller discretion.)
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Take extra Actions:'''</font> Each point of Rage spent gives the character one extra action that turn. Must declare spending Rage for extra actions at the beginning of the turn.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Change forms:'''</font> At any point in a turn, a player can spend one point of Rage to immediate shift to any form without the usual Stamina+Primal Urge roll.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ignore stunning:'''</font> Spending a point of Rage negates being stunned and the shifter can keep moving and take an Action normally.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ignore pain:'''</font> The player can ignore the dice penalties of one health level's worth of wounds per one point of Rage spent for one turn.  This does not heal the damage, dice penalties will apply as normal next turn unless more Rage is spent.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Charisma + Survival (difficulty 6) to determine the response to the character’s call; consult the table below. Only animals that can hear the cry will respond. If the Storyteller decides no animals of that type are within earshot, the summons goes unanswered.
<font color=green>'''Limitations:'''</font> A player can only take as many extra actions as he has dots in either Dexterity or Wits, whichever is ''lower''. If a player chooses to exceed that limit, she suffers +3 difficulty to all difficulties that turn. If the character is in a Frenzy, his Rage actions are limited only by his Dexterity.


The call can be as specific as the player desires. A character could call for all bats in the area, for only the male bats nearby, or for only the albino bat with the notched ear he saw the other night.
==Splitting Dice Pools==
''W20 Core, pg 266''


{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
Any character can split their die pool to perform multiple actions in a single turn. For each action taken that turn, the player loses one die. Each action taken ''after'' the first one loses another die as well - minus two dice for the second of two actions, minus four dice for the third action out of three, and so on. Example; a frat boy wants to grab a bottle and hit someone with it, and splits his pool in two.<br>
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Grab the bottle: Dex + Athletics<br>
! style="min-width: 200px" | Result
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Swing the bottle: Dex + Melee<br>
|-
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The Dex + Athletics pool is at -1 for having the extra action of swinging<br>
|1 success
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The Dex + Melee pool is at -1 for having the extra action of swinging, and another -1 for being the second action.
|A single animal responds.
|-
|2 successes
|One-quarter of the animals within earshot respond.
|-
|3 successes
|Half of the animals respond.
|-
|4 successes
|Most of the animals respond.
|-
|5 successes
|All of the animals respond.
|-
|}


</div>
</tab>
<tab name="Health and Healing">


<div class="mw-customtoggle-quell" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Quell the Beast</div>
=Healing Damage=
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-quell">
''W20 Core. pg 255-256''<br>
=Regeneration=
===Bashing and Lethal===
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Garou regenerate their worst Bashing or Lethal health level every turn while in a non-breed form.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Homid and Lupus breed Garou can regenerate a health level each day while in their natural breed forms if they are in critical condition.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Metis have full regeneration in all forms.


{{reddots|3|2}} <font color=red>'''Quell the Beast'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kitsune'''</font> do not regenerate, and heal as Humans<br>
''V20 Core, pg 130''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ananasi'''</font> do not regenerate without spending Blood Points. 1 blood point to heal 1 Bashing/Lethal, a full day of rest and 5 blood points to heal 1 Aggravated, otherwise heal as humans.
===Aggravated===
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Shifters can soak Aggravated damage, unlike humans.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Shifters can not rapidly regenerate Aggravated damage at the end of a combat turn.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Aggravated damage: Heal 1 point per day as long as the character is in a form that regenerates. <br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] If a shifter reaches Incapacitated from Aggravated damage, they have one chance to channel their Rage to remain active. If the character fails, they die.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Combat regeneration:'''</font> During each turn a shifter may roll Stamina vs 8 as a reflexive action that does not require Rage or splitting pools. Success allows the shifter to heal Bashing or Lethal normally as listed above. A botch means the shifter cannot regenerate until they've had a chance to rest


As the supreme predators of the natural world, Kindred are highly attuned to the bestial nature that dwells within every mortal heart. A vampire who develops this power may assert his will over a mortal (animal or human) subject, subduing the Beast within her. This quenches all powerful, strong emotions — hope, fury, love, fear — within the target. The Kindred must either touch his subject or stare into her eyes to channel his will effectively.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Rage healing:'''</font> Once per scene, a critically injured shifter (reaching Incapacitated through Aggravated damage) may remain active by rolling Rage vs 8. Each success heals 1 level of any kind of damage. No matter how much damage is healed, the character enters a Berserk Frenzy.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] A shifter that successfully remains active through Rage healing gains a Battle Scar (''W20 Core, pg 259'')


Mortals who lack the fire of their inner Beasts are quite tractable, reacting to even stressful situations with indifference. Even the most courageous or maddened mortal becomes apathetic and listless, while an especially sensitive individual may suffer from a phobic derangement while under the power’s influence.
</tab>
<tab name="Rage">
=Rage=
''W20 Core, pg 144 & 262''
=The Curse=
Animals, and especially Humans, can sense the predator that lurks under a werewolf's skin.


Different Clans evoke this power in different ways, though the effect itself is identical. Tzimisce call it Cowing the Beast, since they force the mortal’s weaker spirit to shrivel in fear before the Kindred’s own inner Beast. Nosferatu refer to it as Song of Serenity, since they soothe the subject’s Beast into a state of utter complacency, thus allowing them to feed freely. Gangrel know the power as Quell the Beast, and force the mortal spirit into a state of fear or apathy as befits the individual vampire’s nature.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Willpower:'''</font> When a human’s Willpower is less than a werewolf’s Rage, that human will avoid contact with the Garou if at all possible. He might cross the street to avoid “that weirdo,” decide to hail a cab rather than sticking around, or even run in fear. Most humans have a Willpower score of between 2 and 4, so the Curse is no laughing matter. Humans aren’t the only creatures affected by the Curse: wolves and other animals avoid the Garou whenever possible.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Manipulation + Intimidation if forcing down the Beast through fear, or Manipulation + Empathy if soothing it into complacency. The difficulty of the roll is 7 in either case. This is an extended action requiring as many total successes as the target has Willpower. Failure indicates that the player must start over from the beginning, while a botch indicates that the vampire may not affect that subject’s Beast for the remainder of the scene.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kinfolk:'''</font> The Rage within a werewolf makes even their own Kinfolk uncomfortable, albeit to a lesser degree.


When a mortal’s Beast is cowed or soothed, she can no longer use or regain Willpower. She ceases all struggles, whether mental or physical. She doesn’t even defend herself if assaulted, though the Storyteller may allow a Willpower roll if the mortal believes her life is truly threatened. To recover from this power, the mortal’s player rolls Willpower (difficulty 6) once per day until she accumulates enough successes to equal the vampire’s Willpower. Kindred cannot be affected by this power.
==Using Rage==
Rage points are spent at the beginning of a turn, in the declaration stage. You can spend Rage only in times of stress. A Garou can use Rage in the following ways:


Though a vampire’s Beast cannot be cowed with this ability, the Storyteller may allow characters to use the “soothing” variation of this power to pull a vampire out of frenzy. With three or more successes, the frenzying vampire may roll again to pull herself out of frenzy, using the same difficulty as the stimulus that caused the frenzy originally.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Extra Actions:'''</font> A player can spend Rage to give her character extra actions in a single turn. However, a Garou cannot spend more Rage points for actions in a turn than half of her permanent Rage rating. See p. 266.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Changing Forms:'''</font> A Player may spend a Rage point for his character to change instantly to any form he desires, without having to roll Stamina + Primal-Urge. See p. 285.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Recovering from Stun:'''</font> If a character loses more health levels in one turn than his Stamina rating, he is stunned and unable to act in the next turn. By spending a Rage point, the werewolf can ignore the effect and function normally.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Remaining Active:'''</font> If a character falls below the Incapacitated health level, a player can use Rage to keep her character going. Doing so requires a Rage roll (difficulty 8). Each success heals a health level, regardless of the type of wound. A player may attempt this roll only once per scene. If this roll fails, the character doesn’t recover. However, this last-ditch survival effort has its price. Like all Rage rolls, the character is still subject to frenzy. The wound will also remain on the Garou’s body as an appropriate Battle Scar.<br>


</div>
==Gaining and Regaining Rage==
At certain times, a werewolf’s Rage can even go higher than his permanent rating, but only if the situation is sufficiently infuriating.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-subsu" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Subsume the Spirit</div>
The Rage pool fluctuates from session to session and from turn to turn. Rage replenishes itself in several ways.
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-subsu">


{{reddots|4|1}} <font color=red>'''Subsume the Spirit'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''The Moon:'''</font> The first time a werewolf sees the moon at night, the Beast inside stirs, and Rage floods back into her. Under a new moon, the character gets one point; under a waning moon, two points; under a half or waxing moon, three points; and under a full moon, four points. If the moon phase corresponds with the character’s auspice, she regains all of her Rage. This phenomenon only occurs when the character first sees the moon each night.<br>
''V20 Core, pg 131''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Botch:'''</font> If the Storyteller approves, a werewolf might receive a Rage point after a botched a roll. Rage comes from stressful situations, and seeing the action you were attempting blow up in your face, sometimes literally, can be a very stressful situation.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Humiliation:'''</font> Rage will also come rushing back if anything a Garou does proves particularly humiliating. The Storyteller decides whether a situation is embarrassing enough to warrant a Rage point. Garou tend to be very proud, and they don’t take being laughed at well.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Confrontation:'''</font> Again at the Storyteller’s approval, a character could receive a Rage point at the beginning of a tense situation, in the moments right before combat starts. This gain accounts for the anticipation and hackle-raising that happens just as tempers start to flare.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''New Stories:'''</font> If the ST of your scene is alright with it, you may be able to +gain your Rage (also Gnosis and Willpower) before the scene officially starts. Make sure you ask first, to be polite.


By locking his gaze with that of an animal, the vampire may mentally possess the creature. Some elders believe that since animals don’t have souls but spirits, the vampire can move his own soul into the animal’s body. Many younger vampires think it a matter of transferring one’s consciousness into the animal’s mind. In either case, it’s agreed that the beast’s weaker spirit (or mind) is pushed aside by the Kindred’s own consciousness. The vampire’s body falls into a motionless state akin to torpor while his mind takes control of the animal’s actions, remaining this way until the Kindred’s consciousness returns.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Twitcher Ratkin:'''</font> ''(W20 Changing Breeds, pg 185)'' Whenever a Twitcher regains Rage, they also make a roll to gain even more. Roll one die against a difficulty of (10 – the Twitcher’s Rank). Success gains them another point of a Rage — and another roll. They keep rolling until they are at their maximum Rage, or until they fail or botch the roll. There are no negative consequences for failing or botching this roll.


Some haughty Tzimisce eschew this power, considering it debasing to enter the body of a lesser creature. When they do stoop to using it, they possess only predators. Conversely, Gangrel revel in connecting to the natural world in this way. They delight in sampling different animals’ natures.
==Too Much or Too Little Rage==
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Beast Within:'''</font> Occasionally, a Garou is more a snarling monster than man or beast, and she must pay the price for it. For every point of Rage a character has above her Willpower rating, she loses one die on all social-interaction rolls. People, even other werewolves, can sense the killer hiding just under her skin, and they don’t want to be anywhere near it.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Losing the Wolf:'''</font> If a character has lost or spent all his Rage and Willpower points, he has “lost the wolf,” and he cannot regain Rage. The Garou cannot shift to anything except his breed form until his Rage returns. The character must regain at least one Willpower point before he can recover any Rage.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Manipulation + Animal Ken (difficulty 8) as the character looks into the animal’s eyes (see sidebar on p. 152). The number of successes allows the character to employ some mental Disciplines while possessing the animal, as noted below.
</tab>
<tab name="Frenzy">
=Frenzy=
''W20 Core, pg 144 and 261''


{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
! Rank
! style="min-width: 300px" | Result
! style="width: 175px" | Frenzy Bonus
|-
|-
| 1 success
|0
| Cannot use Disciplines
|None
|-
|-
| 2 successes
|1
| Can use Auspex and other sensory powers
|None
|-
|-
| 3 successes
|2
| Can also use Presence and other powers of emotional manipulation
|None
|-
|-
| 4 successes
|3
| Can also use Dementation, Dominate, and other powers of mental manipulation
| +1 diff to Frenzy rolls
|-
|-
| 5 successes
|4
| Can also use Chimerstry, Necromancy, Thaumaturgy, and other mystical powers
| +2 diff to Frenzy rolls
|-
|-
|5
| +2 diff to Frenzy rolls, 5+ successes needed to Frenzy
|}
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Frenzy:'''</font> Frenzy is the violent outburst, the untamed savagery, the animal instinct for blood and brutality that lurks in the heart of every werewolf. Whenever a player gets four or more successes on a Rage roll, the character enters a frenzy. See Frenzy on p. 261 for more information on the causes and resolutions of frenzies.


This power entwines the character’s consciousness closely with the animal’s spirit, so much so that the character may continue to think and feel like that animal even after breaking the connection. This effect continues until the character spends a total of seven nights or three Willpower points to resist and finally overcome the animal nature. This should be roleplayed, though the character will be affected to a lesser degree if the player chooses to spend Willpower.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Any Rage roll:'''</font> Any Rage roll can lead to a frenzy, even if it’s used to activate Gifts. All Rage rolls represent an attempt to awaken the primal beast that drives the Garou. If a Rage roll scores four or more successes, the character frenzies. The player can spend a Willpower point immediately to halt the frenzy, but her character can’t take any further actions that turn.


At the end of any particularly exciting incident during possession, the player rolls Wits + Empathy (difficulty 8) for the character to retain his own mind. Failure indicates that the character’s mind returns to his own body, but still thinks in purely animalistic terms. A botch returns the character to his body, and also sends him into frenzy.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Less than 4 Rage:'''</font>  Garou who have permanent Rage ratings lower than four can still frenzy, but only under circumstances that touch on a particular psychological trigger: locking a claustrophobic werewolf in a confined space, or an arachnophobe coming face-to-mandible with one of the Ananasi werespiders. When a werewolf encounters that level of stress, his temporary Rage can exceed his permanent rating. Use the higher of the two ratings for all Rage rolls.


The character may travel as far from his own physical body as he chooses while possessing the animal. The character retains no conscious connection with his vampire body during this time, though. The vampire may also venture out during the day, albeit in the animal’s body. However, the character’s own body must be awake to do so, requiring a successful roll to remain awake (see p. 262). If the character leaves the animal’s body (by choice, if his body falls asleep, or after sustaining significant injury), the vampire’s consciousness returns to his physical form instantaneously.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Calm Heart:'''</font> The Merit: Calm Heart adds +2 difficulty to Frenzy rolls. The book text says it adds 2 dice, this is incorrect, 2 extra dice would actually make it easier to frenzy. White Wolf doesn't edit well.


Although the vampire has no conscious link to his body while possessing the animal, he does form a sympathetic bond. Anything the animal feels, the vampire also experiences, from pleasure to pain. In fact, any damage the animal’s body sustains is also applied to the character’s body, though the Kindred body may soak as normal. If the animal dies before the vampire’s soul can flee from the body, the character’s body falls into torpor. Presumably this is in sympathetic response to the massive trauma of death, but some Kindred believe that the vampire’s soul is cast adrift during this time and must find its way back to the body.
==Berserk Frenzy==
The werewolf can only see moving targets — targets she wants to reduce to bloody lumps of mangled meat. A berserk Garou shifts immediately to either Crinos or Hispo form (the player decides which), and attacks something.<br>
Whom she attacks depends on the circumstances. If the Garou’s permanent Rage does not exceed her permanent Gnosis, she will not tear into her packmates — unless she’s in the Thrall of the Wyrm. Anything else is fair game, including other were-creatures who are not members of her pack.<br>
A Garou whose permanent Rage exceeds his permanent Gnosis attacks anything that moves. He can’t distinguish between targets unless his player spends a Willpower point, in which case he can select his victim. If he doesn’t have the Willpower to spare, the Storyteller chooses who he attacks. Werewolves in this state don’t remember what happens to them during frenzy. Many collapse once the frenzy is over.


</div>
==Fox Frenzy==
The werewolf does everything in his
power to escape. He takes his Lupus form and runs. The only time he attacks is when something gets in his way, and only for long enough to get past his opponent. The character runs until he can find a safe hiding place, where he will remain until the frenzy passes.<br>
Whether in berserk or fox frenzy, combat maneuvers and pack tactics require a level of thought and control that a frenzying werewolf does not have. He has three options: bite, claw, or run. He can spend Rage for extra actions, but can’t split dice pools, use Gifts, or step sideways. A frenzied werewolf does not feel pain, and ignores all wound penalties.<br>
A werewolf can only come out of frenzy once the triggering situation is over. Once he’s escaped, the player rolls Willpower (difficulty equaling the Garou’s own Rage) to escape the frenzy. If the roll fails, the player can try again next turn with no increase in difficulty.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! Breed
! Can they Frenzy?
|-
|Ajaba
|As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
|-
|Ananasi
|Not naturally capable of Frenzy. Diff to supernaturally induce Frenzy is +2.
|-
|Bastet
|As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
|-
|Corax
|As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
|-
|Gurahl
|Normally cant Fox Frenzy. Rage rolls are always diff 8. 5+ successes required for Frenzy.
|-
|Kitsune
|Normally cant Berserk Frenzy. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
|-
|Mokole
|As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6, save for Shining Mokole, who's diffs are the same as Garou.
|-
|Nuwisha
|Not naturally capable of Frenzy.
|-
|Ratkin
|As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6. Warriors: Rage rolls are always diff 5.
|-
|Rokea
|Normally cant Fox Frenzy. Rage roll diffs are the same as Garou. Only 2 successes needed to enter a Frenzy.
|}


<div class="mw-customtoggle-draw" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Drawing Out the Beast</div>
==Reasons to roll Rage==
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-draw">
''W20 Core, pg 261''


{{reddots|5}} <font color=red>'''Drawing Out the Beast'''</font><br>
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
''V20 Core, pg 132''
! Moon Phase
 
! Difficulty
At this level of Animalism, the Kindred has a keen understanding of the Beast Within, and is able to release his feral urges upon another mortal or vampire. The recipient of the vampire’s Beast is instantly overcome by frenzy. This is an unnatural frenzy, however, as the victim is channeling the Kindred’s own fury. As such, the vampire’s own behavior, expressions, and even speech patterns are evident in the subject’s savage actions.
|-
 
|New
Gangrel and Tzimisce are especially fond of unleashing their Beasts onto others. Gangrel do so to stir their ghouls into inspired heights of savagery during combat. Tzimisce care less about who receives their Beast than retaining their own composure.
|8
 
<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player must announce his preferred target (since it must be someone within sight, Drawing Out the Beast cannot be used if the vampire is alone), then roll Manipulation + Self-Control/Instinct (difficulty 8). Refer to the table below for the results:
 
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
! style="min-width: 400px" | Result
|-
|-
|1 success
|Crescent
| The character transfers the Beast, but unleashes it upon a random individual.
|7
|-
|-
|2 successes
|Half
| The character is stunned by the effort and may not act next turn, but transfers the Beast successfully. Alternatively, the character may act normally during the turn, but must spend a Willpower point or suffer a single level of lethal damage.
|6
|-
|-
|3+ successes
|Gibbous
| The character transfers the Beast successfully.
|5
|-
|-
|Full
|4
|}
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] A shifter in Crinos reduces their Rage roll difficulties by 1 when checking for Frenzy.


If the attempt fails, the character himself immediately enters frenzy. As the character relaxes in expectation of relieving his savage urges, the Beast takes that opportunity to dig deeper. In this case, the frenzy lasts twice as long as normal and is twice as difficult to shrug off; its severity also increases exponentially. Botching this roll is even more catastrophic; the heightened frenzy grows so extreme that not even expending Willpower curbs its duration or effects. The character is a hapless victim to the terrible fury of his Beast, and may well hurl herself into a savage, flesh-rending rampage that leaves the Masquerade (and unfortunate nearby onlookers) in tatters.
Outside the standard instances listed on the Rage tab, your ST may call for Rage rolls in tense situations that stir the beast and threaten the possibility of Frenzy.


If the character leaves the target’s presence before the frenzy expends itself, the vampire loses his Beast, perhaps permanently. While no longer vulnerable to frenzy, the character cannot use or regain Willpower and becomes increasingly lethargic. To recover the Beast, he must find the person who now possesses it (who likely isn’t enjoying herself very much) and coax the Beast into its proper vessel. The most effective way to do so is to behave in ways that make the Beast want to return — however, this isn’t a guarantee that it will wish to do so. Alternatively, the character can simply kill the host (thus causing the Beast to return to the vampire immediately).
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Embarrassment or humiliation (e.g. botching an important roll)<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Any strong emotion (lust, rage, envy)<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Extreme hunger<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Confinement<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Helplessness<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Being taunted by a superior enemy<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Large quantities of silver in the area<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Being wounded<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Seeing a packmate wounded<br>


</div>
==Thrall of the Wyrm==
''W20 Core, pg 262''


----
When a player rolls six or more successes on a Rage roll, the character enters a berserk frenzy. All the Willpower in the world won’t give her a second’s control. The character is in the Thrall of the Wyrm. In addition to attacking anything that she can see, with the Storyteller picking her targets, the Thrall brings an even more horrific twist.<br>
Each breed of Garou has an affinity to one of the heads of the Triatic Wyrm, and it is that facet that works through them in their worst frenzy.


==Animalism==
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Homid:'''</font> Eater-of-Souls holds humans as its special children. This twisted favor extends to homid-breed Garou. This Wyrm drives its minions to eat humans, wolves, and even other Garou. A werewolf in this Thrall must roll Wits (difficulty 7) whenever she kills or incapacitates an opponent. If the roll is a botch, she must stop for a turn and eat her kill.<br>
''V20 Core, pg 127''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Metis:'''</font> The Defiler Wyrm reserves special attention for those Garou who cannot breed themselves. It drives metis Garou to perform unspeakable sexual acts on their fallen opponents, regardless of their respective genders. If a werewolf kills or incapacitates an opponent, his player must roll Wits (difficulty 7). If the roll botches, the werewolf stops for a turn and slakes his unholy lusts on his opponent’s corpse.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Lupus:'''</font> Beast-of-War lays claim to the savage lupus Garou. It forces them to tear into their victims until nothing is left but bloody chunks of meat and bone. The Garou loses all sense of mercy, and exists only to destroy. When a lupus werewolf kills or incapacitates a foe when in the Thrall, her player must roll Wits (difficulty 7). If the roll botches, the werewolf savages his opponent’s corpse until it is torn limb from limb.


The Beast resides within all creatures, from scuttling cockroaches to scabrous rats up through untamed wolves and even powerful Kindred elders. Animalism allows the vampire to amplify his intensely primordial nature. He can not only communicate with animals, but can also force his will upon them, directing such beasts to do as he commands. As the vampire grows in power, he can even control the Beast within mortals and other supernaturals.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Fera:'''</font> If the Fera breed is capable of rolling Rage and Frenzying, the above applies to their particular breed as well
Beasts grow distinctly agitated in the presence of a vampire who lacks this Discipline or the Skill of Animal Ken, often to the point of attacking or running from the vampire. In contrast, vampires possessing Animalism exude a dominant vibe to lower creatures, which attracts them.<br>
Animalism is commonly found with vampires of the Gangrel and Nosferatu Clans. Manipulation and Charisma are important for the use of Animalism powers; the stronger the vampire’s personality, the more influence he has over animals.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-feral" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Feral Whispers</div>
</tab>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-feral">
<tab name="Delirium">


{{reddots|1|4}} <font color=red>'''Feral Whispers'''</font><br>
=The Delirium=
''V20 Core, pg 129''
''W20 Core, pg 262''
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
! Breed
! Full Delirium
! Reduced Delirium
|-
|Ajaba
|Crinos
|
|-
|Ananasi
|Lilian, Pithus
|
|-
|Bastet
|Chatro
|Crinos
|-
|Corax
|
|Crinos
|-
|Gurahl
|
|Crinos
|-
|Mokole
|Archid
|
|-
|Nuwisha
|
|Manabozho
|-
|Ratkin
|
|Crinos
|-
|Rokea
|Gladius, Chasmus
|Glabrus
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]]<font color=green>'''Kitsune:'''</font> Does not incite The Delirium in any form.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]]<font color=green>'''Ananasi:'''</font> Crawlerling form does not normally incite Delirium at all, however if the breakdown into Crawlerling form is witnessed, it inflicts full Delirium.


This power is the basis from which all other Animalism abilities grow. The vampire creates an empathic connection with a beast, thereby allowing him to communicate or issue simple commands. The Kindred locks eyes with the animal, transmitting his desires through sheer force of will. Although it isn’t necessary to actually “speak” in chirps, hisses, or barks, some vampires find that doing so helps strengthen the connection with the animal. Eye contact must be maintained the entire time; if it’s broken, the Kindred must re-establish contact to continue communication.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Kinfolk are entirely immune to the Delirium.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The Delirium only affects people that can see the Shifter in person. Photographs, video (live or recorded), or other such evidence won't trigger any fear reaction.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Humans will rationalize evidence away as a Photoshopped image or publicity stunt, unless their Willpower is 8 or higher.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Humans that have delved deep into the Occult (4 dots or higher) might roll Wits + Occult vs 9, with each success increasing the human's effective Willpower by 1 in regards to the chart below.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Humans from cultures that didn't suffer the Impergium to a great degree (such as Native Americans and Aboriginal Australians) might also be granted a bonus at the ST's discretion, only if they've been raised without contact with other cultures.


The simpler the creature, the more difficult it becomes to connect with the animal’s Beast. Mammals, predatory birds, and larger reptiles are relatively easy to communicate with. Insects, invertebrates, and most fish are just too simple to connect with.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! Willpower
! % of Population
! Will They Forget?
! Effect
|-
|1
|10%
|Yes
|Catatonic Fear: The human faints, or collapses in fear
|-
|2
|20%
|Yes
|Panic: The human bolts, trying to put as much distance between himself and the Garou as possible.
|-
|3
|18%
|Yes
|Disbelief: The human retreats to a corner to avoid the “hallucination” until it passes, but doesn’t collapse in fear.
|-
|4
|15%
|Yes
|Berserk: The human attacks, be it firing a gun (he won’t have enough presence of mind to reload, however), throwing crockery or even leaping at the “monster.”
|-
|5
|13%
|Yes
|Terror: Much like panic, except with rational thought. The human is able to think enough to lock doors behind him or to get in a car and flee.
|-
|6
|10%
|Yes
|Conciliatory: The human will try to plead and bargain with the Garou, doing anything possible so as not to get hurt.
|-
|7
|7%
|No, but will rationalize
|Controlled Fear: Although terrified, he does not panic. The human will flee or fight as appropriate, but remains in control of his actions.
|-
|8
|5%
|No, but will rationalize
|Curiosity: These people are dangerous, because they remember what they saw (more-or-less), and they might well investigate the matter further.
|-
|9
|1.5%
|No
|Bloodlust: This human refuses to take anymore. She is afraid but angry, and she will remember the Garou and probably even try to hunt it down.
|-
|10
|0.5%
|No
|No reaction: The human is not the slightest bit afraid or bothered by the Garou. Even Kinfolk aren’t this stoic, so Garou tend to be very suspicious of such folks.
|}


Feral Whispers provides no guarantees that an animal will want to deal with the vampire, nor does it ensure that the animal will pursue any requests the vampire makes of it. Still, it does at least make the creature better disposed toward the Kindred. The manner in which the vampire presents his desires to the animal often depends on the type of creature. A Kindred can often bully smaller beasts into heeding commands, but he’s better off couching orders for large predators as requests.
</tab>
</tabs>


If the vampire successfully uses the power, the animal performs the command to the best of its ability and intellect. Only the very brightest creatures understand truly complex directives (orders dealing with conditional situations or requiring abstract logic). Commands that the animal does understand remain deeply implanted, however, and guide its behavior for sometime.
<tabs>
<tab name="Close Combat">


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> No roll is necessary to talk with an animal, but the character must establish eye contact (see p. 152) first. Issuing commands requires a Manipulation + Animal Ken roll. The difficulty depends on the creature: Predatory mammals (wolves, cats, vampire bats) are difficulty 6, other mammals and predatory birds (rats, owls) are difficulty 7, and other birds and reptiles (pigeons, snakes) are difficulty 8. This difficulty is reduced by one if the character speaks to the animal in its “native tongue,” and can be adjusted further by circumstances and roleplaying skill (we highly recommend that all communication between characters and animals be roleplayed).
=Close Combat Attacks=


The number of successes the player achieves dictates how strongly the character’s command affects the animal. One success is sufficient to have a cat follow an individual and lead the character to the same location, three successes are enough to have a raven spy on a target for weeks, and five successes ensure that a grizzly ferociously guards the entrance to the character’s wilderness haven for some months.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] On a successful attack, 1 point of damage is always dealt and might be soaked, even if the damage roll gave zero successes.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Corax'''</font> have -1 diff to all Athletics rolls, and +2 difficulty to soak all Bashing.


The character’s Nature plays a large part in how he approaches these conversations. The character might try intimidating, teasing, cajoling, or rationalizing. The player should understand that he does not simply play his character in these situations, but the Beast Within as well.
===Basic Attacks===
''W20 Core, pg 296''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] While these are largely listed with Garou form names, these are usable by just about anyone, as long as you have the appropriate appendage available.


Using this power cannot force an animal to do something against its nature, or to force a creature to risk its life. While the aforementioned grizzly would stand guard to the vampire’s haven and even fight for it, it would not do so against obviously superior numbers or something overwhelmingly supernatural. A predatory bird might be convinced to harry a target, but would definitely not hold ground. A docile dog or skittish cat would have no problem with reporting something it had seen, but it wouldn’t enter combat unless given no other option — though it would likely agree to stand and fight and then flee at the first opportunity, if a harsh Kindred demanded it.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
|-
! style="width: 100px" | Action !! Pool !! style="width: 20px" | Base Diff !! Base Damage !! Damage Type !! Special
|-
|| Kick || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str + 1 || Bashing || Extreme size difference can make damage Lethal<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Punch || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str || Bashing || Special punches (uppercut, haymaker, etc) may cause extra dmg with a higher diff. Usually Bashing, but nerve strikes, kidney blows, or extreme size difference can make damage Lethal<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Bite || Dex + Brawl || 5 || Str +1 || Agg || Hispo bite +1 dmg, Glabro bite diff 8 and -1 Lethal dmg <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
|-
|| Claw || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str + 1 || Crinos/Hispo: Agg, Glabro/Lupus: Bashing || [[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
|-
|| Disarm || Dex + Melee || +1 diff || See: Failure || - || Successes exceed opponent's Strength score: Opponent drops their weapon. Failure: Inflicts weapon damage; Botch: Loses own weapon <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Bare-Handed Disarm || Dex + Brawl (-1 dice) || 8 || - || - || Failure: Inflicts weapon damage to hands <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Flank Attacks || - || -1 || - || - || May require Rage, move time or another roll at ST's discretion<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|-
|| Rear Attack || - || -2 || - || - || May require Rage, move time or another roll at ST's discretion<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|-
|| Sweep || Dex + Brawl or Melee || 8 || - || - || Knocks Opponent to the ground, can use self or weapon to sweep an opponent's leg. Causes no damage, but target is prone.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|-
|| Grapple || Contested Str + Brawl || 6 || Str || Bashing || [[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Clinch:'''</font> crushing damage applied per turn.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Hold:'''</font> No damage, Target held until freed<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Escape:'''</font> The contested Str + Brawl roll, especially agile chars may use Dex<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Reverse:'''</font> The grapple is turned on the attacker if the contested roll scores 2 more successes than the attacker.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Damage:'''</font> Typically Bashing, can be Lethal or Aggravated if grappled opponent has barbs, spikes, extreme size difference, etc. as appropriate.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Tackle || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str || Bashing || [[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Req: Min 2 Yard Distance<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Attacker and Target both make Dexterity+Athletics rolls to keep their feet (diff 6 for the attacker, diff 6 + the attackers successes for the target).<br>
:<font color=green>'''Failure:'''</font> you end up on the ground.<br>
:<font color=green>'''Botch:'''</font> trips and falls (one die of dmg for every yard ran); slams into something else (that damage plus his Str in dmg on himself); or crashes into his target and bounces off (opponent’s Stamina in dmg, but leaving the target unharmed)<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Dexterity+Brawl vs 7 to determine damage dice if target fails his Athletics roll.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Damage may situationally become lethal at ST discretion.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|}


</div>
</tab>
<tab name="Dirty Fighting">


<div class="mw-customtoggle-beck" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Beckoning</div>
=Dirty Fighting=
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-beck">
''W20 Core, pg 198''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The following maneuvers require Brawl 3 or more.


{{reddots|2|3}} <font color=red>'''Beckoning'''</font><br>
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
''V20 Core, pg 130''
|-
! style="width: 100px" | Action !! Pool !! style="width: 20px" | Diff !! Damage !! Damage type !! Special
|-
|| Blinding || Dex + Subterfuge || 9 || Special || Special || Blinded 1 turn per success, -2 Dice to all pools. 5+ successes destroys eyes, may regen normally if possible. ST discretion if a particularly vicious attack might cause 1 or 2 Lethal damage in addition to blinding.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Body Slam || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str + 2 || Bashing || Requires a successful Grapple, next turn apply Dex + Brawl vs 6 for damage. Damage may be Lethal or even Aggravated at ST discretion depending on what the target is slammed onto. <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Curb Stomp || Str + Brawl || 6 || Str + 2 || Lethal || Requires Stunned/Immobilized target - Takes 1 turn to place in position first, next turn apply Str + Brawl vs 6 for damage. May remove opponent's ability to bite until healed.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro, Crinos
|-
|| Low Blow || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str || Bashing || Stunned for one turn per health level lost after soak. Bashing becomes Lethal if done with claws/teeth/blades/etc.; Stamina diff 8 to shrug off the stun at one turn per success. <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|-
|| Pistol Whip || Dex + Melee || 7 || Str + 2 || Lethal || Requires a gun, crowbar, truncheon, candlestick, etc. Target stunned for 1 turn if they fail Stamina vs 8, or 2 turns if they botch. <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro
|}


The vampire’s connection to the Beast grows strong enough that he may call out in the voice of a specific type of animal — howling like a wolf, shrilling like a raven, etc. This call mystically summons creatures of the chosen type. Since each type of animal has a different call, Beckoning works for only a single species at a time.
</tab>
<tab name="Special Maneuvers">


All such animals within earshot are summoned, and some percentage of them will heed the Beckoning if it is successful. While the vampire has no further control over the beasts who answer, the animals who do are favorably disposed toward him and are at least willing to listen to the Kindred’s concerns. (The vampire can then use Feral Whispers on individual animals to command them, which may be at a decreased difficulty at Storyteller discretion.)
=Special Maneuvers=
''W20 Core, pg 299''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] While these are largely listed with Garou form names, these are usable by just about anyone, as long as you have the appropriate appendage available.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Charisma + Survival (difficulty 6) to determine the response to the character’s call; consult the table below. Only animals that can hear the cry will respond. If the Storyteller decides no animals of that type are within earshot, the summons goes unanswered.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
 
|-
The call can be as specific as the player desires. A character could call for all bats in the area, for only the male bats nearby, or for only the albino bat with the notched ear he saw the other night.
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! style="width: 20px" | Diff !! Damage !! Damage Type !! Special
 
|-
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
|| Evasive Action || Wits + Athletics || 6 || - || - || Works like a dodge, but you cannot abort your previous action to use this tactic. Each success subtracts one success from the attacker's roll. If you score more successes than the attacker, your next attack is at -1 difficulty on that target, assuming you act before them.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
|-
! style="min-width: 200px" | Result
|| Hamstring (Bite/Claw) || Dex + Brawl || 8 || Str + 1 || Aggravated || 2 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 8 to stand again, 1/4 movement speed<br>4 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 7 to remain standing, 1/2 movement speed. <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
|-
|| Hamstring (Weapon) || Dex + Melee || 9 || As Weapon || Lethal || Requires a bladed weapon<br>2 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 8 to stand again, 1/4 movement speed<br>4 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 7 to remain standing, 1/2 movement speed. <br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro
|-
|-
|1 success
|| Jaw Lock || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str + 1/Special || Aggravated || Attacker Wins: Rival forced to ground and immobilized. Attacker Loses: Fails to immobilize target, inflicts the usual Bite damage.<br>If opponent doesn't surrender: Contested Strength + Brawl; opponent's diff is attacker's Brawl+4, attacker's diff is opponent's Brawl+2. Opponent fails: Remains pinned and immobilized. Opponent matches successes: Break free but take attacker's successes in damage (may attempt to soak). Opponent scores more successes than attacker: Breaks free, takes no damage.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
|A single animal responds.
|-
|-
|2 successes
|| Leaping Rake (Claw) || Dex + Athletics || 3 || Str + 1 || Aggravated || See Jumping under Physical Feats (W20 Core, pg 271) - If roll succeeds for chosen distance, attack target with Dexterity + Brawl vs 8 for damage, and land outside of enemy's attack reach. Fail: Land within enemy's reach.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Crinos
|One-quarter of the animals within earshot respond.
|-
|-
|3 successes
|| Leaping Rake (Weapon) || Dex+Athletics || 3 || As Weapon || Bashing/Lethal || As above, requires a weapon, Dexterity + Melee vs 8 for damage, and land outside of enemy's attack reach. Fail: Land within enemy's reach.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro
|Half of the animals respond.
|-
|-
|4 successes
|| Taunt (vs Non-Garou) || Man + Intimidation || Enemy Wits + 4 || - || - || Enemy suffers -1 die to their next action for every 2 successes by the taunter<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Homid, Glabro (All forms if the non-garou target can understand them)
|Most of the animals respond.
|-
|-
|5 successes
|| Taunt (vs Garou) || Man + Expression || Enemy Wits + 4 || - || - || As Above, if taunter scores at least one success, target makes a Rage roll. If an entire pack is taunting (see Pack Tactics), target frenzy diff is at -1. A target whose dice pool is reduced to nothing cant do anything except dodge.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
|All of the animals respond.
|-
|-
|| Wishbone || Dex + Brawl || 6; -1 for each attacker || Str || Special || First turn, to grip the target with the listed roll. Next turn, apply damage by pulling. Damage is Bashing for a slow pull, Lethal if using brute strength, Aggravated if using teeth.<br> If any one garou inflicts more than 3 health levels after soaking, the extremity in question is broken or removed.<br>Soaking: Target must soak each attacker's Strength roll separately.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Can use this tactic solo:'''</font> Ajaba, Bastet, Garou, Gurahl, Mokole, Nuwisha, Rokea
|}
|}


</div>
</tab>
<tab name="Fera Maneuvers">


<div class="mw-customtoggle-quell" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Quell the Beast</div>
=Fera Special Maneuvers=
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-quell">
''W20 Changing Breeds, pg 213-216''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] These maneuvers require the unique anatomy of a particular breed and can not be performed by everyone, often limiting them to the breed listed.


{{reddots|3|2}} <font color=red>'''Quell the Beast'''</font><br>
===Ananasi===
''V20 Core, pg 130''
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! Diff !! Damage !! Effect
|-
|| Engulf || Dex + Brawl ||6 (5) || Strength; suffocation || The Ananasi breaks over her foe like a wave, dissolving into a million biting spiders. Each turn that the werespider maintains the Engulf, the target cannot breathe and runs the risk of suffocation (see W20, p. 259). If the Ananasi is in a non-Crawlerling form when initiating an Engulf maneuver, the action requires a blood point, but the difficulty is reduced to 5 for the initial attack, thanks to the element of surprise.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Any form<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|-
|| Injection || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Venom only ||  The Ananasi can bite gently into a target, injecting venom without causing aggravated damage from his fangs. This can be used to poison opponents and to drink blood.
|}
===Bastet===
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! Diff !! Damage !! Effect
|-
|| Barrel Roll || Str + Athletics || 3 + Target's Str, max 9 || Special || The werecat attacks at running speed on all fours, grabs the opponent by the shoulders, and uses her body mass to topple him. Using the momentum of the tumble, she rolls with the opponent, immobilizing him, usually by biting over the muzzle of the prey to suffocate it.<br> The player makes a standard grapple attack to seize the opponent, and then reflexively rolls Strength + Athletics (difficulty 3 + target’s Strength, maximum 9) to wrestle her prey to the ground. The target then suffers suffocation (see W20, p. 259) and immobility until she can break the grapple.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Crinos, Chatro, Feline<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Garou and Nuwisha'''</font> can also perform this maneuver, though at +1 difficulty.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|}
===Corax===
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! Diff !! Damage !! Effect
|-
|| Eye Pluck || Dex + Brawl || 9 || Str +1 || Corax can attempt to pull the eye from a living opponent. If the Corax scores four successes on the attack roll, and at least two health levels of damage go unsoaked, she tears her enemy’s eye out. This raises the damage to aggravated even if the Corax is in raven form. Shapeshifters that don't suffer a Battle Scar from the maneuver can regrow the eye over time.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Crinos or Corvid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1 ''(House Rules: Changed from 2 Actions to 1)''
|-
|| Wing Swipe || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str +2 || This maneuver requires the Gift: Razor Feathers. The Corax lashes out with a wing, slashing the target with the cutting edge of his steel-hard feathers. This maneuver is also useful out of combat (for cutting ropes, slashing tires, and so on). Even if a wing swipe misses, the target must make a reflexive Dexterity roll (difficulty 5) or be off-balance (+1 difficulty to all Physical actions) for the next turn.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Crinos<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|}
===Mokole===
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! Diff !! Damage !! Effect
|-
|| Tail Lash || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str +1 || The Mokolé slashes at an opponent
with her tail. Characters in Suchid form may only use this maneuver if the opponent stands directly behind them. Damage is bashing, unless the Mokolé has a spiked tail.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Rokea'''</font> in Chasmus or Squamus can also perform this maneuver, but only underwater.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Archid or Suchid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|-
|| Head Butt || Dex + Brawl || 7 || Str || This maneuver is a charge forward, head lowered. It works exactly like Body Slam (see W20, p. 298) save that the Mokolé doesn’t suffer damage if in Archid form, and the target isn’t unbalanced unless knocked down.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Rokea'''</font> in Chasmus or Squamus can use a similar underwater ‘ramming’ maneuver., but only underwater.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Archid or Suchid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|-
|| Jaw Shear || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str +2 || This maneuver requires that the Mokolé successfully used a bite attack in the previous turn. Through this attack the Mokolé can snap his head back and forth, tearing the victim to shreds with his powerful jaws. Unless the victim can break the Mokolé’s grip (using an opposed Strength roll), the weresaurian can continue attempting this maneuver each turn.<br>A similar maneuver, Rolling Bite, sees the Mokolé rolling repeatedly with the victim in her mouth.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Rokea'''</font> in Gladius, Chasmus or Squamus can perform this maneuver.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ajaba'''</font> in Crinos can perform this maneuver.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Archid or Suchid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1
|-
|| Swallow Whole || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str +2 || Only a truly enormous character can perform this action, such as a massive Archid or particularly large Great White Rokea. The prey must be half the character’s size or less, and the attacker must land a bite attack, and then make an opposed Strength roll. If she succeeds, her opponent is swallowed whole. The opponent can continue to take limited actions for (Stamina) rounds before being smothered. If the attacker changes to a smaller form while her victim is alive inside of her, she suffers five levels of lethal damage as her victim erupts through her innards.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Rokea'''</font> in Chasmus can perform this maneuver.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Archid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 2
|-
|| Constrict || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str +2 || The Mokole must be in Archid and cannot move while constricting an opponent in her coils. On each action after having caught the victim, the player reflexively rolls Strength + Brawl against a difficulty of the trapped victim’s (Strength + Brawl –2, maximum 9). Success inflicts the Mokole’s Strength as bashing damage, while failure frees the victim. The Mokole can attack his trapped victim with teeth or claws at –1 difficulty; for others, attacking a constricted victim without harming the Mokole inflicts a +1 difficulty penalty.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Requires'''</font> the "Constricting Coils" characteristic<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Archid<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 1<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''House Rule:'''</font> Originally from the Nagah maneuvers (W20 Changing Breeds, pg 214), but it makes sense for Mokole with the correct characteristics.
|}
===Rokea===
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="width: 100px" | Maneuver !! Pool !! Diff !! Damage !! Effect
|-
|| Great Bite || Dex + Brawl || 6 || Str +3 ||  The Rokea takes hold of her opponent by the shoulders, and attempts to bite her victim’s head off. To grab hold of the opponent, the player must perform a standard grapple roll. The bite attack is administered in the same turn.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Mokolé'''</font> may also perform this maneuver in Archid form, if their characteristics make this possible.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable in:'''</font> Gladius<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Actions:'''</font> 2
|}


As the supreme predators of the natural world, Kindred are highly attuned to the bestial nature that dwells within every mortal heart. A vampire who develops this power may assert his will over a mortal (animal or human) subject, subduing the Beast within her. This quenches all powerful, strong emotions — hope, fury, love, fear — within the target. The Kindred must either touch his subject or stare into her eyes to channel his will effectively.
</tab>
<tab name="Pack Tactics">
=Pack Tactics=
''W20 Core, pg 300''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Packs bonded by a Pack Totem perform these maneuvers together at no penalty.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Unbonded packs that have only trained together perform these maneuvers at +1 difficulty together.


Mortals who lack the fire of their inner Beasts are quite tractable, reacting to even stressful situations with indifference. Even the most courageous or maddened mortal becomes apathetic and listless, while an especially sensitive individual may suffer from a phobic derangement while under the power’s influence.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Other Pack Tactics may include: Wishbone, Flank or Rear attacks, Sweep, as well as less martial tactics such as Long Running, Sensing, and Shadowing in Physical Feats (W20 Core, pg 270), or Hunting, Searching, and Tracking in Mental Feats (W20 Core, pg 282)<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Creating and successfully demonstrating a new pack tactic might be worth Glory or Wisdom renown.


Different Clans evoke this power in different ways, though the effect itself is identical. Tzimisce call it Cowing the Beast, since they force the mortal’s weaker spirit to shrivel in fear before the Kindred’s own inner Beast. Nosferatu refer to it as Song of Serenity, since they soothe the subject’s Beast into a state of utter complacency, thus allowing them to feed freely. Gangrel know the power as Quell the Beast, and force the mortal spirit into a state of fear or apathy as befits the individual vampire’s nature.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
 
|-
<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Manipulation + Intimidation if forcing down the Beast through fear, or Manipulation + Empathy if soothing it into complacency. The difficulty of the roll is 7 in either case. This is an extended action requiring as many total successes as the target has Willpower. Failure indicates that the player must start over from the beginning, while a botch indicates that the vampire may not affect that subject’s Beast for the remainder of the scene.
! style="width: 100px" | Tactic !! Pool !! Diff !! Packmates Required !! Effect
 
When a mortal’s Beast is cowed or soothed, she can no longer use or regain Willpower. She ceases all struggles, whether mental or physical. She doesn’t even defend herself if assaulted, though the Storyteller may allow a Willpower roll if the mortal believes her life is truly threatened. To recover from this power, the mortal’s player rolls Willpower (difficulty 6) once per day until she accumulates enough successes to equal the vampire’s Willpower. Kindred cannot be affected by this power.
 
Though a vampire’s Beast cannot be cowed with this ability, the Storyteller may allow characters to use the “soothing” variation of this power to pull a vampire out of frenzy. With three or more successes, the frenzying vampire may roll again to pull herself out of frenzy, using the same difficulty as the stimulus that caused the frenzy originally.
 
</div>
 
<div class="mw-customtoggle-subsu" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Subsume the Spirit</div>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-subsu">
 
{{reddots|4|1}} <font color=red>'''Subsume the Spirit'''</font><br>
''V20 Core, pg 131''
 
By locking his gaze with that of an animal, the vampire may mentally possess the creature. Some elders believe that since animals don’t have souls but spirits, the vampire can move his own soul into the animal’s body. Many younger vampires think it a matter of transferring one’s consciousness into the animal’s mind. In either case, it’s agreed that the beast’s weaker spirit (or mind) is pushed aside by the Kindred’s own consciousness. The vampire’s body falls into a motionless state akin to torpor while his mind takes control of the animal’s actions, remaining this way until the Kindred’s consciousness returns.
 
Some haughty Tzimisce eschew this power, considering it debasing to enter the body of a lesser creature. When they do stoop to using it, they possess only predators. Conversely, Gangrel revel in connecting to the natural world in this way. They delight in sampling different animals’ natures.
 
<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Manipulation + Animal Ken (difficulty 8) as the character looks into the animal’s eyes (see sidebar on p. 152). The number of successes allows the character to employ some mental Disciplines while possessing the animal, as noted below.
 
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
! style="min-width: 300px" | Result
|-
|-
| 1 success  
|| Taunt (vs Garou) || Man + Expression || Enemy Wits + 4 || 2+ || Enemy suffers -1 die to their next action for every 2 successes by the taunter(s), if taunter scores at least one success, target makes a Rage roll. target frenzy diff is at -1. A target whose dice pool is reduced to nothing cant do anything except dodge.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> All forms
| Cannot use Disciplines
|-
|-
| 2 successes
|| Fur Gnarl || Dex + Brawl || 7 || 2+ || Every 2 successes removes 1 soak from the enemy. Packmates in may attack that spot at +2 difficulty to take advantage of lowered soak. Soak reduced until damage is regenerated or armor reapplied.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
| Can use Auspex and other sensory powers
|-
|-
| 3 successes
|| Harrying || Dex + Athletics || 5 || 4+ || Contested Dex + Athletics vs 5 rolls "hand off" the target to each pack member.<br>Target wins: Attacker can try again at +1 diff for each success target scored over her own. Target maintains diff 5.<br>Attacker wins: +1 diff to target's diff with each successful "hand off" roll, and -1 to all die pools after the first successful exchange. Attacker maintains diff 5. Humans also lose one WP when "handed off" to the next packmate, human-like entities (vamps, changeling, mages, etc.) lose 1 WP per every 2 exchanges.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Hispo, Lupus
| Can also use Presence and other powers of emotional manipulation
|-
|-
| 4 successes
|| Savage/Dogpile || Special || - || 3+ || First attacker makes a successful Sweep or Tackle maneuver (see above). Next attackers make their rolls with modifiers from Knocked Down, Immobilized, or Stunned (see below) at ST discretion.<br>If target survives, they may try to stand with a successful Strength + Athletics roll, diff is 4 + 1 for each Garou involved in the attack (maximum 10).<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Any form
| Can also use Dementation, Dominate, and other powers of mental manipulation
|-
|-
| 5 successes
|| Circle || Dex + Athletics || 8 || 3+ || This maneuver serves to contain and intimidate opponents. The pack surrounds the target, trapping him within a tight circle. To attempt to break free of the circle, the victim must either enter frenzy or spend a Willpower point. Each character making up the circle performs a Dexterity + Athletics attack, difficulty 8, in response to any such bids for freedom; only a single circle member needs to succeed to keep the target contained within the circle.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Any form<br>''Source: W20 Changing Breeds, pg 216''
| Can also use Chimerstry, Necromancy, Thaumaturgy, and other mystical powers
|-
|-
|| Slice n' Dice || Dex + Brawl || 6 || 3+ || A favorite of the Ratkin, though employed by other Fera as well. The attackers blitz their target from all directions, overwhelming him with a flurry of slashes to different body parts. This increases the target's difficulty of dodge attempts by 1 per packmate involved (maximum 9). This maneuver requires the target to be surrounded by the pack.<br>[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Usable by:'''</font> Any form with claws<br>''Source: W20 Changing Breeds, pg 216''
|}
|}


This power entwines the character’s consciousness closely with the animal’s spirit, so much so that the character may continue to think and feel like that animal even after breaking the connection. This effect continues until the character spends a total of seven nights or three Willpower points to resist and finally overcome the animal nature. This should be roleplayed, though the character will be affected to a lesser degree if the player chooses to spend Willpower.
</tab>
 
<tab name="Special Styles">
At the end of any particularly exciting incident during possession, the player rolls Wits + Empathy (difficulty 8) for the character to retain his own mind. Failure indicates that the character’s mind returns to his own body, but still thinks in purely animalistic terms. A botch returns the character to his body, and also sends him into frenzy.
=Special Styles=
 
The character may travel as far from his own physical body as he chooses while possessing the animal. The character retains no conscious connection with his vampire body during this time, though. The vampire may also venture out during the day, albeit in the animal’s body. However, the character’s own body must be awake to do so, requiring a successful roll to remain awake (see p. 262). If the character leaves the animal’s body (by choice, if his body falls asleep, or after sustaining significant injury), the vampire’s consciousness returns to his physical form instantaneously.
 
Although the vampire has no conscious link to his body while possessing the animal, he does form a sympathetic bond. Anything the animal feels, the vampire also experiences, from pleasure to pain. In fact, any damage the animal’s body sustains is also applied to the character’s body, though the Kindred body may soak as normal. If the animal dies before the vampire’s soul can flee from the body, the character’s body falls into torpor. Presumably this is in sympathetic response to the massive trauma of death, but some Kindred believe that the vampire’s soul is cast adrift during this time and must find its way back to the body.


</div>
===Klaviskar===
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]]  Requires Melee 4 (Klaive Specialty)<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]]  Rules and Chart TBD


<div class="mw-customtoggle-draw" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Drawing Out the Beast</div>
===Kalindo===
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-draw">
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Rules and Chart TBD


{{reddots|5}} <font color=red>'''Drawing Out the Beast'''</font><br>
</tab>
''V20 Core, pg 132''
<tab name="Ranged Combat">
=Ranged Combat=
''W20 Core, pg 293''


At this level of Animalism, the Kindred has a keen understanding of the Beast Within, and is able to release his feral urges upon another mortal or vampire. The recipient of the vampire’s Beast is instantly overcome by frenzy. This is an unnatural frenzy, however, as the victim is channeling the Kindred’s own fury. As such, the vampire’s own behavior, expressions, and even speech patterns are evident in the subject’s savage actions.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
 
Gangrel and Tzimisce are especially fond of unleashing their Beasts onto others. Gangrel do so to stir their ghouls into inspired heights of savagery during combat. Tzimisce care less about who receives their Beast than retaining their own composure.
 
<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player must announce his preferred target (since it must be someone within sight, Drawing Out the Beast cannot be used if the vampire is alone), then roll Manipulation + Self-Control/Instinct (difficulty 8). Refer to the table below for the results:
 
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
! style="min-width: 400px" | Result
|-
|-
|1 success
|| Guns || Dex + Firearms
| The character transfers the Beast, but unleashes it upon a random individual.
|-
|-
|2 successes
|| Bows || Dex + Archery
| The character is stunned by the effort and may not act next turn, but transfers the Beast successfully. Alternatively, the character may act normally during the turn, but must spend a Willpower point or suffer a single level of lethal damage.
|-
|3+ successes
| The character transfers the Beast successfully.
|-
|-
|| Thrown || Dex + Athletics
|}
|}


If the attempt fails, the character himself immediately enters frenzy. As the character relaxes in expectation of relieving his savage urges, the Beast takes that opportunity to dig deeper. In this case, the frenzy lasts twice as long as normal and is twice as difficult to shrug off; its severity also increases exponentially. Botching this roll is even more catastrophic; the heightened frenzy grows so extreme that not even expending Willpower curbs its duration or effects. The character is a hapless victim to the terrible fury of his Beast, and may well hurl herself into a savage, flesh-rending rampage that leaves the Masquerade (and unfortunate nearby onlookers) in tatters.
===Range===
''W20 Core, pg 294''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Point blank range: Diff 4, 2 yards or less<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Medium range: Diff 6, the range listed on your +equip weapon item<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Long range: Diff 8, up to twice the listed range. Diff might be higher at ST discretion.


If the character leaves the target’s presence before the frenzy expends itself, the vampire loses his Beast, perhaps permanently. While no longer vulnerable to frenzy, the character cannot use or regain Willpower and becomes increasingly lethargic. To recover the Beast, he must find the person who now possesses it (who likely isn’t enjoying herself very much) and coax the Beast into its proper vessel. The most effective way to do so is to behave in ways that make the Beast want to return — however, this isn’t a guarantee that it will wish to do so. Alternatively, the character can simply kill the host (thus causing the Beast to return to the vampire immediately).
===Aiming===
''W20 Core, pg 293''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Requires at least 1 dot in Firearms for guns or Archery for bows<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Every Turn spent aiming adds +1 dice to the next attack, a max of character's Perception<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Scopes add a further +2 dice<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] These do stack<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Bonuses apply to a single shot, and the character must aim again to get the full bonus and effect


</div>
===Called Shots===
''W20 Core, pg 295''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Called Shots are made at +2 difficulty.


----
===Automatic Gunfire===
''W20 Core, pg 294''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Uses a minimum of 1/2 a clip of ammo<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Automatic gunfire adds +10 Dice to the attack roll at +2 Diff<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Can spray an area, evenly distributing successes between targets; If less successes are scored than there are targets, ST decides who has been hit or missed


==Auspex==
===3 Round Burst===
''V20 Core, pg 134''
''W20 Core, pg 295''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Gain three dice to the attack roll, at +1 difficulty


Auspex gives the vampire uncanny sensory abilities. She starts with the capacity to heighten her natural senses significantly, but as she grows in power, she can perceive psychic auras and read the thoughts of another being. Auspex can also pierce through mental illusions such as those created by Obfuscate — see the sidebar “Seeing the Unseen” on p. 142 for more.
===Reloading Firearms===
''W20 Core, pg 295''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Requires a Dexterity + Firearms vs 6 roll under normal circumstances, and takes one full turn. May have to roll anyway if badly hurt, in a moving car, etc. at ST discretion.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Having at least Firearms 1 may negate that roll.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Automatic weapons: Reloading an automatic weapon takes a single action. That gun can still be fired the same round it's reloaded, at -2 dice from the attack pool.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Revolvers: Can be reloaded as above with a speedloader. Without a speedloader, a revolver takes a full turn to reload, and no other actions are possible that turn, not even Rage actions.


However, a vampire with Auspex needs to be careful. Her increased sensory sensitivity can cause her to be drawn in by beautiful things or stunned by loud noises or pungent smells. Sudden or dynamic events can disorient an Auspex-using character unless her player makes a Willpower roll to block them out (difficulty of at least 4, although the more potent the source of distraction, the higher the difficulty). Failure overwhelms the character’s senses, making her oblivious to her surroundings for a turn or two. While the Malkavians and Toreador are more prone to these kinds of distractions, the Tremere and Tzimisce aren’t immune.
===Bows===
''W20 Core, pg 294''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] A character without Archery can try to use a bow, but each roll for her adds a +1 difficulty penalty<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Loading an arrow is an Automatic Action<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Cross Bows take 2 turns to ready and fire.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] On a botched roll, the bowstring snaps and must be replaced before the weapon can be used again: Wits + Archery or Crafts vs 7<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Considered nearly silent ranged weapons<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Fancy Shots such as a wooden arrow bull's eye in a vampire's heart requires at least 5 successes on the attack and 3 health levels of damage (after soaking) to pierce the heart.


Dots in Perception are very useful for using Auspex powers, as more successes help the character gain more sensory information.
===Thrown Weapons===
''W20 Core, pg 296''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Thrown weapons use Athletics<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Difficulty is usually 6, -1 for especially close targets, +1 or +2 difficulty for distant targets or awkward objects not designed to be thrown.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The range of a thrown object usually depends on the strength of the thrower and on the bulk and aerodynamics qualities of the object. STs should feel free to adjust difficulties and ranges according to circumstances.


<div style="border:2px ridge red;">
===Cover and Movement===
<font color=red>'''Seeing the Unseen'''</font><br>
''W20 Core, pg 294''<br>
''V20 Core, pg 142''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] This is Cover verse Firearms<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Shooting through a wall: the wall will soak 3 Dice of Damage


Auspex enables Kindred to perceive many things beyond the limits of lesser senses. Among its many uses, Auspex can detect the presence of a supernatural being who is hidden from normal sight (a vampire using Obfuscate, for example, or a ghost) or pierce illusions created by the Discipline of Chimerstry. Note: “Normal sight” includes regular, non-Auspex use of the Awareness skill.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
|-
! Cover !! Diff to hit target in cover !! Diff to shoot from cover
|-
|| Lying Flat (on Ground) ||+1 || 0
|-
|| Moving Target || +1 || +1
|-
|| Behind Wall || +2 || +1
|-
|| Only Head Exposed || +3 || +2
|}


{{reddots|1}} '''Obfuscate:''' When a vampire tries to use her heightened perceptions to notice a Kindred hidden with Obfuscate, she detects the subject’s presence if her Auspex rating is higher than his Obfuscate, and she succeeds at a Perception + Awareness roll (difficulty equals 7 minus the number of dots by which her Auspex exceeds his Obfuscate). Conversely, if the target’s Obfuscate outranks her Auspex, he remains undiscovered. If the two ratings are equal, both characters make a resisted roll of Perception + Awareness (Auspex user) against Manipulation + Subterfuge (Obfuscate user). The difficulty for both rolls is 7, and the character with the most successes wins.
</tab>
<tab name="Immobilization">
=Types of Immobilization=
''W20 Core, pg 292''


{{reddots|1}} '''Chimerstry:''' Likewise, vampires with Auspex may seek to penetrate illusions created with Chimerstry. The Auspex-wielder must actively seek to pierce the illusion (i.e., the player must tell the Storyteller that his character is trying to detect an illusion). The Auspex-user and Chimerstry-wielder then compare relative ratings, per Obfuscate, above. The process is otherwise identical to piercing Obfuscate.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Blinding:'''</font> Characters blinded by injury or darkness cannot dodge, block, or parry incoming attacks. All other actions add +2 to their difficulties. At ST discretion, a Shifter can take an action to sense her surroundings to try and reduce the penalty, or use a Gift to compensate for blindness.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Knockdown:'''</font> A character knocked off their feet must take an Action to scramble back up. If they can not do so, they may be considered to be partially immobilized.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Immobilization:'''</font> If held down, paralyzed, or otherwise rendered unable to move more than a little bit, any attacks made against them are made at -2 diff. If the target can not move at all, attacks may hit automatically.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Stunning:'''</font> If, after soak, a character takes health level damage that equals or exceeds their Stamina rating, they are stunned until the end of the following turn. Stunned characters cant do anything except stumble around in a daze. Attacks against a stunned character are made at -2 difficulty.


{{reddots|1}} '''Other Powers:''' Since the powers of beings like magi and wraiths function differently from vampiric Disciplines, a simple comparison of relative ratings isn’t applicable. To keep things simple, both characters make a resisted roll. The vampire rolls Perception + Awareness, while the subject rolls Manipulation + Subterfuge. Again, the difficulty is 7, and the character with the most successes wins.
</tab>
<tab name="Damage and Soak">


</div>
=Damage and Health=


==Defense/Dodge==
''W20 Core, pg 289<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Full Defense was removed from W20.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] The Dodge Ability was removed from W20, dodging uses Athletics in this system.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-height" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Heightened Senses</div>
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-height">
|-
! Maneuver !! Stats !! Difficulty !! Special
|-
|| Dodge || Dex + Athletics || 5 || Firearms are dodged at diff 9/10
|-
|| Block || Dex + Brawl || 5 || Hand to Hand Combat Only
|-
|| Parry || Dex + Melee || 5 || Blocking but with weapons
|}


{{reddots|1|4}} <font color=red>'''Heightened Senses'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Difficulty:'''</font> Diff is a sliding scale depending on the distance the character needs to move and the nature of the attack. Ex: Dodging a punch is diff 5, while dodging close-range firearms is diff 9 or 10. Blocking a punch is diff 5, while blocking a katana is diff 8.<br>
''V20 Core, pg 134''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Dodging/Blocking/Parrying:'''</font> Each success from the above rolls reduces the attackers successes by 1. Left over successes move to the Damage step of turn resolution. To completely dodge/block/parry an attack, the defender must score at least as many successes as the attacker.


This power increases the acuity of all of the vampire’s senses, effectively doubling the clarity and range of sight, hearing, and smell. While her senses of taste and touch extend no farther than normal, they likewise become far more distinct; the vampire could taste the hint of liquor in a victim’s blood or feel the give of the board concealing a hollow space in the floor. The Kindred may magnify her senses at will, sustaining this heightened focus for as long as she desires. At the Storyteller’s option, this may make hunting easier.
==Soaking Damage==
''W20 Core, pg 290''


Occasionally, this talent provides extrasensory or even precognitive insights. These brief, unfocused glimpses may be odd premonitions, flashes of empathy, or eerie feelings of foreboding. The vampire has no control over these perceptions, but with practice can learn to interpret them with a fair degree of accuracy.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kinfolk'''</font> can only naturally soak Bashing damage. Only armor can soak Lethal damage.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Corax'''</font> have +2 difficulty to soak Bashing damage in all forms.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kitsune'''</font> can soak Silver, unsoaked damage is Lethal.


Expanded senses come at a price, however. Bright lights, loud noises and strong smells present a hazard while the vampire uses this power. In addition to the possibility for distraction, an especially sudden or potent stimulus (like the glare of a spotlight or a clap of thunder) can blind or deafen the Kindred for an hour or more.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Bashing:'''</font> Blunt force trauma - Fists, clubs, table legs, etc.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Lethal:'''</font> Sharp edged weapons and firearms - spiked clubs, barbed wire, garrotes, chainsaws, etc.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Aggravated:'''</font> Severe injury - Shifter claws/teeth, vampire fangs, toxic waste, some fire and precious metals.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Soak:'''</font> All soak rolls are made as Stamina vs 6, with the following form restrictions:


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> It takes a reflexive action to activate this ability, but no roll or other cost is required. In certain circumstances, dice rolls associated with using the character’s sense (such as Perception + Alertness) decrease in difficulty by a number equal to the character’s Auspex rating when the power is engaged.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
 
|-
The Storyteller may also use this power to see if the character perceives a threat. In this case, the Storyteller privately rolls the character’s unmodified Auspex rating, applying whatever difficulty he feels best suits the circumstances. For example, sensing that a pistol is pointed at the back of the character’s head may require a roll of difficulty 5, while the sudden realization that a rival for Primogen is planning her assassination may require a 9. Note that even this “precognition” comes only as a result of interpreting details the Kindred is able to notice. It’s not an all-purpose insight or miraculous revelation.
! Type of Damage !! Can Soak In
 
|-
At the character’s discretion, she may selectively heighten one specific sense, rather than leaving them all on. In these cases, the difficulty to perceive stimuli using that sense drops by one, but the difficulty to avoid distraction or temporary bedazzlement increases by one.
|| Bashing || All Forms, Shifter or Kin
 
|-
This power does not let characters see in pitch darkness, as does Eyes of the Beast (p. 199), but it does reduce difficulty penalties to act in such darkness from +2 to +1, and the character may make ranged attacks in pitch darkness if she can hear, smell, or otherwise detect her foe.
|| Lethal || Shifters: All Forms<br>Kin/Humans: Stamina vs 8
 
|-
</div>
|| Aggravated || Soak in any form ''except'' breed form<br>Can not be soaked by non-Shifters
|-
|| Silver/Gold || Soak ''only'' in breed form, as per regular weapon damage. Can not be soaked in any other form, stings bare skin but does not cause damage in breed form.
|}


<div class="mw-customtoggle-aura" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Aura Perception</div>
===Silver/Gold Weapons===
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-aura">
''W20 Core, pg 256''<br>
'''For more in depth information on Silver and Gold, see the Sources of Damage tab'''


{{reddots|2|3}} <font color=red>'''Aura Perception'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Homids and Beast-born take no special damage from silver/gold while in their breed forms, and the weapon is treated as mundane for the purposes of damage.<br>
''V20 Core, pg 135''
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Shifters in any form other than their breed form cannot soak damage from Silver without a Gift or a Fetish, and the damage taken is Aggravated.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] A successful attack always deals one point of damage, even if the attacker rolled no successes for damage.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Metis may not soak silver in any form.


<div style="float: right; padding-left: 10px">
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
{| class="wikitable"
! Fera Breed
! Condition
! Weak to Silver?
! style="width: 175px" | Aura Colors
|-
|-
| Afraid || Orange
|Ajaba
|Yes, due to their similarity to Bastet
|-
|-
| Aggressive || Purple
|Ananasi
|No metal allergies (W20 CB, pg 60)
|-
|-
| Angry || Red
|Bastet
|Yes - Celican ALSO suffer from "Pure Iron" with the same rules as Silver (W20 CB, pg 78)
|-
|-
| Bitter || Brown
|Corax
|Weak vs Gold instead, same rules set as Silver
|-
|-
| Calm || Light Blue
|Gurahl
|Yes
|-
|-
| Compassionate || Pink
|Kitsune
|Yes, can soak vs 8, unsoaked damage is Lethal, other affects as per Garou (W20 CB, pg 126)
|-
|-
| Conservative || Lavender
|Mokole
|Weak vs both Gold and Silver (W20 CB, pg 142)
|-
|-
| Depressed || Grey
|Nuwisha
|No metal allergies, no Gnosis loss from Silver (W20 CB, pg 169)
|-
|-
| Desirous or Lustful || Deep Red
|Ratkin
|Yes
|-
|-
| Distrustful || Light Green
|Rokea
|Yes
|}
 
==Armor==
''W20 Core, pg 291''
 
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Kinfolk: Only armor can soak lethal damage.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] At ST's discretion armor may soak some kinds of Aggravated damage; a flak jacket might blunt the damage of claws or a silver bullet, but could not defend against fire or radiation.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
|-
|-
| Envious || Dark Green
! Armor Type !! Rating !! Dexterity Penalty
|-
|-
| Excited || Violet
|| Tough Hide || 1-3 || 0
|-
|-
| Generous || Rose
|| Reinforced Clothing || 1 || 0
|-
|-
| Happy || Vermilion
|| Biker Jacket || 1 || 1
|-
|-
| Hateful || Black
|| Leather Duster || 2 || 2
|-
|-
| Idealistic || Yellow
|| Bearskin Coat || 3 || 3
|-
|-
| Innocent || White
|| Steel Breastplate || 3 || 2
|-
|-
| Lovestruck || Blue
|| Kevlar Vest || 3 || 1
|-
|-
| Obsessed || Green
|| Flak Vest || 4 || 2
|-
|-
| Sad || Silver
|| Riot Suit || 5 || 3
|-
|-
| Spiritual || Gold
|| Trashcan Lid || 2 || (none, but requires Dex+Melee vs 6 to employ)
|}
 
</tab>
<tab name="Kinfolk Damage">
 
=Kinfolk/Human Injury=
''W20 Core, pg 256''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kinfolk'''</font> can only naturally soak Bashing damage. Only armor can soak Lethal damage.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Kitsune'''</font> heal as Humans<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ananasi'''</font> do not regenerate without spending Blood Points. 1 blood point to heal 1 Bashing/Lethal, a full day of rest and 5 blood points to heal 1 Aggravated, otherwise heal as humans.
 
===Bashing Damage===
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
|-
|-
| Suspicious || Dark Blue
! Health Level !! Recovery Time
|-
|-
| Anxious || Auras appear scrambled like static or white noise
|| Bruised to Wounded || One hour
|-
|-
| Confused || Mottled, shifting colors
|| Mauled || Three hours
|-
|-
| Diablerist || Black veins in aura
|| Crippled || Six hours
|-
|-
| Daydreaming || Sharp flickering colors
|| Incapacitated || 12 hours
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Humans only require medical treatment when Mauled or worse.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Bashing damage past Wounded can have consequences such as degraded vision/hearing from a concussion, excruciating pain from broken ribs or internal bruising, etc. Medical care can negate these effects and is necessary for a human to make a full recovery.
 
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] If a mortal reaches Incapacitated from Bashing damage, they fall unconscious but do not die.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Any further damage upgrades their least severe Bashing health level to Lethal (see below). In this way, a human can be beaten to death.
 
===Lethal Damage===
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
|-
|-
| Frenzied || Rapidly rippling colors
! Health Level !! Recovery Time
|-
|-
| Psychotic || Hypnotic, swirling colors
|| Bruised || One day
|-
|-
| Vampire || Aura colors are pale
|| Hurt || Three days
|-
|-
| Ghoul || Pale blotches in the aura
|| Injured || One week
|-
|-
| Magic Use || Myriad sparkles in aura
|| Wounded || One month
|-
|-
| Werebeast || Bright, vibrant aura
|| Mauled || Two months
|-
|-
| Ghost || Weak, intermittent aura
|| Crippled || Three months
|-
|-
| Faerie || Rainbow highlights in aura
|| Incapacitated || Five months
|}
|}
</div>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Any Lethal wound worse than Injured requires medical attention before it will heal.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] If left untreated, the human suffers another level of Lethal damage each day as the wound re-opens or becomes infected.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Mauled from Lethal damage requires rest and recovery after medical attention.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Crippled or Incapacitated from Lethal damage requires constant medical attention for the time listed below for any healing to take place.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] A human who reaches Incapacitated through Lethal damage is at death's door, one more lethal level of any sort and they will die.


Using this power, the vampire can perceive the psychic “auras” that radiate from mortals and supernatural beings alike. These halos comprise a shifting series of colors that take practice to discern with clarity. Even the simplest individual has many shifting hues within his aura; strong emotions predominate, while momentary impressions or deep secrets flash through in streaks and swirls.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Healing is handled one level at a time, starting with the most severe.<br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Example:'''</font> A human that has reached Injured from Lethal damage must rest for 1 week to heal the Injured level, then 3 days to heal the Hurt level, and 1 additional day to heal the Bruised level.<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Aggravated damage heals the same as Lethal for humans. The only difference is that Aggravated damage is harder to heal through supernatural means.


The colors change in sympathy with the subject’s emotional state, blending into new tones in a constantly dancing pattern. The stronger the emotions involved, the more intense the hues become. A skilled vampire can learn much from her subject by reading the nuances of color and brilliance in the aura’s flow.
</tab>
<tab name="Sources of Injury">


Aside from perceiving emotional states, vampires use Aura Perception to detect supernatural beings. The colors in Kindred auras, while intense, are quite pale; mage halos often flare and crackle with arcane power; the race of shapeshifters has strikingly bright, almost frantic, auras; ghosts have weak auras that flicker fitfully like a dying flame; and faerie creatures’ radiance is shot through with capricious rainbow hues.
=Sources of Injury=
''W20 Core, pg 257''


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> After the character stares at the subject for at least a few seconds, the player rolls Perception + Empathy (difficulty 8); each success indicates how much of the subject’s aura the character sees and understands (see the table below). A failure indicates that the play of colors and patterns yields no prevailing impression. A botch indicates a false or erroneous interpretation. The Storyteller may wish to make this roll, thus keeping the player in the dark as to the veracity of the character’s interpretation.
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
 
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
! style="min-width: 300px" | Result
|-
|-
|1 success
! Object !! Gnosis lost
| Can distinguish only the shade (pale or bright).
|-
|-
|2 successes
|| Silver Bullets || 1 point per 5 bullets
| Can distinguish the main color.
|-
|-
|3 successes
|| Klaive || 1 point
| Can recognize the color patterns.
|-
|-
|4 successes
|| Grand Klaive || 2 points
| Can detect subtle shifts.
|-
|-
|5 successes
| Can identify mixtures of color and pattern.
|}
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Silver/Gold:'''</font> Not everything called "silver" or "gold" contains enough of the element to actually harm a Shifter weak to those metals. "Sterling silver" (over 90% silver) is certainly pure enough to be spiritually active, "Jewelry Silver" (80% pure) might be enough at ST discretion. Argentite and Horn Silver are compounds and not spiritually pure enough to cause harm, nor are compounds with "silver" in the name, including silver nitrate, silver chloride, or silver iodide. Some items can be plated with silver to cause damage, but the plating is ruined after a couple of blows and the Aggravated damage bonus is lost.<br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] For every five silver objects a '''PACK''' carries, '''ALL''' its members suffer the following Gnosis penalties, which persist in all forms, including breed forms. In addition, carrying too many silver objects, especially bullets, may cause a loss of Honor or Wisdom for the entire pack.


The Aura Colors chart offers some example ideas of common colors and the emotions they reflect that Storytellers can use. Note that it is nearly impossible to determine with certainty if a particular character is lying or not with this power – vampires are inherently deceitful by nature, but even mortals might react with anxiety to questions while still being truthful. It is, however, helpful in determine the target’s emotional state, which might lead the vampire to decide that a particular target is suspicious.
----


A character may choose to perform a very cursory aura scan of a large area like a nightclub’s dance floor or the audience in a gallery. In this case, the player decides which characteristic of auras she’s looking for, and that’s the only information she’s able to glean if the roll is successful. (At the Storyteller’s discretion, on this general scan roll, more successes on the roll may more quickly yield what the character seeks.) For example, the player may specify, “Who’s the most nervous person in attendance?” or “Are there any vampirically pale auras among the CEO’s entourage?” Thereafter, the player may narrow down her scrutiny of a single individual, with an additional roll as normal.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Disease:'''</font> Diseases inflict a number of health levels of damage to a patient, either Bashing or Lethal depending on the severity of the disease. With rest and care, the disease runs its course and the health levels return.<br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Shifters aren't immune to most diseases, but they recover faster. Their healing abilities protect them from relatively minor ailments like the common cold and flu (diseases that normally inflict Bashing damage). Even truly debilitating autoimmune diseases cant inflict lasting harm, though the shifter can still serve as a carrier. For a shifter to notice a disease, it would have to be supernatural in origin, and thus deal Aggravated damage.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Falling:'''</font> 1 die of Bashing for every 10 feet/3 meters of falling, changed to Lethal if the surface landed on has sharp objects.<br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Terminal Velocity: Falls more than 100 feet/30 meters deal 10 dice of Lethal damage. Armor only provides one half its normal protection.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Fire:'''</font> Damage from fire is always Aggravated and ignores Armor. Shifters can soak fire damage as normal, with a varying difficulty based on the heat of the blaze. Fire deals specific health levels of damage, not damage dice. Fire damage is automatically successful unless soaked - a character takes two health levels of Aggravated damage per turn if trapped in a bonfire, not two dice of damage per turn.<br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Appearance: If a character falls to Maimed, they suffer temporary scarring from the flames, and their Appearance is reduced by 1 until they recover to at least Bruised. If the character is reduced to Crippled or Incapacitated by fire, the burns cover the majority of their body, reducing Appearance by 2. Scarring may be permanent if the character is Incapacitated and gains a Battle Scar by remaining active (via Rage Healing).


The character may focus in on a particular subject’s aura only once per scene with any degree of clarity. Any subsequent attempts that result in failure should be considered botches. It is very easy for the character to imagine seeing what she wants to see when judging someone’s intentions. After 24 hours, the character may try again at no penalty.
{|
 
| style="vertical-align: top; width: 10%; padding-right: 25px" |
It is possible, though difficult, to sense the aura of a being who is otherwise invisible to normal sight. Refer to "Seeing the Unseen," W20 Vampire Core, pg 142, for more information.
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
 
|-
</div>
! Soak difficulty !! Heat of Fire
 
|-
<div class="mw-customtoggle-sptou" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] The Spirit's Touch</div>
|| 3 || Heat of a candle (1st degree burns)
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-sptou">
|-
 
|| 5 || Heat of a torch (2nd degree burns)
{{reddots|3|2}} <font color=red>'''The Spirit's Touch'''</font><br>
|-
''V20 Core, pg 136''
|| 7 || Heat of a Bunsen burner (3rd degree burns)
 
|-
When someone handles an object for any length of time, he leaves a psychic impression on the item. A vampire with this level of Auspex can “read” these sensations, learning who handled the object, when he last held it, and what was done with it recently. (For these purposes, a corpse counts as an “object” and can be read accordingly.) These visions are seldom clear and detailed, registering more like a kind of “psychic snapshot.” Still, the Kindred can learn much even from such a glimpse. Although most visions concern the last person to handle the item, a long-time owner leaves a stronger impression than someone who held the object briefly.
|| 8 || Heat of an electrical fire
 
|-
Gleaning information from the spiritual residue requires the vampire to hold the object and enter a shallow trance. She is only marginally aware of her surroundings while using The Spirit’s Touch, but a loud noise or jarring physical sensation breaks the trance instantly.
|| 9 || Heat of a chemical fire
 
|-
<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Perception + Empathy. The difficulty is determined by the age of the impressions and the mental and spiritual strength of the person or event that left them. Sensing information from a pistol used for a murder hours ago may require a 4, while learning who owned a bloodstained puppet fashioned a century ago might be a 9.
|| 10 || Molten metal
 
|-
The greater the individual’s emotional connection to the object, the stronger the impression he leaves on it — and the more information the Kindred can glean from it. Events involving strong emotions (a gift-giving, a torture, a long family history) likewise leave stronger impressions than short or casual contact do. Assume that each success offers one piece of information, as per the chart below.
|}
 
| style="vertical-align: top; width: 10%; padding-right: 25px" |
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="25%"
{| class="wikitable" style="border:2px ridge green;"
! style="min-width: 100px" | Successes
|-
! style="min-width: 300px" | Information
! Health Levels !! Size of Fire
|-
|| One || Torch; part of the body is exposed to flame
|-
|| Two || Bonfire; half of the body is exposed to flame
|-
|| Three || Inferno; all of the body is exposed to flame
|-
|}
|}
----
{| class="wikitable" style="float: right; padding-left: 10px; border:2px ridge green;"
|-
! Stamina !! Time
|-
|| 1 || 30 seconds
|-
|| 2 || 1 minute
|-
|-
|Botch
|| 3 || 2 minutes
| The character is overwhelmed by psychic impressions for the next 30 minutes and unable to act.
|-
|-
|Failure
|| 4 || 4 minutes
| No information of value.
|-
|-
|1 success
|| 5 || 8 minutes
| Very basic information: the last owner’s gender or hair color, for instance.
|-
|-
|2 successes
|| 6 || 12 minutes
| A second piece of basic information.
|-
|-
|3 successes
|| 7 || 20 minutes
| More useful information about the last owner, such as age and state of mind the last time he used the item.
|-
|-
|4 successes
|| 8 || 30 minutes
| The person’s name.
|-
|-
|5+ successes
| A wealth of information: nearly anything you want to know about the person’s relationship with that object is available.
|}
|}
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Poison and Drugs:'''</font> Few poisons or drugs have a noticeable effect on Shifters. Shifters that wish to become intoxicated must do so in their breed form, where their regenerative system is less effective, or awaken the spirit of the drug using the Rite of Spirit Awakening, which increases the substance's potency. The following list examples of effects on Shifters either in their breed form or once the substance has been Awakened. it's very difficult for a Shifter to become physically addicted to any substance due to their healing gifts, but it's still possible in extreme circumstances.
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Alcohol:'''</font> -1 to Dexterity and Intelligence die pools for every two drinks worth of alcohol. Reduce the penalty by 1 for every hour that passes after they stop drinking.
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Cocaine/Meth:'''</font> Immediately gain 1 point of temporary Rage. For the rest of the scene, the character only needs 3 successes on a Rage roll to Frenzy.


At the Storyteller’s discretion, some impressions on objects may be so strong — a knife plunged into Caesar’s breast, the tip of the Spear of Destiny, a fang pulled from the maw of Dracula — that any use of this power may be deemed a success.
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Hallucinogens:'''</font> All die pools are reduced by 1 to 3 dice as the character is unable to concentrate. World perception is altered and their reactions will depend on what they believe to be happening. A character that takes hallucinogens before meditating regains Gnosis at 2 points per hour instead of 1. Lasts for (8 minus Stamina) hours.


</div>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Heroin/Morphine/Barbiturates:'''</font> -2 to Dexterity and all Ability pools for (10 minus Stamina) minutes. The character experiences a dreamlike state for (12 minus Stamina) hours, during which time difficulties of Rage rolls are increased by 1.
 
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Marijuana:'''</font> -1 from Perception based pools and increase the difficulties of all Rage rolls. Effects last for about a half an hour.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-tele" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Telepathy</div>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Weak Poison:'''</font> Character takes between 1 and 3 health levels of Lethal damage per scene. Poisons have a maximum amount of damage that they can apply, usually between 5 and 10 levels of damage. If the character doesn't regenerate this damage (due to being in breed form, or being human) subtract 1 from all die pools until the damage is healed. Shifters in a regenerating form burns through the poison's effects in seconds and suffers no ill effects.
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-tele">


{{reddots|4|1}} <font color=red>'''Telepathy'''</font><br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Strong Poison:'''</font> Character takes between 1 and 3 health levels of Lethal damage per scene. Poisons have a maximum amount of damage that they can apply, usually between 5 and 10 levels of damage. A Shifter can regenerate this damage normally, but until the poison has run its course and all the damage has been healed, subtract 1 from all die pools. The only toxins to have a significant effect on Shifters are supernaturally enhanced and thus deal Aggravated damage that may be regenerated.
''V20 Core, pg 137''


The vampire projects a portion of her consciousness into a nearby mortal’s mind, creating a mental link through which she can communicate wordlessly or even read the target’s deepest thoughts. The Kindred “hears” in her own mind the thoughts plucked from a subject as if they were spoken to her.
''(W20 Changing Breeds, pg 61)''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]][[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ananasi'''</font> have venom producing glands (and fangs) available in all forms. Their current form affects the potency. <br>
:[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] Pithus delivers full strength venom, while Lilian is somewhat diluted.<br>
Storytellers should determine the amount of damage and any extra effects based on the particular "spider" species, but venom always deals Aggravated damage that can only be healed through medical attention or magical healing. Left unattended, the damage will never heal.


This is one of the most potent vampiric abilities, since, given time, a Kindred can learn virtually anything from a subject without him ever knowing. The Tremere and Tzimisce in particular find this power especially useful in gleaning secrets from others, or for directing their mortal followers with silent precision.
''(W20 Changing Breeds, pg 182)''<br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]][[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Ratkin'''</font> blood is poisonous to anyone who drinks it, including Vampires and Ananasi. Anyone drinking Ratkin blood suffers one point of unsoakable Lethal damage for every point of Rage the Ratkin possesses.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Radiation and Toxic Waste:'''</font> Many Wyrm locations on Earth are located on or near irradiated landscapes and toxic waste dumps. Also, some minions of the Wyrm use radiation based attacks. Damage from these sources is resolved the same as damage from Fire, but takes twice as long to heal.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Suffocation and Drowning:'''</font> A character can hold their breath for a maximum amount of time based on their Stamina. Changing forms WHILE immersed in a non-breathable medium does not change this time period; lung capacity may increase, but the amount of air currently in those lungs does not. During strenuous activity like combat, the character can hold their breath for a number of ''turns'' equal to twice their Stamina rating. Willpower spent on holding one's breath adds another 30 seconds of life. Willpower spent during combat or strenuous activity gives another ''turn'' of activity.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> The player rolls Intelligence + Subterfuge (difficulty of the subject’s current Willpower points). Projecting thoughts into the target’s mind requires one success. The subject recognizes that the thoughts come from somewhere other than his own consciousness, though he cannot discern their actual origin without a successful Perception + Awareness roll (difficulty equal to the vampire’s Manipulation + Subterfuge).
Once a character has run out of breath, they begin to drown/suffocate and take 1 health level of Lethal damage each turn. This damage cannot be regenerated until the shifter can breathe again. If the character reaches Incapacitated, they revert to their breed form and will die in a number of turns equal to their Stamina.
----
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Temperature Extremes:'''</font> Extreme heat (above 200°F or 100°C) causes damage in much the same way as Fire. At -40 and below, subtract 1 from all Dexterity die pools due to frostbite. For every 10°F (6°C) lower, subtract another die.


To read minds, one success must be rolled for each item of information plucked or each layer of thought pierced. Deep secrets or buried memories are harder to obtain than surface emotions or unspoken comments, requiring five or more successes to access.
</tab>
<tab name="Battle Scars">


Reading thoughts with Telepathy does not commonly work upon the undead mind. A character may expend a Willpower point to make the effort, making the roll normally afterward. Likewise, it is equally difficult to read the thoughts of other supernatural creatures. However, the character may project her thoughts without expending a Willpower point. These thoughts, however, are still obviously intrusions into the target’s mind, but the character may attempt to disguise her mental “voice” with a roll of Manipulation + Subterfuge (difficulty equals the target’s Perception + Awareness) so the target doesn’t recognize her as the “speaker.”
=Battle Scars=
''W20 Core, pg 259''


Storytellers are encouraged to describe thoughts as flowing streams of impressions and images, rather than as a sequence of prose (powers such as Telepathic Communication are of more use for that). Instead of making flat statements like “He’s planning on killing his former lover’s new boyfriend,” say “You see a fleeting series of visions: A couple kissing passionately in a doorway, then the man walking alone at night; you suddenly see your hands, knuckles white, wrapped around a steering wheel, with a figure crossing the street ahead; your heart, mortal now and hammering with panic as you hear the engine rev wildly; and above all, a blazing anger coupled with emotional agony and a panicked fear of loss.” Such descriptions not only add to the story, but they also force the player to interpret for herself what her character gleans. After all, understanding minds — especially highly emotional or deranged minds — is a difficult and often puzzling task.
A human whose fingers are bitten off will need surgery and will lose some function in those fingers (if they didn't lose the fingers entirely). A Shifter can grow the missing tissue and nerve connections back, even regrowing the fingers if they cant be reattached. Some injuries, especially those caused by other Shifters, can cause lasting damage. These wounds occur when a character channels her Rage to remain active in the face of death. A Shifter can also acquire a battle scar as a result of a particularly brutal attack, or from torture. The following is a list of examples and their possible Glory awards.


</div>
<font color=green>'''Glory:'''</font> Gaining any Battle Scar awards Glory, the more visible scars tend to carry larger rewards. Healing a Battle Scar comes with a loss of 1 Glory. Some tribes such as Children of Gaia or Glass Walkers may recognize the Wisdom in healing a Battle Scar.


<div class="mw-customtoggle-psypro" style="cursor:pointer; color:red">[+/-] Psychic Projection</div>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Superficial Scars:'''</font> Large, ugly masses of scar tissue mar your character’s body and remain hairless in all forms. These scars may reduce a character’s Appearance dice pools by one, depending on the situation. 1 temporary Glory.
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-psypro">


{{reddots|4|1}} <font color=red>'''Psychic Projection'''</font><br>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Deep Scar:'''</font> Much the same as a superficial scar, except that muscles are affected as well, and the scar aches when the humidity changes. 1 temporary Glory.
''V20 Core, pg 138''


The Kindred with this awesome ability projects her senses out of her physical shell, stepping from her body as an entity of pure thought. The vampire’s astral form is immune to physical damage or fatigue, and can “fly” with blinding speed anywhere across the earth — or even underground — so long as she remains below the moon’s orbit.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Improper Bone Setting:'''</font> One of your character’s bones snapped and did not heal properly. If that area of your body receives two or more health levels of damage at once in the future (at the Storyteller’s discretion, depending on the description of the attack), the bone snaps again, causing an additional level of lethal damage. 1 temporary Glory.


The Kindred’s material form lies in a torpid state while her astral self is active, and the vampire isn’t aware of anything that befalls her body until she returns to it. An ephemeral silver cord connects the Kindred’s psyche to her body. If this cord is severed, her consciousness becomes stranded in the astral plane (the realm of ghosts, spirits, and shades). Attempting to return to the vampire’s physical shell is a long and terrifying ordeal, especially since there is no guarantee that she will accomplish the journey successfully. This significant danger keeps many Kindred from leaving their bodies for long, but those who dare can learn much.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Cosmetic Damage:'''</font> A readily visible injury that doesn’t have a significant debilitating effect, such as a missing ear, a hare lip, or an exposed part of the skull. It looks grotesque to humans and impressive to Garou. Reduce Appearance by one dot when dealing with humans, unless you cover or conceal the damage. 2 temporary Glory.


<font color=red>'''System:'''</font> Journeying in astral form requires the player to expend a point of Willpower and make a Perception + Awareness roll. Difficulty varies depending on the distance and complexity of the intended trip; 5 is within sight, 7 is nearby or to a familiar location, and 9 reflects a trip far from familiar territory (a first journey from North America to the Far East; trying to shortcut through the earth). The greater the number of successes rolled, the more focused the character’s astral presence is, and the easier it is for her to reach her desired destination.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Broken Jaw:'''</font> Similar to Improper Bone Setting, your jaw was shattered, and it is now out of alignment with your tongue. All difficulties for actions involving talking increase by 2, and the difficulty of bite attacks increases by one. Your character’s speech is slurred and should be roleplayed appropriately. 1 temporary Glory.


Failure means the character is unable to separate her consciousness from her body, while a botch can have nasty consequences — flinging her astral form to a random destination on Earth or in the spirit realm, arriving in a place where the sun is active (necessitating a frenzy roll, although the sunlight doesn’t do any damage), or hurtling toward the desired destination so forcefully that the silver cord snaps.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Missing Eye:'''</font> One of your eyes was gouged out and hasn’t grown back. The difficulties on all rolls involving depth perception or weapon firing (including using thrown weapons) increase by three. Any Perception rolls based on sight take a +2 difficulty penalty. 2 temporary Glory.


The player may spend a point of Willpower to activate this power, and an additional point of Willpower to gain the success necessary to perform the jaunt. This is an exception to the normal rule where a player may not spend more than a single point of Willpower per turn. Each scene in Psychic Projection requires another point of Willpower and a new roll. Failure indicates that the vampire has lost her way and must retrace the path of her silver cord. A botch at this stage means the cord snaps, stranding the character’s psychic form in the mysterious astral plane.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Gelded:'''</font> Your reproductive system has been damaged. You are incapable of siring or bearing children. Males with this wound are not necessarily impotent, but gelded characters of any gender increase the difficulties of seduction and using Animal Attraction by two. 1 temporary Glory.


An astral form may travel at great speeds (the Storyteller can use roughly 1000 miles per hour or 1500 kilometers per hour as a general guide) and carries no clothing or material objects of any kind. Some artifacts are said to exist in the spirit world, and the character can try to use one of these tools if she finds one. The character cannot bring such relics to the physical world when she returns to her body, however.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Collapsed Lung:'''</font> One of your lungs was punctured during battle. You find it difficult to breathe and to exert yourself. You lose one die on any Stamina roll involving exertion and an additional die after five turns of physical activity. In addition, you may hold your breath for only half the listed time (see p. 259). 1 temporary Glory.


Interaction with the physical world is impossible while using Psychic Projection. At best, the character may spend a Willpower point to manifest as a ghost-like shape. This apparition lasts one turn before fading away; while she can’t affect anything physically during this time, the character can speak. Despite lacking physical substance, an astral character can use Auspex normally. At the Storyteller’s discretion, such a character may employ some or all Animalism, Dementation, Dominate, Necromancy, Obtenebration, Presence, Thaumaturgy, and similar non-corporeal powers she has, though this typically requires a minimum of three successes on the initial Psychic Projection roll.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Missing Fingers:'''</font> You have lost at least three fingers on one hand. Dexterity rolls involving that hand suffer a +3 difficulty penalty. Your damage dice pool for claw attacks with that hand is halved (rounding down). 2 temporary Glory.


If two astral shapes encounter one another, they interact as if they were solid. They may talk, touch, and even fight as if both were in the material world. Since they have no physical bodies, astral characters seeking to interact “physically” substitute Mental and Social Traits for Physical ones (Wits replaces Dexterity, Manipulation supplants Strength, and Intelligence replaces Stamina). Due to the lack of a material form, the only real way to damage another psychic entity is to cut its silver cord. When fighting this way, consider Willpower points to be health levels; when a combatant loses all of her Willpower, the cord is severed.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Maimed Limb:'''</font> One of your limbs has been mauled to the point of uselessness. If you lost a leg, you move at half speed in all forms. If you lost an arm, your Hispo and Lupus speed is reduced to three-quarters. You are not able to use the damaged limb for any purpose. 3 temporary Glory.


Although an astrally projected character remains in the reflection of the mortal world, she may venture further into the spirit realms, especially if she becomes lost. Other beings with particular sensitivity to psychic activity, such as ghosts, werewolves, and even some magi, travel the astral plane as well, and can interact with a vampire’s psychic presence normally (although the astrally projected character is not considered a “ghost” for powers such as Necromancy). The observing character notices the astrally projecting vampire with a Perception + Awareness roll (difficulty 8), requiring more successes than the Psychic Projection activation roll. Even those who do notice you won’t be able to identify you; you are merely an immaterial shade hovering in the general area. Storytellers are encouraged to make trips into the spirit world as bizarre, mysterious, and dreamlike as possible. The world beyond is a vivid and fantastic place, where the true nature of things is stronger and often strikingly different from their earthly appearances.
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Spinal Damage:'''</font> Your spine was fractured, and you have trouble keeping your balance. Your Dexterity is reduced by one, you subtract two from your initiative rating, and you must spend Willpower on any roll involving balance, precision, or remaining still. 2 temporary Glory.


</div>
[[File:Greendot-filled.png|10px]] <font color=green>'''Brain Damage:'''</font> Severe damage to the head, or perhaps lack of oxygen for a long period of time, has reduced your mental faculties. You lose one dot from one Mental Attribute (Storyteller’s choice). Additionally, you must roll one die and subtract that number of dots from your Gnosis, Willpower or Knowledges (player’s choice of where these points are lost). You are most likely partially amnesiac as well. 2 temporary Glory.


----
</tab>
</tabs>

Latest revision as of 18:36, 4 December 2025

Note: White Wolf game organization isn't the best, and there are occasions where their rules directly contradict each other, sometimes in the same sentence. We've done our best to fix White Wolf's mistakes.

The Basics

There's a lot of stuff here, huh? Don't be intimidated, combat isn't that rough. The order of operations goes like this:

Initiative: The ST will usually kick this off with +combat/init/start, and you can look at the list with +combat/init.
Declare your action: What you plan to do on your turn, what gift(s) you want to use, and if you'll spend Rage
Take your action: Spend your Rage or Gnosis (remember, you cant spend both in the same turn!), make your attack roll, allow the ST to try to Dodge, roll your damage if applicable, allow the ST to soak damage
Regenerate! Once per turn you can roll Stamina vs 8 to regain 1 health!

And that's it, things move on to the next person.

[+/-] Helpful Code Tips

Helpful code tips:

Have a quick peek at yourself: +mysheet combat will show you your current combat stats and your current health. Good for checking how hurt you are or what a form's stat bonus is.
Did you spend something? +lose willpower, +lose rage, +lose gnosis. Remember that you have to declare the spend BEFORE you make your roll, especially in the case if Willpower.
Did you gain something? +gain willpower, +gain rage, +gain gnosis
Did you take damage? Use +hurt/type to set damage on yourself. +hurt/bashing 1, +hurt/lethal 1 or +hurt/agg 1. The code is weird, enter your damage 1 point at a time to save yourself some headache.
Did you heal damage? +heal will wash away that damage! Regeneration/healing magic always goes for the worst damage first, so +heal/lethal or /bashing 1 for regeneration, or if someone used Mother's Touch you can +heal/agg 1 to clear up the real nasty wounds.
Soak rolls never have a wound penalty: +roll/nowound stamina vs <difficulty> any time you have to soak damage! Use /nowound for any roll that shouldn't be affected by your wound penalty.
Don't spam yourself: +sheet/section me/abilities to check if you have Enigmas, or +sheet/section me/powers to see if you have a gift you want to use next turn. Look at a single section of your sheet to check if you have something, rather than bring up the whole damned thing!

[+/-] Helpful Scene Tips

Helpful scene tips:
Discord: Coordinating in voice chat is really helpful, but don't feel pressured to do so. Not everyone likes talking out loud or even sharing their contact deets.
Copy down the Init list: Once all the NPCs have been added and it's time to get cracking, type +combat/init to see the list, and copy it somewhere you can keep track of it in a notepad or in your pack's Discord server. You can edit it to take out the dead guys and keep up with whose turn it is much more easily this way.
Keep side chatter to a minimum: It's hard not to joke and banter during a scene, but try to keep most of it to pages or +pack chat in another window, Discord, or something else in order to keep the scene from getting confused, side tracked, or hard for the ST to keep organized.
Be cool, man: Try to remember that it's a game, you're here to have fun and make an imaginary person look cool. That imaginary person might fail some times, but use that as an opportunity to change your plan or have a funny story for later. Be open to situational rules changes with the ST in order to get some challenge and story out of the scene you're in, or even suggest something of your own if what you want to do is a little bit crazy.
Communicate: If you have questions about something in the scene, ask! Same if you aren't sure how some mechanic works, if you need more clarification before your hair brained scheme takes off, or if said scheme is even possible. It's okay to pause the scene and hash something out, especially if you're new to the game or unfamiliar with combat, and if you're unhappy with how something is going, talk about it.
Stay focused! If you're part of a +event or plot scene, try and stay focused so that the scene can move quickly. You signed up for this scene, you volunteered, people are waiting on you to pose or to take your turn in combat. Real Life, health, interruptions, those things happen and it's okay, but please be considerate and save your videogame or web comics or whatever until after the scene!

Mistakes? Did you notice mistakes in this page? Is there information for your breed's combat abilities that aren't on here? Put in a +request for Mr. Gutsy to get off his lazy butt and fix it! Just make sure you note what's missing and where to find it, if you have that information. Thank you!

Combat

Sources: W20 Core, pg 288-303

Initiative

Use +help +combat for commands to start/view/add/remove from the Initiative list

Certain gifts such as Spirit of the Frey give bonuses to Initiative, these should be automatically added by the code, or added by the ST of the scene.
Pack initiative (W20 Core, pg 267) If shifters are in a pack and bound together by a single totem, and if all players agree, the pack may share a single initiative roll as well, using the Pack Leader's initiative roll.

Declare Actions

Lowest Initiative declares their action first, moving up to highest Initiative.
Highest Initiative acts first, moving down to lowest.

Rage spends and actions must be declared at the beginning of your turn (Ex: "I'm going to spend 2 Rage to X, then Y, then Z.")
Rage actions will be handled in order after the first "normal" round of actions. Ex: Normal round, Rage round 1, Rage round 2, etc.

Changing Actions

W20 Core, pg 293
In drastic circumstances Declared Actions can be changed, adding a +1 difficulty to the new Action. (If a grenade is tossed at a character's feet, a packmate is in mortal danger, etc.)

Holding Actions

An action may be held until a place lower in the Initiative, to better coordinate a special maneuver with a packmate, to let someone else get ahead of your character, to foil an opponent's action strategically, etc.

Spending Points

Whether it's Willpower, Rage, or Gnosis for gift activation, extra turns, etc., wait until your ST tells you to spend the resource on your turn, for the sake of the scene log having your spends close to your OOC questions and rolls.

You can not spend Rage and Gnosis in the same round, except with the Gift: Chaos Mechanics. Spending one means you can not spend the other.
Willpower for an automatic success on a roll must be declared before the roll is made.
Willpower can not be used for an automatic success on Damage or Soak rolls.

Using Rage

W20 Core, pg 288
Players can spend up to 1/2 of their Rage pool in a single turn (rounded up) to perform the following feats:

Take extra Actions: Each point of Rage spent gives the character one extra action that turn. Must declare spending Rage for extra actions at the beginning of the turn.
Change forms: At any point in a turn, a player can spend one point of Rage to immediate shift to any form without the usual Stamina+Primal Urge roll.
Ignore stunning: Spending a point of Rage negates being stunned and the shifter can keep moving and take an Action normally.
Ignore pain: The player can ignore the dice penalties of one health level's worth of wounds per one point of Rage spent for one turn. This does not heal the damage, dice penalties will apply as normal next turn unless more Rage is spent.

Limitations: A player can only take as many extra actions as he has dots in either Dexterity or Wits, whichever is lower. If a player chooses to exceed that limit, she suffers +3 difficulty to all difficulties that turn. If the character is in a Frenzy, his Rage actions are limited only by his Dexterity.

Splitting Dice Pools

W20 Core, pg 266

Any character can split their die pool to perform multiple actions in a single turn. For each action taken that turn, the player loses one die. Each action taken after the first one loses another die as well - minus two dice for the second of two actions, minus four dice for the third action out of three, and so on. Example; a frat boy wants to grab a bottle and hit someone with it, and splits his pool in two.
Grab the bottle: Dex + Athletics
Swing the bottle: Dex + Melee
The Dex + Athletics pool is at -1 for having the extra action of swinging
The Dex + Melee pool is at -1 for having the extra action of swinging, and another -1 for being the second action.

Healing Damage

W20 Core. pg 255-256

Regeneration

Bashing and Lethal

Garou regenerate their worst Bashing or Lethal health level every turn while in a non-breed form.
Homid and Lupus breed Garou can regenerate a health level each day while in their natural breed forms if they are in critical condition.
Metis have full regeneration in all forms.

Kitsune do not regenerate, and heal as Humans
Ananasi do not regenerate without spending Blood Points. 1 blood point to heal 1 Bashing/Lethal, a full day of rest and 5 blood points to heal 1 Aggravated, otherwise heal as humans.

Aggravated

Shifters can soak Aggravated damage, unlike humans.
Shifters can not rapidly regenerate Aggravated damage at the end of a combat turn.
Aggravated damage: Heal 1 point per day as long as the character is in a form that regenerates.
If a shifter reaches Incapacitated from Aggravated damage, they have one chance to channel their Rage to remain active. If the character fails, they die.


Combat regeneration: During each turn a shifter may roll Stamina vs 8 as a reflexive action that does not require Rage or splitting pools. Success allows the shifter to heal Bashing or Lethal normally as listed above. A botch means the shifter cannot regenerate until they've had a chance to rest

Rage healing: Once per scene, a critically injured shifter (reaching Incapacitated through Aggravated damage) may remain active by rolling Rage vs 8. Each success heals 1 level of any kind of damage. No matter how much damage is healed, the character enters a Berserk Frenzy.
A shifter that successfully remains active through Rage healing gains a Battle Scar (W20 Core, pg 259)

Rage

W20 Core, pg 144 & 262

The Curse

Animals, and especially Humans, can sense the predator that lurks under a werewolf's skin.

Willpower: When a human’s Willpower is less than a werewolf’s Rage, that human will avoid contact with the Garou if at all possible. He might cross the street to avoid “that weirdo,” decide to hail a cab rather than sticking around, or even run in fear. Most humans have a Willpower score of between 2 and 4, so the Curse is no laughing matter. Humans aren’t the only creatures affected by the Curse: wolves and other animals avoid the Garou whenever possible.

Kinfolk: The Rage within a werewolf makes even their own Kinfolk uncomfortable, albeit to a lesser degree.

Using Rage

Rage points are spent at the beginning of a turn, in the declaration stage. You can spend Rage only in times of stress. A Garou can use Rage in the following ways:

Extra Actions: A player can spend Rage to give her character extra actions in a single turn. However, a Garou cannot spend more Rage points for actions in a turn than half of her permanent Rage rating. See p. 266.
Changing Forms: A Player may spend a Rage point for his character to change instantly to any form he desires, without having to roll Stamina + Primal-Urge. See p. 285.
Recovering from Stun: If a character loses more health levels in one turn than his Stamina rating, he is stunned and unable to act in the next turn. By spending a Rage point, the werewolf can ignore the effect and function normally.
Remaining Active: If a character falls below the Incapacitated health level, a player can use Rage to keep her character going. Doing so requires a Rage roll (difficulty 8). Each success heals a health level, regardless of the type of wound. A player may attempt this roll only once per scene. If this roll fails, the character doesn’t recover. However, this last-ditch survival effort has its price. Like all Rage rolls, the character is still subject to frenzy. The wound will also remain on the Garou’s body as an appropriate Battle Scar.

Gaining and Regaining Rage

At certain times, a werewolf’s Rage can even go higher than his permanent rating, but only if the situation is sufficiently infuriating.

The Rage pool fluctuates from session to session and from turn to turn. Rage replenishes itself in several ways.

The Moon: The first time a werewolf sees the moon at night, the Beast inside stirs, and Rage floods back into her. Under a new moon, the character gets one point; under a waning moon, two points; under a half or waxing moon, three points; and under a full moon, four points. If the moon phase corresponds with the character’s auspice, she regains all of her Rage. This phenomenon only occurs when the character first sees the moon each night.
Botch: If the Storyteller approves, a werewolf might receive a Rage point after a botched a roll. Rage comes from stressful situations, and seeing the action you were attempting blow up in your face, sometimes literally, can be a very stressful situation.
Humiliation: Rage will also come rushing back if anything a Garou does proves particularly humiliating. The Storyteller decides whether a situation is embarrassing enough to warrant a Rage point. Garou tend to be very proud, and they don’t take being laughed at well.
Confrontation: Again at the Storyteller’s approval, a character could receive a Rage point at the beginning of a tense situation, in the moments right before combat starts. This gain accounts for the anticipation and hackle-raising that happens just as tempers start to flare.
New Stories: If the ST of your scene is alright with it, you may be able to +gain your Rage (also Gnosis and Willpower) before the scene officially starts. Make sure you ask first, to be polite.

Twitcher Ratkin: (W20 Changing Breeds, pg 185) Whenever a Twitcher regains Rage, they also make a roll to gain even more. Roll one die against a difficulty of (10 – the Twitcher’s Rank). Success gains them another point of a Rage — and another roll. They keep rolling until they are at their maximum Rage, or until they fail or botch the roll. There are no negative consequences for failing or botching this roll.

Too Much or Too Little Rage

Beast Within: Occasionally, a Garou is more a snarling monster than man or beast, and she must pay the price for it. For every point of Rage a character has above her Willpower rating, she loses one die on all social-interaction rolls. People, even other werewolves, can sense the killer hiding just under her skin, and they don’t want to be anywhere near it.
Losing the Wolf: If a character has lost or spent all his Rage and Willpower points, he has “lost the wolf,” and he cannot regain Rage. The Garou cannot shift to anything except his breed form until his Rage returns. The character must regain at least one Willpower point before he can recover any Rage.

Frenzy

W20 Core, pg 144 and 261

Rank Frenzy Bonus
0 None
1 None
2 None
3 +1 diff to Frenzy rolls
4 +2 diff to Frenzy rolls
5 +2 diff to Frenzy rolls, 5+ successes needed to Frenzy

Frenzy: Frenzy is the violent outburst, the untamed savagery, the animal instinct for blood and brutality that lurks in the heart of every werewolf. Whenever a player gets four or more successes on a Rage roll, the character enters a frenzy. See Frenzy on p. 261 for more information on the causes and resolutions of frenzies.

Any Rage roll: Any Rage roll can lead to a frenzy, even if it’s used to activate Gifts. All Rage rolls represent an attempt to awaken the primal beast that drives the Garou. If a Rage roll scores four or more successes, the character frenzies. The player can spend a Willpower point immediately to halt the frenzy, but her character can’t take any further actions that turn.

Less than 4 Rage: Garou who have permanent Rage ratings lower than four can still frenzy, but only under circumstances that touch on a particular psychological trigger: locking a claustrophobic werewolf in a confined space, or an arachnophobe coming face-to-mandible with one of the Ananasi werespiders. When a werewolf encounters that level of stress, his temporary Rage can exceed his permanent rating. Use the higher of the two ratings for all Rage rolls.

Calm Heart: The Merit: Calm Heart adds +2 difficulty to Frenzy rolls. The book text says it adds 2 dice, this is incorrect, 2 extra dice would actually make it easier to frenzy. White Wolf doesn't edit well.

Berserk Frenzy

The werewolf can only see moving targets — targets she wants to reduce to bloody lumps of mangled meat. A berserk Garou shifts immediately to either Crinos or Hispo form (the player decides which), and attacks something.
Whom she attacks depends on the circumstances. If the Garou’s permanent Rage does not exceed her permanent Gnosis, she will not tear into her packmates — unless she’s in the Thrall of the Wyrm. Anything else is fair game, including other were-creatures who are not members of her pack.
A Garou whose permanent Rage exceeds his permanent Gnosis attacks anything that moves. He can’t distinguish between targets unless his player spends a Willpower point, in which case he can select his victim. If he doesn’t have the Willpower to spare, the Storyteller chooses who he attacks. Werewolves in this state don’t remember what happens to them during frenzy. Many collapse once the frenzy is over.

Fox Frenzy

The werewolf does everything in his power to escape. He takes his Lupus form and runs. The only time he attacks is when something gets in his way, and only for long enough to get past his opponent. The character runs until he can find a safe hiding place, where he will remain until the frenzy passes.
Whether in berserk or fox frenzy, combat maneuvers and pack tactics require a level of thought and control that a frenzying werewolf does not have. He has three options: bite, claw, or run. He can spend Rage for extra actions, but can’t split dice pools, use Gifts, or step sideways. A frenzied werewolf does not feel pain, and ignores all wound penalties.
A werewolf can only come out of frenzy once the triggering situation is over. Once he’s escaped, the player rolls Willpower (difficulty equaling the Garou’s own Rage) to escape the frenzy. If the roll fails, the player can try again next turn with no increase in difficulty.

Breed Can they Frenzy?
Ajaba As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
Ananasi Not naturally capable of Frenzy. Diff to supernaturally induce Frenzy is +2.
Bastet As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
Corax As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
Gurahl Normally cant Fox Frenzy. Rage rolls are always diff 8. 5+ successes required for Frenzy.
Kitsune Normally cant Berserk Frenzy. Rage rolls are always diff 6.
Mokole As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6, save for Shining Mokole, who's diffs are the same as Garou.
Nuwisha Not naturally capable of Frenzy.
Ratkin As Garou. Rage rolls are always diff 6. Warriors: Rage rolls are always diff 5.
Rokea Normally cant Fox Frenzy. Rage roll diffs are the same as Garou. Only 2 successes needed to enter a Frenzy.

Reasons to roll Rage

W20 Core, pg 261

Moon Phase Difficulty
New 8
Crescent 7
Half 6
Gibbous 5
Full 4

A shifter in Crinos reduces their Rage roll difficulties by 1 when checking for Frenzy.

Outside the standard instances listed on the Rage tab, your ST may call for Rage rolls in tense situations that stir the beast and threaten the possibility of Frenzy.

Embarrassment or humiliation (e.g. botching an important roll)
Any strong emotion (lust, rage, envy)
Extreme hunger
Confinement
Helplessness
Being taunted by a superior enemy
Large quantities of silver in the area
Being wounded
Seeing a packmate wounded

Thrall of the Wyrm

W20 Core, pg 262

When a player rolls six or more successes on a Rage roll, the character enters a berserk frenzy. All the Willpower in the world won’t give her a second’s control. The character is in the Thrall of the Wyrm. In addition to attacking anything that she can see, with the Storyteller picking her targets, the Thrall brings an even more horrific twist.
Each breed of Garou has an affinity to one of the heads of the Triatic Wyrm, and it is that facet that works through them in their worst frenzy.

Homid: Eater-of-Souls holds humans as its special children. This twisted favor extends to homid-breed Garou. This Wyrm drives its minions to eat humans, wolves, and even other Garou. A werewolf in this Thrall must roll Wits (difficulty 7) whenever she kills or incapacitates an opponent. If the roll is a botch, she must stop for a turn and eat her kill.
Metis: The Defiler Wyrm reserves special attention for those Garou who cannot breed themselves. It drives metis Garou to perform unspeakable sexual acts on their fallen opponents, regardless of their respective genders. If a werewolf kills or incapacitates an opponent, his player must roll Wits (difficulty 7). If the roll botches, the werewolf stops for a turn and slakes his unholy lusts on his opponent’s corpse.
Lupus: Beast-of-War lays claim to the savage lupus Garou. It forces them to tear into their victims until nothing is left but bloody chunks of meat and bone. The Garou loses all sense of mercy, and exists only to destroy. When a lupus werewolf kills or incapacitates a foe when in the Thrall, her player must roll Wits (difficulty 7). If the roll botches, the werewolf savages his opponent’s corpse until it is torn limb from limb.

Fera: If the Fera breed is capable of rolling Rage and Frenzying, the above applies to their particular breed as well

The Delirium

W20 Core, pg 262

Breed Full Delirium Reduced Delirium
Ajaba Crinos
Ananasi Lilian, Pithus
Bastet Chatro Crinos
Corax Crinos
Gurahl Crinos
Mokole Archid
Nuwisha Manabozho
Ratkin Crinos
Rokea Gladius, Chasmus Glabrus

Kitsune: Does not incite The Delirium in any form.
Ananasi: Crawlerling form does not normally incite Delirium at all, however if the breakdown into Crawlerling form is witnessed, it inflicts full Delirium.

Kinfolk are entirely immune to the Delirium.
The Delirium only affects people that can see the Shifter in person. Photographs, video (live or recorded), or other such evidence won't trigger any fear reaction.
Humans will rationalize evidence away as a Photoshopped image or publicity stunt, unless their Willpower is 8 or higher.
Humans that have delved deep into the Occult (4 dots or higher) might roll Wits + Occult vs 9, with each success increasing the human's effective Willpower by 1 in regards to the chart below.
Humans from cultures that didn't suffer the Impergium to a great degree (such as Native Americans and Aboriginal Australians) might also be granted a bonus at the ST's discretion, only if they've been raised without contact with other cultures.

Willpower % of Population Will They Forget? Effect
1 10% Yes Catatonic Fear: The human faints, or collapses in fear
2 20% Yes Panic: The human bolts, trying to put as much distance between himself and the Garou as possible.
3 18% Yes Disbelief: The human retreats to a corner to avoid the “hallucination” until it passes, but doesn’t collapse in fear.
4 15% Yes Berserk: The human attacks, be it firing a gun (he won’t have enough presence of mind to reload, however), throwing crockery or even leaping at the “monster.”
5 13% Yes Terror: Much like panic, except with rational thought. The human is able to think enough to lock doors behind him or to get in a car and flee.
6 10% Yes Conciliatory: The human will try to plead and bargain with the Garou, doing anything possible so as not to get hurt.
7 7% No, but will rationalize Controlled Fear: Although terrified, he does not panic. The human will flee or fight as appropriate, but remains in control of his actions.
8 5% No, but will rationalize Curiosity: These people are dangerous, because they remember what they saw (more-or-less), and they might well investigate the matter further.
9 1.5% No Bloodlust: This human refuses to take anymore. She is afraid but angry, and she will remember the Garou and probably even try to hunt it down.
10 0.5% No No reaction: The human is not the slightest bit afraid or bothered by the Garou. Even Kinfolk aren’t this stoic, so Garou tend to be very suspicious of such folks.

Close Combat Attacks

On a successful attack, 1 point of damage is always dealt and might be soaked, even if the damage roll gave zero successes.
Corax have -1 diff to all Athletics rolls, and +2 difficulty to soak all Bashing.

Basic Attacks

W20 Core, pg 296
While these are largely listed with Garou form names, these are usable by just about anyone, as long as you have the appropriate appendage available.

Action Pool Base Diff Base Damage Damage Type Special
Kick Dex + Brawl 7 Str + 1 Bashing Extreme size difference can make damage Lethal
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Punch Dex + Brawl 6 Str Bashing Special punches (uppercut, haymaker, etc) may cause extra dmg with a higher diff. Usually Bashing, but nerve strikes, kidney blows, or extreme size difference can make damage Lethal
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Bite Dex + Brawl 5 Str +1 Agg Hispo bite +1 dmg, Glabro bite diff 8 and -1 Lethal dmg
Usable by: Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Claw Dex + Brawl 6 Str + 1 Crinos/Hispo: Agg, Glabro/Lupus: Bashing Usable by: Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Disarm Dex + Melee +1 diff See: Failure - Successes exceed opponent's Strength score: Opponent drops their weapon. Failure: Inflicts weapon damage; Botch: Loses own weapon
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Bare-Handed Disarm Dex + Brawl (-1 dice) 8 - - Failure: Inflicts weapon damage to hands
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Flank Attacks - -1 - - May require Rage, move time or another roll at ST's discretion
Usable by: All forms
Rear Attack - -2 - - May require Rage, move time or another roll at ST's discretion
Usable by: All forms
Sweep Dex + Brawl or Melee 8 - - Knocks Opponent to the ground, can use self or weapon to sweep an opponent's leg. Causes no damage, but target is prone.
Usable by: All forms
Grapple Contested Str + Brawl 6 Str Bashing Clinch: crushing damage applied per turn.
Hold: No damage, Target held until freed
Escape: The contested Str + Brawl roll, especially agile chars may use Dex
Reverse: The grapple is turned on the attacker if the contested roll scores 2 more successes than the attacker.
Damage: Typically Bashing, can be Lethal or Aggravated if grappled opponent has barbs, spikes, extreme size difference, etc. as appropriate.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Tackle Dex + Brawl 7 Str Bashing Req: Min 2 Yard Distance
Attacker and Target both make Dexterity+Athletics rolls to keep their feet (diff 6 for the attacker, diff 6 + the attackers successes for the target).
Failure: you end up on the ground.
Botch: trips and falls (one die of dmg for every yard ran); slams into something else (that damage plus his Str in dmg on himself); or crashes into his target and bounces off (opponent’s Stamina in dmg, but leaving the target unharmed)

Dexterity+Brawl vs 7 to determine damage dice if target fails his Athletics roll.
Damage may situationally become lethal at ST discretion.
Usable by: All forms

Dirty Fighting

W20 Core, pg 198
The following maneuvers require Brawl 3 or more.

Action Pool Diff Damage Damage type Special
Blinding Dex + Subterfuge 9 Special Special Blinded 1 turn per success, -2 Dice to all pools. 5+ successes destroys eyes, may regen normally if possible. ST discretion if a particularly vicious attack might cause 1 or 2 Lethal damage in addition to blinding.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Body Slam Dex + Brawl 6 Str + 2 Bashing Requires a successful Grapple, next turn apply Dex + Brawl vs 6 for damage. Damage may be Lethal or even Aggravated at ST discretion depending on what the target is slammed onto.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Curb Stomp Str + Brawl 6 Str + 2 Lethal Requires Stunned/Immobilized target - Takes 1 turn to place in position first, next turn apply Str + Brawl vs 6 for damage. May remove opponent's ability to bite until healed.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro, Crinos
Low Blow Dex + Brawl 7 Str Bashing Stunned for one turn per health level lost after soak. Bashing becomes Lethal if done with claws/teeth/blades/etc.; Stamina diff 8 to shrug off the stun at one turn per success.
Usable by: All forms
Pistol Whip Dex + Melee 7 Str + 2 Lethal Requires a gun, crowbar, truncheon, candlestick, etc. Target stunned for 1 turn if they fail Stamina vs 8, or 2 turns if they botch.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro

Special Maneuvers

W20 Core, pg 299
While these are largely listed with Garou form names, these are usable by just about anyone, as long as you have the appropriate appendage available.

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Damage Type Special
Evasive Action Wits + Athletics 6 - - Works like a dodge, but you cannot abort your previous action to use this tactic. Each success subtracts one success from the attacker's roll. If you score more successes than the attacker, your next attack is at -1 difficulty on that target, assuming you act before them.
Usable by: All forms
Hamstring (Bite/Claw) Dex + Brawl 8 Str + 1 Aggravated 2 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 8 to stand again, 1/4 movement speed
4 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 7 to remain standing, 1/2 movement speed.
Usable by: Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Hamstring (Weapon) Dex + Melee 9 As Weapon Lethal Requires a bladed weapon
2 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 8 to stand again, 1/4 movement speed
4 legged opponent: Dex + Athletics vs 7 to remain standing, 1/2 movement speed.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro
Jaw Lock Dex + Brawl 6 Str + 1/Special Aggravated Attacker Wins: Rival forced to ground and immobilized. Attacker Loses: Fails to immobilize target, inflicts the usual Bite damage.
If opponent doesn't surrender: Contested Strength + Brawl; opponent's diff is attacker's Brawl+4, attacker's diff is opponent's Brawl+2. Opponent fails: Remains pinned and immobilized. Opponent matches successes: Break free but take attacker's successes in damage (may attempt to soak). Opponent scores more successes than attacker: Breaks free, takes no damage.
Usable by: Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Leaping Rake (Claw) Dex + Athletics 3 Str + 1 Aggravated See Jumping under Physical Feats (W20 Core, pg 271) - If roll succeeds for chosen distance, attack target with Dexterity + Brawl vs 8 for damage, and land outside of enemy's attack reach. Fail: Land within enemy's reach.
Usable by: Crinos
Leaping Rake (Weapon) Dex+Athletics 3 As Weapon Bashing/Lethal As above, requires a weapon, Dexterity + Melee vs 8 for damage, and land outside of enemy's attack reach. Fail: Land within enemy's reach.
Usable by: Homid, Glabro
Taunt (vs Non-Garou) Man + Intimidation Enemy Wits + 4 - - Enemy suffers -1 die to their next action for every 2 successes by the taunter
Usable by: Homid, Glabro (All forms if the non-garou target can understand them)
Taunt (vs Garou) Man + Expression Enemy Wits + 4 - - As Above, if taunter scores at least one success, target makes a Rage roll. If an entire pack is taunting (see Pack Tactics), target frenzy diff is at -1. A target whose dice pool is reduced to nothing cant do anything except dodge.
Usable by: All forms
Wishbone Dex + Brawl 6; -1 for each attacker Str Special First turn, to grip the target with the listed roll. Next turn, apply damage by pulling. Damage is Bashing for a slow pull, Lethal if using brute strength, Aggravated if using teeth.
If any one garou inflicts more than 3 health levels after soaking, the extremity in question is broken or removed.
Soaking: Target must soak each attacker's Strength roll separately.
Usable by: Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Can use this tactic solo: Ajaba, Bastet, Garou, Gurahl, Mokole, Nuwisha, Rokea

Fera Special Maneuvers

W20 Changing Breeds, pg 213-216
These maneuvers require the unique anatomy of a particular breed and can not be performed by everyone, often limiting them to the breed listed.

Ananasi

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Effect
Engulf Dex + Brawl 6 (5) Strength; suffocation The Ananasi breaks over her foe like a wave, dissolving into a million biting spiders. Each turn that the werespider maintains the Engulf, the target cannot breathe and runs the risk of suffocation (see W20, p. 259). If the Ananasi is in a non-Crawlerling form when initiating an Engulf maneuver, the action requires a blood point, but the difficulty is reduced to 5 for the initial attack, thanks to the element of surprise.
Usable in: Any form
Actions: 1
Injection Dex + Brawl 7 Venom only The Ananasi can bite gently into a target, injecting venom without causing aggravated damage from his fangs. This can be used to poison opponents and to drink blood.

Bastet

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Effect
Barrel Roll Str + Athletics 3 + Target's Str, max 9 Special The werecat attacks at running speed on all fours, grabs the opponent by the shoulders, and uses her body mass to topple him. Using the momentum of the tumble, she rolls with the opponent, immobilizing him, usually by biting over the muzzle of the prey to suffocate it.
The player makes a standard grapple attack to seize the opponent, and then reflexively rolls Strength + Athletics (difficulty 3 + target’s Strength, maximum 9) to wrestle her prey to the ground. The target then suffers suffocation (see W20, p. 259) and immobility until she can break the grapple.
Usable in: Crinos, Chatro, Feline
Garou and Nuwisha can also perform this maneuver, though at +1 difficulty.
Actions: 1

Corax

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Effect
Eye Pluck Dex + Brawl 9 Str +1 Corax can attempt to pull the eye from a living opponent. If the Corax scores four successes on the attack roll, and at least two health levels of damage go unsoaked, she tears her enemy’s eye out. This raises the damage to aggravated even if the Corax is in raven form. Shapeshifters that don't suffer a Battle Scar from the maneuver can regrow the eye over time.
Usable in: Crinos or Corvid
Actions: 1 (House Rules: Changed from 2 Actions to 1)
Wing Swipe Dex + Brawl 7 Str +2 This maneuver requires the Gift: Razor Feathers. The Corax lashes out with a wing, slashing the target with the cutting edge of his steel-hard feathers. This maneuver is also useful out of combat (for cutting ropes, slashing tires, and so on). Even if a wing swipe misses, the target must make a reflexive Dexterity roll (difficulty 5) or be off-balance (+1 difficulty to all Physical actions) for the next turn.
Usable in: Crinos
Actions: 1

Mokole

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Effect
Tail Lash Dex + Brawl 7 Str +1 The Mokolé slashes at an opponent

with her tail. Characters in Suchid form may only use this maneuver if the opponent stands directly behind them. Damage is bashing, unless the Mokolé has a spiked tail.
Rokea in Chasmus or Squamus can also perform this maneuver, but only underwater.
Usable in: Archid or Suchid
Actions: 1

Head Butt Dex + Brawl 7 Str This maneuver is a charge forward, head lowered. It works exactly like Body Slam (see W20, p. 298) save that the Mokolé doesn’t suffer damage if in Archid form, and the target isn’t unbalanced unless knocked down.
Rokea in Chasmus or Squamus can use a similar underwater ‘ramming’ maneuver., but only underwater.
Usable in: Archid or Suchid
Actions: 1
Jaw Shear Dex + Brawl 6 Str +2 This maneuver requires that the Mokolé successfully used a bite attack in the previous turn. Through this attack the Mokolé can snap his head back and forth, tearing the victim to shreds with his powerful jaws. Unless the victim can break the Mokolé’s grip (using an opposed Strength roll), the weresaurian can continue attempting this maneuver each turn.
A similar maneuver, Rolling Bite, sees the Mokolé rolling repeatedly with the victim in her mouth.
Rokea in Gladius, Chasmus or Squamus can perform this maneuver.
Ajaba in Crinos can perform this maneuver.
Usable in: Archid or Suchid
Actions: 1
Swallow Whole Dex + Brawl 6 Str +2 Only a truly enormous character can perform this action, such as a massive Archid or particularly large Great White Rokea. The prey must be half the character’s size or less, and the attacker must land a bite attack, and then make an opposed Strength roll. If she succeeds, her opponent is swallowed whole. The opponent can continue to take limited actions for (Stamina) rounds before being smothered. If the attacker changes to a smaller form while her victim is alive inside of her, she suffers five levels of lethal damage as her victim erupts through her innards.
Rokea in Chasmus can perform this maneuver.
Usable in: Archid
Actions: 2
Constrict Dex + Brawl 6 Str +2 The Mokole must be in Archid and cannot move while constricting an opponent in her coils. On each action after having caught the victim, the player reflexively rolls Strength + Brawl against a difficulty of the trapped victim’s (Strength + Brawl –2, maximum 9). Success inflicts the Mokole’s Strength as bashing damage, while failure frees the victim. The Mokole can attack his trapped victim with teeth or claws at –1 difficulty; for others, attacking a constricted victim without harming the Mokole inflicts a +1 difficulty penalty.
Requires the "Constricting Coils" characteristic
Usable in: Archid
Actions: 1
House Rule: Originally from the Nagah maneuvers (W20 Changing Breeds, pg 214), but it makes sense for Mokole with the correct characteristics.

Rokea

Maneuver Pool Diff Damage Effect
Great Bite Dex + Brawl 6 Str +3 The Rokea takes hold of her opponent by the shoulders, and attempts to bite her victim’s head off. To grab hold of the opponent, the player must perform a standard grapple roll. The bite attack is administered in the same turn.
Mokolé may also perform this maneuver in Archid form, if their characteristics make this possible.
Usable in: Gladius
Actions: 2

Pack Tactics

W20 Core, pg 300
Packs bonded by a Pack Totem perform these maneuvers together at no penalty.
Unbonded packs that have only trained together perform these maneuvers at +1 difficulty together.

Other Pack Tactics may include: Wishbone, Flank or Rear attacks, Sweep, as well as less martial tactics such as Long Running, Sensing, and Shadowing in Physical Feats (W20 Core, pg 270), or Hunting, Searching, and Tracking in Mental Feats (W20 Core, pg 282)
Creating and successfully demonstrating a new pack tactic might be worth Glory or Wisdom renown.

Tactic Pool Diff Packmates Required Effect
Taunt (vs Garou) Man + Expression Enemy Wits + 4 2+ Enemy suffers -1 die to their next action for every 2 successes by the taunter(s), if taunter scores at least one success, target makes a Rage roll. target frenzy diff is at -1. A target whose dice pool is reduced to nothing cant do anything except dodge.
Usable by: All forms
Fur Gnarl Dex + Brawl 7 2+ Every 2 successes removes 1 soak from the enemy. Packmates in may attack that spot at +2 difficulty to take advantage of lowered soak. Soak reduced until damage is regenerated or armor reapplied.
Usable by: Glabro, Crinos, Hispo, Lupus
Harrying Dex + Athletics 5 4+ Contested Dex + Athletics vs 5 rolls "hand off" the target to each pack member.
Target wins: Attacker can try again at +1 diff for each success target scored over her own. Target maintains diff 5.
Attacker wins: +1 diff to target's diff with each successful "hand off" roll, and -1 to all die pools after the first successful exchange. Attacker maintains diff 5. Humans also lose one WP when "handed off" to the next packmate, human-like entities (vamps, changeling, mages, etc.) lose 1 WP per every 2 exchanges.
Usable by: Hispo, Lupus
Savage/Dogpile Special - 3+ First attacker makes a successful Sweep or Tackle maneuver (see above). Next attackers make their rolls with modifiers from Knocked Down, Immobilized, or Stunned (see below) at ST discretion.
If target survives, they may try to stand with a successful Strength + Athletics roll, diff is 4 + 1 for each Garou involved in the attack (maximum 10).
Usable by: Any form
Circle Dex + Athletics 8 3+ This maneuver serves to contain and intimidate opponents. The pack surrounds the target, trapping him within a tight circle. To attempt to break free of the circle, the victim must either enter frenzy or spend a Willpower point. Each character making up the circle performs a Dexterity + Athletics attack, difficulty 8, in response to any such bids for freedom; only a single circle member needs to succeed to keep the target contained within the circle.
Usable by: Any form
Source: W20 Changing Breeds, pg 216
Slice n' Dice Dex + Brawl 6 3+ A favorite of the Ratkin, though employed by other Fera as well. The attackers blitz their target from all directions, overwhelming him with a flurry of slashes to different body parts. This increases the target's difficulty of dodge attempts by 1 per packmate involved (maximum 9). This maneuver requires the target to be surrounded by the pack.
Usable by: Any form with claws
Source: W20 Changing Breeds, pg 216

Special Styles

Klaviskar

Requires Melee 4 (Klaive Specialty)
Rules and Chart TBD

Kalindo

Rules and Chart TBD

Ranged Combat

W20 Core, pg 293

Guns Dex + Firearms
Bows Dex + Archery
Thrown Dex + Athletics

Range

W20 Core, pg 294
Point blank range: Diff 4, 2 yards or less
Medium range: Diff 6, the range listed on your +equip weapon item
Long range: Diff 8, up to twice the listed range. Diff might be higher at ST discretion.

Aiming

W20 Core, pg 293
Requires at least 1 dot in Firearms for guns or Archery for bows
Every Turn spent aiming adds +1 dice to the next attack, a max of character's Perception
Scopes add a further +2 dice
These do stack
Bonuses apply to a single shot, and the character must aim again to get the full bonus and effect

Called Shots

W20 Core, pg 295
Called Shots are made at +2 difficulty.

Automatic Gunfire

W20 Core, pg 294
Uses a minimum of 1/2 a clip of ammo
Automatic gunfire adds +10 Dice to the attack roll at +2 Diff
Can spray an area, evenly distributing successes between targets; If less successes are scored than there are targets, ST decides who has been hit or missed

3 Round Burst

W20 Core, pg 295
Gain three dice to the attack roll, at +1 difficulty

Reloading Firearms

W20 Core, pg 295
Requires a Dexterity + Firearms vs 6 roll under normal circumstances, and takes one full turn. May have to roll anyway if badly hurt, in a moving car, etc. at ST discretion.
Having at least Firearms 1 may negate that roll.
Automatic weapons: Reloading an automatic weapon takes a single action. That gun can still be fired the same round it's reloaded, at -2 dice from the attack pool.
Revolvers: Can be reloaded as above with a speedloader. Without a speedloader, a revolver takes a full turn to reload, and no other actions are possible that turn, not even Rage actions.

Bows

W20 Core, pg 294
A character without Archery can try to use a bow, but each roll for her adds a +1 difficulty penalty
Loading an arrow is an Automatic Action
Cross Bows take 2 turns to ready and fire.
On a botched roll, the bowstring snaps and must be replaced before the weapon can be used again: Wits + Archery or Crafts vs 7
Considered nearly silent ranged weapons
Fancy Shots such as a wooden arrow bull's eye in a vampire's heart requires at least 5 successes on the attack and 3 health levels of damage (after soaking) to pierce the heart.

Thrown Weapons

W20 Core, pg 296
Thrown weapons use Athletics
Difficulty is usually 6, -1 for especially close targets, +1 or +2 difficulty for distant targets or awkward objects not designed to be thrown.
The range of a thrown object usually depends on the strength of the thrower and on the bulk and aerodynamics qualities of the object. STs should feel free to adjust difficulties and ranges according to circumstances.

Cover and Movement

W20 Core, pg 294
This is Cover verse Firearms
Shooting through a wall: the wall will soak 3 Dice of Damage

Cover Diff to hit target in cover Diff to shoot from cover
Lying Flat (on Ground) +1 0
Moving Target +1 +1
Behind Wall +2 +1
Only Head Exposed +3 +2

Types of Immobilization

W20 Core, pg 292

Blinding: Characters blinded by injury or darkness cannot dodge, block, or parry incoming attacks. All other actions add +2 to their difficulties. At ST discretion, a Shifter can take an action to sense her surroundings to try and reduce the penalty, or use a Gift to compensate for blindness.
Knockdown: A character knocked off their feet must take an Action to scramble back up. If they can not do so, they may be considered to be partially immobilized.
Immobilization: If held down, paralyzed, or otherwise rendered unable to move more than a little bit, any attacks made against them are made at -2 diff. If the target can not move at all, attacks may hit automatically.
Stunning: If, after soak, a character takes health level damage that equals or exceeds their Stamina rating, they are stunned until the end of the following turn. Stunned characters cant do anything except stumble around in a daze. Attacks against a stunned character are made at -2 difficulty.

Damage and Health

Defense/Dodge

W20 Core, pg 289
Full Defense was removed from W20.
The Dodge Ability was removed from W20, dodging uses Athletics in this system.

Maneuver Stats Difficulty Special
Dodge Dex + Athletics 5 Firearms are dodged at diff 9/10
Block Dex + Brawl 5 Hand to Hand Combat Only
Parry Dex + Melee 5 Blocking but with weapons

Difficulty: Diff is a sliding scale depending on the distance the character needs to move and the nature of the attack. Ex: Dodging a punch is diff 5, while dodging close-range firearms is diff 9 or 10. Blocking a punch is diff 5, while blocking a katana is diff 8.
Dodging/Blocking/Parrying: Each success from the above rolls reduces the attackers successes by 1. Left over successes move to the Damage step of turn resolution. To completely dodge/block/parry an attack, the defender must score at least as many successes as the attacker.

Soaking Damage

W20 Core, pg 290

Kinfolk can only naturally soak Bashing damage. Only armor can soak Lethal damage.
Corax have +2 difficulty to soak Bashing damage in all forms.
Kitsune can soak Silver, unsoaked damage is Lethal.

Bashing: Blunt force trauma - Fists, clubs, table legs, etc.
Lethal: Sharp edged weapons and firearms - spiked clubs, barbed wire, garrotes, chainsaws, etc.
Aggravated: Severe injury - Shifter claws/teeth, vampire fangs, toxic waste, some fire and precious metals.
Soak: All soak rolls are made as Stamina vs 6, with the following form restrictions:

Type of Damage Can Soak In
Bashing All Forms, Shifter or Kin
Lethal Shifters: All Forms
Kin/Humans: Stamina vs 8
Aggravated Soak in any form except breed form
Can not be soaked by non-Shifters
Silver/Gold Soak only in breed form, as per regular weapon damage. Can not be soaked in any other form, stings bare skin but does not cause damage in breed form.

Silver/Gold Weapons

W20 Core, pg 256
For more in depth information on Silver and Gold, see the Sources of Damage tab

Homids and Beast-born take no special damage from silver/gold while in their breed forms, and the weapon is treated as mundane for the purposes of damage.
Shifters in any form other than their breed form cannot soak damage from Silver without a Gift or a Fetish, and the damage taken is Aggravated.
A successful attack always deals one point of damage, even if the attacker rolled no successes for damage.
Metis may not soak silver in any form.

Fera Breed Weak to Silver?
Ajaba Yes, due to their similarity to Bastet
Ananasi No metal allergies (W20 CB, pg 60)
Bastet Yes - Celican ALSO suffer from "Pure Iron" with the same rules as Silver (W20 CB, pg 78)
Corax Weak vs Gold instead, same rules set as Silver
Gurahl Yes
Kitsune Yes, can soak vs 8, unsoaked damage is Lethal, other affects as per Garou (W20 CB, pg 126)
Mokole Weak vs both Gold and Silver (W20 CB, pg 142)
Nuwisha No metal allergies, no Gnosis loss from Silver (W20 CB, pg 169)
Ratkin Yes
Rokea Yes

Armor

W20 Core, pg 291

Kinfolk: Only armor can soak lethal damage.
At ST's discretion armor may soak some kinds of Aggravated damage; a flak jacket might blunt the damage of claws or a silver bullet, but could not defend against fire or radiation.

Armor Type Rating Dexterity Penalty
Tough Hide 1-3 0
Reinforced Clothing 1 0
Biker Jacket 1 1
Leather Duster 2 2
Bearskin Coat 3 3
Steel Breastplate 3 2
Kevlar Vest 3 1
Flak Vest 4 2
Riot Suit 5 3
Trashcan Lid 2 (none, but requires Dex+Melee vs 6 to employ)

Kinfolk/Human Injury

W20 Core, pg 256
Kinfolk can only naturally soak Bashing damage. Only armor can soak Lethal damage.
Kitsune heal as Humans
Ananasi do not regenerate without spending Blood Points. 1 blood point to heal 1 Bashing/Lethal, a full day of rest and 5 blood points to heal 1 Aggravated, otherwise heal as humans.

Bashing Damage

Health Level Recovery Time
Bruised to Wounded One hour
Mauled Three hours
Crippled Six hours
Incapacitated 12 hours

Humans only require medical treatment when Mauled or worse.
Bashing damage past Wounded can have consequences such as degraded vision/hearing from a concussion, excruciating pain from broken ribs or internal bruising, etc. Medical care can negate these effects and is necessary for a human to make a full recovery.

If a mortal reaches Incapacitated from Bashing damage, they fall unconscious but do not die.
Any further damage upgrades their least severe Bashing health level to Lethal (see below). In this way, a human can be beaten to death.

Lethal Damage

Health Level Recovery Time
Bruised One day
Hurt Three days
Injured One week
Wounded One month
Mauled Two months
Crippled Three months
Incapacitated Five months

Any Lethal wound worse than Injured requires medical attention before it will heal.
If left untreated, the human suffers another level of Lethal damage each day as the wound re-opens or becomes infected.
Mauled from Lethal damage requires rest and recovery after medical attention.
Crippled or Incapacitated from Lethal damage requires constant medical attention for the time listed below for any healing to take place.
A human who reaches Incapacitated through Lethal damage is at death's door, one more lethal level of any sort and they will die.

Healing is handled one level at a time, starting with the most severe.

Example: A human that has reached Injured from Lethal damage must rest for 1 week to heal the Injured level, then 3 days to heal the Hurt level, and 1 additional day to heal the Bruised level.

Aggravated damage heals the same as Lethal for humans. The only difference is that Aggravated damage is harder to heal through supernatural means.

Sources of Injury

W20 Core, pg 257

Object Gnosis lost
Silver Bullets 1 point per 5 bullets
Klaive 1 point
Grand Klaive 2 points

Silver/Gold: Not everything called "silver" or "gold" contains enough of the element to actually harm a Shifter weak to those metals. "Sterling silver" (over 90% silver) is certainly pure enough to be spiritually active, "Jewelry Silver" (80% pure) might be enough at ST discretion. Argentite and Horn Silver are compounds and not spiritually pure enough to cause harm, nor are compounds with "silver" in the name, including silver nitrate, silver chloride, or silver iodide. Some items can be plated with silver to cause damage, but the plating is ruined after a couple of blows and the Aggravated damage bonus is lost.

For every five silver objects a PACK carries, ALL its members suffer the following Gnosis penalties, which persist in all forms, including breed forms. In addition, carrying too many silver objects, especially bullets, may cause a loss of Honor or Wisdom for the entire pack.

Disease: Diseases inflict a number of health levels of damage to a patient, either Bashing or Lethal depending on the severity of the disease. With rest and care, the disease runs its course and the health levels return.

Shifters aren't immune to most diseases, but they recover faster. Their healing abilities protect them from relatively minor ailments like the common cold and flu (diseases that normally inflict Bashing damage). Even truly debilitating autoimmune diseases cant inflict lasting harm, though the shifter can still serve as a carrier. For a shifter to notice a disease, it would have to be supernatural in origin, and thus deal Aggravated damage.

Falling: 1 die of Bashing for every 10 feet/3 meters of falling, changed to Lethal if the surface landed on has sharp objects.

Terminal Velocity: Falls more than 100 feet/30 meters deal 10 dice of Lethal damage. Armor only provides one half its normal protection.

Fire: Damage from fire is always Aggravated and ignores Armor. Shifters can soak fire damage as normal, with a varying difficulty based on the heat of the blaze. Fire deals specific health levels of damage, not damage dice. Fire damage is automatically successful unless soaked - a character takes two health levels of Aggravated damage per turn if trapped in a bonfire, not two dice of damage per turn.

Appearance: If a character falls to Maimed, they suffer temporary scarring from the flames, and their Appearance is reduced by 1 until they recover to at least Bruised. If the character is reduced to Crippled or Incapacitated by fire, the burns cover the majority of their body, reducing Appearance by 2. Scarring may be permanent if the character is Incapacitated and gains a Battle Scar by remaining active (via Rage Healing).
Soak difficulty Heat of Fire
3 Heat of a candle (1st degree burns)
5 Heat of a torch (2nd degree burns)
7 Heat of a Bunsen burner (3rd degree burns)
8 Heat of an electrical fire
9 Heat of a chemical fire
10 Molten metal
Health Levels Size of Fire
One Torch; part of the body is exposed to flame
Two Bonfire; half of the body is exposed to flame
Three Inferno; all of the body is exposed to flame

Stamina Time
1 30 seconds
2 1 minute
3 2 minutes
4 4 minutes
5 8 minutes
6 12 minutes
7 20 minutes
8 30 minutes

Poison and Drugs: Few poisons or drugs have a noticeable effect on Shifters. Shifters that wish to become intoxicated must do so in their breed form, where their regenerative system is less effective, or awaken the spirit of the drug using the Rite of Spirit Awakening, which increases the substance's potency. The following list examples of effects on Shifters either in their breed form or once the substance has been Awakened. it's very difficult for a Shifter to become physically addicted to any substance due to their healing gifts, but it's still possible in extreme circumstances.

Alcohol: -1 to Dexterity and Intelligence die pools for every two drinks worth of alcohol. Reduce the penalty by 1 for every hour that passes after they stop drinking.
Cocaine/Meth: Immediately gain 1 point of temporary Rage. For the rest of the scene, the character only needs 3 successes on a Rage roll to Frenzy.
Hallucinogens: All die pools are reduced by 1 to 3 dice as the character is unable to concentrate. World perception is altered and their reactions will depend on what they believe to be happening. A character that takes hallucinogens before meditating regains Gnosis at 2 points per hour instead of 1. Lasts for (8 minus Stamina) hours.
Heroin/Morphine/Barbiturates: -2 to Dexterity and all Ability pools for (10 minus Stamina) minutes. The character experiences a dreamlike state for (12 minus Stamina) hours, during which time difficulties of Rage rolls are increased by 1.
Marijuana: -1 from Perception based pools and increase the difficulties of all Rage rolls. Effects last for about a half an hour.
Weak Poison: Character takes between 1 and 3 health levels of Lethal damage per scene. Poisons have a maximum amount of damage that they can apply, usually between 5 and 10 levels of damage. If the character doesn't regenerate this damage (due to being in breed form, or being human) subtract 1 from all die pools until the damage is healed. Shifters in a regenerating form burns through the poison's effects in seconds and suffers no ill effects.
Strong Poison: Character takes between 1 and 3 health levels of Lethal damage per scene. Poisons have a maximum amount of damage that they can apply, usually between 5 and 10 levels of damage. A Shifter can regenerate this damage normally, but until the poison has run its course and all the damage has been healed, subtract 1 from all die pools. The only toxins to have a significant effect on Shifters are supernaturally enhanced and thus deal Aggravated damage that may be regenerated.

(W20 Changing Breeds, pg 61)
Ananasi have venom producing glands (and fangs) available in all forms. Their current form affects the potency.

Pithus delivers full strength venom, while Lilian is somewhat diluted.

Storytellers should determine the amount of damage and any extra effects based on the particular "spider" species, but venom always deals Aggravated damage that can only be healed through medical attention or magical healing. Left unattended, the damage will never heal.

(W20 Changing Breeds, pg 182)
Ratkin blood is poisonous to anyone who drinks it, including Vampires and Ananasi. Anyone drinking Ratkin blood suffers one point of unsoakable Lethal damage for every point of Rage the Ratkin possesses.


Radiation and Toxic Waste: Many Wyrm locations on Earth are located on or near irradiated landscapes and toxic waste dumps. Also, some minions of the Wyrm use radiation based attacks. Damage from these sources is resolved the same as damage from Fire, but takes twice as long to heal.


Suffocation and Drowning: A character can hold their breath for a maximum amount of time based on their Stamina. Changing forms WHILE immersed in a non-breathable medium does not change this time period; lung capacity may increase, but the amount of air currently in those lungs does not. During strenuous activity like combat, the character can hold their breath for a number of turns equal to twice their Stamina rating. Willpower spent on holding one's breath adds another 30 seconds of life. Willpower spent during combat or strenuous activity gives another turn of activity.

Once a character has run out of breath, they begin to drown/suffocate and take 1 health level of Lethal damage each turn. This damage cannot be regenerated until the shifter can breathe again. If the character reaches Incapacitated, they revert to their breed form and will die in a number of turns equal to their Stamina.


Temperature Extremes: Extreme heat (above 200°F or 100°C) causes damage in much the same way as Fire. At -40 and below, subtract 1 from all Dexterity die pools due to frostbite. For every 10°F (6°C) lower, subtract another die.

Battle Scars

W20 Core, pg 259

A human whose fingers are bitten off will need surgery and will lose some function in those fingers (if they didn't lose the fingers entirely). A Shifter can grow the missing tissue and nerve connections back, even regrowing the fingers if they cant be reattached. Some injuries, especially those caused by other Shifters, can cause lasting damage. These wounds occur when a character channels her Rage to remain active in the face of death. A Shifter can also acquire a battle scar as a result of a particularly brutal attack, or from torture. The following is a list of examples and their possible Glory awards.

Glory: Gaining any Battle Scar awards Glory, the more visible scars tend to carry larger rewards. Healing a Battle Scar comes with a loss of 1 Glory. Some tribes such as Children of Gaia or Glass Walkers may recognize the Wisdom in healing a Battle Scar.

Superficial Scars: Large, ugly masses of scar tissue mar your character’s body and remain hairless in all forms. These scars may reduce a character’s Appearance dice pools by one, depending on the situation. 1 temporary Glory.

Deep Scar: Much the same as a superficial scar, except that muscles are affected as well, and the scar aches when the humidity changes. 1 temporary Glory.

Improper Bone Setting: One of your character’s bones snapped and did not heal properly. If that area of your body receives two or more health levels of damage at once in the future (at the Storyteller’s discretion, depending on the description of the attack), the bone snaps again, causing an additional level of lethal damage. 1 temporary Glory.

Cosmetic Damage: A readily visible injury that doesn’t have a significant debilitating effect, such as a missing ear, a hare lip, or an exposed part of the skull. It looks grotesque to humans and impressive to Garou. Reduce Appearance by one dot when dealing with humans, unless you cover or conceal the damage. 2 temporary Glory.

Broken Jaw: Similar to Improper Bone Setting, your jaw was shattered, and it is now out of alignment with your tongue. All difficulties for actions involving talking increase by 2, and the difficulty of bite attacks increases by one. Your character’s speech is slurred and should be roleplayed appropriately. 1 temporary Glory.

Missing Eye: One of your eyes was gouged out and hasn’t grown back. The difficulties on all rolls involving depth perception or weapon firing (including using thrown weapons) increase by three. Any Perception rolls based on sight take a +2 difficulty penalty. 2 temporary Glory.

Gelded: Your reproductive system has been damaged. You are incapable of siring or bearing children. Males with this wound are not necessarily impotent, but gelded characters of any gender increase the difficulties of seduction and using Animal Attraction by two. 1 temporary Glory.

Collapsed Lung: One of your lungs was punctured during battle. You find it difficult to breathe and to exert yourself. You lose one die on any Stamina roll involving exertion and an additional die after five turns of physical activity. In addition, you may hold your breath for only half the listed time (see p. 259). 1 temporary Glory.

Missing Fingers: You have lost at least three fingers on one hand. Dexterity rolls involving that hand suffer a +3 difficulty penalty. Your damage dice pool for claw attacks with that hand is halved (rounding down). 2 temporary Glory.

Maimed Limb: One of your limbs has been mauled to the point of uselessness. If you lost a leg, you move at half speed in all forms. If you lost an arm, your Hispo and Lupus speed is reduced to three-quarters. You are not able to use the damaged limb for any purpose. 3 temporary Glory.

Spinal Damage: Your spine was fractured, and you have trouble keeping your balance. Your Dexterity is reduced by one, you subtract two from your initiative rating, and you must spend Willpower on any roll involving balance, precision, or remaining still. 2 temporary Glory.

Brain Damage: Severe damage to the head, or perhaps lack of oxygen for a long period of time, has reduced your mental faculties. You lose one dot from one Mental Attribute (Storyteller’s choice). Additionally, you must roll one die and subtract that number of dots from your Gnosis, Willpower or Knowledges (player’s choice of where these points are lost). You are most likely partially amnesiac as well. 2 temporary Glory.