DrunkonDuty
he/him
So jealous! Have fun!
I have some vague memories of playing Pendragon back in the 90s, and at least back then Traits had an additional function as well. Your Knight could come from different cultures, which would likely have different faiths – Christian and Pagan were, I think, the big ones but there may have been others. These faiths/cultures valued different traits, and if your appropriate traits were high enough you would be getting some kind of bonus.I'm most familiar with KAP 1e, though I think the rules have stayed relatively stable over the years (more refinements than full revisions), and Traits are used as follows (I'm paraphrasing the examples given in the 1e Player's Book, pp 52-55):
You're on the right track, though I might complicate it slightly:@Old Fezziwig Thanks for the write-up and explanation. I guess I was just getting too hung up on how often it 'might' get called on. I totally understand if the player wants to use it to either guide behavior, or is generally ambivalent, it can push the character one way or the other (and not always in a good way!).
What I wanted to try to avoid was myself calling for tests of Traits frequently, thinking that every time a situation came up where someone could be dishonest, that they roll (or any of the Traits, not just Honest). I imagine if a knight is in a situation where they are asked a question, and the knight's Trait lean toward Honesty, and they say they are going to tell the truth, I then don't have to have them make a check. They can just choose to be honest. I also understand that if a knight has a strong Honest Trait, and they say they are going to lie, THEN I would ask for a test, first against Dishonest, then Honest if necessary.
Is my thinking in the right vein here?
Yep, this is right. There are mechanical bonuses for being an exemplar of your faith, e.g. Wotanic characters gain +1d3 to damage in 1e, if the right Traits are high enough.I have some vague memories of playing Pendragon back in the 90s, and at least back then Traits had an additional function as well. Your Knight could come from different cultures, which would likely have different faiths – Christian and Pagan were, I think, the big ones but there may have been others. These faiths/cultures valued different traits, and if your appropriate traits were high enough you would be getting some kind of bonus.
The trick is that the adventures need to be properly arthurian in tone.Cool character sheet! I never really understood Pendragon though.
Probably a Pagan, too.A lustful, energetic, generous and valorous knight. Interesting mix. Always liked the Traits system. Have fun!
I don't know much about it, although I'm told it's mightier than Swordragon.I never really understood Pendragon though.