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Muspellsheimr
post Sep 23 2008, 11:07 PM
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Remove "guaranteed" and I believe it is.
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ElFenrir
post Sep 23 2008, 11:07 PM
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I'm in that ''You burn the edge, and luck comes in somehow.''

The bullet example was good. Instead of your heart, it hits somewhere else. You're down and out, but alive. Another good example is the bomb blast-throws you back, knocked to crap but again, alive. You'll need to spend some time healing, for sure...but you got lucky.

This is why I actually don't mind being able to keep burning Edge. There are people in real life that have been though hell, having should have died several times...but didn't. In SR, you can say they had a high-ass Edge and just ended up burning it to live. Person struck by lightning? In SR, they burn the Edge. While I don't like to use real life as an exact scope for SR, the person with the 1 edge just isn't that lucky, and that 7 edge person somehow manages to cheat fate almost every time. We use edge as is; if you have a 5 edge, yeah, you can cheat death five times if you want. You buy it higher, there you go. Oddly enough, it's rare anyone in our groups have over a 4 edge, and it's usually more in the 2-3 range. You'd think for a ''get out of jail free'' card it's the first stat people would boost...but it's not. I know some folks have a problem with people spending Edge to avoid death, but we don't. I mean, if a character wants to sit there and spend their Edge up at the start rather than getting other things, and then getting into trouble and having to blow it, and then buying it up with Karma...great, while everyone else is actually getting somewhere with their character, they are playing Captain 100 lives. I mean, if that's fun for them...well, fun's the most important thing, I guess.

All of that being said...sometimes even Edge can't get you out. If someone is standing next to the nuke as it goes off...yeah. I mean, I really can't think of any possible way the Edge is going to get them out of that one. If they strip naked and dive into a pool of concentrated hydrochloric acid, I also don't know how I'd explain that one. There are certain things that I just can't see people getting out of. But for everyday ''deaths'' like a car crash, bullet, or knife, I just call it as ''it avoids vitals, you're messed up, you need hospital care for X time and X nuyen, you'll live.''
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Cain
post Sep 23 2008, 11:10 PM
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QUOTE (Stahlseele @ Sep 23 2008, 03:05 PM) *
i suddenly understand the whole Mr.Lucky Concept a whole lot better right now . .

Actually, it's hideously inefficient to burn Edge that way. It'll cost you 24 karma to replace that top point of Edge.

If you really want to be evil, only get an Edge of 2. At the end of game, bind a max-force spirit and use the burn tactic on both the binding and drain rolls, if necessary. If you need to burn both points, you only need to spend 9 karma to rebuild your Edge back up again.

Maxing your Edge means you really don't want to burn any, if you can avoid it.
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Muspellsheimr
post Sep 23 2008, 11:12 PM
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Yes, Mr. Lucky relies on 6~8 dice for every test via Long Shot, not Critical Success via Burning. Way to expensive to replace that lost Edge.

But still, 8 dice when your dice pool would otherwise be -50 or so is impressive.
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Cain
post Sep 23 2008, 11:14 PM
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QUOTE (Muspellsheimr @ Sep 23 2008, 03:07 PM) *
Remove "guaranteed" and I believe it is.

You're right, but the guarantee is implied:
QUOTE (SR4, p 68)
• Escape certain death. This use of Edge represents another
shot at life—something the spirits are rare to
provide. The streets have decided that they have more
uses for this character before she’s discarded to the
trash heap and miraculously pull her from the jaws
of Death. Gamemasters can explain this phenomena
with any rationale they like, from sheer coincidence to
the intervention of the gods. Note that the character is
not necessarily unharmed by the action; if shot in the
head, for example, she may be knocked into a coma
and appear dead to her enemies, but she will survive to
get revenge another day.
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Muspellsheimr
post Sep 23 2008, 11:17 PM
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Guaranteed is not implied. It is by default included in a statement of fact, and thus redundant to write - no "implied" about it.
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sunnyside
post Sep 23 2008, 11:44 PM
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Actually a fair point is the difference between surviving and getting out clean. Specifically it'd be pretty easy to make the other siad decide to just capture the oc instead of killing them.
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DTFarstar
post Sep 24 2008, 12:19 AM
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Not to be too picky, Kurious, but if the bullet passed between the two halves of your brain it would hit your corpus callosum, killing you deader than if it had instead just hit one lobe.

Chris
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Muspellsheimr
post Sep 24 2008, 12:27 AM
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A better explanation of surviving a head shot would be the bullet is deflected by the skull, riding underneath the skin but above the skull to the back of your head, where it exits. This has happened multiple times in real life - just, I believe, with small caliber arms. I doubt it would be a reasonable explanation for a Barrett 121 shot.
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sunnyside
post Sep 24 2008, 12:36 AM
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QUOTE (Muspellsheimr @ Sep 23 2008, 07:27 PM) *
A better explanation of surviving a head shot would be the bullet is deflected by the skull, riding underneath the skin but above the skull to the back of your head, where it exits. This has happened multiple times in real life - just, I believe, with small caliber arms. I doubt it would be a reasonable explanation for a Barrett 121 shot.


There is also a lot of the head that isn't brain that could be blown off.
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Cain
post Sep 24 2008, 01:07 AM
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QUOTE (DTFarstar @ Sep 23 2008, 05:19 PM) *
Not to be too picky, Kurious, but if the brain passed between the two halves of your brain it would hit your corpus callosum, killing you deader than if it had instead just hit one lobe.

Chris

Last I checked, cutting the corpus callosum was still used today as a last-ditch treatment for extremely severe epilepsy. It's perfectly survivable, except for the fact that now your right and left sides of your brain can not communicate; but that effect is a topic unto itself. It's hits to the brainstem that are invariably fatal.

QUOTE
A better explanation of surviving a head shot would be the bullet is deflected by the skull, riding underneath the skin but above the skull to the back of your head, where it exits. This has happened multiple times in real life - just, I believe, with small caliber arms. I doubt it would be a reasonable explanation for a Barrett 121 shot.

Well, you could call it a graze, blowing off part of the skull and exposing the brain. That might look fatal from a distance.
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Kurious
post Sep 24 2008, 01:13 AM
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QUOTE (DTFarstar @ Sep 24 2008, 01:19 AM) *
Not to be too picky, Kurious, but if the brain passed between the two halves of your brain it would hit your corpus callosum, killing you deader than if it had instead just hit one lobe.

Chris



Well, sure... if a brain passed between the two halves of a brain... (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wink.gif)

But, just to clarify, I was referring to the upper portion of the skull, not the lower (or even middle). Another good example is like what Muspellsheimr said, it got deflected.

Hell, get creative... (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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Matsci
post Sep 24 2008, 01:23 AM
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What do my players get from a point of burned edge?

Survival, no matter what, and 5-10 points worth of negative qualities.
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DTFarstar
post Sep 24 2008, 01:30 AM
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Cain, yes, severing the corpus callosum during surgery is a life altering if survivable operation. Severing it with a BULLET is not. I could be wrong, of course, but I'm almost certain that severing it without anesthesia and with a bullet, which by the way is signifcantly larger than the width of the corpus callosum itself, would kill the hell out of someone as their brain would shut down from the sudden overflow of sensation and trauma.

Chris
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Cain
post Sep 24 2008, 01:43 AM
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QUOTE (DTFarstar @ Sep 23 2008, 05:30 PM) *
Cain, yes, severing the corpus callosum during surgery is a life altering if survivable operation. Severing it with a BULLET is not. I could be wrong, of course, but I'm almost certain that severing it without anesthesia and with a bullet, which by the way is signifcantly larger than the width of the corpus callosum itself, would kill the hell out of someone as their brain would shut down from the sudden overflow of sensation and trauma.

Chris

No anesthesia would be painful, but not as bad as you might think. There aren't many (any?) pain receptors in the brain itself. The bullet would be difficult, but it depends a bit on what tissues it hit on the way in. I can't find any good references as to size, and my anatomy texts are in storage in Seattle; but from what I can see, the whole of the corpus callosum would be larger than a small-arms bullet. As far as brain shutdown from sensory overload, that AFAIK is a myth. I've never heard of someone dying from oversensation, especially after brain damage. If anything, sensation should decrease, since the brain isn't able to receive the signals anymore.
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DTFarstar
post Sep 24 2008, 03:12 AM
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See I thought there had been studies done... somewhere in my psych textbooks.... about sensory overload shutting down the brain. Maybe not, I don't have my anatomy books on hand either, but I was under the(possibly mistaken) impression that the corpus callosum was about a quarter of an inch thick. Maybe I am overestimating the size of a bullet, but I thought most were bigger than that. Also, sensation would decrease after the fact, but speaking as someone who has had nerves severed as a medical procedure where I was not allowed to be anesthetized, sensation increases dramatically at the moment of severance and the nerve activates a final time. Mine was in my neck, so maybe it was just the pain, but the doctor told me it was the release of neurochemicals as the nerve is ruptured.

I could be wrong though, very easily, I didn't really put much thought into my first couple of answers much less research so you could be correct.

Chris
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Cain
post Sep 24 2008, 03:25 AM
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Bullet size is one of these weird things. The 7.62 bullets used by NATO actually fire a projectile that's .223 inches across-- about the same size as a .22 LR round. The reason it looks so much bigger is because the cartridge holds a lot more propellant. I'm no gun expert, but I bet one will be around soon to correct me if I'm wrong.
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TKDNinjaInBlack
post Sep 24 2008, 04:42 AM
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I agree with Ryu.

Their out, and the other team members might or might not know if they survived. Could be left for dead, which is usually what it implies. Doc Wagon was generous, some mob boss felt they could use more muscle to exploit in exchange for saving them, Lone Star picked them up and cold steel slabbed them and they wake up in a prison lockup, who knows, but it usually is bad and more than likely, a burden for the team to recover them, or provides interesting Roleplaying arcs in the future.
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Riley37
post Sep 24 2008, 06:08 AM
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At a recent session, a bullet-riddled character burned Edge to survive, during a hit on a corp facility. The GM ruled that one of the corpsec mage's possession spirits had entered the PC, giving him just enough INW to survive... but he was still wounded badly, possessed, and in the middle of a firefight at an oil refinery in frozen tundra. The other characters went out of their way to retrieve him. They couldn't kick out the possessing spirit right away; if they'd done that, he might have died as his P track reverted to its normal state. They extracted, got emergency medical care ready, then banished the spirit, IIRC.

If the GM had handwaved that the bullet-riddled PC was effectively whisked off-stage, that would have been easier for the team; it was fun to play out rescuing the near-dead team-mate, with his life still in danger. Also, before he got shot, he'd been the one to actually enter the facility's control room and do the hacking that was essential to the mission, the rest of us were there as his backup, so he'd earned a rescue.

In this case, yeah, it was just survival from a single attack. If somehow we'd botched the rescue, eg dropped his body while jumping over a burning oil slick, or if a corpsec grenade had landed next to him, then I dunno if the GM woulda invited him to burn Edge again.

He eventually recovered just fine.

As we rule it, his Edge went from 2 to 2/1, in much the same way that a STR of 5 plus Muscle Augmentation 2 becomes 5/7. So to recover the burned Edge, he pays the same as the cost to go from Edge 2 to Edge 3, and his final score is Edge 3/2. Same with Magic; when a wizard with Magic 5 gets a datajack (or other ware with Essense cost up to 1), his Magic becomes 5/4.
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JudgementLoaf
post Sep 24 2008, 06:12 AM
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Survival, as always, is questionable in most gunfights/bomb blasts/other goofy stuff that would cause people to burn edge. That being said, the character will survive (in a state of my choosing) post burning edge. Usually, this amounts to a state of extreme luck...... or potential impossible random chance. A good example I have used in one of my games was a character that walked into a bomb trap. The bomb went off, and would have killed the character, but he burned edge. So, he survives with a broken leg and a broken arm, under a pile of rubble. Saved from the "event" of the bomb only, had to deal with the surrounding mess after.
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sunnyside
post Sep 24 2008, 07:21 AM
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QUOTE (TKDNinjaInBlack @ Sep 24 2008, 12:42 AM) *
I agree with Ryu.

Their out, and the other team members might or might not know if they survived. Could be left for dead, which is usually what it implies. Doc Wagon was generous, some mob boss felt they could use more muscle to exploit in exchange for saving them, Lone Star picked them up and cold steel slabbed them and they wake up in a prison lockup, who knows, but it usually is bad and more than likely, a burden for the team to recover them, or provides interesting Roleplaying arcs in the future.


The start for the SNES SR game revealed at long last.

Anyway it's the 5.56 round that's equivalent (roughly) to the .22lr width wise. However the 5.56 is longer, going a lot faster (as in the brain will get pushed apart by the shockwave), and will tend to go sideways and shatter which is why it is as deadly as it is despite being a smallish round.
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BullZeye
post Sep 24 2008, 10:06 AM
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QUOTE (Cain @ Sep 24 2008, 06:25 AM) *
Bullet size is one of these weird things. The 7.62 bullets used by NATO actually fire a projectile that's .223 inches across-- about the same size as a .22 LR round. The reason it looks so much bigger is because the cartridge holds a lot more propellant. I'm no gun expert, but I bet one will be around soon to correct me if I'm wrong.


7.62 is just that, 7.62mm in diameter (also known as .308)
.223 is 5.56mm
.22 is 5.5mm
.177 is 4.5mm, a typical air gun.
.50cal is 12.7mm that Barret uses... That makes nice airing holes (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
and 9mm is (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wobble.gif) 9mm
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TKDNinjaInBlack
post Sep 24 2008, 12:10 PM
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isn't the conversion the same as caliber = inches? So converting .50 cal round to mm would be the same as converting 1/2 inch to mm?
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Cain
post Sep 24 2008, 03:23 PM
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QUOTE (BullZeye @ Sep 24 2008, 02:06 AM) *
7.62 is just that, 7.62mm in diameter (also known as .308)
.223 is 5.56mm
.22 is 5.5mm
.177 is 4.5mm, a typical air gun.
.50cal is 12.7mm that Barret uses... That makes nice airing holes (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
and 9mm is (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wobble.gif) 9mm

Oops, I had a feeling I was getting that one wrong. But I think the point is, a shot that miraculously hits the corpus callosum and nothing else (via burning Edge) is potentially survivable, if with an intriguing new mental Flaw as a result.
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BullZeye
post Sep 24 2008, 03:45 PM
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QUOTE (Cain @ Sep 24 2008, 06:23 PM) *
Oops, I had a feeling I was getting that one wrong. But I think the point is, a shot that miraculously hits the corpus callosum and nothing else (via burning Edge) is potentially survivable, if with an intriguing new mental Flaw as a result.


Yep, I think even if one makes a 13mm hole to head, one can survive it.

QUOTE (TKDNinjaInBlack @ Sep 24 2008, 03:10 PM) *
isn't the conversion the same as caliber = inches? So converting .50 cal round to mm would be the same as converting 1/2 inch to mm?


Aye.

And when talking about cannons:
"The length of a gun divided by the diameter."
"a gun described as 18 caliber's long would have a bore 18 times as long as its diameter." - both quoted from google definitions (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
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