Table of Contents

Schismata: Opifex

Overview

This document is intended to be a distillation of the base system mechanics for Schismata. Absent from this document is the lore or implied setting. The hope is that this will support extension of the system and enable the creation of derivative works, new implementations, etc., without burdening the individual game developers with unwanted flavor text that does not fit with their game ideas. That is, Schismata should be able to form the basis of any kind of game. Covered here are: the basic action resolution mechanics of Schismata, which are effort-based dice pools; the rules around expending, depleting, and replenishing action pools; the definition and characteristics of actions; rules for how these mechanics work for character creation and advancement; and additional support mechanics necessary to run a game, namely time and movement.

Actions and Action Resolution

Whenever a character’s actions have an uncertain (i.e., interesting) result, you’ll roll dice.

The core Action Resolution mechanic is to:

  1. Build your Action Pool
    1. An Action Pool consists of all the Effort Dice spent to power the Action, plus or minus any Circumstance Dice.
    2. Minimum: At least one Effort Point is required.
    3. Maximum: You cannot spend more Effort Dice than the current number of points in the Ability Action Pool you are using for the Action.
    4. Effort Points are resources you will spend by drawing from an Ability Action Pool related to the Action. Effort Points will be subtracted from that Ability Action Pool.
    5. Circumstance Dice cannot reduce an Action Roll below one, nor can they reduce the minimum points spent for the Action Roll.
  2. Roll the Action Pool dice to perform the Action and determine the outcome.
    1. Any result on the dice that is equal to or less than the maximum value of the Ability Action Pool that powered it is a success.
    2. Any result that exceeds the maximum value of the Ability Action pool that powered the Action is a failure.
    3. Count the total successes. In many cases, only a single success is necessary to succeed in an Action Roll. In the remaining cases, more successes are necessary, or more successes provide greater benefit.