Commune based monk skills

This is an idea that's been bouncing around my head for the past week and wouldn't leave me alone. So I figured I'd put it here for discussion and hope that that will help clear my mind of it. Much of what I use as examples will be with a Serenwilde bent, due to Kay being of Serenwilde, but I will try to offer thoughts and examples for other organizations.

It had occurred to me that of the archetypes in the game monks are the only ones without skills to really help tie them to the commune. Wicca and guardians have their cosmic and nature skills, druids and mages have their elementalism and nature skills. And both druids and wicca have totems as well. Those are the most obvious. Warriors can choose totems as well, offering that as a tie. Bards are a bit looser, but even they have ties. Wildarrane, for example, calls on ancestor spirits and Starhymn has their hymns. But monks don't really have anything quite like that. At least commune monks have Scorpion and Bull, but even then I view that as tenuous. So I had the idea for another tertiary, or secondary, for monks with a focus on their organization.

I had a couple considerations to take into account as I was thinking on it. First is that I felt it should be an internalized skill, rather than externalized. What I mean by this is that the effects shouldn't be an external display like calling down moonfire or filling an area with a miasma. Instead they would be abilities that affect the  monk, or are triggered by the monks actions. The reason being that monks, much like warriors, are a physical class. All their skills are focused on the physical, or themselves. Even the more mystical effects tend to be self-contained, as with psychometabolism. Though there is an exception in the harmony mantra fires.

Another consideration was if they should each get their own skill, if they should get a base skill as a choice with a subskill specific to their organization, or if there should just be two skills, one for communes and one for cities, with a couple different abilities for each organization, the way druidry and wicca are. I can see arguments for each.

And finally, how would these skills work. This is the tricky part, and why this is mostly here just to get it out of my head, as you'd want to to keep in theme with the monk archetype, but that makes the question one of how to do so without just ripping off and re-branding one of their existing skills, as they're pretty well covered in that regard. The option that stuck in my mind the most would be to make it largely a contingency based or triggered skill. An example of what I mean by this is that they get abilities that do things like 'On activation for the next three strikes an attack has a 50% chance to entangle the struck limb.' Or, 'Upon activation for the next two seconds an attack has a chance to cause blackout.' And they wouldn't just be limited to attacks, but could also be triggered by moving or being moved, by being attacked, and so on.

However, I already see issues with that. Big ones. First, we already have things that modify our attacks. Used to be they were modifiers. Now they're form bonuses. Second is that monks are already capable of hitting with a lot of afflictions each time they attack. 3 actions in a form each causing an affliction, and 2 poisons with a chance to afflict. And that's just afflictions from the kata based skills. So balance would be... A nightmare.

But I just wanted to see about getting it out of my head. And possibly get some discussion on it. Do you feel skills in this vein, thematically if not the implementation I had in my brain, would be worth considering? Can you think of how to make it work? Is everything I said horrible and I should be burned at the stake?



....


Please don't actually threaten to burn me at the stake. I'm a GOOD witch.

Comments

  • I'm all for a second secondary skill for monks. They are one of the more restricted classes in terms of skill choice.

    No idea what you'd put in it or make it do but well I'd happily work on the concept if you have some ideas.
  • Cyndarin said:
    TaekwonCrow?

    No...please....just no.....

    That was painful to read :D
  • Monk skill choices aren't too bad, actually. Basically psymet vs acro. I guess compared to the other classes, it can get a little dull - though warriors are sort of in the same boat (totems or tracking).

    Of course, more choices to let monks differentiate themselves further will be cool and interesting (for me, too)!

    In terms of mechanics - as a guideline, anything that is designed to happen simultaneously or concurrently with kata as active abilities (or which boosts kata active abilities) will probably be a no-go. Other than concerns of the already fully maximised potential of kata's damage/aff output, the admin have traditionally blocked attempts to move in that direction. Passives will need to be strictly limited in either effect, or duration, for the same reason.

    The new skill should offer alternatives to kata attacks instead of adding on to them (either modifying or as a bonus). You'll want to design it so that it offers a unique effect that kata cannot achieve, but which can make sense to be used instead of a kata attack. In the past, this was almost impossible because kata was about damage and affs - but monks now have an additional status to build toward for their instakill. You could look at unique ways to capitalize off that. For example, an active ability (so it can't be used in conjunction with kata) that gives unique effects based on the target's hemorrhaging. Or which cures hemorrhaging to cause effects. Or which helps make it easier for the next kata attack to build hemorrhaging, etc.



  • Lerad said:
    Monk skill choices aren't too bad, actually. Basically psymet vs acro. I guess compared to the other classes, it can get a little dull - though warriors are sort of in the same boat (totems or tracking).



    They also get to pick out of five different knighthood specs.
  • Well I mean choice wise:

    Warriors
    5x choices for prime skill.
    1 choice for secondary.
    2-3 choices for third.

    Druids/mages
    2 prime
    1 second
    4 third

    Guardians/wiccians
    1 prime
    1 second
    3 third

    bards
    1 prime
    1 second
    3 second

    monks
    1
    1
    2

    So I mean its not a huge difference but monks def have less choice than any other class.



  • Veyils said:
    Well I mean choice wise:

    Warriors
    5x choices for prime skill.
    1 choice for secondary.
    2-3 choices for third.

    Druids/mages
    2 prime
    1 second
    4 third

    Guardians/wiccians
    1 prime
    1 second
    3 third

    bards
    1 prime
    1 second
    3 second

    monks
    1
    1
    2

    So I mean its not a huge difference but monks def have less choice than any other class.



    Your conclusion may still be right, but I think the above statement is a bit one-dimensional. Yes, warriors have 5 prime skills, but they have the same 5 prime skills in every org, whereas the 1 prime skill for Guardians/Wiccans, Bards, and Monks differs for EVERY org (except poor Hallimonks and Gaudimonks, RIP). So Guardian/Wiccan actually has 6 primary skills - more than warriors. It is true that a single character who refuses to change orgs has restricted choices for flavour and rp reasons, but that doesn't mean the class as a whole lacks variety.
  • Oh yea I was more saying for each player. Like Monks are the most restricted in choice as a player.
  • FalaeronFalaeron Jolteon
    edited August 2017
    Choice (or the illusion of) is overrated when it comes to competitiveness. Tarot bards > glamours/dramaturgy bards. DW/runes/even TK mages > TP mages etc etc.

    The flip side is that we have mages/druids who actually have a choice in their primaries that actually change how they play entirely.

    Not saying monks should or shouldn't get more choices, but I am purely responding to the count of how many skill choices each archetype has because I don't think it ultimately matters for the mostly arbitrary archetype labels we have. As far as I'm concerned, Aerochemantics and Aeromancy are two completely different archetypes that happen to share some skills.
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