Friday 25 July 2014

Jack the Giant Slayer and the Specialist Fighter

I recently took up karate classes. (As an aside, I recommend doing a martial art wholeheartedly. And I don't mean boxercise. As a gym rat who goes four times a week I thought I was pretty fit and in shape and in touch with my body. Doing karate twice a week has taught me there is not just a whole other level of physical fitness, but a whole other universe. I've never ached like I've been aching the last couple of weeks. But in a really good way.) When I was younger I did quite a bit of tae kwon doe, but that is getting on for 15 years ago now and although I have a bit of muscle memory, I'm effectively approaching the whole thing as a beginner.

Today we were practising a simple routine, blocking a slap to the head and then delivering a punch to the sternum. At one point the teacher stopped me and my partner to demonstrate. He told us that we may just have been blocking a "slap", but then he showed us how there are different levels of slaps - he used the base of his open hand to just lightly tap my jaw and said, "A proper slap will break this." And I could feel that small movement make my entire jaw bone shift from side to side.

It reminded me of my old Tae Kwon Doe teacher showing us a pattern in which one of the moves was a specific punch delivered at a certain angle and a certain point so as to make the target void his bladder. That's how specific martial arts get. Traditions stretching back thousands of years, perfecting the art of killing people.

Now, in the West we have lost those traditions, although WMA and and HEMA people are doing their level best to reinvigorate them, but there's no reason why in a fantasy world that would have happened. Those martial traditions would be unbroken and ancient. Doesn't it seem likely that in such worlds, martial arts schools would have developed teaching to teach people how to kill not just other people, but also orcs, trolls, ogres, giants, dragons, etc.? Here's how you jab a spear just so that it ruptures a hill giant's spleen. Here's where an orc's jugular vein is - different to humans, slightly to the left. Here's the spot to hit if you want to make a dragon shit itself...

In view of, this, I give you the experimental Jack the Giant Slayer Rule.

At character creation, the player of a fighter can specify that his PC has received training in how to fight a certain type of monster or humanoid. From that point, once per combat, the player can elect to do double damage against that creature type, but he must declare this before rolling to hit. 
A fighter may undergo specific training for killing other types of monsters and humanoids every other level. 

9 comments:

  1. Isn't that what the original Ranger Class was all about?

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    1. Yes, but I think it's daft that rangers are the ones who get the ability rather than fighters. The Complete Ranger Handbook for 2nd Edition even has a Giant Killer kit. I don't have the book to hand though.

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    2. I think I understand your feeling, but keep in mind that (at least in AD&D?) rangers were pretty much a variant fighter. You're free to do what you want in your own play, of course. But I think if you wanted, you could just say that a normal "fighter" is more of a man-at-arms kind of guy, while rangers are the ones who choose a specific species and study how to make their spleens explode with the right hit in the right spot - and get the effect you want without house-ruling anything new in.

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  2. The west never lost its martial arts traditions -- that's exactly what boxing and wrestling are!

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    1. I think he's talking about armed martial arts. As in arts intended to be used martially, not just kung fu.

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    2. Armed? Like fencing, knife-fighting, archery, shooting? 8^P

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  3. "As a gym rat who goes four times a week I thought I was pretty fit and in shape and in touch with my body. Doing karate twice a week has taught me there is not just a whole other level of physical fitness, but a whole other universe".

    Having 'retired' from rugby a couple of years ago, I have - at the request of the coach - 'unretired' and I am currently going through pre-season conditioning for the umpteenth time. I am twice as old as some of the lads. But no amount of circuits, boxercise and weights has prepared me properly for all the high-fatigue game-related conditioning work we're doing now (explosive power drills, wrestling work, etc.). And in this heat...

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  4. Also, have fun with karate! Sounds like you're doing a full-contact style like Kyokushin?

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    1. Shotokan, but it's a non-mcdojo and the teacher is extremely strict on fitness and strength training and doing everything with 'spirit'. Recipe for muscle ache, but my fitness levels are going through the roof.

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