d20 Past
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d20 Past is a
Synopsis
The book itself is divided into an introduction and five chapters:
- Chapter One - How Real Is Your Past? is a short essay on the different views on history and a discussion of the different modes of playing historical games.
- Chapter Two - Rules Components provides player and games master with the specific new rules and deviations from established Modern rules for a historic setting.
- Chapter Three - Age of Adventure provides d20 fantasy in a swashbuckler setting.
- Chapter Four - Shadow Stalkers does the same thing to a setting combining elements from Wild West.
- Chapter Five - Pulp Heroes is the third setting provided, it enables the player to be a more contemporary hero and take on anything from F.B.I.
Further period background information was made available as a Web Enhancement.[3]
Progress Levels
According to Wizards of the Coast, a Progress Level (PL) is an indication of the state of technology that exists in a particular society or an arbitrary measurement of how advanced a culture is, based on developments in technology and society.[4] The concept was introduced in d20 Future (and even earlier in TSR's Alternity manuals by Bill Slavicsek) to describe both the level of technology in the campaign as well as the technology levels of other species comparative to the human one. They are similar to the Tech Levels in GURPS. Progress levels of six and higher were studied in d20 Future, with the default d20 Modern setting encompassing progress level five. In d20 Past, two progress levels are available such as: Progress level three (the age of reason) and progress level four (the industrial age).
Skills and feats
Skills and feats have deviated remarkably from their d20 Modern standards to accommodate for the differences in technology. For example, certain uses of a skill that were acceptable under a modern standard may no longer apply to a campaign setting where the technologies to perform these actions may not have been available. Similarly, some feats may represent modern knowledge or techniques that were not available to people centuries prior. It also includes new uses of skills and feats that might be more appropriate for a historic campaign.
References
- ^ "d20 Past - d20 Modern Rules Supplement". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on January 1, 2007.
- amazon.com.
- ^ "d20 Past (Web Enhancement)". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on March 17, 2005.
- ^ "Progress Levels". Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on January 30, 2005.