Dexterity Skills

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Dexterity

Artillery (Ground, Starship)
This skill is used for the targeting of crew-served or emplaced weapons like projectile artillery batteries, mortars and surface-to-surface or surface-to-air missile or rocket launchers. Starship artillery are specially designed weapons intended to be used from higher altitudes (often low to high planetary orbit), or regular ship’s batteries fired at ground targets.

Athletics
This is a generalized catch-all attribute that reflects the overall athleticism of the character. People with high levels of athletics are those who tried out for multiple sports in school, or are active and physically capable. When attempting a feat such as jumping, gymnastics, throwing an object or diving for cover (to name a few examples) athletics may be the attribute called upon.

Climb
Be it trees, ropes, cliff faces or fire escapes, the climbing skill is used as a base to determine one’s speed while climbing. Some difficult climbing tasks (sheer cliff face, slippery drain pipe) may require one or more rolls to determine if the character can make it at all or if they fall in the middle of the climb.

Dodge
The dodge skill is used to effectively utilize cover in a firefight and avoid incoming enemy fire.

Drive (Hover, Tracked, Wheeled)
This skill is used to operate motor vehicles of various methods of propulsion. Not everyone will have this skill; it should not be taken for granted. Some cultures encountered will be of a low enough tech level that they do not have motor vehicles, while in some cultures, driving vehicles may require extensive licensing, privilege or wealth, or given the local geography, most common vehicles may be impractical.

EVA
Extra-Vehicular Activity is the use of pressurized “space suits” in low or unpressurized atmospheric conditions (like outside of a spacecraft or an airless planet, moon or asteroid). This skill is used in zero-gee environments, when using a suit’s thrusters or rocket pack to maneuver. Characters with no level in this skill may suffer penalties to any critical actions in adverse environments, or may even panic and be unable to act for short periods of time.

Fighting (Blunt; Brawling; Edged, Long; Edged, Short; Energy Blade; Hafted; Martial Arts; Special; Vibro Blade)
This skill is used to make hand-to-hand combat attacks with any number of close-combat weapons, including non-martial art unarmed combat.

Lockpicking
For some people, locks are just a clue to where the good stuff is. This skill is used to overcome physical security. Successful use of this skill does not always leave a lock in working order when you are done with it or hide the fact that someone opened it without a key; the easiest way to crack a safe is to bust it open (hence, safecracking), and using tools or picks will often leave “jimmy” marks on locks that can be easily detected by trained personnel. To leave a safe or lock unharmed so no one knows it was tampered with may increase the difficulty. A character can attempt to pick a lock multiple times if they fail, but each try after the first incurs a cumulative -2 penalty, up to -8. At this point, he is stumped until he earns another level in lockpicking, or, at the Starmaster’s discretion, returns with better tools

Mobile Infantry
Cap troopers are the stuff of legend, the bogeymen in the night of a distant battlefield. When a patrol comes across an enemy position that was smashed flat and they heard no chatter about it from above, you can bet the M.I. had a hand in it. The mobile infantry skill allows one to effectively use exoskeletal strength suits and various power armors; without this skill, one cannot master the negative feedback systems employed, and will wind up seriously injuring themselves, others or just making a mess of everything around them. A character’s level in mobile infantry will act as a cap on any martial arts, athletics or other gross-motor skills (Starmaster’s discretion). You may be a kung-fu master outside the armor, but if your skill while moving inside it is minimal, the armor will be a hindrance. The trade-off, of course, is the protection it offers and other on-board systems.

Parachuting
Sometimes you just need to jump out of a perfectly good aircraft. When this need arises, it’s good to have a way to soften the sudden stop at the end of the fall. On the field of battle, airborne troops are usually deployed behind the enemy lines, where aircraft cannot land or where stealth is key. Sometimes troops are dropped from a great altitude and they open their chutes low to the ground to minimize the opportunity the enemy has to spot them (a HALO or High-Altitude, Low-Opening jump), sometimes they deploy a great distance away (sometimes even several kilometers!) and open their chutes high in order to glide silently toward the target. There are many types of parachutes designed for multiple roles. Make sure you have the right one for the job and the atmosphere of the planet you’re dropping on! Success on your parachuting roll means that you landed near the position you intended; each point you missed by equals 1d100 meters of drift. If attempting a stealth approach, this roll will act as the character’s “sneak” roll versus an opposing force’s “search/awareness” roll.

Pilot: Atmospheric Craft (Fixed Wing Propulsion, Helicopter, VTOL)
Aircraft utilize several methods of providing lift, thrust and control. Some are related, others are quite different from each other. This skill is used to pilot craft that rely on an atmosphere to fly. Fixed wing craft use rotors or jet turbines for thrust and wings for lift and maneuvering. Helicopters use one or more rotors that provide lift, thrust and maneuvering and are capable of not only hovering but flying backwards and side to side. VTOL (vertical take-off and landing) craft are often similar to fixed wing craft, but they have rotors or jet turbines that tilt on one or more axes to provide lift and thrust in directions other than forward. VTOL craft can operate in some respects like a helicopter, but are much faster.

Pilot: Spacecraft (Conning, Personal Spacecraft, Shuttle)
Operating a craft that is capable of space travel requires a much different skill set than operating an atmospheric craft, and while many spacecraft may be able to operate in an atmosphere, they utilize vastly different means to stay aloft and maneuver (and in many cases do neither of these as well as aircraft!). The conning concentration is used to pilot a large vessel, often a military ship, where the pilot may have to relay orders to other crew members to change output to various systems (engines and drives) and because of the scales involved may have to rely on sensor readings to perceive the area around the ship (Like Sulu on the Enterprise). Personal spacecraft are those that can be operated by a one person, and rather than having a proper bridge they are more apt to have a “cockpit” (Like Luke Skywalker aboard his X-Wing). Shuttles are generally craft that ferry personnel and/or materiel ship-to-ship, land-to-ship or vice-versa, and have no FTL capacity. Shuttles include the broad category of “ship’s boats,” and on military vessels also include various armed assault craft used to deploy marines and act as gunships (Like Cpl. Ferro on the Bug Stomper, one of the Sulaco’s dropships).

Ride (Animal, Cycle)
If you can fall off of it, you’re probably riding. This skill is used to pull off fancy maneuvers or overcome obstacles while riding various animals or open vehicles like motorcycles, ATVs or CG land sleds. Trying to operate these kind of steeds/vehicles with no training is a dicey proposition at best.

Shooting: ARPOBDIF
Anti-robot positronic brain disruption field weapons are direct-fire weapons that target the advanced electronics of the positronic brains commonly found in most meks. ARPO weapons could be considered like EMP guns that specifically target robots.

Shooting: Handgun (Blaster, Laser, Disruptor, Fusion, Gauss, Projectile, Needler)
This attribute covers shooting any small, one-handed ranged weapon.

Shooting: Rifle (Blaster, Laser, Fusion, Gauss, Needler, Projectile, Disruptor)
Two-handed ranged weapons that have some kind of a stock held to the shoulder for stability and to absorb recoil are rifle-type weapons be they long guns, carbines or submachine gun style. Rifles generally have increased range over pistols and sometimes fire heavier rounds, but they can be slower and are not well-suited for firing in close-quarters.

Shooting: Flamer
Weapons that use pressurized incendiary material to ignite a target or area. Flamers come in several sizes, and their operations are similar. Specialized skill is useful to know how to effectively fan a target and make sure the flaming product gets where the shooter wants it.

Shooting: Heavy (Fusion, Laser, Blaster, Projectile)
Heavy weapons are usually not fired from the shoulder like a rifle. Instead, they utilize bi- or tripod stabilization or are turret-mounted (though some LMG variants are designed for either mounted or shoulder fire). This requires a different set of skills and fire discipline, as most heavy weapons are fully automatic.

Shooting: Grenade Launcher
With miniaturization and energetic explosive compounds, grenades can be made even more compact and devastating. Launcher-style weapons are effective to medium-long ranges, but precision deployment of ordnance at anything beyond short ranges will require some degree of indirect fire. Grenade types vary widely, and as such, launchers can be used as “multi-role” weapons.

Shooting: PML
Portable Missile Launchers use either direct fire (rockets) or guided/homing systems to put a powerful warhead on target. PML weapons are generally used for armor penetration or anti-aircraft roles. With these, explosive, anti-personnel effects are minimal and secondary. Some rockets may be primarily HE or incendiary, however, and their battlefield role might be that of a large-caliber grenade launcher.

Shooting: Recoilless
“Recoilless” weapons are true rocket guns. The slugs themselves are propelled by their own tiny, powerful rocket motor. They do not experience the bullet drop endemic to standard projectile firearms, as their rockets fire during their entire flight. Recoilless weapons are not as effective at very close ranges, however, as the projectile will not have gotten up to speed yet. Because the entire munition is expended in firing, recoilless guns do not have to cycle or eject spent cartridges, and have impressive rates of fire. The slugs of the larger caliber “infinite repeaters” are big enough to carry a warhead, and are often used for anti-armor or anti-personnel roles, the latter by saturating an area with fire. Recoilless weapons have little noticeable “kick,” and are therefore well-suited for zero gee combat.

Shooting: Special
Special weapons include stunners, tangleguns and dart guns.

Sleight of Hand
Misdirection and subtlety are the key when it comes to making things seem to appear or vanish at your fingertips. It can be used to cheat at the game table, pilfer small items, or quickly arm yourself in a dicey situation. Sleight of hand allows a character to draw or place small items out of or into his sleeve or pocket quickly and without notice. Bystanders may be allowed an opposed search/awareness roll to detect your actions. Sleight of hand may also be used like the quick draw attribute on any weapons smaller than a pistol (especially those classified as “hold out” weapons).

Sneak
Moving about without being detected by those around you requires a sneak roll. This is an opposed roll against a target’s search/awareness skill. When trying to sneak around or past a group of people, instead of each target rolling an individual search roll, use the following table:

Observers Search Modifier
1 +0
2-3 +1
4-8 +2
9-15 +3
16+ +4
Condition Search Modifier
Background Noise -2
Darkness -4
Target on alert/searching +2

Swim
The swim skill determines how fast a character can move in water; does he know the breast stroke, or is he limited to the dog paddle? Other feats like diving or rescuing someone who is drowning may call for a swim check.

Throw (Axe/Blade, Spears, Exotic, Grenade)
Sometimes you just need to chuck a knife at somebody. Or your dropship might have gone down with all your fancy gear, and all you’ve got is a pocketknife to make a spear. Perhaps you’re a ninja armed with throwing stars or bolas. Or maybe you’ve just got to get a frag grenade into the trench over yonder. Whatever the case, the throw skill will determine your accuracy.

Zero G
Like the climbing and swimming skills, weightless conditions are an environment all their own, and require a different subset of skills in order to maneuver and work safely or effectively. Movement speed in weightless conditions is determined by this skill, and skill checks may be required at critical moments. Performing any actions in zero g with no training may result in penalties.