Re: Thief's backstab revisited.
Posted: Sun Sep 01, 2013 8:56 pm
Pretty amazing how much variety there is in dealing with thieves and backstab.
EDIT Based on something Matthew said in the assassin thread, it got me thinking. If you keep the assassination table out of the combat round (which was probably the intent, because AC does not come into the equation) why not keep backstab out of the combat round as well (or sort of a pre-combat attack)? If a MS or HIS works (totally hidden and totally silent) then allow a chance to hit before surprise is rolled (or before combat). Then role normal initiative (as the chance of thief's surprise was sacrificed by the attack, or at best normal surprise 1-2 in 6). If the thief chooses he can instead go for surprise 1-4 in 6 then after that go to regular initiative (honestly the chance of winning 4 segments of surprise is probably a better option then backstabbing alot of the time, for example you come upon 4 orcs. With 4 segments of surprise you might kill all of them before normal initiative. If the thief moved up behind one, I'd allow a +2 on the first hit, no double damage and then however many other hits he can get in based on his segments of surprise). I remember asking Gygax about backstab and surprise years ago. He stated his intent was that if you MS or HIS (whatever being appropriate) you could backstab without having to role a separate surprise (and this would be at +4 not +2). I suspect that this was the intention of the author (you could backstab or surprise but not both), it was just botched in how it was written. Further more, if you were hidden and managed to get an attack from behind off (despite failing to MS) you could still backstab at a +2 (so say you as a thief made noise, but where close enough to strike the target from behind. Lets say the target is already in combat and can't turn around to see whats at his back, but he can take some precautions (so its a +2 and backstab rather then a +4 and backstab the thief would have gotten if he'd MS successfully).
EDIT Based on something Matthew said in the assassin thread, it got me thinking. If you keep the assassination table out of the combat round (which was probably the intent, because AC does not come into the equation) why not keep backstab out of the combat round as well (or sort of a pre-combat attack)? If a MS or HIS works (totally hidden and totally silent) then allow a chance to hit before surprise is rolled (or before combat). Then role normal initiative (as the chance of thief's surprise was sacrificed by the attack, or at best normal surprise 1-2 in 6). If the thief chooses he can instead go for surprise 1-4 in 6 then after that go to regular initiative (honestly the chance of winning 4 segments of surprise is probably a better option then backstabbing alot of the time, for example you come upon 4 orcs. With 4 segments of surprise you might kill all of them before normal initiative. If the thief moved up behind one, I'd allow a +2 on the first hit, no double damage and then however many other hits he can get in based on his segments of surprise). I remember asking Gygax about backstab and surprise years ago. He stated his intent was that if you MS or HIS (whatever being appropriate) you could backstab without having to role a separate surprise (and this would be at +4 not +2). I suspect that this was the intention of the author (you could backstab or surprise but not both), it was just botched in how it was written. Further more, if you were hidden and managed to get an attack from behind off (despite failing to MS) you could still backstab at a +2 (so say you as a thief made noise, but where close enough to strike the target from behind. Lets say the target is already in combat and can't turn around to see whats at his back, but he can take some precautions (so its a +2 and backstab rather then a +4 and backstab the thief would have gotten if he'd MS successfully).