Difference between revisions of "Appearance"

From Exalted - Unofficial Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (link fix)
m
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT Attributes[[/Appearance]]
+
= Appearance =
 +
Something Exalted seems to have done is rendered the Appearance Attribute probably the most useless thing in the entirety of the RPG.  While in the Aeon Continuim and the World of Darkness, it is actually a rolled stat, Exalted gives a very minimal benefit for having the Ability, to the point that one Caste, the Changing Moon Lunar Exalted, don't gain any benefits from it at all.  I am also worried that two Alchemical Castes - Jade and Soulsteel - will also suffer this fate.
 +
 
 +
As such, I have tweaked Appearance and will also change soem Charms for Lunars so that it is a more suitable choice for character Creation.  The first change is to change the definition of what Appearance means.  As it is written now, its how pretty you look.  However, a concept I frist read in Adventure! (Not sure if shows up elsewhere in the Aeon games) is the idea that Appearance is how striking you look, instead.  This means that at high Appearance, you might be utterly ugly or totally pretty.  Its all a PC's choice. 
 +
 
 +
It also doesn't screw over Boar Totem Lunars.  Which is nice.
 +
 
 +
Anyways, here is the new Attribute, based on the Adventure! wording, and with new rules for the use of the stat.
 +
----
 +
== New Appearance Description ==
 +
Appearance is a measure of how memorable you look.  This rating doesn't always reflect exceptunal beauty -- a high Appearance could also represent someone of striking ugliness!  Since people often stick by a first impression, Appearance can be very impoortant when it comes to social interaction.
 +
 
 +
<tt>
 +
<b>•    Poor:</b> 
 +
Your alias is "whatsisname"<br>
 +
<b>••    Average:</b>
 +
Just that -- another face in the crowd.<br>
 +
<b>•••  Good:</b> 
 +
If you are pretty, you can turn heads.  If you are ugly, you can turn stomachs.<br>
 +
<b>••••  Exceptional:</b> 
 +
Either a celebrated beauty, even in the Imperial court, or a famed horror known across the land.<br>
 +
<b>••••• Superb:</b> 
 +
Rural folks may mistake you for a deity - or demon - incarnte.
 +
</tt>
 +
 
 +
== Altered Appearance Mechanics ==
 +
One thing which annoys me about the current ruleset is that you simply don't roll Appearance, ever.  Even in things like Intimidation or Seduction, where you would expect Appearance to play a major role, they rarely do more then effect the difficulty.  As such, these new mechanics takes into account Appearance's broader description.
 +
 
 +
=== Presence ===
 +
<b>Seduction</b> - If a character is attractive, they may opt to use Appearance rather then Charisma or Manipulation in order to seduce someone.  The roll is otherwised modified as normal.  Very attractive characters are simply more physically able to generate more primal emotional responses.  Ugly characters can not use this potion.
 +
 
 +
<b>Intimidation</b> - Characters who have choosen to have their Appearance represent ugliness may use the Attribute instead of Manipulation or Strength when dealing with people on a one-on-one basis.  Simply put, ugly people do have the capability to strike fear into people's hearts if need be.  Characters with attractive Appearance scores can not use the Attribute in this fashion.
 +
 
 +
== Altered Lunar Charms ==
 +
While I understand Geoff's take on Appearance and Lunars, I feel that this change to the basic definition of the Attribute allows for more accessable Appearance Charms for all totems.  As such the following Charms I would change, so that they would be Appearance, rather then Charisma or Manipulation, Charms:
 +
 
 +
Looking through the Lunar book, many of the Charms, however, are rather set on Manipulation or Charisma as is.  So for now, these are really the only ones I can think of changing.  Suggestions from folks about are welcome though.
 +
 
 +
==== Shapeshifting ====
 +
*Hide of the Cunning Hunter
 +
*Masking the Brilliant Form
 +
*Shaping the Ideal Form
 +
*Many-Faced Moon Transformation
 +
*Prey's Skin Disguise
 +
 
 +
==== Stealth ====
 +
*Chameleon Skin Disguise
 +
 
 +
== Abyssal Appearance ==
 +
As Abyssal Exalted gain Permanant Essence, their bodies transform to be more like that of the dead.  With the new mechanics in mind, this means that as an Abyssal gets higher Essence, even if he decides to be ugly, he has to buy dots of additional Appearance like his more attractive brethren.  AKA, you aren't going to get out of spending that xp on Appearance to look ugly.  Besides, that's extra intimidation dice!
 +
 
 +
And well, stuff.
 +
 
 +
=== Comments ===
 +
I like the change to Appearance. I always thought it was how good you were with your appearance, which for most people means how pretty you can be.<br>
 +
I will never forget the one time in a Vampire game I had to roll Appearance+Stealth. It was gorgeous.
 +
 
 +
Also, to be productive now, it seems to me that the Lunar charms based on Manipulation are such because they're a matter of willfully changing, of manipulating, your shape in ways that go outside of just altering your appearance. The only Charms I see up there that I could see changing to being Appearance-based are <i>Chameleon Skin Disguise</i> and <i>Shaping the Ideal Form</i> because they're a direct alteration of your natural appearance. Arguably <i>Hide the Cunning Hunter</i> and <i>Masking the Brilliant Form</i>, but the point is to actively trick so I still don't QUITE see them as Appearance. Same reason I don't see <i>Prey's Skin Disguise</i> being Appearance, only more so.
 +
 
 +
That's my story and I'm stickin' to it.<br>
 +
~*~[[Braydz]]~*~
 +
 
 +
 
 +
-Appearance is a POS attribute in most games. It's really hard to take appearance into account, and, in general, appearance can get you ahead in the world, but it's hard to use in a lot of exaltedish situations. So, your appearance system helps a lot and is definitely one way to go. But something about it just doesn't register in my mind. When I think of appearance, I think of a quality of a person which they're stuck with, and can be altered only with cosmetics or considerable luck and work or time.  I think that what appearance does best in games is serve to highlight some relatively fixed quality in a person. For example, what happens in social situations often reminds a character that he's ugly, and just has an uphill battle socially. And a beautiful person should be reminded that they are first picked, most noticed, last attacked, given the benefit of the doubt, and have an easy time with people just by keeping their mouth shut. This doesn't balance appearance in exalted, in my opinion. But I think that appearance is a valid limit to charisma and manipulation in a lot of social interractions, especially first impressions. And I flat out award automatic successes equal to the difference between 2 characters' appearances for seduction rolls. But this is all stylistic, and a <i>good call</i> in your direction, because it's about time that someone took the appearance system and did something with it, because it's not quite right from where I'm standing.
 +
-[[Morpheus]]
 +
 
 +
I generally thought Prey-Skin's Disguise was Appearance-like because of how it affected your actual physical form in the way it did.  You are human, after all, and it seems to me to be an extension of Shaping the Ideal Form more then much else. 
 +
 
 +
I also picked Many-Faced Moon Transformation due to its mostly asthetic applications.  It really is just changing your appearance IMHO.
 +
 
 +
As for Hide the Cunning Hunter and Masking the Brilliant Form, I would atleast maket he first one Appearance.  I see it as actually causing the tattoos to fade from the eye to be hoenst.  Not everyone playing a Lunar wants there to be tattoos that would show up if they were drawn or something.  I also like drawing a couple Lunars using that Charm being shown as lacking tattoos.
 +
 
 +
And stuff.  Thanks folks.  --  [[Blaque]]
 +
 
 +
On intimidation -- Couldn't someone with Appearance 5 who's incredibly, absurdly beautiful be intimidating too, though?  I mean, 5 Appearance ... that's so unthinkable.  The <i>limit of human capacity</i> in beauty.  Hell, I'd be intimidated.  Not to mention that in Exalted, a lot of the most dangerous creatures are beautiful (e.g. the Fair Folk are the most obvious example), so being beautiful isn't necessarily a "harmless" thing.<br>
 +
I guess the point is: Imagine you're a peasant in the Age of Sorrows.  Suddenly, a woman so beautiful you could mistake her for an incarnate deity walks up to you.  Unimaginably beautiful.  Heart-stoppingly beautiful.  Aren't you intimidated?<br>
 +
~ Shataina (just sniffing around)
 +
 
 +
:While I see what you mean here, part of why I'm doing it like this is because I want it so that either version of the Attribute has its edge.  Making it so that pretty folks can get the bonus too makes it so that ugly folks only get one of the two main options for the Attribute, until I start figuring out way sot incorperate things from Adventure! like the rolls for disguise and whatnot being based on this.  This works for now I think, and those nobles and whatnot still have Manipulation up the wazzoo to fall back on.  Stuff.  [[Blaque]]
 +
 
 +
'Taina: Maybe, depends on how used you are to that sort of thing.<br>
 +
However you'd <i>definitely</i> be intimidated if they were <i>trying</i> to intimidate you, which I think is the real point.
 +
 
 +
And to Blaque:<br>
 +
<i>Many-Faced Moon Transformation</i> doesn't just change your aesthetics though, it changes your ACTUAL sex. You look like you did before, you've just got different anatomy now. Ok not <i>exactly</i> like you did, but you're really just the other-sexed version of yourself.<br>
 +
I get the <i>Hide the Cunning Hunter</i> argument though. And you're right about <i>Prey's Skin Disguise</i>, but I wonder if <i>Shaping the Ideal Form</i> should even be appearance.<br>
 +
Again though, this's just me.<br>
 +
~*~[[Braydz]]~*~
 +
 
 +
On the pretty-intimidator subject, yes, if they were -trying-. However, if they're trying, I see them using charisma or manipulation, something the fair folk and others who are beautiful and intimidating tend to have lots of. However... if said incarnate deity walked up and then tried very badly to intimidate you, the beauty would probably only colour the peasant's reactions before they spoke up (and maybe afterwards for social reasons), whereas even if an amazingly ugly character was pitiful at intimidation, people are still more likely to be scared of them, in my opinion. Look at zombies, for example. They're not charismatic, they're not all -that- dangerous (compared to all of the really nasty things wondering around the Second Age) but they're sure as hell ugly and disgusting, and people tend to be afraid of them. Just my opinion on the matter. Nice way of making appearance more useful though, I'll be using part or all of this!<br> -- [[Darloth]]
 +
 
 +
I'd like to lend my opinion here, and say that this is a very good idea. There really does need to be some better ruling on how <nowiki>Charisma/Manipulation/Appearance</nowiki> interact with each other in social situations, too.  I'm also curious to see what could be done with using Appearance in non-Lunar Charms - obviously not Charms based on appearance, but Charms affecting it, to see how other beings of power treat Appearance (Abyssals especially come to mind..). I've done some experimental work with such myself, but they've yet to be playtested. [[Gamlain]]
 +
 
 +
The "Innocuous" Merit (EPG p. 22) and the "Disfigured" Flaw (p. 32) obviously need to be rewritten to fit into these rules.  My take on them is at [http://exalted.xi.co.nz/wiki/wiki.pl?MetalFatigue/HouseRules1#appearance MetalFatigue/HouseRules1]. --[[MF]]
 +
 
 +
Also, it occurs to me that the various rules that specify that ugly people can't be raised above Appearance 2 by magical disguises could easily be replaced by a rule that magical disguises can't change your Appearance "mode" from ugly to beautiful.  So a horrid monster with Appearance 4 could, at best, be reduced to Appearance 1 (a face in the crowd), but couldn't go beyond that and into "positive" Appearance. --[[MF]]

Revision as of 19:32, 8 February 2005

Appearance

Something Exalted seems to have done is rendered the Appearance Attribute probably the most useless thing in the entirety of the RPG. While in the Aeon Continuim and the World of Darkness, it is actually a rolled stat, Exalted gives a very minimal benefit for having the Ability, to the point that one Caste, the Changing Moon Lunar Exalted, don't gain any benefits from it at all. I am also worried that two Alchemical Castes - Jade and Soulsteel - will also suffer this fate.

As such, I have tweaked Appearance and will also change soem Charms for Lunars so that it is a more suitable choice for character Creation. The first change is to change the definition of what Appearance means. As it is written now, its how pretty you look. However, a concept I frist read in Adventure! (Not sure if shows up elsewhere in the Aeon games) is the idea that Appearance is how striking you look, instead. This means that at high Appearance, you might be utterly ugly or totally pretty. Its all a PC's choice.

It also doesn't screw over Boar Totem Lunars. Which is nice.

Anyways, here is the new Attribute, based on the Adventure! wording, and with new rules for the use of the stat.


New Appearance Description

Appearance is a measure of how memorable you look. This rating doesn't always reflect exceptunal beauty -- a high Appearance could also represent someone of striking ugliness! Since people often stick by a first impression, Appearance can be very impoortant when it comes to social interaction.

• Poor: Your alias is "whatsisname"
•• Average: Just that -- another face in the crowd.
••• Good: If you are pretty, you can turn heads. If you are ugly, you can turn stomachs.
•••• Exceptional: Either a celebrated beauty, even in the Imperial court, or a famed horror known across the land.
••••• Superb: Rural folks may mistake you for a deity - or demon - incarnte.

Altered Appearance Mechanics

One thing which annoys me about the current ruleset is that you simply don't roll Appearance, ever. Even in things like Intimidation or Seduction, where you would expect Appearance to play a major role, they rarely do more then effect the difficulty. As such, these new mechanics takes into account Appearance's broader description.

Presence

Seduction - If a character is attractive, they may opt to use Appearance rather then Charisma or Manipulation in order to seduce someone. The roll is otherwised modified as normal. Very attractive characters are simply more physically able to generate more primal emotional responses. Ugly characters can not use this potion.

Intimidation - Characters who have choosen to have their Appearance represent ugliness may use the Attribute instead of Manipulation or Strength when dealing with people on a one-on-one basis. Simply put, ugly people do have the capability to strike fear into people's hearts if need be. Characters with attractive Appearance scores can not use the Attribute in this fashion.

Altered Lunar Charms

While I understand Geoff's take on Appearance and Lunars, I feel that this change to the basic definition of the Attribute allows for more accessable Appearance Charms for all totems. As such the following Charms I would change, so that they would be Appearance, rather then Charisma or Manipulation, Charms:

Looking through the Lunar book, many of the Charms, however, are rather set on Manipulation or Charisma as is. So for now, these are really the only ones I can think of changing. Suggestions from folks about are welcome though.

Shapeshifting

  • Hide of the Cunning Hunter
  • Masking the Brilliant Form
  • Shaping the Ideal Form
  • Many-Faced Moon Transformation
  • Prey's Skin Disguise

Stealth

  • Chameleon Skin Disguise

Abyssal Appearance

As Abyssal Exalted gain Permanant Essence, their bodies transform to be more like that of the dead. With the new mechanics in mind, this means that as an Abyssal gets higher Essence, even if he decides to be ugly, he has to buy dots of additional Appearance like his more attractive brethren. AKA, you aren't going to get out of spending that xp on Appearance to look ugly. Besides, that's extra intimidation dice!

And well, stuff.

Comments

I like the change to Appearance. I always thought it was how good you were with your appearance, which for most people means how pretty you can be.
I will never forget the one time in a Vampire game I had to roll Appearance+Stealth. It was gorgeous.

Also, to be productive now, it seems to me that the Lunar charms based on Manipulation are such because they're a matter of willfully changing, of manipulating, your shape in ways that go outside of just altering your appearance. The only Charms I see up there that I could see changing to being Appearance-based are Chameleon Skin Disguise and Shaping the Ideal Form because they're a direct alteration of your natural appearance. Arguably Hide the Cunning Hunter and Masking the Brilliant Form, but the point is to actively trick so I still don't QUITE see them as Appearance. Same reason I don't see Prey's Skin Disguise being Appearance, only more so.

That's my story and I'm stickin' to it.
~*~Braydz~*~


-Appearance is a POS attribute in most games. It's really hard to take appearance into account, and, in general, appearance can get you ahead in the world, but it's hard to use in a lot of exaltedish situations. So, your appearance system helps a lot and is definitely one way to go. But something about it just doesn't register in my mind. When I think of appearance, I think of a quality of a person which they're stuck with, and can be altered only with cosmetics or considerable luck and work or time. I think that what appearance does best in games is serve to highlight some relatively fixed quality in a person. For example, what happens in social situations often reminds a character that he's ugly, and just has an uphill battle socially. And a beautiful person should be reminded that they are first picked, most noticed, last attacked, given the benefit of the doubt, and have an easy time with people just by keeping their mouth shut. This doesn't balance appearance in exalted, in my opinion. But I think that appearance is a valid limit to charisma and manipulation in a lot of social interractions, especially first impressions. And I flat out award automatic successes equal to the difference between 2 characters' appearances for seduction rolls. But this is all stylistic, and a good call in your direction, because it's about time that someone took the appearance system and did something with it, because it's not quite right from where I'm standing. -Morpheus

I generally thought Prey-Skin's Disguise was Appearance-like because of how it affected your actual physical form in the way it did. You are human, after all, and it seems to me to be an extension of Shaping the Ideal Form more then much else.

I also picked Many-Faced Moon Transformation due to its mostly asthetic applications. It really is just changing your appearance IMHO.

As for Hide the Cunning Hunter and Masking the Brilliant Form, I would atleast maket he first one Appearance. I see it as actually causing the tattoos to fade from the eye to be hoenst. Not everyone playing a Lunar wants there to be tattoos that would show up if they were drawn or something. I also like drawing a couple Lunars using that Charm being shown as lacking tattoos.

And stuff. Thanks folks. -- Blaque

On intimidation -- Couldn't someone with Appearance 5 who's incredibly, absurdly beautiful be intimidating too, though? I mean, 5 Appearance ... that's so unthinkable. The limit of human capacity in beauty. Hell, I'd be intimidated. Not to mention that in Exalted, a lot of the most dangerous creatures are beautiful (e.g. the Fair Folk are the most obvious example), so being beautiful isn't necessarily a "harmless" thing.
I guess the point is: Imagine you're a peasant in the Age of Sorrows. Suddenly, a woman so beautiful you could mistake her for an incarnate deity walks up to you. Unimaginably beautiful. Heart-stoppingly beautiful. Aren't you intimidated?
~ Shataina (just sniffing around)

While I see what you mean here, part of why I'm doing it like this is because I want it so that either version of the Attribute has its edge. Making it so that pretty folks can get the bonus too makes it so that ugly folks only get one of the two main options for the Attribute, until I start figuring out way sot incorperate things from Adventure! like the rolls for disguise and whatnot being based on this. This works for now I think, and those nobles and whatnot still have Manipulation up the wazzoo to fall back on. Stuff. Blaque

'Taina: Maybe, depends on how used you are to that sort of thing.
However you'd definitely be intimidated if they were trying to intimidate you, which I think is the real point.

And to Blaque:
Many-Faced Moon Transformation doesn't just change your aesthetics though, it changes your ACTUAL sex. You look like you did before, you've just got different anatomy now. Ok not exactly like you did, but you're really just the other-sexed version of yourself.
I get the Hide the Cunning Hunter argument though. And you're right about Prey's Skin Disguise, but I wonder if Shaping the Ideal Form should even be appearance.
Again though, this's just me.
~*~Braydz~*~

On the pretty-intimidator subject, yes, if they were -trying-. However, if they're trying, I see them using charisma or manipulation, something the fair folk and others who are beautiful and intimidating tend to have lots of. However... if said incarnate deity walked up and then tried very badly to intimidate you, the beauty would probably only colour the peasant's reactions before they spoke up (and maybe afterwards for social reasons), whereas even if an amazingly ugly character was pitiful at intimidation, people are still more likely to be scared of them, in my opinion. Look at zombies, for example. They're not charismatic, they're not all -that- dangerous (compared to all of the really nasty things wondering around the Second Age) but they're sure as hell ugly and disgusting, and people tend to be afraid of them. Just my opinion on the matter. Nice way of making appearance more useful though, I'll be using part or all of this!
-- Darloth

I'd like to lend my opinion here, and say that this is a very good idea. There really does need to be some better ruling on how Charisma/Manipulation/Appearance interact with each other in social situations, too. I'm also curious to see what could be done with using Appearance in non-Lunar Charms - obviously not Charms based on appearance, but Charms affecting it, to see how other beings of power treat Appearance (Abyssals especially come to mind..). I've done some experimental work with such myself, but they've yet to be playtested. Gamlain

The "Innocuous" Merit (EPG p. 22) and the "Disfigured" Flaw (p. 32) obviously need to be rewritten to fit into these rules. My take on them is at MetalFatigue/HouseRules1. --MF

Also, it occurs to me that the various rules that specify that ugly people can't be raised above Appearance 2 by magical disguises could easily be replaced by a rule that magical disguises can't change your Appearance "mode" from ugly to beautiful. So a horrid monster with Appearance 4 could, at best, be reduced to Appearance 1 (a face in the crowd), but couldn't go beyond that and into "positive" Appearance. --MF