this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2025
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Feedback is always welcome!
The issue is that for out-of-combat actions, the move die has the same function for both types of moves, so giving it a different name could lead to more confusion. Additionally, any number mentioned on the move card always refers to the move die, so having different names might again be more confusing.
I hope I made it clear that special moves have a very different procedure, and as soon as you realise that, knowing that the “move die” is the die on the move card should hopefully make things fairly clear.
Part of the impetus behind the combat rules was trying to make a singular “Special” stat not just functional but logical. If it was just going to be SpA/SpD combined, there’d be no reason not to split them. Having the split be damaging moves and effect moves solved that issue nicely, but it did necessitate very different mechanics.
Thanks for the feedback, though!
Fair enough, you can tell I hadn't read that far yet!
Another bit of feedback: the word "move" is used to mean different things and can be a bit ambiguous. A good example is the paragraph explaining paralysis: "move(s)" is used to mean changing turn order, movement around the grid, and an attack (and I'm still a little confused as to how paralysis works in general!) Might be worth calling "moves" (the attacks that pokémon make) something like "abilities" or "techniques" to make it clearer?
Hmm, techniques might work, but space is often limited and it’s quite a bit longer than “move”. I’m aware of the issue, but didn’t have a clean way of solving it. I couldn’t use “attack” since there’s already an Attack die and abilities are also a thing in Pokémon in general. If it was going to be confusing regardless, I figured I might as well stick with the name used in the games. Basically, move as a noun is an “attack”, move as a verb is movement. I may have to try to fit that clarification in somewhere…
The thing to keep in mind with Paralysis is that every round starts with determining turn order, any Paralysed Pokémon move to the end of the turn order and then loses Paralysis. The not-being-able-to-move bit is only relevant if the Paralysed Pokémon hasn’t acted yet that round.
Hmm, good points. I can think of three possibilities:
BTW I hope this doesn't come off as negative, I'm really enjoying reading it and I'm keen to try running a campaign!