Auspex: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Added hidden div for power sections)
(Moved "Fatal Precognition" over from the Oblivion page.)
Line 242: Line 242:
''<sub>The Black Hand, pg. 78</sub>''
''<sub>The Black Hand, pg. 78</sub>''
</div></div>
</div></div>
<br>
== FATAL PRECOGNITION ==
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:568px;">
'''Auspex''' ••
'''Amalgam:''' Oblivion ••
''It is said by many necromancers that the Lady of Fate rules the Underworld through her Stygian servants, and through communion with her certain death dealers have learned this power. Fatal precognition allows a vampire to scry any non-vampire and experience a vision of their impending death, whether it’s due a minute from now or several decades away. The Kindred’s eyes turn black and they stand, sit, or lie completely still as the fate plays out in their mind. Fate can of course be cheated, though there’s a cost for doing so.''
'''Cost:''' One Rouse Check
'''Dice Pools:''' Resolve + Oblivion
'''System:''' The vampire must be able to see or hear their target when they use this power. After rolling Resolve + Oblivion (Difficulty 3 or more at the Storyteller’s discretion), the vampire becomes paralyzed in place as the vision plays out, preventing them from any form of physical or social interaction for that turn. '''The higher the margin, the clearer the vision.''' A win grants sight of the corpse, and with each point of margin an additional clue is provided, such as the manner of death, time and place of death, or the name and face of the first living person to find the corpse. A critical win on this roll grants the vampire a vision of crystal clarity, along with a sense of the motive, if the target is intentionally killed. A total failure renders the vampire blind for the remainder of the scene, and unable to use this power on the same target again.
If anyone attempts to subvert the fate observed in this way, they find everything working against their hubristic ambition. Add one to all Difficulties while working to directly circumvent the precognition as cars break down, storms erupt from nowhere, and people become hostile for no reason. This penalty applies until the prophecy is fulfilled or avoided, or the current story ends.
'''Duration:''' Until fulfilled, avoided, or the story ends.
<div style='text-align: right;'>
''<sub>Cults of the Blood Gods, pg. 204</sub>''
</div></div>
<br>


<br><br>
<br><br>

Revision as of 10:35, 7 January 2023

AUSPEX

Scrying | Anima Visus | Mytherceria | Voyeurism


Among the greatest gifts and worst curses afflicting vampires, the Discipline of Auspex allows Kindred to discern truth from lies, probe the minds of those around them, and perceive reality on a different level than other beings. What appears to be the ultimate power in foresight and vision grants its wielders perhaps too much knowledge. They may detect an assassin’s blade before it strikes or get into an enemy’s head to turn them around, but they can also sense every shift in emotion, good and bad, see things they wish they had not, and discern futures they may not wish to explore. Users of Auspex invite paranoia, but using it is addictive. Once you know the truth rests within your grasp, you seek it out at every opportunity.


Kindred use Auspex in many ways. Some vampires act as spies for their courts or factions. Others act on their own, blackmailing mortals and immortals with secrets gleaned from quiet conversations, subtle emotional shifts, and telepathic intrusion. Auspex allows its user to play the role of domain detective, studying the scene of a vampire’s destruction for tell-tale spiritual clues or interrogating suspects with unnatural accuracy.




CHARACTERISTICS


Discipline auspex.png
  • Type: Mental
  • Masquerade Threat: Low.
    Auspex never by itself manifests in a way visible to the naked eye or causes effects that can’t be rationalized, if only as dumb luck.
  • Blood Resonance: Phlegmatic.
    Artists (especially photographers) and visionaries, certain schizophrenics, users of psychoactive substances, detectives.

Storytellers may wish to make Auspex rolls for characters in order to more convincingly provide wrong or incomplete answers after failed rolls.