From the tainted book
DEMONIC JOBS Your dark patron keeps you on Earth for a reason. Choose two jobs from the list below:
collecting souls, tracking down rogue demons, delivering threats and messages, guarding someone or something, assassinating your patron’s enemies, brokering demonic contracts, hiding demonic contraband.
When you complete a job for your patron, mark Wild. Your patron owes you a Debt for every job completed.
You can cash in a Debt with your Patron in order to have them:
• Answer a question (honestly) about their Faction
• Introduce you to a powerful member of their Faction
• Give you a worthy and useful gift without cost
• Erase a Debt they hold on someone
• Give you a Debt they have on someone else
• Give you +3 to persuade them (choose before rolling)
Your patron may offer you the chance to buy your freedom, but Debts alone won’t be enough.
How does this works?
You cash in a debt with your patron to have ¿THEM?
I expect it means you can cash in a Debt your Patron owes you, and then they will do one of the listed things for you.
I expect it means you can cash in a Debt your Patron owes you, and then they will do one of the listed things for you.
Aye, the debt is one your patron owes you.
I’m asking about the target affected by the list.
– Who answers a question about their Faction?
I guess the tainted and the Patron are both Wild, but this seems to be a question you ask someone else Ô.o
Aye, the debt is one your patron owes you.
I’m asking about the target affected by the list.
– Who answers a question about their Faction?
I guess the tainted and the Patron are both Wild, but this seems to be a question you ask someone else Ô.o
I would read it to mean “them” is “your Patron”. It’s the only reading that makes sense to me, although I’ve only read the book and not played US, so maybe I’m missing something?
I would read it to mean “them” is “your Patron”. It’s the only reading that makes sense to me, although I’ve only read the book and not played US, so maybe I’m missing something?
It was my first reading, but when a player where checking for a new character he asked me about that and the doubt arise.
I the target is your patron why call him “them” and how can be him of a different Faction?
It was my first reading, but when a player where checking for a new character he asked me about that and the doubt arise.
I the target is your patron why call him “them” and how can be him of a different Faction?
I assume your patron knows more about your faction than you do. (That’s certainly the case in my campaign, where the patron is secretly the mastermind behind the biggest threat in the city!)
I assume your patron knows more about your faction than you do. (That’s certainly the case in my campaign, where the patron is secretly the mastermind behind the biggest threat in the city!)
It’s referring to your Patron. It’s the same list of options choices in the Cash in a Debt basic move but we put it there for ease of reference.
It’s referring to your Patron. It’s the same list of options choices in the Cash in a Debt basic move but we put it there for ease of reference.
Oscar Iglesias As Jason Tocci said, I might still use a Debt to ask a member of my faction about it because I don’t know everything. In this case, you’re asking a demonic god-esque creature who definitely knows far more than you could ever know.
Oscar Iglesias As Jason Tocci said, I might still use a Debt to ask a member of my faction about it because I don’t know everything. In this case, you’re asking a demonic god-esque creature who definitely knows far more than you could ever know.
Thx Andrew Medeiros . The use of “them” and “they” referring the patron confused us.
I guess is something trivial for you native speakers 😛
Thx Andrew Medeiros . The use of “them” and “they” referring the patron confused us.
I guess is something trivial for you native speakers 😛
Oh, yeah, they/them are meant in this context to be singular and gender-neutral. It’s like saying “their faction” as “su facción.”
Oh, yeah, they/them are meant in this context to be singular and gender-neutral. It’s like saying “their faction” as “su facción.”