Move Speeds | Accel/Decel | Long Distance Movement |
Space Terrain Difficulties | Maneuvers / Failures | Collisions |
Starship Movement
Starship movement works just like vehicle movement. Every ship has a Space score:
it's how many "Space units" it moves at cruising speed.
A slow ship might have a Space of two or three, while an average freighter would have a Space of about five or six. The galaxy's fastest starfighters — like Awings and TIE interceptors — have Space movements as high as 11 and 12.
Moving is an action, just like firing a blaster or dodging. A ship can move once per round.
When a ship moves, you describe the terrain and then pick a difficulty level and a difficulty number:
Very Easy (1-5)
Easy (6-10)
Moderate (11-15)
Difficulty (16-20)
Very Difficult (21-30)
Heroic (31+).
The pilot can pick one of four speeds
• Cautious Movement: This is a very slow movement: the ship goes up to half its Space. Round up. (A ship with a Space of nine would move up to five units.) In Very Easy, Easy, and Moderate space, cautious movement is a "free action" and the pilot doesn't have to roll his space transports (or other skill). In Difficult, Very Difficult and Heroic space, roll the character's piloting skill, but reduce the difficulty one level. (Very Difficult space is Difficult to cross; Moderate space is Easy to cross.)
Example: Rhen, the brash pilot, jumps behind the controls of Thannik's Thunder, a stock Ghtroc class 720 freighter. The ship has a Space of three and a maneuverability of ID. Rhen's space transports skill is 5D. She's piloting in open space (Easy space) at cautious speed. She doesn't have to roll — the Ghtroc freighter automatically moves two Space units. If she were also firing Thannik's Thunder's double laser cannon, she'd get to roll her full starship gunnery skill of 5D because piloting in Easy space is a "free action." Later, Rhen is flying through the heart of a dense asteroid field — it's Very Difficult space. Since she decides to fly at cautious speed, the space is considered one difficulty level easier: it's only Difficult (the gamemaster picks a difficulty number of 17). Rhen rolls her space transports of 5D and the Ghtroc's maneuverability of ID and gets a 19. Thannik's Thunder maneuvers through the field with ease.
• Cruising Movement: "Cruising movement" is the normal movement speed for a starship: it moves at its Space speed. Moving at cruising speed counts as an action, but the pilot can automatically make the move for Very Easy, Easy and Moderate space. The pilot must roll his piloting skill for Difficult, Very Difficult and Heroic terrains.
Example: Rhen is flying Thannik's Thunder through open space (Easy terrain), with two Imperial TIE fighters closing in fast. She can automatically fly the ship at cruising speed (it goes its Space of three), but it's an action. Firing the double laser cannon is a second action, so she rolls 4D (subtract the -ID penalty from her starship gunnery of 5D) to hit one of the TIEs. Later, Rhen's racing through a thick asteroid belt (Difficult terrain; difficulty number of 19) at cruising speed. She rolls her space transports of 5D and ship's maneuverability of ID and gets a 19 — she just barely swings around a large asteroid as two smaller pieces of rock go tumbling by a little too close for comfort.
• High Speed: High speed movement is pushing a starship for added speed: the ship moves at twice its Space speed. The pilot must roll for Very Easy, Easy or Moderate space. When moving at high speed, the difficulty for Difficult, Very Difficult and Heroic space increases one level: Difficult space becomes Very Difficult to fly through, Very Difficult space becomes Heroic, Heroic space becomes Heroic+10.
Example: Rhen is flying Thannik's Thunder through open space (Easy terrain; difficulty number 8) while trying to avoid space pirates in Z-95 Headhunters. She decides to go at high speed to outrace them. Her space transports and maneuverability rolls total 11 — a success. The ship's Space is three, so it moves six Space units.
Later, Rhen is still trying to avoid the pirates, this time by maneuvering through the girders of a partially completed space station — it's Difficult terrain. Because she's moving at high speed, the terrain is considered Very Difficult (difficulty number 24). Rhen rolls her space transports skill plus maneuverability dice, getting a 23: she fails. To find out what happens, see "Starship Movement Failures."
• All-Out: A ship going at all-out speed moves at four times its Space. Characters piloting a ship at "all-out" speed may not do anything else in the round, including starship dodges or firing the ship's weapons. Increase the difficulty one level for Very Easy, Easy and Moderate space. Increase the difficulty two levels for Difficult, Very Difficult or Heroic space.
Example: Rhen knows Imperial TIE fighters are closing in on her, but if she's quick enough she may be able to make the jump to lightspeed and escape.
She decides to move Thannik's Thunder allout. The space is Easy terrain; since Rhen is moving all-out, the difficulty increases to Moderate (difficulty number 12). Rhen rolls her space transports and maneuverability, getting a 15 — success! Thannik's Thunder has a Space of three, so it pulls ahead 12 units!
Later, Rhen decides to fly all-out while moving through a thick bunch of starships orbiting a planet. It's Difficult space, but because she's moving all-out, the difficulty increases two levels to Heroic (difficulty number 38). Rhen rolls her space transports of 5D and her ship's maneuverability of ID and gets a 27. Rhen realizes that she's pushed Thannik's Thunder too hard and that the ship is about to go spinning out of control! See "Starship Movement Failures."
Starships may increase or decrease their speed one level per round.Example: Rhen is piloting Thannik's Thunder at high speed one round. The next round, she may maintain high speed, decrease to cruising speed or increase to all-out speed. She may not slow down to cautious speed or come to a stop.
Partial Moves
Starships can move anywhere between half their
"move speed" and the full move speed.
Example: A starship with a Space of 6 is going at high speed (moving up to 12 units). The ship can move anywhere between 6 and 12 meters.
All-out movement takes its toll on starships: a starship continuously going all-out must make a hull code roll every 10 minutes. The first hull code difficulty is Very Easy; increase the difficulty one level for each additional roll. If the ship fails the roll by 1-10 points, it's suffering strain (experiences severe power fluctuations and so forth) and must "rest" for twice as long as it moved all-out. If the roll fails by 11 or more points, the ship has suffered a mechanical failure and requires a Moderate repair roll and at least one hour of work.
High speed movement also requires hull code rolls: roll once every hour. The first roll is at Very Easy difficulty and increases one difficulty level for each additional roll.
Starship "Terrain Difficulties"
Very Easy: 1-5> Flying a starship in clear space with no navigational hazards.
Easy: 6-10> Flying a starship in the vicinity of other starships, such as orbiting a space station. Flying around minor obstacles in space, such as a small, dispersed asteroid belt.
Moderate: 11-15> Flying a starship in crowded space — a busy spacedock staging area. Flying in an area littered with a moderate amount of debris or down the Death Star's artificial canyon.
Difficult: 16-20> Starf ighter combat with many ships in the immediate area. Flying through an area clogged with debris or asteroids.
Very Difficult: 21-30> Flying a starship in an area of space densely packed with other ships or debris.
Heroic: 31+> Flying through Heroic terrain is almost impossible. Flying the Millennium Falcon inside the Death Star to reach its reactor core. Flying through Hoth system's asteroid field.
The difficulty number covers basic starship maneuvers: straight-line flight, a couple of turns and other simple movements. If the pilot wants to make a more difficult maneuver — a series of spins that bring several enemy fighters into the ship's gun sights, for example — add modifiers as needed:+1-5 Maneuver is fairly easy.
+6-10 Maneuver is somewhat difficult and requires a certain amount of skill.
+11-15 Maneuver is very difficult and requires a very talented (or lucky) pilot.
+ 16+ Maneuver appears to be almost impossible. Only the very best pilots can pull off a maneuver of this difficulty.
A starship that fails a movement roll may slow down, go spinning out of control or suffer a collision. (Of course, collisions are fairly rare in space.) Find the number of points by which the movement roll failed:1-3 Slight slip. The ships "slips," nearly spinning out of control. While the ship completes the movement, the pilot suffers a penalty of-ID to all actions for the rest of the round (in addition to normal multiple action penalties).
4-6 Slip. The ship "bobbles," nearly spinning out of control. It only completes half of its Space move. The pilot suffers a penalty of -3D to all actions for the rest of the round, and -ID to all actions for the next round (in addition to normal multiple action penalties).
7-10 Spin. The ship completes one-quarter of its Space move and then goes spinning out of control. The pilot cannot control the ship for the rest of the round and the next round.
11-15 Minor collision. If there's anything to hit, the ship has a minor collision (subtract -3D from normal collision damage; see "Collisions"). Otherwise, the ship goes spinning wildly out of control. The pilot cannot control the ship for the rest of the round and the next round.
16-20 Collision. If there's anything to hit, the ship has a collision, suffering normal damage. Otherwise, the ship goes spinning wildly out of control. The pilot cannot control the ship for the rest of the round and the next round.
21+ Major collision. If there's anything to hit, the ship smashes into an obstacle at such a poor angle as to increase collision damage by +4D. (See "Collisions.") Otherwise, the ship goes spinning out of control. The pilot cannot control the ship for the rest of the round and the next round.
The amount of collision damage depends on how fast the starship was moving. (Don't forget to take into account scale differences where pertinent.)Speed |
Damage |
Cautious |
2D |
Cruise |
4D |
High Speed |
6D |
All-Out |
10D |
Roll the collision damage and compare it to the starship's hull code roll. "Starship Damage" explains what happens. If the ship runs into another ship, the damage may vary based on the angle of the collision. (Most collisions will be "T-bone" crashes, but a very few qualify as "head-on," "rear-ender" or "sideswipe" crashes.)
Head-on crash | +3D |
Rear-ender/sideswipe | -3D |
T-bone | 0D |
You may want to adjust collision damage to reflect what the starship runs into. If a ship hits something that's very light — for example, a primitive ship with a weak hull — you may want to reduce collision damage by -ID, -2D or more.