This is the third in a series of updates covering some of the changes to the Cypher rules and how you can start incorporating them into the Cypher System game you’re playing right now. To catch up on any you've missed, check out our other recent updates!
Players Control Ability Durations
Time in a game session is pretty flexible; you might have a combat encounter, then travel for an unspecified amount of time before another encounter happens. The GM probably doesn’t care if it’s been 45 minutes or 90 minutes, but you need to know because it might mean some of your cyphers and abilities have expired. This forces the GM to accurately track time passing (often coupled with how fast you’re traveling and therefore how far you’ve traveled), and means that instead of thinking about what to do next, you’re thinking about what abilities have ended and whether you have to use an action to start them up again.
In the new Cypher, most duration-based cyphers and character abilities end when you use a specific recovery (formerly called recovery rolls). For example, instead of Shroud of Flame lasting ten minutes, it lasts until you use a ten-minute (or longer) recovery.
To use this in your current Cypher System game, use these rough guidelines:
Anything that lasts about a minute now ends when you use a one-action or longer recovery.
Anything that lasts about ten minutes now ends when you use a ten-minute or longer recovery.
Anything that lasts about an hour now ends when you use a one-hour or longer recovery.
Anything that lasts more than a couple of hours now ends when you use a ten-hour recovery.
This change doesn’t affect abilities that are “always on,” like Eyes Adjusted, or instant or one-round abilities like Onslaught.
And speaking of recoveries, in the new Cypher you can use your four recoveries in any order you want. Most groups (including our MCG home games) already played it that way as a house rule, so we decided to make it the official rule.
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Why the Change?
Putting control over cypher and ability durations in the players’ hands frees up the GM to focus more on the story instead of details like how fast the characters are moving or how many minutes it’s been since they last stopped. Plus, this change presents some interesting tactical options for your character. For example, if you have three active abilities that end on a ten-minute or longer recovery, and you’re wounded and tired, you can decide if you want to use a ten-minute recovery (and end all three of those abilities), or push on longer to take advantage of those abilities as long as possible.
Stay tuned for more ways to use new Cypher rules in your game!
It's the Last week for Numenera: The Amber Archive!
Have you seen the Datasphere Deck Tool (which will be a great new feature for your Cypher decks—not just Numenera!)? Looked into the huge library of free PDFs—45 titles totaling over 4500 pages? Checked out Beasts of the Amber Archive, with scores of new creatures that are 100% compatible with your Cypher game? Or just explored the loads of new material we're bringing to the storied Ninth World setting of Numenera?