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Post by ericphillips on Oct 28, 2015 22:25:10 GMT 1
The way I read the rule on critical failures in activation (page 33), where it says "all failures on an activation roll (at least 2 of which are a “1”), this is what I think you meant:
1. You cannot critically fail if you only roll one die for activation.
2. If you roll more than one die (either two or three), if they all roll failures, and two of them indicate "1", that is a critical failure.
3. None or one "1" is not a critical failure.
4. It is actually easier to critically fail when rolling two dice, as it is more probable to roll two "1s" on two dice instead of three dice. Does this make it preferable to roll three dice over two?
Please tell me if I am wrong in the way I read it.
Thank you.
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