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January 1st, 2020, 13:20 #1
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D&D Basics [BECMI] - The Surprise
Hello.
Im trying to learn the rules of the Basic Rule Set (Red box) from 1983 IIRC, and there is one thing I don't understand about the surprise. In the booklet, it is written :
There is more to an encounter than just walking into a room and seeing a monster. For example, you might have sneaked up on the creature — or it might have sneaked up on you! You might turn a corner, and be completely surprised to find a monster right there. But if the monster is surprised, too, then you would both stop for a moment and look at each other. The mutual surprise on both sides would cancel out, for no effect except a short delay.
In group adventures, you roll to see who is surprised, and by how much. A six-sided die (Id6) is rolled for each side, and the results are compared in the following way:
You are only surprised if you roll a 1 or a 2; the same applies to the monsters.
Regards.
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January 1st, 2020, 14:20 #2
I would run it as:
If your thief has been creeping about the place and he is nicely in shadows or behind cover and he spies across the courtyard 3 Orc Guards they are not going to get the drop on him (provided he passes a stealth check if the GM so requests). The Orcs might have to roll to be surprised - the Orcs could be very vigilant and not easily surprised.
If your thief has been creeping about the place and he is nicely in shadows or behind cover and he turns a corner and there are 3 Orc Guards at the ready both parties should roll to see if any are surprised.
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January 1st, 2020, 14:25 #3
My take in this is, surprise are rolls on both side if you see each others at the same time, like if you turn a corner and face an Ogre. If you sneak successfullly and the Ogre don't notice you then you don't need to roll surprise since the Ogre can't react to someone he doesn't know is there.
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January 1st, 2020, 14:35 #4
Reading the full text, you only roll if both sides are unaware of each other.
If your thief is sneaking up on an unaware monster, then your thief obviously is aware, so no roll at all.
Also note that it specifies for groups one die is rolled per group, not individually; ie. your party and a squad of orcs patrolling in a dungeon, unaware of each other. Walk around a corner and you're both face to face and one die rolled for the party, one die for the orcs.
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January 1st, 2020, 17:04 #5
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Thank you for you answers everyone. So I guess I must only make a surprise check when both sides are seeing each other suddenly.
My take in this is, surprise are rolls on both side if you see each others at the same time, like if you turn a corner and face an Ogre. If you sneak successfullly and the Ogre don't notice you then you don't need to roll surprise since the Ogre can't react to someone he doesn't know is there.
2) And what if my Thief is surprised but the party is waiting in another room, is there a surprise check for them too or they are not included in the encounter ?
That's not really clear in the red box booklet, rules are not very detailed.Last edited by Falheim; January 1st, 2020 at 17:12.
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January 1st, 2020, 22:33 #6
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January 1st, 2020, 23:09 #7
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If you read farther on in the books the surprise is used to determine how far away the intial placement of mobs are from the party/PC. Back in the old days it was more tactical based with rules around distances since it orginally came from a wargame history.
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January 2nd, 2020, 00:42 #8
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Nope, they don't talk about surprise anymore after that, neither in the player's manual, nor in the dungeon master manual. At least in the first D&D basic rule booklet (red box). Maybe you're talking about the other books (expert, companion, master, immortal or rule cyclopedia).
Anyway, thanks for all your advices. Sometimes description or not really clear (probably because it's very old), I suppose it's more detailed in the further version like Rule Cyclopedia, etc.
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April 6th, 2021, 18:10 #9
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Surprise is rolled at the start of an encounter. In this case, by the time the thief was aware of the presence of monsters, and resolved to sneak toward them, an encounter had already begun, and surprise must have already been rolled. If the monsters have already rolled and passed their surprise check, they may be aware that adventurers are nearby (having heard them), but unaware that the thief has moved to flank or observe them.
"Encounter" in BECMI is not synonymous with "combat". Encounters may contain combats, but they are much larger. Evading monsters, chasing monsters, stalking monsters, and even talking to them, happens after the encounter begins, and after any surprise rolls are made.
In a situation where a Thief is using Move Silently to explore a dungeon, and he or she encounters monsters in the process, I would rule that the fact the thief is moving silently would either penalize the monsters' surprise check, or force them to automatically fail. The thief might still be surprised (unaware of the monsters that are up ahead). Note, all of this would be spoiled if the theif's adventuring companions were moving quietly alongsdise, as they're not quite "silent".
The surprise check represents a non-thief's attempts to move as quietly as possible, without having the thief's special ability to move silently. If the party is making excessive noise, you might give the monsters a bonus to this surprise check. I prefer to think that narrative things like this are made up after the fact to explain the result of a surprise check, rather than having them prejudice the die roll.Last edited by shamsael; April 6th, 2021 at 18:14.
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