Friday, July 1, 2022

Attribute Generation in Lucky 7, Part 3

I’m writing this in Austin, Texas, so this will be a quickie.

When I go running I think about things. Often it’s stuff for my RPGs—either rules or adventures. Lately it’s been a lot of stuff for Lucky 7. Now that there’s only three attributes, I think that calls for changes in the way to generate attribute scores.

The old methods were in these posts:

The Methods

Most of these are just the old methods update, but there’s a new one.

Method #1: Point Buy (Former Method 3)

This method has the most player agency. Depending on the player involved it might be super quick, or it might take an eternity of agonizing decision making. Some players using this have the habit of making the same character every time.

Step 1: For each of the three attributes, assign any value between -2 and +2.

Step 2: Twiddle with the assignments until sum of all three attributes equals +1.

Step 3: There is no step 3!

Method #2: Quick Random (Former Method 1)

This method is the fastest of the bunch, but has the least player input. It’s good for simulating the feel of old school role-playing.

It also has the least character diversity, as it’s impossible to generate a character with a very good score (+2), a good (+1) score, and a very bad (-2) score.

Because it’s so quick, it’s particularly good for making characters when a new player shows up unexpectedly, or to replace a PC that was killed or captured.

This method uses this attribute table:

d3
Roll
d6
Roll
d12
Roll
Attribute
1 1 – 2 1 – 4 Physical
2 3 – 4 5 – 8 Mental
3 5 – 6 6 – 12 Spiritual

Step 1: All attributes start at 0.

Step 2: Roll a and refer to the table above. Add 1 to the corresponding attribute.

Step 3: Same as step 2. Note: You could just combine this with the previous step by rolling two dice at that step instead of one.

Step 4: Same as step 1, but instead of adding, Subtract 1 from the corresponding attribute.

That’s it!

Example: I’m making a new character. Starting attributes are P: 0, M: 0, S: 0. I roll 3d6 and get:

  • Die #1 is a 3 so Mental goes from 0 to +1
  • Die #2 is a 2 so Physical goes from 0 to +1
  • Die #3 is a 3 so Mental goes from +1 back down to 0

The character starts the game with:

  • Physical: +1
  • Mental: ±0
  • Spiritual: ±0

Method #3: Random (New)

This is more complicated than method #2, but is provided for those who want the “purity” of generating all possible character types randomly.

This uses the same attribute table as Method #2.

Step 1: Each of the three attributes starts with a value of -2.

Step 2: Roll 7 dice (7d6 is easiest, but any combination of d3, d6, or d12 works).

Step 3: Referring to the attribute table, add 1 to the attribute indicated by each die.

Step 4: In the unlikely1 that an attribute would be raised above +2, assign the +1 to a different attribute instead. Roll randomly if you can’t decide.

Example: I’m making a new character. Starting attributes are P: -2, M: -2, S: -2. I roll 7d6 and get:

  • Die #1 is a 6 so Spiritual goes from -2 to -1
  • Die #2 is a 4 so Mental goes from -2 to -1
  • Die #3 is a 5 so Spiritual goes from -1 to 0
  • Die #4 is a 3 so Mental goes from -1 to 0
  • Die #5 is a 5 so Spiritual goes from 0 to +1
  • Die #6 is a 5 so Spiritual goes from +1 to +2
  • Die #7 is a 6 that would raise Spiritual to +3, and that can’t happen. I decide to raise Physical from -2 to -1

The character starts the game with:

  • Physical: -1
  • Mental: ±0
  • Spiritual: +2

Method 4: Random Pre-Gen(Former Method 4)

This is really the simplest of the bunch. The name was James' idea.

Step 1: Roll 1d20. Reroll any result of 19 or 20.2

Step 2: Refer to the table below.

1d20 Physical Mental Spiritual
1 -2 1 2
2 -2 2 1
3 -1 0 2
4 -1 1 1
5 -1 2 0
6 0 -1 2
7 0 0 1
8 0 1 0
9 0 2 -1
10 1 -2 2
11 1 -1 1
12 1 0 0
13 1 1 -1
14 1 2 -2
15 2 -2 1
16 2 -1 0
17 2 0 -1
18 2 1 -2

Example: I’m making a new character. I roll 1d20 and get a 14. The character starts the game with:

  • Physical: +1
  • Mental: +2
  • Spiritual: -2

Method 5: Random NPC Generation (New)

The methods above are all designed for player characters, and will result in a character whose sum of attributes is equal to +1. A totally random method could result in stronger or weaker characters. The level of randomness is well suited for non-player characters. If you want to go full old school, you can use this method for player characters, too.

Step 1: Roll 4d2-6. Assign the total to Physical. 

Step 2: Roll 4d2-6. Assign the total to Mental. 

Step 3: Roll 4d2-6. Assign the total to Spiritual.

Example: I’m making a new character. I roll 4d2-6 for Physical and get 0. I roll again for Mental and get -1. Rolling one more time I get a +1. The character starts the game with:

  • Physical: ±0
  • Mental: -1
  • Spiritual: +1

Epilogue

That’s it for this week. The post was originally about the new Method 3. It works, but the way it worked in my head was better then in reality. I might not keep it.

Which method did you like the best?


  1. This will happen about once per seven characters.

  2. If you really want to avoid re-rolls, you could roll a d6 and a d12. If the d12 is between 1–4, the d6 roll is unmodified; if the d12 is between 5–8, the d6 roll gets a +6 modifier; if the d12 is between 9–12, the d6 roll gets a +12 modifier. No rerolls, but I don’t think the added complexity is worth it.

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